<data:blog.pageTitle/>

This Page

has moved to a new address:

https://northernheads.com

Sorry for the inconvenience…

Redirection provided by Blogger to WordPress Migration Service
Northern Heads: Open Mike Eagle - Dark Comedy review

11.26.2014

Open Mike Eagle - Dark Comedy review

So many 'Hip Hop' 'albums' and even more 'mixtapes' come out in a year that you're excused dear reader if you can't make out the kernel from the chaff.  Dark Comedy by Open Mike Eagle is the sort of album, of any genre, that reaches out and grabs you after about 17 seconds and keeps paying off all the way through.

Eagle is an L.A. based rapper born in Chicago.  He's affiliated with the Project Blowed crew, a legendary group of west coast underground freestylers including the singular Aceyalone, Busdriver, Mikah 9 and Abstract Rude
Rather than adopt the affected pose of a rented-wardrobe second unit hip hop video he invokes and calls out all of these cliches in prompt order.

If he sounds smart-as-hell it's because he is.   Eagle, born Michael Eagle II, is a serious brainiac.  He's a former special education teacher and "he co-authored and participated in a study conducted by the National Institutes of Health that observed the locations of increased brain activity during freestyle rapping".  Plus anyone who namechecks Joe Walsh ('analogue Eagle Joe Walsh bandanna on' - Thirsty Ego Raps) and Little Lord Fauntleroy ("I changed my rap name to Lil' Wonder Boy/ You change your rap name to Little Lord Fauntleroy").  Little Lord Fauntleroy (the title of a 19th century children's novel and a term for an overly precious silly bloused nitwit) isn't exactly a name you hear checked in Hip Hop these days.  It's the sort of reference that sent fake feds running for fake notepads when they picked it up on a wire in Tony Soprano's basement.


It gets better.  If you like your brainy Hip Hop without the silly blouses a good mitigator is a healthy dose of comedy.  In that regard Eagle comes from the Kyu Sakamoto school of hard knocks. Sakamoto's hit song Sukiyaki (the name of a steak dish) was popular with GI's returning from the Korean war.  Really titled Ue o Muite Arukou it translates as: "I look up as I walk/ So that the tears won't fall".  Except Eagle doesn't seem to be getting over the heartbreak of a romance with a Japanese starlet.  He's too busy changing diapers and rapping about them.  Which is also a tired cliché in Hip Hop these days everyone uses that schtick most recently from memory Busdriver who (produces Deathmate Black on Dark Comedy) also has a strong album out this year (Perfect Hair).  Except Eagle is aware of the cliche and exploits it to deft effect.

Then there's the references and referentiality; Dave Gahan, Jon Lovitz and Doug Stamper (one of whom is fictional).   It was the last one and you need to have seen House of Cards to get the reference (Stamper is Spacey's character Frank Underwood's chief of staff and sick fixer).  Even better on the song- appropriately titled Doug Stamper (Advice Raps) - Hannibal Burress (most famous recently for being the comedian who said out loud that Bill Cosby is a rapist becoming an ally to all the women he's raped giving them much needed legitimacy) is featured (although it's rumoured that Amy Poehler ghost wrote the verse).













Labels: , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home