Verse Essential-I’m Not Supposed To Be
Here-Independent-(2014)
Artist: Verse Essential
Album: I’m Not Supposed
To Be Here
Label: Independent
Producers: Black Mic, Kidd
Called Quest, Al Capone, DJ Sincere, Juan Lobo, others
Underground
artists have to fight tooth and nail to get recognized. Through hard work and
dedication, the music pays off and fans will attract to it. This includes
Laurelton, Queens Verse Essential who paved his own way through his music. With
many works with other artists, including a couple of his own works, Verse
Essential made his name a household word. His album collections speak for
itself with his debut album Ingenious sparking a buzz which elevated him to
another status. This compelled him to work even harder in music selection that
included his two mixtapes, the Artform Rejects collaboration and the highly
impressed collaboration with Kidd Called Quest on No Invitation Needed. Now,
Verse is on another mission which ponders his existence to the hip hop game
with his sophomore opus I’m Not Supposed To Be Here
This album has a
few surprises to its belt. Verse Essential knows how to pick beats that matches
the theme of the album. The album starts off strong with Endangered Species featuring fellow compadre Access Immortal over a
dark murky soulful Black Mic beat. The unexpected track which compels Verse to
step out the box is the Al Capone produced Future
which is one of the standout tracks where Al Capone matches the drum kicks over
with a xylophone sound. The album continues where Verse screams I’M FROM THE GUTTER while tapping
on your skull like Gregory Hines on the gritty DJ Sincere’s Leatherface 2 as
Verse exposes superstars with a pocket full of lint to the thought provoking Mobile Slave where Verse expresses the psychological
after affects of the average human being succumbing to the power of their cell
phone. This is Verse at his strong points where the hard aggressive beats push
his lyrical cadence to another level. Other tracks like the Big D track Just A Week Ago with Fess Gotchu talks a
true female story that most people can relate to while the single Everyday is self explanatory where Verse
expresses the struggles the average person is going through.
With a strong aggressive approach,
the album should stay on course. However, a few tracks wane the consistency of
the album. Tracks like New York Giant
and My Ghetto are cool tracks but not
as hard hitting as the previous seven tracks while Too Easily featuring Mike O’Leary is an album filler with a slow
vibe. Brandi has a cool 90’s boom bap
feel provided by the Cratez as Verse spits about a girl he knew while Necessary Evil brings Verse to play with
your mind over a somewhat lazy piano beat. Towards the end Verse picks up the
pace in a major way. If you want to hear musical chemistry to its purest form,
the Kidd Called Quest produced Pour My Soul featuring
Pennsylvania’s Capcizza and Yonkers rhymetress Golden blends perfectly with
precision over a hard consistent drum pattern. How the story begins is how the
story ends with Verse dedication to his dad on Mighty Joe Black.
I’m
Not Supposed To Be Here paints a picture of Verse’s struggles throughout
the album; it’s like a compelling novel that has a beginning, middle and end. A
few minor setbacks pertaining to the album: eighteen tracks on an album will
lose the listener especially when it starts off stellar. The album wanes a bit with
a few album fillers in the middle before picking back the pace. Lastly, Verse
delivery can be redundant at times but his subject matter and the beats made up
for it. Verse Essential didn’t succumb to the sophomore jinx that most artists
fall into because of their stellar debuts. Although more innovative and
production wise captivating than Ingenious, Verse still has not stray from the
minor flaws such as a few guest appearance mismatch and monotonous delivery.
The theme towards I’m Not Supposed To Be
Here is to pull the listener to Verse Essential’s world and come with
numerous questions; that’s the advantage of wanting more. I’m Not Supposed To Be Here brings substance to the art form but with
stronger guest appearances and delivery, this would have been a classic.
Strong
Tracks: “Endangered Species”, “Future”, “Leatherface 2”, “Breakaway”, “Everyday”,
“Mobile Slave”, “Just A Week Ago”, “Pour
My Soul”, “Mighty Joe Black”,
Rating:out of
No comments:
Post a Comment