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| View Poll Results: Inspectah Deck - The Movement | |||
| Classic |
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8 | 17.02% |
| Superior |
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4 | 8.51% |
| Banger |
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12 | 25.53% |
| Average |
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17 | 36.17% |
| Mediocore |
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3 | 6.38% |
| Wack |
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3 | 6.38% |
| Voters: 47. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#1 |
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WU-TANG FOREVER
Join Date: Aug 2005
Age: 27
Posts: 54
Rep Power: 0 ![]() |
![]() Inspectah Deck - The Movement . 2003 Koch Records / In The Paint . 1. Intro 2. City High 3. That S*!T 4. Get Right 5. The Movement 6. Who Got It 7. It's Like That 8. Shorty Right There Feat. Streetlife 9. U Wanna Be 10. Framed Feat. Kool G. Rap & Killa Sin 11. Bumpin' And Grindin' 12. Vendetta 13. The Stereotype 14. That Ni**a 15. Big City 16. Cradle To The Grave Feat. Mojehan I haven't really listened to the whole album properly so any review I did myself wouldn't really be that accurate but for me my favourite tracks are "The Movement" and "That Ni**a" . I got this review of rapreviews.com , so give your opinions on this album Peace . Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon I-N-S the Rebel. Those words alone are enough to bring a smile to the heart of any tried and true, die-hard, down since 1993 fan of the Wu-Tang Clan. Listeners knew even then that Inspectah Deck was an MC who combined a keen intellect with an intensely unrelenting verbal barrage of disdain for competitors and weak MC's. Even in what may go down as the greatest supergroup of rap talent ever assembled, Deck got his props for unforgettable verses on songs like "Da Mystery of Chessboxin'": "Well I'm a sire, I set the microphone on fire Rap styles vary, and carry like Mariah I come from the Shaolin slum, and the isle I'm from is comin through with nuff niggaz, and nuff guns so if you wanna come sweatin, stressin contestin you'll catch a sharp sword to the midsection Don't talk the talk, if you can't walk the walk Phony niggaz are outlined in chalk A man vexed, is what the projects made me Rebel to the grain there's no way to barricade me Steamrollin niggaz like a eighteen wheeler with the drunk driver drivin, there's no survivin" Unfortunately for fans of Deck, it would be a long EXCRUCIATING six year wait until his first solo album "Uncontrolled Substance" was released in 1999; a period which featured two Method Man albums, solo releases from GZA, Ol' Dirty, Raekwon, Ghostface, and damn near everybody in the Clan except for U-God (his "Golden Arms Redemption" came out in 1999 as well). As a result much of the fiery MC's heat cooled off in the sales area; or as contributor DJ Fatboy wrote, "Think of hip hop as constipated right now. You know there's some good shit in there, but it's a constant struggle to get a good movement out." So the iconic member of the Wu languished in the cellar, while another four years of both solo and group Clan releases passed him by. In 2003 though, Inspectah Deck is back to get "The Movement" out and reach that underground fanbase that still holds it down for one of the Clan's sharpest swordsmen. All the tools are at his disposal to create greatness: a distinctive voice which finds a comfortable medium between the highs of MC Shan and the lows of Method Man, with an emotive flow that never hits banality or monotony, and the polished experience of a decade plus writing the rhymes recognized inside and outside rap music as superb poetry. The only thing Deck needs to get over is beats, but if you're expecting the Wu wunderkind RZA to hook him up, it's not going to happen. Production duties are split almost evenly between "Fantom of the Beats" and Ayatolla. In fact, this album seems to find Deck distancing himself from the Clan somewhat, as none of his fellow founding Clan members appear on the disc - just two cameos from second tier members Killa Sin and Street Life. Whether intentional or not, this breathing room may be giving Deck the freedom he needs at long last to satiate his hungry fans, who like the Rebel himself aren't willing to wait around until RZA has time to program a beat. And there's certainly no inherent whackness to these cuts. The title track of "The Movement" is an energized mixture of deep bass, swift scratch sounds, high pitched whistling noises and taps that give a dark and ominous feel to his flamboyant raps: "Smooth like a green Caddy, you fiend badly Heads spin like Giovanni's on the Navi Hammers spit, quick as the darts, niggaz part Like the Red Sea, test me, I'm sick with the art Been held back, it's either rap or sell smack _Black Knight_ like Martin Lawrence +Run Tel Dat+ It's the I-N-S-P-E-C-T-A-H Livin' life on the line, I hope I see daybreak" The smooth soul of the following track "Who Got It" will remind people that "it's a Shaolin thing y'all" which