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ALBUM REVIEW: Gucci Mane – The Appeal: Georgia’s Most Wanted

27 Sep

Gucci Mane is now a superstar. And of course, with the onset of the trappings of success, there comes the inevitable period wherein someone unfamiliar with these gifts possibly makes mistakes in their utilization. Thus is the tale of Gucci’s sophomore studio release, The Appeal: Georgia’s Most Wanted. In adjusting to having the celebrities of hip hop on speed dial, there were steps made that were of a successful nature. However, there were some as well that failed miserably, as we now begin to delve deeper into the progressive trend of Gucci Mane as a mainstream heavyweight hip hop artist, and how exactly that concept is going to take shape. This album answers that question well, but not to the positive development of the album as a top performance piece on par with the fantastic The State v. Radric Davis. However, in baking a cake, you have to break a few eggs along the way, and it is clear that we are settling in for a serious journey.

There is one concept that is obvious here. The collaboration of Gucci Mane and Swizz Beatz is a match made in bottle service heaven. If a close follower of the trajectory of Gucci Mane’s career, the next step on this album was to cross Gucci over from the trap to the clubs. “Wasted,” the feel good jam of 2009 took a Fatboi produced party banger into the realm of the party vibe like nothing Gucci had ever rhymed on before. It opened a clear path for him to have mainstream relevance and economic success as the chief party rocker from the ATL. No, not a party hype man like Lil Jon’, but a party rocking emcee, a southerner following in the line of Northern legends like Busy Bee, and ATL forefathers like Jermaine Dupri, keeping the vibe alive and the party moving. The newly minted Mr. Alicia Keys has a legacy of that as well, so the pairing of the two, namely on the Justice sampling lead single “Gucci Time” really shines a bright light on Gucci’s populist path to follow to remain commercially relevant.

The album fails when Gucci attempts to variate from his formula. Notably, his collaboration with Nicki Minaj and Pharrell Williams, “Haterade” is a downtempo production familiar to a number of the Neptunes’ plethora of hits. However, instead of a “Drop It Like It’s Hot,” they give Gucci a “She Likes To Move,” and over the trance synths and live instruments Gucci sounds terribly out of place on his own track, while drive time radio comfortable Pharrell and Minaj put in expected work with solid results. Wyclef Jean sings the hook on “O Dog,” in which he compares Gucci to Larenz Tate’s iconic character in Menace II Society. The comparison, while effective, coming from the mouth of a muted and reflective Jean makes Wyclef sound like an old man desperate for cultural relevance, and the song itself, while solid, in lacking an effective hook falls incredibly flat.

The radio singles on the album are solid. Jim Jonsin of working with T.I. fame is here, and serves up a great track straight out of the “What You Know” or “No Matter What” file in “Grown Man,” and Brit pop lost child Estelle (yes, of “America Boy” fame) pops up ere, as when Gucci proclaims himself a “grown ass man” on the hook with her, you almost get a sense that with Tip Harris being on ice for awhile, that there will be a number of uneasy attempts to fill his throne. I fully expect radio to eat up Estelle on this one, and Gucci succeeds modestly at this new stylistic necessity for his career aspirations. Trap heavy producer of the moment Lex Luger cranks out another champion with “Remember When” with yes, the man who put it down on Kim Kardashian on videotape, Ray J on the hook. Gucci and Ray J on a Lex Luger track is sonic kryptonite for the streets, as there’s something there for everyone to ogle, lust after, get crunk to, and overall enjoy. Fatboi’s here as well with the underwhelming “Wasted 2: Electric Boogaloo” of “Party Animal,” which keeps the trend alive of tracks that are solid and overall sound, but not the massive crushers we want to expect.

Schife is the new Fatboi and Zaytoven, meaning he’s the next underground grinder in line for a lot of publicity as a producer from working with Gucci Mane. He was the creator behind the excellent “Shining For No Apparent Reason” from Burrprint 2: HD Edition, and here his “Making Love to the Money” is the true star of the album, as it pulls out the brilliant ignorance we expect out of Gucci, as with a hook like, “I’m making love to the money like a sex tape, I’m talkin’ Kim K, I’m talking Ray J” over a brilliant bed of synths, horn samples and a bass heavy bottom, the bizarre excellence that makes Gucci Mane a superstar is on display.

