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Reply #600 posted 03/07/08 10:44am

Rhondab

JackieBlue said:

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

OK, I know I can't be the only one who noticed this but the time listed for the tracks does not coincide with the time of most of the actual songs on the CD. Has anyone pieced together any significance of the extra portions of each song? I kind of went through and tried to see if there might be a message there but I don't think so. Also, does anyone know what the 42 laws might be that Analog girl says she lost at the end of the first track?


I haven’t noticed the timing on the songs yet but I’m almost positive the 42 laws is a reference to the 42 Laws of Ma’at – the Egyptian Goddess of truth, balance and justice. She is usually depicted a scale with a feather on one side and a heart in the other. If your heart outweighs the feather you have done wrong in your life. The laws are the divine principles to live by but of course some have been tweaked to suit modern understanding and times. Some consider several of them to be the foundation for the Ten Commandments.

On Twinkle I think the guy speaking in ancient Kemet says something about Ma’at but not sure.


The 42 Divine Principles of the Goddess Maat
1. I have not committed sin.

2. I have not committed robbery with violence.

3. I have not stolen.

4. I have not slain men or women

5. I have not stolen food.

6. I have not swindled offerings.

7. I have not stolen from God/Goddess.

8. I have not told lies.

9. I have not carried away food.

10. I have not cursed.

11. I have not closed my ears to truth

12. I have not committed adultery.

13. I have not made anyone cry.

14. I have not felt sorrow without reason

15. I have not assaulted anyone

16. I am not deceitful.

17. I have not stolen anyone’s land

18. I have not been an eavesdropper

19. I have not falsely accused anyone.

20. I have not been angry without reason.

21. I have not seduced anyone’s wife.

22. I have not polluted myself.

23. I have not terrorized anyone.

24. I have not disobeyed the Law.

25. I have not been exclusively angry.

26. I have not cursed God/Goddess.

27. I have not behaved with violence.

28. I have not caused disruption of peace.

29. I have not acted hastily or without thought.

30. I have not overstepped my boundaries of concern.

31. I have not exaggerated my words when speaking.

32. I have not worked evil.

33. I have not used evil thoughts, words or deeds.

34. I have not polluted the water

35. I have not spoken angrily or arrogantly.

36. I have not cursed anyone in thought, word or deeds.

37. I have not placed myself on a Pedestal.

38. I have not stolen what belongs to God/Goddess.

39. I have not stolen from or disrespected the deceased.

40. I have not taken food from a child.

41. I have not acted with insolence.

42. I have not destroyed property belonging to God/Goddess.
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Reply #601 posted 03/07/08 11:35am

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

Rhondab said:

JackieBlue said:



I haven’t noticed the timing on the songs yet but I’m almost positive the 42 laws is a reference to the 42 Laws of Ma’at – the Egyptian Goddess of truth, balance and justice. She is usually depicted a scale with a feather on one side and a heart in the other. If your heart outweighs the feather you have done wrong in your life. The laws are the divine principles to live by but of course some have been tweaked to suit modern understanding and times. Some consider several of them to be the foundation for the Ten Commandments.

On Twinkle I think the guy speaking in ancient Kemet says something about Ma’at but not sure.


The 42 Divine Principles of the Goddess Maat
1. I have not committed sin.

2. I have not committed robbery with violence.

3. I have not stolen.

4. I have not slain men or women

5. I have not stolen food.

6. I have not swindled offerings.

7. I have not stolen from God/Goddess.

8. I have not told lies.

9. I have not carried away food.

10. I have not cursed.

11. I have not closed my ears to truth

12. I have not committed adultery.

13. I have not made anyone cry.

14. I have not felt sorrow without reason

15. I have not assaulted anyone

16. I am not deceitful.

17. I have not stolen anyone’s land

18. I have not been an eavesdropper

19. I have not falsely accused anyone.

20. I have not been angry without reason.

21. I have not seduced anyone’s wife.

22. I have not polluted myself.

23. I have not terrorized anyone.

24. I have not disobeyed the Law.

25. I have not been exclusively angry.

26. I have not cursed God/Goddess.

27. I have not behaved with violence.

28. I have not caused disruption of peace.

29. I have not acted hastily or without thought.

30. I have not overstepped my boundaries of concern.

31. I have not exaggerated my words when speaking.

32. I have not worked evil.

33. I have not used evil thoughts, words or deeds.

34. I have not polluted the water

35. I have not spoken angrily or arrogantly.

36. I have not cursed anyone in thought, word or deeds.

37. I have not placed myself on a Pedestal.

38. I have not stolen what belongs to God/Goddess.

39. I have not stolen from or disrespected the deceased.

40. I have not taken food from a child.

41. I have not acted with insolence.

42. I have not destroyed property belonging to God/Goddess.


clapping !!!!! biggrin

I thought maybe the 42 laws were hidden in the album somewhere because she says "OK, whenever he say a key word, everyone just shout on the cue" and so I was trying to identify those shouts and cues lol EXCELLENT!. I'm learning some new stuff today dancing jig
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #602 posted 03/07/08 11:52am

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

NDRU said:

llf553 said:

I put this CD in my everyday playlist and moved on . . . for about 2 days!

