Monday, 16 February 2015

NEW ALBUM + REVIEW : WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING




We have been waiting for it, now it’s here. The rap trio, The Art Departments, “While You Were Sleeping” album is out now! You see, when you go out and say that the industry has been sleeping on you and you offer the industry an album, you have to show us that we were wrong for sleeping on you. Fortunately, we were lucky enough to have the album for over a weekend and as it drops, here’s what we thought about it.

The album starts off with an intro that summarises pretty much all the songs on the album, but it’s not one of those intros we can say a whole looot about, let’s go to the first song.

Bang:
This song was the official second single from their album. The instrumental was appropriate for the song. We won’t say much about this one, because we already talked about it here

For The Money
It’s that song that has never ceasing affirmation of what rappers/ hustlers/ anyone really will do to get money. Only this one was more centred on them. The flows switching content slightly between first, second and third verse, Tone LakeSide on that gotta grow up tip, the second was on the more retrospective of how irrelevant Illsicker was before and the third being about what we do for the money, “sell a shirt for $3.00” anything but selling cough mixture hopefully. Veiltorn laid a beat that people could dance to, not full out shake it but move to slightly.

Ride with us
This was the introduction we got to the Art Department. The PHD produced and Alaina featured song as explained in one our blogs is really a “we will have the last laugh” typa jam. Message to the unbelievers of the crew that they are “fly with the Desert Eagles”.. well, we get the message fellas, you have guns and you don’t want us to ride with you. The feeling of being underrated is one that most rappers in Zim and albeit, the world over have, however not most of them can put the words in song and bring it out properly. The Art Department did a good job at this. Alaina was great on the chorus vocally but we think a lot more could’ve been done there in terms of the wording.

Drunk in The Morning
This song excludes Navy Seal. The beat is not vicious or hard so much that you nod so hard your neck hurts or anything. BUT, the title of the song and the content are misleading. One would think “Drunk in the morning” would have more to do with being drunk in the morning, e.g, we were partying all night and woke up drunk in the morning, but more than anything  else they were talking about the city having their backs or yes again, getting money (it would be hard to get money if you are drunk in the morning to be honest, unless of course you drink for a living). The good thing is the delivery of the verses was top notch but it’s one of those songs which leave you thinking “so what are these guys really saying because we don’t see the connection between the phrase “drunk in the morning” and the song itself…except on the chorus.

All night
Once this song goes on, you magically turn the volume up and get a head dance going. Navy Seal starts it off like he was born with the beat on his tongue! The synthesiser effects that jump in mid verse make you wonder who the hell produced such artistry! Good thing we have the answer, PHD! By that time, you are in the chorus which sounds oh so delectable, Rob Illsicker takes over, more effects are added as he murders the second verse like Navy did in the first. The song is a party jam straight from 2003! As the third verse starts, some effects are removed, we get a closer feel of Tone Lakeside who like the first two verse owners kills it with finesse. The song is so good Navy comes back with a bridge like thing and magically, you press replay. WHAT MORE CAN WE SAY!

Dreams of a man
After “All night” the feel of this song sobers us up. “Dreams of a man” sounds like a more mature, poetic, real and honest version of “For the money”. Robbie to us had the verse which we feel stood out, the word play and how he just carries the mood of the song without the usual rap “the more that I get colder the more I write again, the more that I feel lonely , the more I can hold this mic again” , something really special about the verse. If one thought that these guys weren’t lyrical, it’s the song that shows you that they are.

Cooling Off
The reason why this song is good is really because you just can’t find anything wrong with it, NOTHING! It was not made for radio exactly but it would still be good for radio. It’s a drink in cup song or driving home from a lit situation type of song. The really lovely bit of the song is that it was produced by PHD who produced the two songs before this one on the track list. The guy is versatile. It might not be played like “All Night” but it will probably never leave your play list. “ you know we international, the flow is metaphysic” If this was a play on words with the name of  the diaspora legend MC Metaphysics then… good one Navy

Bring it Back
Navy seal goes solo on this TR Hitz produced song. Like “All night” it’s straight out of the early-mid two thousands. You immediately confirm that Navy Seal was probably influenced by Aftermath/ G Unit / Dr Dre sound. The awesome thing about it all is that he left the song in a body bag. We think it’s one of the best songs on the album. Party jam but it still packs a major gangster punch.