In final, this album is highly disjointed. In opting to use a mix of familiar sounds of mainstream veterans like The Neptunes and Wyclef and failing, and in Gucci’s inability to fully handle the style necessary to flow over a track definitely more comfortable for an artist like T.I., this is not a complete success. Yes, he’s understandably the busiest producer in the game right now, but after hearing the Mad Decent Records Free Gucci Mixtape, how Diplo, the most untapped mind in mainstream hip hop today, and someone who could definitely delve into the bizarre mindset of the emcee, wasn’t tabbed for the project is beyond my comprehension. However, we do have the brilliance of “Gucci Time” and “Making Love to the Money” here, so, it’s really not a complete loss. This album aimed for the moon to achieve the goal of mainstreaming one of the most unusual mainstream emcees of all time. In failing, it still keeps Gucci as a star on the rise.

THREE OUT OF FIVE STARS

S*** I’M DIGGING THIS WEEK

8 Jun

aka avant garde musical water cooler discussion.

1. Rap gets back to normal (aka Notes from Prison) – T.I. is out of prison and released the F*** A Mixtape mixtape largely filled with material that comes off like filler and not the top quality material we have come to respect as album lead in singles from the self proclaimed “King of the Trap.” In this journalist’s mind, let’s state right now that T.I.’s King Uncaged due on August 17th will certainly bear no resemblance to this mixtape of blase throwaways for starved fans of the 29 year old emcee. Let’s remember, established artists don’t need mixtapes to prove their dominance. Gucci Mane just performed at NYC’s Summer Jam fresh from successfully serving his prison sentence. In other jurisprudence news this week, VH1 debuts DMX: Behind the Music which was believed to be the lead in to Dark Man X’s time on Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew, alas, DMX has been in Maricopa County, AZ jail since May 8th. The fall from grace for the hip hop legend is not surprising, but definitely unfortunate.

2. Capital Pride Weekend – This weekend is a huge one for DC’s LGBT community as it is Captial Pride Weekend, and as expected the EDM community has responded with some truly exciting bills. Saturday night June 12th Bob Mould and Richard Morel team for the DC based and nationally travelling Blowoff electronic dance party at the 9:30 Club. Gay tending but socially and sonically open, the DJ duo has met with success having remixed Interpol amongst others. Sunday night, June 13th, U Street Music Hall brings Alt.DC’s Pride closing party with vAnniety kills opening and yes, Lady Miss Kier of Deee Lite as the headlier. Kier isn’t just the propulsive sensuality behind “Groove is in the Heart.” She has had a log and storied career in EDM as well, and it’s truly special to have her in town.

3. Sunny Ali & The Kid – We’re big fans of Taqwacore here at TGRI. Muslim punks are the future of the sound, as between Popo and The Kominas, we’re fairly sure the sound is well covered for the future. However, enter into the picture Sunny Ali and the Kid. Yes, we’ve seen country punks before. Hank Williams III is as fine an example of the concept as anyone to ever play music. However, visual shock aside, imagine Pakistani punk rockers who take a decidedly low-fi feel and do it with an expression that really isn’t too bad at all. Do check their official Myspace for more information!

MIXTAPE REVIEW: Gucci Mane – The Burrprint 2 HD

13 Apr

Love him or hate him, TGRIOnline.com’s 2009 Hip Hop Artist of the Year, Gucci Mane is one of the most galvanizing forces in hip hop at the present moment. Yes, he’s still locked behind bars for about nine more months as part of a year long bid for violating his probation, but that still doesn’t stop his crew, the 1017 Brick Squad, from releasing a mixtape of tracks recorded before his prison stint, with guest drops and guest emcees representing hip hop’s elite (Jim Jones, Lil Kim, DJ Khaled, etc.) all over the mix. This mixtape being in high definition? Well, he’s also dropped mixes in 3D as well. We’ll just say that he believes, as we do as well, that his work is a cut above the rest.

