Most Popular

  • The Hard Lie
    How former Ticket host Greg Williams destroyed the most dynamic duo in Dallas talk radio through drugs, deceit and disaffection
  • American Girls
    Crossing between American and Egyptian cultures, he Said girls made one deadly misstep: They fell in love
  • The Dirt Doctor
    How radio show host Howard Garrett pushed Dallas to the center of the organic gardening movement through passion, principle and molasses
  • Our 20th Music Awards
    1988-2008: Two Decades of DOMA
  • The Caretaker
    One mother's crusade to better the life of her mentally retarded son and the system that failed him

Recent Articles

Recent Articles by Mikael Wood

National Features >

  • City Pages

    Being Tron Guy

    Meet the man inside the glowing Spandex unitard, who refuses to be a "geek pinata."

    By Ben Palosaari

  • Riverfront Times

    Evil Amongst Us

    The nation's best known--and perhaps only--demonologist keeps up the struggle against Satanic spirits.

    By Aimee Levitt

  • Miami New Times

    Taps

    Sensing the end of an era, bottled-water companies spend billions to keep an eco-unfriendly industry alive.

    By Lee Klein

  • Village Voice

    John Steinbeck's Ghosts

    A man fascinated by a violent 1930s strike solves a mystery with the help of a mobster's musician.

    By Tony Ortega

Rhymefest

Blue Collar (J/Allido)

By Mikael Wood

Published on August 10, 2006

This Chicago MC gives a good name to conscious rap, too often the genre where creativity and fun go to die. Like his pal and benefactor Kanye West (with whom he won a Grammy last year for co-writing "Jesus Walks"), Rhymefest is obsessed with the intersection between virtue and temptation. Blue Collar, his big-budget debut, is filled with evidence of the rapper's struggle to reconcile his material desires with his conviction that true happiness lies in transcending those cravings; as on West's records, the juiciest moments occur when Rhymefest can't quite reason the contradiction away.

Of course, what makes Blue Collar's complexities worth savoring--and what distinguishes it from many of its bargain-bin conscious-rap counterparts--is the top-shelf collection of beats by high-priced producers such as Just Blaze, Cool & Dre and West himself; the disc's appealingly glossy sound acknowledges that, on the radio, introspective philosophizing still (rightly) answers to the almighty groove. Rhymefest has the most fun in the handful of tracks helmed by well-connected celebrity DJ Mark Ronson. In "Devil's Pie" he invites George Bush, Donald Rumsfeld and Condoleezza Rice to sample their own bullshit over a funky chop-up of the Strokes' "Someday." It might be the most buoyant protest song of the summer.



Dallas Observer Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff
Backpage.com