It's much more like the later Co Flow stuff (I'm talking Drum Pattern Awareness, Simian D, Patriotism) with a touch of the Cold Vein, but on steroids and hallucinogens. You know when you get the best hip hop records, and it feels like walking into a brand new world (new slang to decipher, references that you'd never expect, sounds you don't expect mashed together, a numbing amount of ideas, so many that it's impossible to hold it all in your head).
The comparison between this and the Cold Vein isn't complete, because vocally El-P runs rings around Vordul and Vast (who are just that bit too sleepy sounding, IMHO - especially Vast). In fact, I can't think of many MCs he wouldn't run rings around on this set. It sounds like he's just gone all out to silence the naysayers, not by retracting his principles, but by perfecting them. His flow, his lyrics and his beats are so on point it hurts. And the album is surprising funky: a lot of the Co Flow jerkiness has suddenly become something I'd get down to. The same goes for El-P himself - while he's always going to be wordy (and here he drops so much science in any one track he's dizzying), the majority of cuts on this album make you just want to pump your fist and shout "hell yeah!"
Lyrically, I'm at pains to pick out highlights. Delorean is the one all the critics have mentioned (hell of a lot of BTTF references, as you'd expect), but my personal favourite is Dr Hell No and the Praying Mantus (sic), on which El-P recounts shagging on mushrooms and feels displaced in time (hilarious - too many one liners to recount). T.O.J. is about a relationship breakup, less of a conventional flow but with heartbreaking lyrics which ends with a squelchy synth sound not unlike programmed wedding bells in rhythm. Stepfather Factory really hurts lyrically, finding parallels between the breakup of community and family (something very personal to El-P) and the development of capitalism (although that's not doing it justice). The song is particularly moving at the end, where El-P gets just that bit too verbose, and you realise that he's using the complexity of the lyric to distance himself from exactly how personal the tune is to him - you get the impression that he wouldn't have been able to keep going and record the vocal if it had been something more straightforward. I'm going to be listening to this for months non-stop, trying to master every crooked line. Oh, and 1984 samples... what was I saying about that Manics comparison?
Wicked guest spots, too. All the MCs are great. |