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“History (Live on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon)” – Mos Def & Talib Kweli featuring the Roots and Amber & Angel from the Dirty Projectors
(Words/music: Talib Kweli Greene, Dante Smith, James Yancey, Cecil Womack, Mary Wells-Womack, originally available on Mos Def’s The Ecstatic, Downtown 2009) 

In the closing of his review of The Ecstatic for Pitchfork, Nate Patrin boils “History” down to its most crucial details: “It’s a Black Star reunion over a Dilla beat.”  Not that either Talib Kweli’s presence on the track or production from the late J Dilla requires instant success (nor does Mos Def necessarily need the help), but it certainly turns a few more heads that way.  Sure enough, neither the former Black Star MCs nor the departed Dilla disappoint.  “History” coasts on a smooth soul sample that feels more looped than chopped, with Mos Def and Talib Kweli reflecting on their personal history.  While Mos Def’s first verse deals primarily with personal history, Kweli evokes Black Star’s name, contrasting with the current era of rappers who “dumb it down considerably.”  Even if “History” isn’t as essential as that Black Star LP, it is, like Mos Def says in the outro, “not a comeback in particular.”  Instead, it’s an enjoyable track from a duo many would love to hear record an entire album.

As for the production, this version from Jimmy Fallon’s late night performance feels like a two and a half minute homage to Dilla’s production.  With The Roots and the female vocalists from the Dirty Projectors providing the music, the musical talent on stage could rival Mos Def and Talib Kweli’s lyrical capabilities.  However, rather than try to embellish on Dilla’s production, the musicians carefully replicate his soulful track.  ?uestlove, perhaps Dilla’s most prominent supporter in the last few years, even commented via Twitter (forgive the missing link – that man tweets a lot!) how impressed he was that Amber and Angel could pick up the subtleties in the way the intonation of “History” changes throughout the track.  Appropriately, the show’s mix probably had the MCs a little lower than necessary.  As a (unintended) result, I find myself focusing less on the words and instead on the rhythm of the delivery mixed with the track itself.  If nothing else, it makes me want to spend all my eMusic credits this month solely on Dilla produced beats.

More on Mos Def: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: mos def | talib kweli | black star | j dilla | the roots | ?uestlove | dirty projectors | 2009 | 2000s | hip hop | downtown records | perhaps the longest title/author credit in the history of this blog |
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“RE:DEFinition” – Black Star
(Words/music: Tony Cottrell, Talib Kweli Green, Dante Smith, available on Mos Def & Talib Kweli are Black Star, Rawkus 1998)

On their first (and so far, only) full collaborative LP, Mos Def and Talib Kweli took the temperature of the hip hop underground in the late 1990s; this is in the phase where hip hop became a full blown commercial phenomenon (and after Tupac and B.I.G. were gunned down).  This isn’t an album of song length “samples” or odd rap-rock hybrids; Black Star seemed more in step with A Tribe Called Quest’s Midnight Marauders than anything Puff Daddy produced, and as a result Black Star still sounds as relevant in 2009 as it did when it first came out.

Kweli and Mos Def are known as skillful lyricists, and use the Black Star LP as an opportunity to decry some of hip hop’s ills.  Most notably, the track “Definition” calls for an end to the mounting violence in hip hop culture.  The track, produced by Kweli’s long time collaborator Hi-Tek, borrows the hook from Boogie Down Productions’ “Stop the Violence” (as well as it’s overall message of disarmament).  Mos Def sings the hook with a slightly reggae-tinged inflection and does such a great job that the pair modify it slightly for “RE:DEFinition,” a track that serves as the epilogue to “Definition.”  On “Definition,” Kweli follows Mos Def’s lead, rapping in a tightly wound, almost metronome like flow while Hi-Tek’s stuttering drum beat and repeated guitar sample drive home the beat.  It’s an appropriate mood for a song about violence; the tense beat and rapid-fire delivery almost sound like an assault.  Conversely, “RE:DEFinition” slows the beat down slightly and the two MCs rhyme in a more relaxed, free-formed manner (with Mos Def now appropriating some of Kweli’s flow).  The content too seems relaxed – while the first track carries weighty content, the second is more like a classic posse cut where the MCs declare their prowess, with Mos Def declaring himself “lyrically handsome,” one of my favorite lines on this entire album.  The sonic texture differs too, as “RE:DEFintion” features a near content tremolo string figure.  It gives the track a slightly sinister feel (especially with the electric piano that drops in an out), but even more than that it makes the track sound on the brink of unraveling at the entire time.  Appropriately the song (and, in essence, this two song suite) ends with the strings finally hitting a brief legato melody only to have the beat stumble on itself.  It’s an appropriate warning for hip hop (even in 2009) to watch itself, lest it self-destruct from its own vices.

More on Black Star: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: 1990s | 1998 | black star | boogie down productions | hip hop | mos def | puff daddy | talib kweli | track analysis | tribe called quest | rawkus records |
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