At 24 tracks, there’s a lot to get into, of course none of it ready to challenge anything of the intellectual quotient of B.O.B. or Jay Electronica, but that’s not expected here. This is get crunk, get high, party time in the trap music, simple rhymes for simple times, and he brings it. The best guest look on this album may be early on with Ludacris on “Atlanta Zoo,” as the past, present and future of Atlanta club heat unify in describing the jungle atmosphere of Atlanta’s streets. Yo Gotti, Rick Ross and Schife go hard over a big sounding 808 and synths on “Do This Shit Again,” the street anthem it’s expected to be, as if you’re still calling Rick Ross “Officer Ricky” instead of the “Bawse!,” you’re doing it wrong. Calling Barack Obama a “natural born hustler” is one of the most entertaining and telling bars of the year from Mr. 305. “Coca Cola” is easily one of the big hits of the mixtape and one I expect to blow up the mixtape circuit, as Gucci drops 16 bars from jail, alongside Rocko, OJ Da Juiceman, Waka Flocka, Shawty Lo, Yo Gotti & Nicki Minaj, this posse cut identifies both the highlights (Minaj) and lowlights (the abominable Gucci Mane placeholder Wacka Flocka Flame). The sparse, haunting synths here make this love ode to cocaine a heater for the streets for sure.


http://www.youtube.com/v/XlK2i3rbESs&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

But the real champion here is “Shining For No Apparent Reason.” Absurdist capitalism to the nth degree, this is the type of hook we have come to know and love from Mr. “Party Party Party/Let’s all get wasted,” and he delivers here. Stating that the “green on Wacka Flocka’s chain makes him look just like some Gatorade,” you’re unsure whether to be completely shocked or play along with the true Atlanta trap stories being spit here by Gucci, Wacka and Wooh Da Kid. The track is a typical hood banger, street certified production, and the lyrics are nothing special, but “shining for no apparent reason?” That may be end up being one of the most iconic yet ridiculous hooks of the year.

Gucci Mane isn’t setting hip hop back 100 years as people believe. Music is an avenue for disparate voices to be heard to the general betterment of the music itself. If there were no Gucci, there could be no Jay Electronica or B.O.B., and vice versa. There needs to be a broad spectrum of voices across the board for hip hop to improve and develop yet again. “Shining For No Apparent Reason?” There absolutely is a reason for Gucci to shine. If he shines, then avenues for hip hop’s development increase. In every spot of darkess lies a plant waiting for the sun.

COP/DONOT COP THIS MIXTAPE

MIXTAPE REVIEW: Gucci Mane x Diplo – Free Gucci: Best of the Cold War Mixtapes

12 Jan


The concept of “genres” is dead.

The most important lesson learned from the Free Gucci: Best of the Cold War Mixtapes release by Mad Decent Records is that there are a ton of young production minds in this world now available to the world of hip hop. Now that Snoop Dogg and Nicki Minaj freely flow over dubstep, Pitbull has made a career on electro, and reggae emcees have already been on the dub and reggae tip for quite some time, we’ve reached a musical equilibrium. The nature of this mixtape in principle is to explore what Gucci Mane would sound like over musical styles unfamiliar to his typical dirty South productions. Instead, this just sounds like a bunch of ideas that Gucci can explore when he gets released from prison.

Literally one year ago, Diplo and the gang at Mad Decent released a mixtape taking Alabama’s Paper Route Gangstaz into the underground club scene. At the time, that album sounded fresh, odd and entertaining. Fast forward after 2009, and the same concept with Gucci Mane sounds like his latest mainstream album release. This says a lot about the saturation of electro in mainstream top 40 music, and if anything portents the same expectation for dubstep in the year to come. Instead of reaching far, this mixtape sounds like an amalgamation of competing B-sides for Warner Brothers to choose from for inclusion on white label releases of singles. Music is an odd place, and with this release, we begin to see where the separation of styles of music actually ceases to exist, and the invocation of a fertile, genre-less musical atmosphere can occur.

In just under 53 minutes, some of the brighter young production minds in electronic dance music, alongside a select few veterans attempt but often fall short in creating awe inspiring remixes of Radric Davis. However, there are a few standouts that require spotlight. Chicago Ghetto-industrial band Salem’s take on Gucci’s “My Shadow” is dark, bleak and completely frightening, adding tremendous depth and meaning to the track that clearly was not there prior. The weaving and meandering synths and frankly depression inducing bassline is fantastic. The band has prior experience in the realm of Gucci Mane remixes, so their success here is in no way shocking at all. Chicago’s Willy Joy and DJ Benzi go bonkers on “I’m the Shit,” crafting a fun and funky house remix with Daniel Bedingfield’s “Gotta Get Through This” as a winning track to lay the vocals over. The doubles on the chorus are a particularly entertaining touch, creating some fun UK 2-step type instrumentation.

