Wednesday, July 26, 2017

It Was The Realest Shit He Ever Wrote: Review of Ital Santos' Decem

Ital Santos, the artist formerly known as Jynxx, recently released a well-curated collection spanning the first ten years of his career called Decem. Meditating on it a few times over a few months makes me think deeper on his double album The Transition. I always thought of the title as referring to the time in his life and his mindstate while creating the album but now I realize much of his career reflects the transition that West Coast Rap itself was going through in the first decades of the twenty-first century.

The music community in Cali was going through a Transition that Ital correctly identified- transitioning away from the dominance the 90’s held, transitioning out of losing 2pac and more broadly, moving beyond the Gangsta Rap narrative that had been dominant up through the late 90’s and the end of the century. Ital never lost sight of the idea that older cats go through these things for the benefit of the youth, so that they don’t have to.

You can hear the cultural Transition throughout Decem. The older tracks bristling with a little more trigger-happiness and aggressive masculinity. Their pre-track shout outs sound Death Row-style and Yasin, a frequent Santos collaborator on the earlier works, throws down hard bars over powerful and grimy boom-bap. The later tracks are more chill and even stoner-hippie in their wizened observations and wisdom. Noted posi-gawds like Noa James show their earlier more gangster side on older tracks from the collection too: again, the Jynxx / Ital Santos Transition reflects the larger cultural shift, here is a musician who has been here for all that. Songs in between like an addictive R & B number, "Black Brown Soul Revue" sung amazingly by CornBreeze near the end help show Ital’s diversity and vision.

The record's given me a new appreciation for how Ital develops choruses- 'Realest shit', 'Crisis', 'All for the money', 'Rain Check' and plenty more show his understanding of the interplay of the sung soul sample and the rapped refrain but more importantly they are catchy and give his music an enjoyable momentum.  More recent tracks include standout performances from Slick C, D'zyl 5k1 and of course a frequent Ital collaborator Mando the DJ on the cut.

Santos shows us his part in local lexicon development with tracks like “the 9”, and the collection’s standout almost-closer “The Realest Shit I Ever Wrote” on which he says "I got friends but sometimes I feel alone." The whole song is a bluesy soul slapper which encapsulates, I think, Ital's desire to shed light on the struggle of people in the I.E. This record commemorates a decade of him doing exactly that, through different collaborators, different eras and personas of the self, just trying to give the I.E. the kind of musical shading and texture so many other hard-up communities have had in the past. He's been busy in this last decade and I look forward to what he produces in his next.

Tristan "Tanjint Wiggy" Acker is a staff writer for JooseBoxx, youth hip-hop writing instructor with CHORDS Enrichment Youth program (chordseyp.org) and member of the Inland Empire nerdcore hip-hop group the West Coast Avengers. Catch more of their work at westcoastavengers.com, follow Tristan on Twitter @Tanjint or e-mail him at tristanacker@gmail.com.

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

The Reason That The Party On Smash: Review of The Combine


    2 years ago I couldn’t have told you an I.E hip-hop record like The Combine existed. Unapologetically modern but also relentlessly smart and positive, the album plays like the coolest Inland Empire pep rally Hollywood could create. Triune delivers baritone bars and E.Q sings tronical fried R&B smoothness on their crisply produced collection of sports-themed anthems, seemingly custom-designed for Friday night PS4 sessions and ESPN.

The wholesomeness and conventionality of the value system at work here is a different experience for me. Triune’s high school (and mine!) scores a dedication on “Alma Mater”- E.Q’s endless high school references “asking for hall passes”, “salutatorian” etc. keep the song light on its feet, more concerned with humor and cleverness than putting people down like a lot of other baller-boss hip-hop does. Triune spits poems about real grown-person love that are both beautiful in their painting but honest in their portrayal of a man.

“Draft Day” is a great role-playing exercise and metaphor for the day young athletes learn they’ve been selected in the draft as well as one of the album’s catchiest tracks. Both E.Q and Triune start simply and build up to ridiculous styles by the end of the piece.
“Pretty Thangz” cleverly uses basketball lingo to describe a stable of lovers competing for elevated status, “she tryna win a ring…”


"Going Going Gone" is the group's baseball anthem with one of the album's catchiest choruses and a beat that won't quit, creating a catchy middle ground between a hip-hop banger and a stadium organ anthem. "Game Winner" is another highlight, reaching a remarkable emotional height at the end while the chorus crescendos over some of E.Q's strongest foundation harmony vocals. "Vacation" and "Like a Winner" are chill sexy odes to relaxing with a lover in which both vocalists, particularly Triune, describe tropical and luxurious escape scenes vividly. On "Carpe Diem" a track whose unqiue and epic beat I love more every time I bump it, both of the album's stars make clear they haven't forgotten where they came from as they discuss the challenges of growing up for themselves and the future generation.

E.Q. weaves between hip-hop and R&B seamlessly, his facility with lingo and MC braggadocio while structuring songs recalls Nate Dogg while at the same time sounding totally modern and of his era. Triune is an unpredictable and versatile MC who, to use the album’s milieu, knows how to play on a team but also how to score points solo. Sometimes he's very direct and sometimes he's one of those Godfather rappers with whom the more he says the less you’re sure of what he’s really thinking. Together, The Combine make collaboration sound easy. From what I hear, they’ll be doing this forever. 

Tristan "Tanjint Wiggy" Acker is a staff writer for JooseBoxx, youth hip-hop writing instructor with CHORDS Enrichment Youth program (chordseyp.org) and member of the Inland Empire nerdcore hip-hop group the West Coast Avengers. Catch more of their work at westcoastavengers.com, follow Tristan on Twitter @Tanjint or e-mail him at tristanacker@gmail.com.


Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Recent Video Round Up with Viva Mescal, Skinny Trillions, Hvlloween, Muds One, 18Scales, Cam Archer

Gonna try to do a monthly round-up of videos from the past year and more recently that I got a chance to catch and want to share.

Viva Mescal - Cherry Of My Blunt
Muds One does immense justice to one of my favorite Mescal songs here. Stay peeping content by Soul Providers and East of the River crews. This is a really biased thing to say but I feel like EOTR is one of the only crews besides mine that really goes out of its way to credit beatmakers. Mescal’s latest project here 

Skinny Trillions – go to sleep foo
Who couldn’t help but be inexorably drawn to the stubborn and almost inscrutable weirdness of Skinny Trillions’ new video series?

More Trilly here 


Hvlloween - Dopest in the I.E.

I can't lie about how often I find myself shocked by the gutter-ass shit the founder of Grey Entertainment has to say but I find his work hard, dark, unique and ever defter in it execution. I like his consistency and that he reps the I.E. to the teeth. His latest project linked here

18SCALES – No Potassium
More from Muds One, had to get a repost of a piece of one of the latest projects from the superdope superduo 18 Scales in…


Cam Archer - On The Way
The first video from Cam Archer's upcoming Spirit Gunner LP shows that dude can sing choruses and boom-bap with the best of 'em. Filmed in New York City, Coca crisply rides a chill and bassy Nabeyin production. Detailed write-up and links to Cam's last project here

Tristan "Tanjint Wiggy" Acker is a staff writer for JooseBoxx, youth hip-hop writing instructor with CHORDS Enrichment Youth program (chordseyp.org) and member of the Inland Empire nerdcore hip-hop group the West Coast Avengers. Catch more of their work at westcoastavengers.com, follow Tristan on Twitter @Tanjint or e-mail him at tristanacker@gmail.com.