• Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Auto width resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
  • red color
Member Area

A 'n' E Vibe

Monday
Jul 07th
Home arrow CURRENT BESTSELLERS arrow THE ROOTS - Rising Down
THE ROOTS - Rising Down PDF Print E-mail
Written by Todd Andre   

rising_down.jpg THE ROOTS - Rising Down 
CD Review
Artist: The Roots
Title: Rising Down
Label: Universal Music
Canada
Released:
April 29th 2008       

5 Stars    

Reviewed By: Todd Andre (Calgary Correspondent - Canada)  

The Roots never make a bad album, and it doesn't look like they are going to start with their tenth release, Rising Down.  Many people were skeptical of this album after The Roots teamed up with pop-punk starlet Patrick Stump (Fall Out Boy) on the album's pre-release "Birthday Girl."  Despite the song's subversive, anti-pop narrative describing MC Tariq ‘Black Thought' Trotter's...ahem, admiration of an underage fan backstage, loyal listeners couldn't wrap their heads around a Roots' "crossover hit."  As a result, "Birthday Girl" failed to make the final cut on the album and "Rising Down" was released as the album's first single (For more info on the Roots record label woes check out Reuters). 

All is well though; the pop sounds of "Birthday Girl" don't gel with the dark, apocalyptic synthesizers that dominate the album.  The bumpin' bass lines and ominous guitar melodies of the title track "Rising Down" are more definitive of what to expect than Stump's whiny pop punk vocals.  Trotter sees the lead track as a table setter for Rising Down's penetrating cynicism.  

"It's not an intro, but more an introduction to the topical theme of the album.  Mos [Def] kicks it off from one perspective. My verse is about global warming and how the world is all haywire. And Styles P is rapping about prescription-drug campaigns, the stuff they advertise on TV, all the crazy side effects," says Trotter in an interview with Entertainment Weekly reporter Simon Vozick-Levinson.  "We're all dealing with different aspects of the state of the world."

Rising Down dabbles in darker themes, but it will tempt those with dancing feet as much as the angry afrocentric.  "Get Busy" is a party tune that resurrects the Golden-era of Philadelphia's early 90s hip-hop scene.  Old school DJ Jazzy Jeff pumps out phat and funky bass lines while Dice Raw mimics machine-gun style gangsta rap.  That sets up "Criminal," a track that defends the outlaw psychology of street thugs.  Truck North, Saigon and Black Thought muse about the seemingly arbitrary bifurcations between criminality and legitimacy in the modern world. 

Lighter fare stands out in the second half of the album.  "Unwritten" and "Rising Up" relieve the oppressive weight of the first half of the album with the silky soft vocals of Mercedes Martinez and Chrisette Michelle.  The Roots have a history of hits working with female singers like Erykah Badu, and "Rising Up" is another song in the tradition of Badu's "You Know U Got Me" effort.  It's as if Trotter needs to find a female on every album to be a ying to his yang.       "Where 'Rising Down' is one of the darker moments of the album, 'Rising Up' is the beacon of hope," said Trotter.  The world can seem like a dark and scary place after listening to a Roots album, but the final track leaves a cleaner, more optimistic end to the brooding dance party that is the first half of the album. 

For Roots fans out there, this album has crushed the low expectations set by the Stump single.  For the casual hip-hop fan, Rising Down has matched the gold standard of hip-hop excellence we have come to expect from the boys from sunny Philadelphia.      

Track List

  1. The Pow Wow (Intro)
  2. Rising Down (f/ Mos Def and Styles P)
  3. Get Busy (f/ Dice Raw & Peddi Crack & Jazzy Jeff)
  4. @ 15
  5. 75 Bars (Reconstruction) (ft Tuba Gooding Jr.)
  6. (Up Theme) Becoming Unwritten (instrumental)
  7. Criminal (with Truck North & Saigon)
  8. I Will Not Apologize (ft. Porn & Talib Kweli)
  9. I Can't Help It (f/ Malik B & Porn)
  10. Singing Man (f/ Porn, Black Thought, & Truck North)
  11. (Up Theme) Unwritten (f/ Mercedes Martinez)
  12. Lost Desire (f/ Malik B & Talib Kweli)
  13. The Show (f/ Common)
  14. Rising Up (f/ Wale & Chrissette Michelle)

- HIDDEN TRACK: Live at WPFW (Howard University), 1994
- HIDDEN TRACK: The Pow Wow 2

 
< Prev   Next >
 

Mamma Mia! Trailer. July 18th release date. Official Website

Login Here

DIGG IT? 
A 'n' E Vibe wants to know which articles you Digg. At the bottom of reviews & articles you can find the Digg It symbol. If you loved what you read, let others know about it!


CONGRATULATIONS!
charles
Ohio, USA
books1.jpg
A 'n E VIBE Prize Pack WINNER!
 
Register with AnEVibe
to win Contests,Prize Packs & More!

TOP FICTION: Week Of July 7th

1. FEARLESS FOURTEEN, by Janet Evanovich
2. SAIL, by James Patterson and Howard Roughan
3. TAILSPIN, by Catherine Coulter
4. ROGUE, by Danielle Steel
5. THE HOST, by Stephenie Meyer
 

stone_angel_ver2.jpg

  NEW FILM RELEASES

WEEK OF JULY 7th

1. The Stone Angel                2. Journey To The Center Of The Earth
3. Hancock
4. Meet Dave

coldplay_viva_la_vida.jpg

TOP ALBUMS

WEEK OF JUNE 30th

1. Coldplay 'Viva La Vida'

2. Camp Rock 'Soundtrack'

3. Lil Wayne 'Tha Carter III' 

4. Offspring 'Rise & Fall, Rage & Grace''

5. Disturbed 'Indestructible'

mandela_lg.jpg
Nelson Mandela turns 90! 
  Hyde Park in London (England) was host to the 46664 AIDS/HIV charity event to both celebrate the heroes birthday, and  promote awareness of his charity named after the number he was gave for his 27 year socially unjust prison sentence on Robin Island (South Africa). July 18th welcomed the `big stars`from Will Smith (who hosted), to attendees Oprah, and Uma (Thurman) the event had `Birthday Bash`wrote all over it. The performers list was endless, such as Annie Lennox, and Josh Groban who both gave delightful tributes to Mandela`s legacy.