But the champion here is Diplo. He’s weirder than ever now, and in his fertile imagination lies such far reaching freedom for innovation that by comparison, though everyone here is more than talented, Diplo sets the bar so far above and beyond that it’s truly impossible at this moment to reach. Take for example the mixtape opener “Danger’s Not a Stranger.” I can’t imagine anyone else in the universe re-interpolating Mariah Carey’s “Can’t Let Go” and blending in Gucci’s vocals to create a mid-tempo, drive time radio banger. Mixtape closer “Break Yourself” goes from being a hood anthem about women to being an Ibiza trance inspired bottle service club crusher when Diplo injects the familiar synth lines of ATB’s “9PM (Til I Come)” into it, changing the emotion and expanding the hit potential of the song.

The issue with the mixtape is that many of the younger producers on the album violate the nature of the vocals in attempting to take an acapella in a particular direction seemingly as a route to attaining mainstream acceptance. As solid as Douster and DZ are at providing dubstep for the masses, Gucci Mane’s cadence really just does not lend itself well to deep basslines. Veterans Bird Peterson and Emynd show and prove here, Peterson’s take on “Dope Boys” a downtempo and intropective track that is acceptable, and Emynd gets southern vet Playboy Tre to drop 16 bars on Frowny Face, creating a high hat, bass kick and 808 laden ATL strip club style remix that certainly passes muster as expected.

In final, this mixtape is more than solid. However, it speaks much more to the proliferation of underground musical styles succeeding in the mainstream than to any advancement or celebration of Gucci Mane as an artist. On the strength of Diplo’s, Salem’s and the Willy Joy and Benzi remixes alone, this is a must download compilation, but certainly not a contender for the best compilation of the year.

3.5 OUT OF FIVE STARS

SHIT I’M DIGGING THIS WEEK

7 Jan

aka avant garde musical water cooler discussion.

1. Word on the street is that Blaqstarr’s in Baltimore for a bit.

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=3858102&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=&fullscreen=1

DJ Blaqstarr Interview from Couch Sessions on Vimeo.

Yes, he’s enigmatic as ever, but, if in the Charm City, anytime, anywhere, anyplace, it’s quite possible that the man may show up and DJ, he may show up and sing, he could show up and play guitar, you never know. Easily many of my favorite moments of 2009 came when Blaq would show up unannounced at various times at various venues across the city prior to going to SXSW to play his (at that point) brand new guitar and melody based rock friendly material. Not guaranteeing anything, but do keep your eyes open. You never know.

2. The homies of Nadastrom stay grinding

Dave Nada and Matt Nordstrom are attempting to become the most buzzed about DJ tandem worldwide in 2010. They’re already well on the way to that goal with two major gigs lined up this month, playing DC’s Fur Nightclub for the Glow party, in the same space that has hosted Tiesto, David Guetta, MSTRKRFT, Armin van Buuren and so many others last year. The look is a giant one for the duo, who are really on their grind. As well, Dave and Matt play Jess Jubilee and Nick Catchdubs’ “Flashing Lights” party on January 29th in NYC, yes, the same party that Diplo tore down after playing a set as Major Lazer at HARD NYC earlier this year. As we covered at the end of the year, Dave as a solo heads off to Honolulu, Hawaii on the 23rd, and dropped this mix in preparation. Speaking of, Dave and Matt have dropped the “Y’all Ain’t Yeti” mix in preparation for their big NYC set at Flashing Lights. Want some unreleased heat from Steve Starks of DC’s notorious and mega talented Nouveau Riche posse? It’s here. And dope.

Tracklist below:

Nadastrom – Ghetto Pass (Pimp Jackson Nadastrom Edit)
Tom Stephan – Turn That Shit Up (Diplo Remix)
Brodinski & Mumdance – Eurostarr (Nic Sarno Remix)
Boris Dlugosch – Bangkok
Paserock – Nights (Nadastrom Remix)
Steve Starks – Lydia
Cabin Fever – Don’t You Know
DJ Madskillz – Surface
Art Vs Science – Parlez-Vous Francais (Nadastrom Remix)

