The Streets: Why Should I Care?
TREW
2,037 Posts
so after trying hard to avoid listening to The Streets (and to a lesser extent Lady Sovereign) I was trapped in urban outfitters, discussing throw pillows with my fiance when one of the employees decided to rock The Streets (they may of had it piped in muzak-style, who knows?)anyhow, after having listened to half of the album, i still can't understand the hype.. every review i've read seems to be conscious of the horrendous lyrical content but the rewiewer will still give the album a pass...can anyone shed some light/opinions/related urban outfitters horror stories?
Comments
Some of the most awful music ever foisted on an unsuspecting public...I have only ever heard it in stores(Borders,Old navy,etc), and been forced to leave whatever shopping I might have been doing. Terrible shit.
However I find Lady Sov totally unlistenable...(This years Neneh Cherry/MIA etc...)
Last time I was in a branch of Urban Outfitters, I heard D'Angelo's version of "Feel Like Makin' Love", which I'd hitherto managed to miss completely. For a song that's become somewhat played-out down the years, it's pretty good.
http://www.austinchronicle.com/issues/dispatch/2004-06-04/music_phases.html
The Streets
A Grand Don't Come for Free (Vice)
Britain's Mike Skinner has thrown down a one-of-a-kind hip-hop album[/b], bursting with heart and Northern soul. So sharp are his rhymes, you could eunuchize 99% of the gall that passes for rap in the States[/b] and still have enough edge to shave your willie for your big date next weekend. Clever segue that, since A Grand Don't Come for Free is one of the most knowing breakup albums ever cut, one that slices deep into your battered romantic psyche. Skinner's sophomore opus is also a concept album, on which he plays the hapless Mike, an East End geezer who, in the course of a single day, loses ??1,000, his girlfriend Simone (voiced by MC C-Mone), and very nearly his sanity. His ongoing woes sputter out in the flat cockney accent of a mate with too much time on his hands and not half as much smarts. There's more story than songs, but between the garagey UK beats of "Wouldn't Have It Any Other Way," which finds Mike stoned and joyous on his girlfriend's couch, and elegaic closer "Empty Cans," with Mike mentally waging war against the world, there's a wily narrative previously unheard in any genre. Of course, this being the Streets, it's all about being, at the end, in the dark, all by your lonesome. "This is the beginning of hard times to come," sings Skinner, but he's wrong. This is the ending of the first hip-hop classic of the new millennium[/b].
Queen of Chav-Hop
sounds about right. but definitely not accurate. ha.
haha.. these critics (no offense to your hommie) don't seem to realize that his flow is off in a major way.
To echo DocMcoy and diverge a bit, as an american living in London when I talk to your average UK hip hop listener (non specialist) there is the perception that most thug cats are completely fronting and somebody who's basically talking about everyday working class shit is easier to relate to.
While I agree that the majority of the famous American cats bragging about crack cooking and shootouts are fronting, to dismiss all of that as being image-oriented undermines the role Hip Hop has had traditionally of letting people know what goes on in the hood, which is important.
But uh, music-wise the Streets are wack. no question.
to me, it sounds like a british version of Eminem's "look at me, i'm sensitive" songs like "cleaning out the closet" etc etc, with the all the off-key vocal hooks...
when i heard the first streets LP, i didn't like it, but i could understand why people would.
however, hearing some guy go on about how hard is to be famous, b/c you can't do a line b/c someone might have a camera phone, etc etc is pretty fucking boring.
when it comes to touchy feely UK rap, Wiley does it much better...
Hotel Expressionism is the shit though.
maybe this is better:
Original Pirate Material is an important document, wether you like it or not.
He probably should stick to the flicks I guess.....
it's like, if I want to hear hip hop, I'll listen to Hot 97 or college
radio or whatever - but if I wanna get my Doc Beezie on and dive into
nostalgia for the early-90's with some Alice in Chains and Smashing
Pumpkins, why I gotta have my grunge-reverie disrupted by some godawful
cockney rhyming slang over playskool beats??
Nothing exposes the racism of american popular radio more than the
fact that these so-called "alternative" and "Rock" stations will play
rap if it's performed by white people or an in-their-eyes clever but
harmless Brit, but would never in a million years represent That Real Schitt??
I've always found that to be bullshit too. Although I never would have stated it so eloquently.(no sarcasm) Then again, the urban stations won't even play De La Soul, so That Real Schitt is getting the bozack all around.
Yeah Treddin' On Thin Ice is a criminally slept on album.
As for the Streets, put much of the hype down to the UK media getting overly excited about anything that seems to offer a "true british voice" in the world of so called urban music.
I still think his first album has a certain appeal due to it's basic nature and amusing lyrics but the rest of it leaves me pretty cold. His new album is utter shite by the way.
The critics are correct in only one respect - he may be one of the true voices of urban youth because seriously, he's barely literate, like 99% of his generation. It has absolutely no artistic merit. Just because a generation is too lazy to learn anything beyond text-message English does not make it acceptable.
Good luck to him, in a Jade Goody way, for spinning shit into gold, but it's more a sad reflection of the public's low standards and inability to seek something not directly placed under their noses than him flexing any modicum of talent.
I entirely agree that the most annoying thing about him is how he's used by critics in the u.s. to hammer at american rap music, which is obsenely stupid and borderline racist.
the new one is better, IMHO...
Their music is just bad, no need to justify it or care about it.