Talib Kweli-Prisoner of Conscious-Nature
EMI-(2013)
Artist: Talib Kweli
Album: Prisoner of
Conscious
Producers: Oh No, RZA, Sean
C. & LV, J. Cole, others
Talib
Kweli has paid his dues for the longest. From the Black Starr projects,
Reflection Eternal to his solo albums, Talib Kweli put his work down for the
longest. There is a method into Talib Kweli’s message which is mostly
political. A few mixtapes has still made his name relevant. Now with the new
album “Prisoner of Conscious”, can Kweli keep up with the ongoing changes of music?
We all know that he is known for his
conscious lyrical content. The beginning of the album starts very strong.
“Human Mic” brings out the old Talib with his slick wordplay. What Talib puts
together on this album is musical chemistry that brings out his guest
appearances. “Favela Love” and “Come Here” matches perfectly with artists such
as Miguel and Seu Jorge. Moreover, “Come Here” bridges the hip hop and soulful
singing to a tee. The RZA produced “Rocket Ships” brings out the energy out of
Talib and Busta Rhymes to make this a compatible track.
Somewhere, the beats on this album
can get lost at times. As the album starts to progress, the middle tracks
dwindle the momentum of the album knocking it off balance. Starting with tracks
like “Hamster Wheel” and “Delicate Flowers” that suffer from bland mediocre
production. High Life” and “Upper Echelon” are generic album fillers that don’t
bring the excitement. “Push Thru” sucks out the energy out of the listener
despite the strong lyrics from Kendrick Lamar while the gospel piano infused “Before
He Walked” featuring Nelly and Abby Dobson is too unbearable to listen to with
the annoying knocking bassline. Although Nelly tries to shine: I’m from a small
city, but I have big dreams/has some good ideas, but I got better schemes, this
track should not even be on the album.
Although not a classic, a solid
album can be describe at its best. Talib has diverse subject matter and some
tracks do shine. For instance, respecting females on “Delicate Flowers”, a
radio friendly collaboration that works well on “Come Here”, the political knockout
punch on “Human Mic” and the conceited lyrical content: No one as gifted as
this/I’m magnificent/Classically consistent/I’m nasty as black licorice on “Hold
It Now”. Where the album begins to lose it course? Some
tracks are inconsistent with monotonous production that allows you to press the
skip button. However, some of the guest appearances blend well with Talib’s
delivery. It’s apparent that some of the songs supersede others by far.
Needless to say, Talib is still the emcee that many people will love to have on
their projects. Prisoner of Conscious brings out many elements and introduces
to some new ones. Question is will you be free out of your conscious. Only the
listeners will answer that question.
Strong
Tracks: “Human Mic”, “Come Here”, “Favela Love”,, “Outstanding”, “Turnt
Up”
Average
Tracks: “Hold It Now”, “High Life”, “Upper Echelon”, “Rocket Ships”
Weak
Tracks: “Before He Walked”,
“Push Thru”, “Hamster Wheel”, “Dedicate Flowers”
Rating:out of
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