I had to go back to listening to this thing on repeat. Me, Soldier, The Cell, That Hump, Telephone, Honey . . . I like how I feel listening to this!!


That's what I keep going back to. I still don't really love any song, exactly, but it makes me feel more creative just to listen to it. At times a song like Twinkle might feel like an experiment than a masterpiece, but it doesn't sound like the same ol' thing.

I was just talking about how there feels like there's nothing new in music. This is new. It reminds me of MIles' ON the Corner, which might not be as rich or have as many classics as Kind Of Blue, but I love how it creates a sound I've never heard before.

Well I just compared the album to Miles Davis, I guess that's a compliment lol


lol

OK, I can't believe how many people are struggling with this album musically. There are Mama's Gun type moments on here. Me and Soldier definitely and to a certain degree My Hump and Telephone. And while none of those are Penitentiary Philosophy as regards to her singing with real vigor, how can you not love the frantic energy of cell or the hellish landscape of Twinkle, whos name serves a dual purpose. Named after the little twinkling note throughout and to draw contrast to the fact that this song is not Twinkly at all.....They don't know their language, They don't know their God. How fucking tragic.

I loved how you drew the Radiohead contrast and I completely appreciate that about this album. Towards the end of My People she gasps...Good Morning, did you have a dream?... I see this album TOTALLY as a dream landscape. Dreams.....

You can walk with your mother through a forest and come upon a pregnant 98 year old black woman. You and your mother lay her down and your mother holds her up while giving you instructions on how to deliver the baby. You look up in panic because you have never delivered a child before. As you look up you see that your mother and the old black woman have traded places and that it is the old woman propping up your mother and that she is giving birth to you. With that realization you are transported into the womb to experience your own birth. And all this can happen without ever once questioning the reality of it! lol Does nobody use their imagination when listening to music?
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #603 posted 03/07/08 1:51pm

JackieBlue

avatar

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

NDRU said:



That's what I keep going back to. I still don't really love any song, exactly, but it makes me feel more creative just to listen to it. At times a song like Twinkle might feel like an experiment than a masterpiece, but it doesn't sound like the same ol' thing.

I was just talking about how there feels like there's nothing new in music. This is new. It reminds me of MIles' ON the Corner, which might not be as rich or have as many classics as Kind Of Blue, but I love how it creates a sound I've never heard before.

Well I just compared the album to Miles Davis, I guess that's a compliment lol


lol

OK, I can't believe how many people are struggling with this album musically. There are Mama's Gun type moments on here. Me and Soldier definitely and to a certain degree My Hump and Telephone. And while none of those are Penitentiary Philosophy as regards to her singing with real vigor, how can you not love the frantic energy of cell or the hellish landscape of Twinkle, whos name serves a dual purpose. Named after the little twinkling note throughout and to draw contrast to the fact that this song is not Twinkly at all.....They don't know their language, They don't know their God. How fucking tragic.

I loved how you drew the Radiohead contrast and I completely appreciate that about this album. Towards the end of My People she gasps...Good Morning, did you have a dream?... I see this album TOTALLY as a dream landscape. Dreams.....

You can walk with your mother through a forest and come upon a pregnant 98 year old black woman. You and your mother lay her down and your mother holds her up while giving you instructions on how to deliver the baby. You look up in panic because you have never delivered a child before. As you look up you see that your mother and the old black woman have traded places and that it is the old woman propping up your mother and that she is giving birth to you. With that realization you are transported into the womb to experience your own birth. And all this can happen without ever once questioning the reality of it! lol Does nobody use their imagination when listening to music?


Probably not and even less thanks to music videos.
[Edited 3/7/08 13:52pm]
Been gone for a minute, now I'm back with the jump off
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Reply #604 posted 03/07/08 2:08pm

horatio

confused






confused





why is this not a sticky any more?










confused confused
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Reply #605 posted 03/07/08 2:08pm

paisleypark4

avatar

Graycap23 said:

paisleypark4 said:



Im guessing The Rainbow Children was too much for you 2 ha?