DJ Gregory & Gregor Salto – Con Alegria (Solo More Cowbell Remix)
Daneil Haaksman – Pabum Coco (Sharkslayer Remix)
Hi-Jack – Keep it Real (Oliver $ Remix)
Format B – Hot Rod
Mescal Kid – Do You Want It
Anton Pieete, Paul Ritch – The Opera
Deep Groove – Spike (Mark Broom Remix)
Dustin Zahn – Stranger To Stability (Len Faki Remix)
Claude Von Stroke – Vocal Chords
Kid Cudi Ft. Kanye West & Common – Make Her Say (Nadastrom 88 Dub)

3. The Crookers are on their grind as well in preparation for the Tons of Friends release

The Italian Stallions of bass, as we covered earlier this week on the site, are making moves as well. Their latest move, a mix for Brooklyn clothier Mishka’s “Keep Watch” series gives more of a clue of where they’re headed with their sound on this album, as they expansively search the realms of bass for new and interesting takes and emotive directions. The mix is trumpeted as something “special” by Mishka, and while good, the jury is still out as to whether the dubstep styled explorations of the Italian duo are going to pay dividends in the end.

4. Mad Decent Records drops Free Gucci: Best of the Cold War Mixtapes on Monday.

I’m not shocked by any of the producer inclusions here, and am particularly looking to see what Emynd, Bird Peterson, and yes, Ninjasonik’s Teenwolf can do with Gucci. This has to be a dream project for Emynd, Bird’s got the bass on lock, and Teenwolf’s (and Ninjasonik by extension’s) learning curve these days is sort of out of control. Check the Ninjasonik “Hot Sauce” mix of Duck Sauce’s dance floor champion “aNYway” for proof.

But yeah. Here’s the rest of that tracklist…

1.Danger’s Not A Stranger (Diplo Remix)
2.Dope Boy (Bird Peterson Remix)
3.Excuse Me (Memory Tapes Remix)
4.No No No (Brodinski & Monsieur Monsieur Remix)
5.Frowny Face (Douster Remix)
6.Frowny Face (Emynd Remix feat Playboy Tre)
7.Im Expectin (Teenwolf Remix)
8.Boi (Zomby Remix)
9.My Shadow (Salem Remix)
10.Excuse Me (Diplo Remix)
11.Photo Shoot (Flying Lotus Remix)
12.I Be Everywhere (Mumdance Remix)
13.I Be Everywhere (DZ Remix)
14.Im The Shit (Benzi & Willy Joy Remix)
15.Break Yourself (Diplo Remix feat Lil B)

5. DC’s Little Miss Whiskey’s Golden Dollar is the best EDM venue in the city right now. Closely following it, Club 24 in Northeast.

Six hour Dave Nada v. Orlando Villegas set on Halloween. Starks and Nacey (Nouveau Riche) vs. Meistro and Deep Sang (Dirty Bombs). Nadastrom and Tittsworth on Matt Nordstrom’s birthday. Cullen Stalin the day after Thanksgiving. It may not be the biggest venue, but the cozy nightspot in DC’s H Street Atlas District is ABSOLUTELY winning. Talent arranger Shaun Starkey certainly either knows his stuff or knows what draws and has definitely placed the best spotlight possible on the venue. This Friday starts the weekly of Nouveau Riche v. Dirty Bombs “The Business,” which may be on paper alone the best weekly party in the city right now by a far, deep, wide and long long shot.

Like bass? Well, go to DC’s Club 24. Dominic and his crew at 3D Promotions have really gotten their act together, and on January 15th present Klever and the hottest underground bass DJ in the world to those “in the know” 12th Planet, after a number of massive, hard and crazy events. They’re doing great work over there, and deserve all the credit in the world for it. It’s a difficult area and new venue to promote, and their success needs to be noted.