Set It Off
“Beats I am f**king the beats up, means I am leaving em pregnant, which means you gotta get these f**king beats some contraceptive”
This is a straight up street, gangster rap sounding; take no prisoners, ME AND MY CREW ARE BETTER THAN YOUR CREW type of song. First Class showed us why he is named that way. We thought this song was a killer till we heard the third verse, after that we had no words, just listen to it.

Like This
Braggadocio flows, The song seems to be supposed to get our hands up but, with the current way in which turn up songs are done, it might not be the most possible thing to do with the song. Not too much stands out about the song. it’s a good song. It doesn’t hold a candle to some of the better moments on the album.

Top of the World
This track is a motivational song. “why fly when you can walk on water”, it’s all about being on the top of the world without the fear of falling. The mellow nature of the song and the message behind it merge to take the message through to the listener. It was a good way to close the album. It has a good balance content wise, a more intimate and honest version of the come up of the crew. The Grind continues

The Over view
This collaborative effort was a success. The Art Department have excellent synergy, their articulation of their manner was well presented. They don’t sound like they are confused about what sound they want to present or what they are associated with. There is an undeniable American Hip Hop from the peak of the 50 Cent, G- Unit era influence in this album. Strong hints of Aftermath type Dr Dre, 2002-2006 type of hip hop are underlying characteristics of their music. These are especially apparent in “All Night” and “Bring it back.

Question is, is there a problem with it all? Most Zimbabwean MC’s are looking hard for the next exclusively Zim sound? There is this “originality” thing that Zim rappers have been told to look for but in the case of the Art Department, they seem to have taken all that and flushed it down the toilet. When you listen to the album again and again (like we did) you see as Navy says, that they make music for real G’s, that he will still wear Timberland boots to church. THEY DON’T WANT TO SOUND ALL VERNAC OR ZIMBO LIKE. We think that it was a bold approach and they nailed it. Their choice in words, phrases, metaphors and similes really sound like they are from some neighbourhood in New York but for some strange reason, it’s not irritating, it’s really good.

One thing that we noticed is that in as much as the songs are different, they all pretty much talk about the same thing, “I am outchea hustling, tryna get paid, don’t mess with my crew,” and repeat. We were not going to let them go especially with “Drunk in the morning”. The album is pretty long too, slightly monotonous sometimes mostly because of the content. The other noticeable (could be) flaw is that, unless you listen to the whole album at least three times, you might have a hard time picking out which one is Rob Illsicker, which one is Tone Lakeside, you might just hear  Navy Seal because of a slightly different voice and style. Our issue here is that, they all have the same style. Compare this with other groups, say G- Unit or MMT, their individual differences in style make us anticipate what X will rap like in the next song, as in say, at the beginning of the song when the beat drops, it’s a healthy thing to always be prompted to have a , “I wonder what Tone Lakeside will sound like on this beat”. However, because of their similarity, we can kind of predict what will happen.

The Art Department have songs that are nicely cleaned out, mastered, flawless in delivery. There aren’t any words out of place, the instrumentals are balanced perfectly, chosen appropriately for their content and just sound beautifully mastered. They are disciplined in their approach; one can tell that they put a lot of thought in this project. They respected the art and the producers didn’t give them a shoddy job of it. We have nothing but praise for the technical team, the producers of the song, the ones who arranged the songs and the artwork. The only feature on the song, Alaina, didn’t do a bad job either and we hope to see the visuals of some of the songs.

In conclusion, this album has brought a sound which we had missed from Hip Hop in general. We are so used to the trappy DJ Mustard sounds, loud bass, ear tearing beats or slightly pop going Nigeria records where men dance but these guys kept the G in HIP HOP. They stuck with the theme and truth be told, we have been sleeping on them.

You don’t have to take our word, just download the album here and see if we are calling a bluff or we are PUSHING THE SOUND HARD.

Rating 3.5/5



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