PP4, please tell me that u are NOT comparing this dribble 2 The Rainbow Children.....


NO he dont like this album and is dissing it bad, they must be accustomed to verse bridge chorus cheap fade-out endings
Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #606 posted 03/07/08 2:11pm

Graycap23

paisleypark4 said:

Graycap23 said:


PP4, please tell me that u are NOT comparing this dribble 2 The Rainbow Children.....


NO he dont like this album and is dissing it bad, they must be accustomed to verse bridge chorus cheap fade-out endings

lol.....
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Reply #607 posted 03/07/08 2:42pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

JackieBlue said:

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:



lol

OK, I can't believe how many people are struggling with this album musically. There are Mama's Gun type moments on here. Me and Soldier definitely and to a certain degree My Hump and Telephone. And while none of those are Penitentiary Philosophy as regards to her singing with real vigor, how can you not love the frantic energy of cell or the hellish landscape of Twinkle, whos name serves a dual purpose. Named after the little twinkling note throughout and to draw contrast to the fact that this song is not Twinkly at all.....They don't know their language, They don't know their God. How fucking tragic.

I loved how you drew the Radiohead contrast and I completely appreciate that about this album. Towards the end of My People she gasps...Good Morning, did you have a dream?... I see this album TOTALLY as a dream landscape. Dreams.....

You can walk with your mother through a forest and come upon a pregnant 98 year old black woman. You and your mother lay her down and your mother holds her up while giving you instructions on how to deliver the baby. You look up in panic because you have never delivered a child before. As you look up you see that your mother and the old black woman have traded places and that it is the old woman propping up your mother and that she is giving birth to you. With that realization you are transported into the womb to experience your own birth. And all this can happen without ever once questioning the reality of it! lol Does nobody use their imagination when listening to music?


Probably not and even less thanks to music videos.
[Edited 3/7/08 13:52pm]


Yeah, many want microwaved instant meals or 30 second drive through. Hopefully the art of selecting, smelling and sampling the ingredients, setting the time to cook them into a delicious dish and savouring every bite of your labors is not lost for good. This is a damn fine meal nod
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #608 posted 03/07/08 2:48pm

horatio

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

JackieBlue said:



Probably not and even less thanks to music videos.
[Edited 3/7/08 13:52pm]


Yeah, many want microwaved instant meals or 30 second drive through. Hopefully the art of selecting, smelling and sampling the ingredients, setting the time to cook them into a delicious dish and savouring every bite of your labors is not lost for good. This is a damn fine meal nod



i made chicken soup from scratch a couple days ago biggrin
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Reply #609 posted 03/07/08 2:49pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

horatio said:

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:



Yeah, many want microwaved instant meals or 30 second drive through. Hopefully the art of selecting, smelling and sampling the ingredients, setting the time to cook them into a delicious dish and savouring every bite of your labors is not lost for good. This is a damn fine meal nod



i made chicken soup from scratch a couple days ago biggrin

touched

mushy

batting eyes
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #610 posted 03/07/08 2:56pm

JackieBlue

avatar

paisleypark4 said:

Graycap23 said:


PP4, please tell me that u are NOT comparing this dribble 2 The Rainbow Children.....


NO he dont like this album and is dissing it bad, they must be accustomed to verse bridge chorus cheap fade-out endings


falloff I actually was gonna mention that Erykah has been transitioning away from typical structure for some time now and prepping the fans with WWU and her concerts.

I also think she rarely does stuff by happenstance even down to the spelling of her chosen name. But some criticisms remind me of what the teacher tells the student that can't get through a book of enlightenment, you're not ready.
Been gone for a minute, now I'm back with the jump off
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Reply #611 posted 03/08/08 3:16am

Papaj

avatar

First of all, let me start this post with saying that I am a huge Badu fan - have all her albums and been to her concerts. I love that she is so much different from all the gals out there. She has a tremendous personality and does not give a damn about what people would like her to be. Notwithstading all that, I must say that musically-wise her latest effort is by far the worst from her. Where the heck has her unique, powerful singing gone? Where have gone the universal lyrics? Instead she's dwelling in unintelligible rants that are nothing more than pseudo-social commentary. To make matters even worse, the production of the disc is just horrible. I like what Madlib, ?love and the other producers have been doing but their input into "New Amerykah" simply mars the album. There's no groove, the compositions sound cluttered or unfinished (the latter even confirmed by Erykah herself in the liner notes to some cuts). "Telephone", which could have been a progressive hip-hop masterpiece, is an unimaginative noodling piece of self-indulgence. The best of the bunch is "Soldier" with something reminiscent of a hook. But that's all there is to get hooked with.