SHIT I’M DIGGING THIS WEEK

8 Dec

ALBUM REVIEW: Gucci Mane – "The State vs. Radric Davis

4 Dec


Tipper Gore would’ve hated this record. Gucci Mane has crafted a record in his second studio release, “The State vs. Radric Davis” that serves more as deviant and decadent urban lifestyle construct than tightly crafted lyrical album. Gucci Mane is not many things, even in the realm of just southern hip hop. He’s not the finest lyricist. He’s not even the finest storyteller. He’s not particularly quick witted with the ad libs, nor is he worthy of critical hip hop acclaim for being a master emcee. However, Gucci does get the idea of who he is, and what he is, and how that applies to making money. Gucci’s a legit criminal. He’s on his way back to jail now for a parole violation, and he has a rap sheet that reads better than most episodes of COPS. He likes to party. In fact, about a solid 75% of his discography is about wearing ice (BRRRRRRRRRR), drinking, having sex or smoking marijuana. Between partying and going to prison, he also has sold drugs. In fact, he may still do so, as he refers to his never ending affinity for “trap music” on this release, and a plentiful supply of other tracks. “The State vs. Radric Davis” succeeds in spite of itself. It’s really not even in the year’s top 20 hip hop releases from a lyrical standpoint. The production is masterful, but given it’s southern nature, it was expected to sound like nothing else on the market. But, as far as the year’s top 50 urban lifestyle guides, it’s #1. Gucci’s take on everything, by being so blase, honest and ridiculous in the face of hip hop that is completely over the top or entirely too seriously attempting to be lyrically superior is the hazed out, “Wasted” smile at the end of the year.

Coming in at 74 minutes of the most simple, yet ridiculous tales of urban debauchery of the year, Gucci Mane becomes a hip hop superstar due to this release. The iconic track here is “Wasted,” the Fatboi production that is laden with hooks, and with Plies spitting the racial unity line of the year when he says, “we like to get wasted like them white boys, but we don’t wear skinny jeans like them white boys,” as Gucci Mane “party, party, parties” his way into a song that in having the simplest and most appealing chorus of the year, succeeds. Iconic as well is “Kush is My Cologne,” the Drumma Boy production where Gucci, Bun B, E-40 and Devin the Dude take great delight in the laconic pulverization of a track where the scent of marijuana is lauded and appreciated as it hasn’t been in quite a number of years. “Spotlight” is pretty much an Usher track produced by Polow the Don with Gucci dropping his bars appropriately, the point here to cross Gucci over to the mainstream without exposing any of his baggage, the baggage that pretty much defines his entire career as an artist. What exactly is Gucci Mane without discussions of selling dope or getting wasted? Just another emcee. For Usher, fresh from a divorce, to choose Gucci for one of his big return tracks to radio post his public issue, shows the mainstream interest in and drawing power of this most odd of hip hop winners of 2009. This track merely advances him to radio, but does nothing for him as an artist.

Tracks like “Heavy” are the braggadocious expectation of this release, as Gucci claims to be the man who “introduced cola to soda and said y’all should hook up/I pimped that white girl like a mother fuckin’ hooker.” Yes, Gucci, like Wu Tang, is for the children! As well on the same tip is “Lemonade,” in which Gucci advocates all yellow everything, as in yellow diamonds being in his watch and chain, the Bangladesh production here excellent as usual. On “Gingerbread Man” with OJ da Juiceman, there’s a record set for drops between Gucci’s trademark “Brrr” and OJ’s “Aye,” and Gucci states that he and OJ will “eat rappers like Jeffrey Dahmer but don’t call us Sinead O’Connor.” Nonsensical and ridiculous, yes, but then again, that’s the nature of the beast on this release.

Notes must be made as well regarding the nature of the guest shots and production on this album. Gucci has a murderer’s row of hip hop celebrity on this album. And they all come through in spades with A-plus material. Why? Well, Gucci plays well to three places. The club, the radio and the streets. He’s a heavy hitter right now in every place you’d like for an artist like him to be. From Cam’ron and Lil Wayne (do check “Stupid Wild”), Trina, Nicki Minaj, Soulja Boy Tell ‘Em and Rick Ross, production assists as well from Mannie Fresh, Scott Storch and the JUSTICE League as well, and interludes with urban funnyman of the moment Mike Epps, alongside the previously named contributors, Gucci has the perfect team assembled to enhance his take on the universe. If Gucci were not a mainstream icon on the rise, these men and women would likely be nowhere near this release in the slightest. Because Gucci is a star apparently worthy of coronation, the world is his.

In final, Gucci Mane, at this very moment, is the king of rap. When listening to this release, do realize that this is a man living the dream. Will he continue to be the king? Well, that’s a different discussion entirely. But hating this man, or this release, well that’s just not enjoying this man, and his moment for exactly what it is. It’s mindless, it’s silly, it’s fun, it’s a party. I think I’ve said enough. Let’s do what Gucci wants us to do. Let’s go get wasted.

