
| tracklisting |
| 1. Exaggerated Joy |
| 2. Pen's Oil |
| 3. Carl Weathers |
| 4. Glorified Hype Man |
| 5. Fine For A Robot |
| 6. Germs That May Cause The Following: |
| 7. Weather Locklear |
| 8. Break For 2300 |
|
9. DJ Furry
|
| 10. Raffle Ticket Blues |
| 11. Sleep Standing Up |
| 12. Name Forgetter |
| 13. Thousand Words |
| 14. Fizzing Energy Drink |
| 15. Barely Music feat. Awol One,
2Mex, Circus |
|
|
| And fast is the word on all songs.
With one of the fastest being "Carl
Weathers", where you can easily
miss Busdriver pointing out the "people who
bring flat screens to book burnings", if it
weren't for the lyrics that are to our great appreciation
printed in the cover. As there's more Formula One
poetry on "Pen's Oil",
where in political ways the virgin consumerism of
the sixties is commented, with the conclusion ringing
wisely: "just because the world runs on oil,
doesn't mean oilmen should run the world".
The beat seems to borrow a lot of the Sesame Street
aesthetic, with a drum glimpsing through the clouds
at times. And Daedelus in general is hardly overshadowed
by the attention demanding rhyming, may it be on
the okay "Glorified
Hype Man", where pop stars going
out of the loop verses are said, or may it be on
the playful Hammond organ playing "Exaggerated
Joy", where Busdriver asks to "invite
us and the conspiracy theorist and furry feminist
to family diner with the grand wizard." |
| Daedelus actually finds the luxury
of including many different parts in a song like
"Germs That May Cause
The Following", that sounds very
different to the little samba of "Weather
Locklear". That features Mikah 9
whistling, and not just thus is one of the best
songs on here. Another one of those is "Fine
For A Robot", where Busdriver sings
his verses, where he and Radio discuss some cyber
kink, while the latter gargles his way out of the
song. Then there's also the overbearing static of
"Barely Music",
where the off sounds are wanted and the track is
supposed to sound broken. This is the track where
more wordartists are invited, with Circus doing
the most direct speak verse. |
| As harsh this song is, as excellent
is "Name Forgetter"
again, where Daedelus not only digs out a child
record voice sample, but also makes the playful
instruments of the beat get a little spacey with
him putting some spaciousness behind the sounds.
Busdriver picks up this chance to again flow incredible,
while equally confusing: "then there's orange
cones around my bed, cuz I be manufacturing dreams
so you can put 'em in your answering machine, and
I sell them to people who get into fender-benders
in bumper-to-bumper traffic". Radioinactive
almost cockily merely states, that he's "just
another funny looking Mediterranean brother, as
the head of an alien hovers", before he lets
Busdriver go through his solo song "Thousand
Words", which is another lyrical
Pulitzer song. |
| On "Sleep
Standing Up", the two proclaim:
"We are here. You are there. We are weird."
There's little information on here, that would dispute
this finding, as all three of the artists definitely
follow the Mush mantra to push it out there. And
out there is rather way out there. And Radioinactive
rides verses that are travelling very fast, while
Busdriver raps in more versatile progressions, what
then enables Daedelus to even go further with it,
as proven on "Germs
That May Cause The Following", where
the beat and Bus' rhyme do the same complicated
dance steps into the sunset. And so maybe, just
maybe, you can say that Busdriver overshadows Radioinactive
a little bit. And the Busdriver fans out there will
agree, while the Radioinactive fans will not. But
instead they'll threaten you with what Radio's describes
as his own murder, that partly included a throw
of 'a dispenser of napkins'. |
| With all of this exposing "The
Weather" as experimental, that still makes
sense. As much sense as that there is a word in
Swiss German for a road or patch of grass without
snow. Yes, it'd be 'orber'. In a world where there
often is snow, a word like that makes sense. In
the world of the creativity of Busdriver, Radioinactive
and Daedelus all of this makes sense too. And we
can definitely pay that world a visit. |
| review:
tadah |
|
| » back
to top | last changed :
28.01.03
|
| : . ©
2000 - 2012.08 by urban smarts | contact |
|
|