On a more postive note, I like the fact that Badu's been constantly evolving as an artist. However, with "New Amerykah" she misses it badly. I was hoping for a consistent concept album but this one is merely sketches of abstract musical ideas without any direction. Don't even try comparing it to "The Rainbow Children".
[Edited 3/8/08 3:17am]
[Edited 3/8/08 11:08am]
We Can Funk
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Reply #612 posted 03/08/08 5:19am

Rhondab

I think what some are missing is the very thing you guys are criticizing the cd for not being is the very reason why many DO like it.


I like that its disjointed, incomplete and self indulgent. I like the chanting.

Its like organized chaos to me. I GET it!

and i'm no weed head. I don't listen to the bassline or how a lyric should have been phrased....but how a song simply makes me FEEL. This is FEELING cd. She wasn't trying to be technically correct.
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Reply #613 posted 03/08/08 5:36am

Graycap23

JackieBlue said:

But some criticisms remind me of what the teacher tells the student that can't get through a book of enlightenment, you're not ready.

Lol.....organized noise that does NOT sound worth a damn? U are correct, I'm NOT ready and neither are my ears.
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Reply #614 posted 03/08/08 9:46pm

paisleypark4

avatar

Papaj said:

First of all, let me start this post with saying that I am a huge Badu fan - have all her albums and been to her concerts. I love that she is so much different from all the gals out there. She has a tremendous personality and does not give a damn about what people would like her to be. Notwithstading all that, I must say that musically-wise her latest effort is by far the worst from her. Where the heck has her unique, powerful singing gone? Where have gone the universal lyrics? Instead she's dwelling in unintelligible rants that are nothing more than pseudo-social commentary. To make matters even worse, the production of the disc is just horrible. I like what Madlib, ?love and the other producers have been doing but their input into "New Amerykah" simply mars the album. There's no groove, the compositions sound cluttered or unfinished (the latter even confirmed by Erykah herself in the liner notes to some cuts). "Telephone", which could have been a progressive hip-hop masterpiece, is an unimaginative noodling piece of self-indulgence. The best of the bunch is "Soldier" with something reminiscent of a hook. But that's all there is to get hooked with.

On a more postive note, I like the fact that Badu's been constantly evolving as an artist. However, with "New Amerykah" she misses it badly. I was hoping for a consistent concept album but this one is merely sketches of abstract musical ideas without any direction. Don't even try comparing it to "The Rainbow Children".
[Edited 3/8/08 3:17am]
[Edited 3/8/08 11:08am]



Whatever happened to being unique though?
Who said that every song in the world must be an Americanized hit chart topping album?


U talk Self indulgance....how about self-love.
The way she speaks about wanting to stop smoking dope because things are hard is a tale any single mother can tell you. "That Hump"

Telephone was written for Dilla who passed away in 2007. Self indulgant?

The Cell is about a woman who uses her body to take away the pain in her life.. is self indulgant?

Master Teacher is for PRAISE of brothers and sisters who are positive is self indulgant? "If there were no niggas and only master teachers I'd stay woke". ARE YOU LISTENING to her or yourself?

Stay WOKE, u sleepin on it. Stay in the box, we understand.
Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #615 posted 03/08/08 11:51pm

ThreadBare

I've been joking with Rhonda about this project. "I bet it's a great album to listen to, if you're stoned ," were my words. (Calhoun, I could have bought Alice Smith's CD instead, right?)

Anyway, my thoughts:

What I like:

The Roy Ayers involvement and Curtis Mayfield nod. (But the project's catchiest hooks belong to other folks. That's the downside to that.)

I appreciate the late-70s/early-80s vibe that wafts throughout, and I like how so much of Badu's sound templates are cyclical. She debuted with her feet firmly planted in the neo-soul stuff, but her follow-ups have featured stylings that could be lifted from different eras. "Honey," on this project, sounds like something straight from 1982 R&B radio.

Second, some of the tracks have some decent musicianship moments.


What I dislike:

"What good do your words do if they can't understand you?" She should have asked herself that, a few times throughout handling this project.

I get the sense that Badu wants to reach people, to affect our perspectives and belief systems for the betterment of the world. That she esteems her art as playing a role in that kind of movement is what separates her from many of her counterparts.

But, I think a lot of what hinders this from being a good project is that most people probably don't think we need Badu to educate us, we don't look to her as a guru with The Answer and a lot of what she puts forth on the album isn't revolutionary (I was hearing this sort of stuff at the HBCU I attended, almost 2 decades ago). It's just new agey psychobabble to a lot of folks. So, I totally see where the "Rainbow Children" comparisons have merit. TRC doesn't hit its stride, to me, until a few tracks in. When it finally does, it maintains cohesion and rhythm.

