Robert Christgau's Music Criticism Blog - Expert Witness - MSN Music

Spoek Mathambo/Big K.R.I.T.

Think Positive--Or Not

By Xgau Apr 10, 2012 1:14AM

Spoek Mathambo: Father Creeper (Sub Pop)

Although I slotted this Soweto-raised 27-year-old's 2010 Mshini Wam as promising kwaito electro, I never imagined it promised a hip-hop record so dark it reveals his labelmate Shabazz Palaces for the arty pothead we can assume he is. Contra the nervous crits who claim to hear a "palpable feeling of hope" or "summery highlife melodies" (highlife, eh? I've heard of that‑-African, right?), even the sweet opener about the sexual maturation of a guy who was feeling it before his pubes came in ends ominously. After that come evocations of oppression only more brutal because they're sometimes dissociated‑-blood diamonds, why we hate our crap jobs, the deadening surrender of the tricking American hip-hop makes light of. The music suits because it's also dissociated‑-beaty enough to keep your foot tapping and your subconscious involved, but devoid of the escapist joy that is the miracle of so much Afropop produced from equally horrendous daily struggles. A

 

Big K.R.I.T.: 4Eva N a Day (free download)

He was just Kritikal, but the Mississippi underground had trouble pronouncing that word‑-check out the consonant-averse "1986" intro to understand why‑-so he made it Big K.R.I.T., claimed it stood for King Remembered in Time, and continued a rapping career that imagined high school coaching as a fallback. No hip-hopper has ever been bigger on getting up when you're down and making every minute count. Could get tiresome, but on a no-cameos mixtape Def Jam couldn't clear, his proudly drawled, lucidly conceived preachments go undefeated. Almost every soulful track grew on me, with the clincher "Down & Out," one of his periodic explanations of why sometimes he sips and smokes instead of trying yet again. A MINUS

 

232Comments
Apr 10, 2012 9:29AM
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Made a slight change in Mathambo. I know he's still in Jo'burg, but he apparently no longer lives in Soweto, so I made it raised instead of based. BTW, the same interview indicated that his family including his 100-year-old grandmother are landlords in Soweto. Doesn't change the songs, but worth pondering nonetheless.


Apr 10, 2012 8:44AM
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And the hip-hop onslaught continues - wonderful!

It was a tough realization for this indie/punk lifer that the guitar kids just weren't doing it for me these days, but it's undeniable that there's some mild crisis point ongoing in that world, which I see very little evidence of changing anytime soon. But the beats keep bringing it, both above- and below-ground. Very glad to hear the solid vote in favor of Spoek Mathambo.

how does everyone feel about Kendrick Lamar?
Can't speak for everyone, and it seemed like last year's Section.80 was a bit overpraised. But for a twenty-three year old guy from Compton, he seemed pretty wise in the ways of politics and the legacy of Ronald Reagan, and I liked his samples, especially the noisy jazz assemblage that conclude the album. 
Apr 10, 2012 8:34AM
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Fraptron: Simply put, Evans is way too impressionistic for my tastes, his harmonic preoccupations way over my head formally without generating much for the gut or the untrained ear. Great on Kind of Blue, though.


Apr 10, 2012 8:15AM
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Out of curiosity -- how does everyone feel about Kendrick Lamar?
Apr 10, 2012 7:41AM
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Did Bill Evans never grab you, Robert?

 

I'm just curious because I've never heard any critique of Evans aside from praise from his claque. I'm on neither side, really, but still interested to hear an opposing view.

Apr 10, 2012 6:38AM
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If anyone's interested, Concord is reissuing Monk's Misterioso in 24-bit. Also The Quintet and a Bill Evans I can always do without.
Apr 10, 2012 6:25AM
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i'm loving all the recent A-spectrum free music

Apr 10, 2012 5:01AM
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Spin also gave Father Creeper a 9/10.  That review is worth reading.  I'd tell you about it if our overseers would let me.


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Interest piqued. Been playing, and enjoying, Big K.R.I.T. for a few weeks already, but Spoek Mathambo has flown under my radar, likely because the reviews haven't been wholly positive; A quick giggle search seems to suggest that only PopMatters and the Guardian were close to the Dean's assessments of Father Creeper, and reading some of those less positive reviews, I can't say I'm impressed with their arguments.

Lucky for me, I know who I trust, and why.
Apr 10, 2012 2:26AM
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Dan -- Shush!  Don't blow it for us west coasters!
Apr 10, 2012 1:23AM
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Two points I tried to squeeze into the reviews proper but decided didn't fit there. On Mathambo, I strongly advise buying a physical CD. The lyrics are pretty clear to the ear, but the booklet helps on the fuzzy moments and with concentration in general. On K.R.I.T. (boy am I getting to hate those periods--he's Merrill Garbus's brother under the skin), the intro to "1986" I mention is actually tacked onto the end of the preceding track.


Apr 10, 2012 1:21AM
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Adding to the excitement of these two reviews is the fact that this may be the earliest the Dean has ever posted - a welcome treat for this insomniac. At 3:18 EDT, the hunt begins. Get some sleep Bob!
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about the blogger

Robert Christgau

Starting in 1967, Robert Christgau has covered popular music for The Village Voice, Esquire, Blender, Playboy, Rolling Stone, and many other publications. He teaches in New York University's Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music, maintains a comprehensive website at robertchristgau.com, and has published five books based on his journalism. He has written for MSN Music since 2006.

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