Just
when you thought that the golden era of hip-hop had disappeared
forever, it resurfaces on Journey to Anywhere with these cats from
Long Beach called Ugly Duckling. Obviously a reference to the children's
story of the same name, these Caucasian rhymers seem too comfortable
in their element to even live up to that moniker. Made up of Andy,
Dizzy, and Young Einstein on the tables, UD rip it with old school
party lyrics, jazzy, horn infused beats, and impeccable production.
Throughout the album, smooth as silk basslines and crisp piano loops
flood your auditory canals, perfectly in sync with the UD's laid
back flows.
A great facet of
this album, of which there are many, is the subject matter. These
Cali boys go from talking old school experience on "Friday Night",
playing wanna be pimps on "Pick Up Lines" and trashing the mainstream
money grubbers on "A Little Samba."
On the title track,
we succumb to a sleepy, melodic beat on which Andy and Dizzy concoct
a whirlwind journey through a trippy world filled with the greats
of old 70's children's programming. "I was greeted on arrival by
drums of steel, a one man band called Surreal. I asked him of law
and regulation. He said it was up to me. This was no longer reality,
in here I was truly free." Some of Andy's lyrics point to obvious
metaphors describing his feelings towards hip-hop and others simply
entertain with his fantastic imagination and wit.
Upon first listen,
many heads will immediately jump to the conclusion that these musicians
are jumping on the J5 tip. Admittedly, my first impression was the
same. You can even liken a lot of their style to Bizarre Ride era
Pharcyde, with the wacked out subject matter and flow. The UD set
themselves apart though. I think the only thing they have in common
with J5 is a love for vintage hip-hop and party moving. Its refreshing
to listen to an album and actually enjoy the simplicity of what
hip-hop once was. No wax thugs or credit card millionaires on this
album. Strictly nasty beats, smooth lyrics, and an understanding
of what hip-hop once was and can be again.
courtesy
of hiphop-elements.com
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