Blakroc is
a Rap/Rock collaboration between The Black Keys, Dan Auerbach and Patrick
Carney, and several hip hop and R&B artists that came about in 2009, in collaboration
with Damon Dash, co-founder and former co-owner of Roc-A-Fella Records, who
oversaw the project. The album features guest appearances from several hip hop
and R&B acts, namely Mos Def, Nicole Wray, Pharoahe Monch, Ludacris, Billy
Danze of M.O.P., Q-Tip of A Tribe Called Quest, Jim Jones and NOE of ByrdGang,
as well as Raekwon, RZA and the late Ol' Dirty Bastard of Wu-Tang Clan.
Rap and
rock don’t always make easy bedfellows, and the combination of the two genres
has mostly produced a case of ever-diminishing returns over the years. It all
started so well, with Run DMC and the Beastie Boys successfully melding giant
riffs with ingenious rhymes. But in 2009, the most talked-about rap/rock
alliance is Lil Wayne’s Rebirth, which has been delayed and rescheduled by a
record company who appear to have got cold feet over the whole idea. So it’s
with some trepidation that anyone will approach Blakroc, a brief blast into the
rap/rock world from Akron
two-piece The Black Keys. Their savvy move was hiring Jay-Z’s Roc-A-Fella
partner Damon Dash to help with the project – he enlivened the 11-day recording
sessions in New York
by bringing RZA, Raekwon, Mos Def and Ol’ Dirty Bastard on board, the latter
appearing from beyond the grave.
ODB gets
the album off to a fine start, alongside Ludacris, on Coochie, full of vast,
echoed drums and an infectious treated guitar line. Mos Def has plenty of experience
working with live bands and sounds like the most comfortable performer here on
the straightforward blues jam On the Vista, but the album works best when
Timbaland-inspired odd noises and circuitous loops are stirred into the mix. The
best example of this is Pharoahe Monch/RZA effort Dollaz & Sense, which is
played out to a heavily tremolo’d guitar riff that bounces all over the track. The key
template of Patrick Carney’s cavernous drum sound and thick, raw, overdriven
guitar noise from Dan Auerbach remain a constant throughout, but the band also
introduce other influences. Hard Times pulls hard on a whistling riff that
could have been lifted straight from Harlem
River Drive ’s Idle Hands, and Nicole Wray’s
soulful Why Can’t I Forget Him, delivered over squelching wah-ed out guitar, is
a welcome diversion from the norm.
It doesn’t
always work – RZA’s Tellin’ Me Things veers too far in the direction of
uncomplicated, clumpy rock, sounding like an off-cut from Mos Def’s The
Ecstatic – in this writer’s opinion, something of a misstep. But for the most
part this is a surprisingly compelling and welcome rejoining of the rap and
rock worlds that successfully captures the off-the-cuff nature of the recording
sessions.
Track listing
01. "Coochie" (feat. Ludacris & Ol' Dirty Bastard) - 4:08
02. "On the Vista" (feat. Mos Def) - 2:39
03. "Hard Times" (feat. NOE) - 2:38
04. "Dollaz & Sense" (feat. RZA & Pharoahe Monch) - 3:47
05. "Why Can’t I Forget Him" (feat. Nicole Wray) - 4:16
06. "Stay Off the Fuckin’ Flowers" (feat. Raekwon) - 2:31
07. "Ain't Nothing Like You (Hoochie Coo)" feat. Mos Def & Jim Jones) - 3:23
08. "Hope You’re Happy" (feat. Billy Danze of M.O.P., Q-Tip, & Nicole Wray) - 2:11
09. "Tellin’ Me Things" (feat. RZA) 2:39
10. "What You Do to Me" (feat. Billy Danze of M.O.P., Jim Jones, & Nicole Wray) - 5:14
11. "Done Did It" (feat. Nicole Wray & NOE) - 3:29
Credits
The Black Keys:
Dan Auerbach
Patrick Carney
features:
Mos Def
Nicole Wray
Pharoahe Monch
Ludacris
Billy Danze of M.O.P.
Q-Tip of A Tribe Called Quest
Jim Jones
NOE of ByrdGang
Raekwon
RZA
Ol' Dirty Bastard of Wu-Tang Clan
Recorded By – Joel Hamilton
Mastered By – Adam Ayan
Mixed By – Clay Holley, Joel Hamilton, Tchad Blake
Producer: Damon Dash (exec.), Dan Auerbach, Patrick Carney, Joel Hamilton
Notes
Recorded: 2009 (Brooklyn, New York City, New York)
Genre: Rap rock, alternative hip hop, garage rock, blues rock
Length: 37:47
Label: BlakRoc LLC, Cooperative Music, V2 Records
© 2009
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