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Waajeed has an answer to the
tired debate about what to do or where to take hip hop: Blow the whole damn
thing up. The War L.P. does just that. Through the use of “weapons of
mass percussion” this mostly instrumental affair manages to do what many artists
of today are incapable of…make an artistic statement.
As one half of the Platinum
Pied Pipers, Waajeed was at least 50% responsible for one of the most creative
efforts this millennium in the group’s Triple P album. However, Waajeed
is too forward-thinking to simply rehash such an artistic masterpiece to pacify
his cult following. The War L.P. instead has a much, much darker and
grittier feel than the electronic neo soul of Triple P. At times the
album has hard rock textures and guitar riffs that meld with the rough-edged
boom-bap that only Motown can produce. At other points the album has the feel of
futuristically soulful electronica mixed with smart and relevant samples. The
sinister synths of “Anything” are as raw and cold as Detroit itself while “The
Dragon” is Jeed’s self-described ode to “cheap-ass 80’s” movie soundtracks like
The Terminator. Waajeed’s cuts are showcased on several of his own tracks but
are particularly deft (and affecting) on the suite of J Dilla-produced beats
towards the middle of the album. The production is also garnished with its share
of blaring sirens, falling bombs, bullets and explosions that contribute to the
canvass of sonic destruction and despair on which Waajeed operates.
The guest appearances aren’t
as diverse or robust as on the Triple P effort, but when vocalists do
appear over Jeed’s beats, the music is taken to another level. All vocals are
mostly done by Detroit-bred artists, which effectively add to the cohesion and
hunger of this album. Tiombe Lockhart’s (the lone non-Detroiter) apocalyptic
careening on “O’Bloody Days, O’Starry Nights On The Bowery” blend seamlessly
with Waajeed’s use of cascading synthesizer and Dilla-like soul clap. Elsewhere,
the heavy rock feel of Invincible’s metaphoric ode to the love of her craft on
“Pick Your Poison” and her bleak tales of Detroit living on “Place Where We
Dwell” paint pictures so vividly overwhelming that you might have to step back
from the album for a bit.
This effort should not be
looked upon as an instrumental album or beat tape the likes of
Petestrumentals or, more recently, Rappers Best Friend. Rather,
The War LP is a concept album, where the marriage of menacing beats,
perilous lyrics and haunting vocals make it the kind of musical H-bomb aimed at
an industry prone to static.
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