blends the mystical style of the East with the beats and rhymes of the West: "Truth scholar, you holla, up the few dollars I work it overtime, whether white or blue collar I proved my honor, cause I been through the drama Wu-Chronicles, and I continue the saga Chart topper, rhymes tough as body armor When I speak, I hold the globe like the Dhali Lama The flow is aqua, pa you swimmin wit the known piranha The soul father, get to know my whole persona" It wouldn't be a Deck album though if he didn't hold down the streets with a straight up street banger, and on "It's Like That" even drama king DJ Kay Slay drops in to endorse this hardcore assault: "I rep, what you expect, I took a set back Crept back, nursin' my wounds, lookin' for get back Forced to bring the pain, make 'em say my name Rings have changed, shinin' like I'm Ving Rhames Or King James, hustlin', I sling game Sting lames, this money makin' things change I bless heads, push past the full macs Left for dead, raised by the wolf packs Black hoods, leathers with the wool hats Draw blood, don't even pull gats, it's like that" As good as this middle third of the album is, there are times where it feels like Deck is going through the motions lyrically and vocally. Deck going through the motions without giving 100% is still 150% better than 90% of MC's in rap, but there's still something overly hollow and simplistic about his vocals in songs like "Shorty Right There" featuring Street Life. Deck is capable of penning verses where the rhymes come in abstract combinations and sometimes in the middle of his bars, but on this song his words are formulaic enough to have come from an amateur still looking unsuccessfully for a record deal: "Pleased to meet you, your dress fit as if see through Niggaz treat you like royalty and dream to freak you Diva in your own right, keep your home right Bad bitch with the switch, let's trip the strobe lights Tight with the Power-U, I'll devour you Everything about you, make me scout you No doubt, boo, make me fiend for a taste Your hot like a fireplace, shows in your face Now, come out the closet, baby girl, it's safe Just a taste, of sex, lies and videotape; let's skate" If that's his mack game for clocking a hot dame, I found it a little lack-ing. "U Wanna Be" is the typical rap mockery of fake gangsters, which is becoming cliche in and of itself. Deck seems to know it because he's not really trying to say anything profound or rap with any energy. "Framed" is a hot track, where Deck's enthusiasm seems to have been sparked by rhyming with the legendary Kool G. Rap for this one song. Things immediately slow back down on the silly "Bumpin and Grindin" (did he join Wreckx-N-Effect) but picks back up on "Vendetta" thanks to Ayatolla's Wu-esque beat which puts Deck in a more military frame of mind; even firing off rockets in the background: "Y'all better rock y'all hoodies And hold your girl tight before we pop that pussy It be so real, I don't need no deal My mass appeal make 'em marvel att how he so ill Y'all time is up, try your luck, you'll wind up fucked up Before you even recognize I struck Roll with the live dozen, got all eyes buzzin With strong rhymes cousin, been a long time comin Break your weak links, in the chain Fuck your mink, and your reign Son is lame, plus he thinks it's a game; but We about to apply the heat (the heat) And snatch him up out the driver's seat I put my life on it, post up like who want it Blast off with the force to send y'all in orbit Wild like whities in the mosh pit, yeah we gon' start shit Pack 'em down, then corner the market" More tracks like "The Stereotype" are needed on this album, where a hard beat inspires the Rebel to "serve mankind like a superhero" on the microphone; he even cleverly quips "Trust, I touch kids, but I'm no pedophile." The difference between where this album works and fails is pretty clear by the end as a result - as gifted as the Rebel I-N-S is as a writer, he doesn't put his full effort into the writing when the beat is uninspiring. There couldn't be a larger disparity between the heavy handed boom bap of "That Shit" and the uninteresting chord progressions of "Get Right," where Deck tries to compensate by speeding up his flow to gloss over it's weakness (and it doesn't work). Since both songs are produced by the Fantom, there's no real explanation why one is heat and the other is ice. No single producer is to blame for the lesser cuts on "The Movement," likewise no single producer can be credited with it's triumphs. By the album's end though, Wu-Tang fans might be wondering if it was worth waiting for beats from RZA, 4th Disciple and True Mathematics to give his album a more familiar Wu sound and Deck himself more inspiration for flow and rhyme-writing. After a four-year long hiatus, it's not the revelation that "Uncontrolled Substance" was and worse still may show he's now headed in the wrong direction; but regardless Wu fans need to consider this one a must have. Music Vibes: 7 of 10 Lyric Vibes: 8 of 10 TOTAL Vibes: 7.5 of 10 Originally posted: June 17, 2003
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