Statik Selektah-Extended Play-Duck Down-(2013)
Artist: Statik Selektah
Album: Extended Play
Label: Duck Down
Producers: artist,
Alchemist
Lawrence Massachusetts, Statik Selektah has put in work with his production skills. The deejay of his weekly radio show on Sirius XM put all the energy into making one effective album after another. Being mentored by DJ Premiere, the beat maker does know how to make compatible matches with his beat with the artists. With a full length 18 track album “Extended Play” will it favor the listeners?
Listening to this album puts the listener
into high hopes of a great album and it certainly made its mark. Second album
out of duck down, fifth studio album total, extended play blends well with
switching up from the boom bap 90’s production style to original content. The
guest appearances really fit the theme of the album. Fans love when an album starts
off with a Pain in the Ass talking shit reminiscing from the Reasonable Doubt days as he teams up
with Action Bronson, Big Body Bes and Tony Touch on “Reloaded”. The first
single “Bird’s Eye View” starts off correct with three rhyming juggernauts Raekwon,
Joey Bada$$ and Black Thought spit over the soulful sample beat while “21 and
Over” seems like an odd pair on paper but Sean Price and Mac Miller came
correct over the head nodding, hard kicks and a nicely simple beat with the 90’s
feel element of DJ scratching and the high energized “East Coat” sounds like a
M.O.P record but pairing N.O.R.E with Lil Fame actually works.
The album continues with the jazzy
horn infused “The Spark” where Action Bronson and Joey Bada$$ spit fire on this
track despite not really feeling the Mike Posner’s chorus. The highlight tracks
is three fourths of the album especially “Pinky Ring” that brings out the
hunger Prodigy; although he doesn’t sound like the 90’s P but the musical
compaibilty of this song makes it so close with that soulful sample and the ferocious
lyrics. This also includes “Big City of Dreams” where Troy Ave, Push, Meyhem
Lauren and AG Da Coroner add that hood spark with the official hard drums and
scratches added by the clever producer and the piano loop insisted “Game Break”
brings that laid back nostalgic feel to it with Lecrae, Posdnous and
Termanology did their thing on this.
Extended
Play put the average listener to perspective and put artists into how to make
an album. This album has a great experimentation of old school rappers and new
artists mixed with boom bap production and some contemporary beats. While Statik
Selektah didn’t abandon the old hip hop elements such as the deejay elements
and sampled infused beats, this album works very well. the minor concern may be
listener fatigue because the album is lengthy. Personally, I enjoyed this album
but some listeners don’t have a lengthy attention span. This does not affect
the consistency of the album in any way. Whether making an odd pair of Sean
Price and Mac Miller on “21 and Over” seem listenable, perfect compatibility of
Styles P, Bun B. and Hit-Boy (which I had no idea he raps too) on “Funeral
Season”, bringing out the new emcees like Pro Era on the Alchemist assisted “Live
From the Era” or hot tracks from artists I’m not too familiar with, this album
hits all angles. It doesn’t matter if it’s contemporary or the old school boom
bap sound; it’s how to make a song. Enough of the old school boom bap music
hating or the new school hating, Extended Play made its way to break the
segregation of the trends. This album has an extended play on my I-POD.
Strong
Tracks: “Reloaded”, “21 and Over”, “East Coast”, “Bird’s Eye View”, “Funeral
Season”, “Pinky Ring”, “Big City of Dreams”, “Game Break”
Average
Tracks: “Make Believe”
Weak
Tracks: None
Rating:out of
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