Madvillain

Madvillainy (Parental Advisory)

  • MOG Editorial Review

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    Madlib and MF Doom have enough alter egos between them to form a superhero troop of rhyme-fighting hip-hop heroes. How fitting, then, that the approach to their anticipated collaborative album would maintain a frenetic comic book appeal, with half the album comprised of tracks under the two minute mark. Madlib’s unusual construction of hip-hop beats, taking samples from the likes of Sun Ra, Daedelus, Steve Reich, and The Jesus Lizard, garnered the album its well-deserved attention beyond the names themselves. With MF Doom’s hook-less rhymes about anti-heroes and villains, his unexpected flows proved a natural fit for Madlib’s wide-ranging pastiche of sounds. His lyrical flow meshed over accordions, world music, and George Clinton funk and soul making this one of the strongest and most original collaborations hip-hop has ever seen.
  • AMG Review of Madvillainy

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    Sam Samuelson
    All Music Guide

    Madvillainy represents the highly anticipated collaboration between Madlib and MF Doom. Recorded throughout 2003 -- a year which, between the two of them (under various aliases), saw more than eight releases featuring their work. When Madvillainy was released in March 2004 it became obvious that the best was saved for last as MF Doom's unpredictable lyrical style fits quite nicely within Madlib's unconventional beat orchestrations. Twenty-two short and blunted tracks bang out mythical stories of villains and urban (anti) heroes trying to make it through with their ganja and wits still intact -- each flows together in a comic book fashion sometimes segued with vignettes sampled from 1940s movies and broadcasts or left-field marjuana-toting skits. Madvillainy's strength lies in its mix between seemingly obtuse beats, samples, MCing, and some straight-up hip-hop bumping. Take "Accordion" for example. A wacky accordion sample loops throughout a slow-paced beat and lazy bassline while Doom flies through almost unaware of the background at times. Or "Raid," which features a beat that seems to be so out of time or step with a traditional hip-hop direction. But Doom sits quite comfortable within its frame and sets up Medaphor for a slick guest appearance. Other guests include the bad character, Lord Quasimoto, on "Americas Most Blunted" and the Sun Ra-inspired "Shadows of Tomorrow"; Wildchild blasts million-miles-an-hour rhymes on "Hardcore Hustle" and Stacy Epps floats through "Eye." Madvillainy gets close to the genius seen on Quasimoto's Unseen, and like that record this one might take a few listens to find it. But once it clicks in, this disc stays in the CD player for days.

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