The high-pitched alter-ego of the Lootpack‘s Madlib, Quasimoto concocts one of the most creative hip-hop albums in recent times. Sounding like a lost demo tape from 1992, and made under the influence of some serious mind-altering substances, The Unseen finds Quasi indulging in scattered, stream-of-consciousness rhymes and a collection of dusty jazz breaks and loops. Not only does the album sample the frantic vocals of ’70s playwright Melvin Van Peebles, it also shares an affinity with Peebles’s spoken-word albums, such as Serious as a Heart Attack. Both artists are most interesting when they take chances, risking alienation and/or ridicule.
Written by Spencer Sloe on September 14, 2008 7:37 pm
DAILY LINKS
- Who's Hotter? Gabrielle Union or Meagan Good? -- huffingtonpost.com
- Ashanti Salsa Dances With Victor Cruz [Video] -- bossip.com
- Bangin Candy: Draya Michele [Photos] -- hiphopwired.com
- New Music: Young Jeezy Feat. Andre 3000, Jay-Z, and Drake "I Do (Remix)" -- vibe.com
- Music Tour Guide: Drake -- blackatlas.com
- What Do Women Really Want In Bed? -- main.aol.com
- 9 More MCs That Desperately Need A Name Change -- smokingsection.uproxx.com
- Friday Five: Places That Celebrate MLK Day -- blackatlas.com













