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the most beautiful rappers: Jurassic 5

Who: The Los Angeles-based rap group Jurassic 5, featuring the MCs Akil, Chali 2na, Mark 7even, and Zaakir, and the DJs Cut Chemist and DJ Nu-Mark. (Yes, that's six members. If you're outraged, take it up with Timbuk 3, the Thompson Twins, and 10,000 Maniacs.) Here they are with the song "What's Golden," from their 2002 album Power in Numbers:


Why: I also can't believe I just crowned a band that isn't Public Enemy by using a song that is built around a sample from one of Public Enemy's greatest songs. But while PE may have been past the days of yes-yallin', Jurassic 5 embraced the tradition. Rap allows for a blizzard of words; J5 just knew more words than anyone else, and styled them more effortlessly than anyone else. After seven years mastering their craft at an L.A. health-food cafe (!) called The Good Life, Jurassic 5 transcended in 2000. Their landmark album Quality Control spiraled out unthinkably creative offerings like "You baby MCs drink Pedialyte/While underground doesn't like you, the media might." They followed it up with the equally fascinating Power in Numbers, but J5 wasn't built for fame. After the Terry Gilliam-esque Cut Chemist left the group (making them an actual quintet!), J5 produced a final album, 2006's Feedback, featuring Dave Matthews mellowing up the savage Dubya-parody video "Work It Out". Dave Matthews on a rap song. Told you these guys were clever.

Impact: J5's influence is hard to judge. While they carried a standard for lyrical excellence, it's not clear that anyone picked up that standard. Just when you think a band like Black Eyed Peas seems to get it, they'll throw it all away on a "My Humps." Rap seems to have abandoned suaveness, but it's easy to bring back. Just step to the mike and flow.

Personal Connection: Among my friends, I hear "I don't like rap!" a lot. Instead of speculating on a societal level, I just drop some J5 into the background, and that usually dispenses with such nonsense. Just like country music, which gets similar disdain from a different group of my friends, there's always something good to be found in any genre.

Other Contenders: the unassailable Public Enemy, here with thrashmasters Anthrax on their classic "Bring the Noise"; LL Cool J, whom I hear the ladies love; New York's finest, the Beastie Boys; the numerous West Coast collaborations of Dr. Dre, such as this epic Tupac tribute to George Miller; Malcolm McLaren and his quixotic excursion into rap opera.

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( 28 comments — Agree or disagree? )
lynn_pryderi
Aug. 8th, 2009 05:53 pm (UTC)
Huh! The only song I've ever heard from Jurassic 5 is called Swing Set, which is a compilation of remixed music from the thirties. I do like that one immensely. (The Beastie Boys would've been my next pick. :D ) I suppose I agree, not that I know better concerning the genre.
selinker
Aug. 8th, 2009 06:47 pm (UTC)
Well, there's a lot of poking around available on the internet. If you like J5, may I also suggest The Roots, A Tribe Called Quest, and Busta Rhymes, for various reasons.
girafeduflamme
Aug. 8th, 2009 06:44 pm (UTC)
Man, I remember back in the late 90s/early 00s when everyone and their mom (myself included, although I was in middle school so I feel I can be cut some slack here) loved to say "I like everything but rap and country." Oh how dumb I was. It also cracks me up when people say things to the effect of "rap isn't music," "anyone could do that," etc. I typically dare people to try to create good rap music if it's so easy, but no one has taken me up on that yet.

As for me, I'd have gone with Lupe Fiasco. A zombie gangsta who decides to roam the earth slinging drugs once again after his casket fills up from all the Hennessy his friends poured out in his memory? A Gundam-style giant walking robot that's also a project building? Meditations on the use of the word "bitch" in rap? Check, check, check!
selinker
Aug. 8th, 2009 06:57 pm (UTC)
Also one of the few rappers who would dare sample Radiohead's Thom Yorke.

Edited at 2009-08-08 06:57 pm (UTC)
thedan
Aug. 8th, 2009 07:07 pm (UTC)
He also does a fine job sampling UNKLE. (Disregard the Batman footage, I couldn't find another video with the studio track intact.)
phatjoe
Aug. 8th, 2009 07:04 pm (UTC)
Some people still say the "rap and country" thing, but apparently nowadays people just like to say "My taste in music is eclectic", which usually translates to "I like everything from Matchbox 20 to Maroon 5."

/joe
selinker
Aug. 8th, 2009 07:09 pm (UTC)
Oddly (for today's topic), there are five members of Maroon 5. But not 20 members of Matchbox 20.
cramerica
Aug. 8th, 2009 06:50 pm (UTC)
Thanks for including all those great clips. PE is my favorite battle music, to be played before any big throwdown.
selinker
Aug. 8th, 2009 06:58 pm (UTC)
I'll go with Nine Inch Nails' "Head Like a Hole" myself, but I certainly appreciate the sentiment.
phatjoe
Aug. 8th, 2009 07:43 pm (UTC)
My unsolicited additions:

Kool Keith, aka Dr. Octagon, Dr. Dooom, and many more

MC Paul Barman, who has also been published in Games magazine

Del tha Funkee Homosapien, probably best known for being featured on a couple of Gorillaz tracks

/joe
selinker
Aug. 8th, 2009 09:04 pm (UTC)
I certainly know Kool Keith and Del tha Funkee Homosapien, but I'd never heard of a rapper who'd been published in Games magazine. I do know of a beatboxer who might be showing up there soon, though.
phatjoe
Aug. 10th, 2009 01:23 am (UTC)
He is a nerdy Jewish guy who loves word play and obscure rhymes. One of his most clever verses is a set of palindromes where he names a bunch of other rappers:

Eve / Mika, RZA, Evil JD, Nasir is Osiris and J-Live, AZ, Rakim / Cormega, Cage, Mr. O.C. / I'm anomie. I, mon ami.