3.5 OUT OF FIVE STARS

MARCUS DOWLING’S YEAR END AWARDS – 2009 RAPPER OF THE YEAR

23 Oct


RAPPER OF THE YEAR: Gucci Mane


Other Nominees: Drake, Raekwon, Slaughterhouse, Jay-Z

For those of us in an around the music industry that believe that the fix is in for Drake to be the next giant crossover superstar, you really aren’t paying much attention. By the end of 2009, Radric “Gucci Mane” Davis is going to be destroying the industry and selling records in such a way that “real hip hop” heads need to run and duck for cover. Thus and so are the genesis of his case for being 2009’s Rapper of the Year.

Gucci may be the first man in history to go to prison with mainstream radio’s hottest song at that moment (his collaboration w/ OJ da Juiceman on “Make the Trap Say Aye”) and emerge from an amended prison sentence for parole violation on a weapons possession charge six months later with a deal with Warner Bros. Records. Crazy, but if you’re a record executive, numbers and buzz (both positive and negative) don’t lie. As well, Gucci Mane may be the most prolific mixtape artist in the game since Lil Wayne, as Gucci’s laconic flow was the mixtape winner of the year on a national level, with the anticipated October 17th “Cold War” triple mixtape drop “Brrrussia,” “Great Brrritain” and “Guccimerica,” a highlight as the man seemingly has no lyrical end in sight. As well, his Murder Was the Case album, his final release on Big Cat Records, with little to no advertisement of release, with a top 25 Billboard Top 200 Album within the first week of sales.

Gucci Mane may be the best party emcee we’ve had in ages. One can release so many mixtapes and have such a deep discography when the lyrical content isn’t, well, discussing health care, economic stimulus packages, or gas prices being out of control. He raps about sex. He raps about partying. He raps about wearing iced out chains. He raps about smoking marijuana. And sometimes, when you’re lucky, he creates his best work to date, “Wasted,” a mixtape instant classic now the lead single from December’s The State v. Radric Davis when he raps about having sex while at a party while wearing an iced out chain and smoking marijuana.

The ultimate key to Gucci’s mainstream success lies somewhere between undeniably great production and a roster of cameo guests that is a Murderer’s Row of the history of hip hop and R & B. From Outkast’s Big Boi on Big Boi’s “Shine Blockas,” to work with Drake, Mariah Carey, Usher, Snoop Dogg, Plies, Trey Songz Lil Wayne and a plethora of others, Gucci’s party time take on hip hop seems to have him at the front of the national Rolodex. Furthermore, every Gucci track seems to be a winning production. From ATL new jacks like Fatboi (“Wasted’s” producer) and Zaytoven, to pretty much any top producer in the game on duets with other artists, Gucci Mane is never presented in a light wherein his less than stellar lyrical acumen is fully displayed. When a Gucci track is playing, you’re bobbing, you’re bouncing, you’re partying, let’s face it, he was having the best time of your life this year, pretty much anywhere you were, or wanted to be.

Gucci Mane is MTV’s #6 hottest MC in the game for 2009 not because he works harder at his craft than everyone. Neither is he #6 because his adlibs and hooks are hotter than everyone else’s. He’s also not #6 because of his ability to drop 64 bars over DJ Drama’s “CANNON” in a freestyle battle. He’s the one man balance for the game. Not everything has to be topical, neither does everything needs to be so serious. In Gucci’s infinite “ignorance,” he, like Soulja Boy Tell ‘Em absolutely puts the smiling happy face on a game, and sadly, a life and universe that needs one. No, Gucci’s #6, and now #1 for me, because, well, in 2009, he was the Mastercard of rap music. Everywhere you wanted to be. If the man gets arrested again tomorrow like Lil Wayne and faces an eight month bid, or is exposed in some Internet expose for owning counterfeit or leased iced out chains, well, we at least had 2009 where he was consistently, good, bad or indifferent, hip hop’s most consistently noteworthyand buzzed about artist.

If you wanted to look at this from a standpoint of legends doing exactly what they should be doing, Raekwon is the winner. If you want to look at this as being coronated as the first hall of famer of the era of hip hop’s extreme monetization, Jay-Z’s your guy. If you wanted to look at someone who is well on their way to being a bankable hip hop name, there’s Drake. But those are more plaudits of a career than remembrances of 2009. And 2009? Well that was the year that Gucci Mane, by being the most prolific and entertaining of them all, became a superstar. 2009 was his year.