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ALBUM REVIEW: Big Boi – Sir Lucious Leftfoot: The Son of Chico Dusty

7 Jul

In 1994, I became obsessed with hip hop and music in general. The album that did it, Outkast’s debut, Southernplayalisticcadillacmusik. Prior to that point, all I knew about Southern hip hop was that I thought the Geto Boys were the most “real” rap group I’d ever heard in my life, “My Mind’s Playing Tricks On Me” was the dopest and most unique song I’d ever heard, and that Mr. Scarface was the most underrated emcee in all of the game. The second I popped Outkast’s debut into my Walkman, I knew three things. Foremost, Outkast was unlike anything I’d ever heard before. They were a blend of funk, soul, honesty and superior lyricism. I also felt that they had an uncanny chemistry, like a Simon and Garfunkel of rap. As well, I told every single one of my friends that Big Boi and Dre were going to be the base of a Southern hip hop revolution. Well a Ludacris, Master P, Lil Wayne, Paul Wall, T.I., Soulja Boy and Gucci Mane later, and we’ve hit another evolutionary point. And here comes Big Boi once again with new release Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty to yet again set the creative and stylistic precedent for the Dirty South.

Big Boi – Fo Yo Sorrows VIDEO ft.Too Short,George Clinton,SamChris from SNORTTHIS.COM on Vimeo.

Whereas Dre evolved into Andre 3000, a celestial rap superpower with his feet firmly rooted in the streets, Big Boi has merely become one of the best meat and potatoes emcees in the industry. There’s no flash or eye catching glitter to his style. It’s straight ahead lyricism over crunk, trunk destroying rhythms, still, 16 years later, the kind of music you play in your Cadillac as you cruise the trap in the SWATS on a humid summer evening. In taking nearly three years to put together Sir Lucious Left Foot, the industry changed, and Southern hip hop definitely veered away from lyricism and into the realm of producers, namely Fatboi, Tha Business and Bangladesh becoming in many ways larger stars than the rappers that rapped over their tracks. In one hour flat, Big Boi, in an era with T.I. serving time and Lil Wayne firmly entrenched in a Sun-Ra esque period of interpretive rhyming, resets the game and brings it back to basics. With producers familiar to him like Scott Storch, Organized Noise, Salaam Remi, and yes, rap partner Andre 3000, a veteran crew performs in a veteran manner to execute a stellar album.

Already released singles “Shutterbugg” and “Shine Blockas” (with Gucci Mane) are the mainstream club crunkers we expect. However, this album being three years in production is fire from beginning to end. “General Patton” features Big Boi at his braggadocios battle emcee best, while “You Ain’t No DJ” features support from buzzed about neophyte Yelawolf, whose style isn’t too much of a far cry from the established Outkast playbook. “Tangerine” once again shows Chico Dusty’s boy to be a top level storyteller, not having slacked since the days of “Git Up, Get Out.” This album is likely Big Boi’s precedent setter for the rest of his career. Having largely been silent insofar as a creative direction, with guest shots from Janelle Monae, George Clinton, Too Short, Jamie Foxx, Joi and Sleepy Brown, we get the method to his madness here, and it’s truly exemplary.

Following in the fine footsteps of the Wu-Tang Clan, The Roots and Jay-Z, Big Boi’s release shows that there is a definite necessity for hip hop’s veterans to be active stewards of setting the standard of excellence for the game to aspire to for the next generation. This album, by merely featuring a hip hop stalwart doing his job to the best of his ability, is likely a contender for being one of the finest rap albums of 2010.

4.5 OUT OF FIVE STARS

SHIT I’M DIGGING THIS WEEK

7 Apr

Do check our *NEW* TGRIOnline.com schedule to the left. SHIT I’M DIGGING THIS WEEK moves to Mondays permanently next week!

1. I think we all wanna go to Lollapalooza this year…what a lineup!!!!!!!!

I remember being thirteen and literally *just* getting into Jane’s Addiction. In the summer of 1990, the year prior, just before I started the 7th grade at Georgetown Day School, my mother finally broke down and got cable. I finally had my MTV. The video for “Been Caught Stealing” from album I wasn’t allowed to buy Ritual de lo Habitual was the song that confounded and interested me the most on the network that summer (alongside Warrant’s “Cherry Pie,” Van Halen’s “Poundcake” and LL Cool J’s “Six Minutes of Pleasure”). Fast forward a year, and there was Adam Curry telling me that Jane’s Addiction was breaking up?!?!?! And that they were planning a summer carnvial, comedy, arts and crafts and music tour? I wanted to go. Badly. But couldn’t. Throughout the 90s the concert festival really set standards high for defining the concept that Farrell himself coined, that of the “alternative nation.”

3. Dear urban mainstream: Weird Atlanta has returned. You’re welcome.

I’ve honestly wondered out loud when the vibrant diversity that dots Atlanta’s underground was going to make itself apparent on the mainstream scene. Janelle Monae is the best performer walking in music today. Half Laurie Anderson, half James Brown, her buzz is uproarious and finally is not being denied. On May 18th, her debut album ArchAndroid will hit shelves, and the weird wonder that we have come to expect from the ATL will return. Know what else is coming? Outkast. No, not Andre 3000, but Big Boi, who is featured on Monae’s breakout rave funk fest “Tightrope,” but the dank smokin’ trunk crusher returns on May 4th with debut solo album Sir Luscious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty. The timing of having the legendary genre and sound expanders Outkast having new music alongside the undoubtedly and awesomely weird Monae is too clutch, and I expect the summer to feel like a transplant to 1993, when Southerplayalsticcadillacmusic and it’s inherent uniqueness pushed all music and set the standard by which you tuned your Walkman.