(full lyrics here)

/joe
adamdaigle
Aug. 9th, 2009 01:51 am (UTC)
I would seriously consider adding Mos Def and Talib Kweli's Blackstar project (the song Thieves in the Night, particularly) as contenders for this. Those guys are solid.

As long as we're naming names, Lyrics Born and the Grouch rock it as well.
selinker
Aug. 9th, 2009 02:54 am (UTC)
Lyrics Born is phenomenal, Adam. I saw him on a twin bill with Kid Beyond (the beatboxer I mentioned above) not long ago. Mind-expanding stuff.
zoatebix
Aug. 9th, 2009 06:06 pm (UTC)
Everyone I've heard that's associated with Lyrics Born - OK, so that really only consists of Blackalicious and the Lifesavas - are amazing.
selinker
Aug. 9th, 2009 08:32 pm (UTC)
You can easily get lost in all the Solesides goodness.
kelmit
Aug. 9th, 2009 01:23 pm (UTC)
I'm so glad I found your blog. I'm being introduced to so many new things. Just downloaded two J5 songs, enjoying them. Please, keep the beautiful things coming.
selinker
Aug. 9th, 2009 08:31 pm (UTC)
Will do, Kelly. Always good to have another MIT alumna in the house. (Is it possible I now know more MIT grads than Northwestern grads? Probably.)
bourbon_cowboy
Aug. 9th, 2009 02:08 pm (UTC)
I totally agree with you on Jurassic 5 (and "Swing Set" is THE song to play for people who say they don't like hip-hop), with one caveat: If Jurassic 5 is the gateway drug, Blackalicious (especially Blazing Arrow) is the straight-up cocaine. I can name particularly nice tracks from individual rappers (The intro to Black Star, which name-checks Ralph Ellison and John Coltrane, J-Live's "Not Satisfied" which has the great line "the grass isn't greener on the other genocide," Mos Def's "Rock and Roll," which is the only song I've ever heard that draws a specific musical connection from jazz and blues to punk rock). But "Blazing Arrow" is a total adventure, swinging from one experiment to another (including the crowd-pleasing "Chemical Calisthenics" which actually changes time signatures and tempos several times, while using words like "adiabatic process" and "mass spectrograph" in the lyrics.) The move from the grimness of "The Sky is Falling" to the joy and freedom of "First in Flight"--tracks two and three--is one of the most sublime moments I've ever experienced.

By the way, I'd like to suggest the topic "Most Beautiful Hip-Hop Concept Album." My vote is for Deltron 3030, but if you go with Danger Doom's The Mouse and the Mask, I'll totally understand.
selinker
Aug. 9th, 2009 09:04 pm (UTC)
Dave, you're onto something. When I called Cut Chemist the Terry Gilliam of the group, "Swing Set" is a good example of that. Yes, he's white (in the same way Gilliam was the only American in Monty Python), but he was also capable of thinking of things that others in the group couldn't. The Feedback album is noticeably missing him. (He also appears on Blazing Arrow creating the "Chemical Calisthenics" track you mention.)

As for hip-hop concept albums, I do have another one that I'd put ahead of those, but I'll have to get back to that later.
phatjoe
Aug. 10th, 2009 04:41 am (UTC)
More concept album nominees: Prince Paul - A Prince Among Thieves, Handsome Boy Modeling School - So... How's Your Girl?, DJ Q-Bert - Wave Twisters, Dr. Octagon - Dr. Octagonecologyst

/joe
selinker
Aug. 10th, 2009 06:22 am (UTC)
You are very much circling around the album I was thinking of, Joe. Anyway, The Most Beautiful Concept Album can wait for a while, as there are other Things on deck.
seekingferret
Aug. 10th, 2009 03:18 pm (UTC)
Rap music is something I've sampled as an adult rather than something I grew up with, and I'm keenly aware that there are large, important swaths of it I know nothing about.

Still, I'd have to put Jay-Z above the Beastie Boys for representing the New York scene. The Beastie Boys are fun, and I had a blast listening to "No Stops Till Brooklyn" again, but there's something a little too goofy about their music.
selinker
Aug. 10th, 2009 03:29 pm (UTC)
I haven't forgiven Jay-Z for filling the airwaves with the thuddingly dull "Big Pimpin'." He sure makes a fine template for remixing and mashups, though.
dougo
Aug. 10th, 2009 06:33 pm (UTC)
For a minute I really thought you meant Tupac was tributing Representative George Miller, D-CA. I mean, it is called "California Love".
selinker
Aug. 15th, 2009 04:16 am (UTC)
I am not aware of any connection between Tupac and Representative George Miller, but given all the conspiracy theories, it wouldn't shock me.
villagidiot
Aug. 14th, 2009 11:33 pm (UTC)
I have to admit, I'm not at all into the whole hip-hop genre. But when I first heard "Sage Francis", I was immediately hooked. I wouldn't necessarily describe most of his stuff as "beautiful" (I tend to prefer his social/political commentary), but I do consider his track "Hopeless" to be quite beautiful:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=af4X8VAPSrg

To say that I'm not given to outward displays of emotion is a bit of an understatement, but nearly every time I hear "Makeshift Patriot"...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcMJ5QD4r60

...I get a little choked up. It's not because I'm feeling angry at one nation or another, or because I'm upset by specific events, but it's simply out of sorrow for the state of humanity in general.

Josh.
selinker
Aug. 15th, 2009 04:15 am (UTC)
"Makeshift Patriot" is darn fine. I think Sage Francis has listened more than a little Gil Scott Heron. Not that that's a bad thing.
( 28 comments — Agree or disagree? )

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