| ![[The Final Conflict]](../coverart/virt-finalconflict.jpg)  Virtuoso :: The Final Conflict  Big Bang Records
 Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
 
 
 There's a deliberate mixing of pop culture references in the titling of this 
album. If on the one hand you abbreviate the underground rap pugilist 
Virtuoso to a singular "V," you 
might be reminded of a 1980's NBC mini-series called "V: The Final Battle" 
where aliens attempt to steal the world's resources. If on the other hand you're of 
a horror movie mindset, you may instead flash back to the 1981 film 
"Omen III: The Final Conflict." The trilogy depicted a child named Damien 
Thorn who was actually the Antichrist incarnate, at first unaware of his 
demonic heritage, later embracing his destiny and promulgating evil until 
his ultimate demise.
 
Either one is ultimately apt, because both reference 
dark days for humanity, and Virtuoso is proud to be one of rap's most gothic 
emcees. He seems to have found a like-minded soul in new production 
partner Blue Sky Black Death. 
They aren't co-credited on the cover or binding, but they produce two-thirds 
of "The Final Conflict" and give Virtuoso an appropriately menacing sound. 
GZA's once boastful line "I be the body dropper, the heartbeat stopper/Child 
educator plus head amputator" is given a newfound menace when sampled 
for the grim "Heartbeat Stopper," which appropriately also features a sample 
of Ryzarector cackling "HA, HA HA HA HA HA!" V's raps are penned with poison:
 
"High speed your dial-up, extra memory free my style upIt happens every time I'm rappin, I watch the bodies pile up
 So why fuck with the knowledge from this scholar's crown
 It's all around, in the hollow ground, walls of reality falling down
 There's not a sound more beautiful and terrible
 that Big Virtuoso, musical, lyrical, grand imperial
 Master, of celestial and ethereal
 The intangible and material
 [...]
 Cut the tape, cause that's a one take masterpiece
 Pass the hashish 'fore I snap and smash your teeth"
 
One might believe a rapper so brutal in his approach would be unlistenable 
and/or have few friends; then again one might forget that the equally savage 
Vinnie Paz has been an underground 
stalwart for years. Likewise the Boston native Virtuoso has stayed well connected 
through his long years in the indie rap scene, and he calls upon those friends to 
lend him a hand for "The Final Conflict." The guest appearances are both local and 
bi-coastal on "No Fear" as Akrobatik and Casual get it in on a heavy BSBD beat.
 
Virtuoso: "To each his own then, this shit is all meThey call me creator of the big bang that keeps exploding
 Weak eroding land mass smashed by my deepest ocean
 Flow take your {*inhale*} so the wisdom that I speak can soak in"
 
Akrobatik: "Enter the black Burt BacharachWith enough force to merk Cadillac Williams
 This is Virt, Cas' and Ak' killin 'em
 Silly dumb young full of cum rappers bounce into our millenium"
 
Casual: "Well on the West, I provide the bless for y'allBut digestin y'all gave me high cholesterol
 You on your own dick thinkin you the best rapper
 Your impact crash smaller than a stress fracture"
 
"The Bay of Pigs" reads like a who's who of independent hip-hop too, inviting 
Del the Funky Homosapien (billed as Deltron 3030) and Vast Aire to join him on 
on a track that still sounds haunting despite having a pleasantly sung hook and 
symphonic background instruments. The only collaborative song not produced 
by BSBD is the early leaked single "Wie Kings" featuring German rap star Torch, 
laced up by Sicknature with sick cello sounds one could mistake for Apocalyptica. 
Other production partners to join in the debauchery are Khrome, who can be heard 
lacing the apocalyptic Chuck D sampling "Catch Me on Two" and the appropriately 
titled and heavy-handed "Hypnotic," newcomer Sandhill on the stripped down and 
DJ scratch heavy "How to Make Fire" plus "In My Lives," and Musicologo on 
the album's grand finale "S.O.S. (The System Is Failing)."
 
Virtuoso: "In this culture of consumption, gas pumpin for 3.20-somethinTwelve year old girls fuckin, them little drama kikos bustin
 at they own cousin for nothin, just to get a rep
 Just to get a check, set up they brother and cut his neck
 Left in the penitentiary, servin a quarter century
 You can't rehabilitate when you can't develop mentally (nah)
 Like a flower with no rain and no sunlight
 All pain and no fun right? Of course them boys gon' fight"
 
Therein lies the secret to Virtuoso's success - he's not dark simply for the sake of 
the darkness. There's a definite method to what V would willingly describe as his 
madness, an underlying message to the seemingly unrepentant violence within his 
rhymes. When you read between the lines you find that Virtuoso is actually hopeful 
for a better world. If one compared Boston to Basin City, Virtuoso would be our 
Marv, always being manipulated by the system he's a part of yet, intelligent and 
powerful enough to exact revenge on the forces against him. He's the anti-hero who 
is not afraid to let the ends justify the means, the man who would kill a rapist rather 
than see him arrested and beat the charge at trial. While "The Final Conflict" may 
be deeper and darker than the casual rap fan is willing to go, Virtuoso's world is 
no less compelling for those willing to tread through the blood soaked pages 
of his rhyme book.
 
Music Vibes: 8.5 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 8 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 8 of 10
 
Originally posted: February 15, 2011source: www.RapReviews.com
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