But, Badu's project is scattered, unfocused and comes off a bit lazy to me. Her singing's lazy, the writing's lazy (the concepts are OK. I get it, even the sci-fi-ness of it all. But the concepts' execution is pretty inconsistent), the production is hit-or-miss... And, the chanting creeps me out. lol

I think she could have done better. And, if she's trying to pass off clutter and scatteredness as signs of enlightenment (which is the reasoning I'm hearing on this thread), I'm dreading Part II.
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Reply #616 posted 03/09/08 1:36am

Rhondab

ThreadBare said:

I've been joking with Rhonda about this project. "I bet it's a great album to listen to, if you're stoned ," were my words. (Calhoun, I could have bought Alice Smith's CD instead, right?)

Anyway, my thoughts:

What I like:

The Roy Ayers involvement and Curtis Mayfield nod. (But the project's catchiest hooks belong to other folks. That's the downside to that.)

I appreciate the late-70s/early-80s vibe that wafts throughout, and I like how so much of Badu's sound templates are cyclical. She debuted with her feet firmly planted in the neo-soul stuff, but her follow-ups have featured stylings that could be lifted from different eras. "Honey," on this project, sounds like something straight from 1982 R&B radio.

Second, some of the tracks have some decent musicianship moments.


What I dislike:

"What good do your words do if they can't understand you?" She should have asked herself that, a few times throughout handling this project.

I get the sense that Badu wants to reach people, to affect our perspectives and belief systems for the betterment of the world. That she esteems her art as playing a role in that kind of movement is what separates her from many of her counterparts.

But, I think a lot of what hinders this from being a good project is that most people probably don't think we need Badu to educate us, we don't look to her as a guru with The Answer and a lot of what she puts forth on the album isn't revolutionary (I was hearing this sort of stuff at the HBCU I attended, almost 2 decades ago). It's just new agey psychobabble to a lot of folks. So, I totally see where the "Rainbow Children" comparisons have merit. TRC doesn't hit its stride, to me, until a few tracks in. When it finally does, it maintains cohesion and rhythm.

But, Badu's project is scattered, unfocused and comes off a bit lazy to me. Her singing's lazy, the writing's lazy (the concepts are OK. I get it, even the sci-fi-ness of it all. But the concepts' execution is pretty inconsistent), the production is hit-or-miss... And, the chanting creeps me out. lol

I think she could have done better. And, if she's trying to pass off clutter and scatteredness as signs of enlightenment (which is the reasoning I'm hearing on this thread), I'm dreading Part II.



many of these tracks are at least one - two years old....I heard The Healer well over a year ago Live.....all of the enlightenment stuff...shrug I don't feel enlightened but its just a cool experience.

I think some of ya'll musicians think too deeply when ya'll listen to stuff....lol (Thread and Gray)
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Reply #617 posted 03/09/08 6:19am

2Jay

I have to be honest with you playas, and interrupt this yay-fest.

I did enjoy this album to some extent. I bought it for my Album of the Month for February.

And I think I wasted an Album of the Month.

I got her message for her songs and digged some of the groove. cool

But I didn't get the lazy put-together for the CD.

OVERALL SCORE: B+
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Reply #618 posted 03/09/08 8:07am

horatio

I liked it. It wasn't all boombastic.
Its flow psychologically bizarre.
Like waking up from and recalling a vivid dream.
And if thats what she/they meant to do they certainly pulled it off quite well.
Maybe something like Steve Wonders Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants.
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Reply #619 posted 03/09/08 1:53pm

Savage

avatar

Last 2 albums I bought were this and Jill Scott, Real Thing Words & Sounds Volume 3: Includes Dvd

From the 2 I have to admit I have enjoyed Jill Scotts.

I must admit tho. I need to give Erykah more of a play but it hasn't grabbed me like Jill.
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Reply #620 posted 03/09/08 2:36pm

paisleypark4

avatar

Years from now it will be described as a Masterpiece.

end.
Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #621 posted 03/09/08 6:49pm

Brendan

avatar

I’m stuck to the floor of its sticky soul and can’t bear to leave when the credits roll.
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Reply #622 posted 03/09/08 7:11pm

sosgemini

avatar

ThreadBare said:

I've been joking with Rhonda about this project. "I bet it's a great album to listen to, if you're stoned ," were my words. (Calhoun, I could have bought Alice Smith's CD instead, right?)

Anyway, my thoughts:

What I like:

The Roy Ayers involvement and Curtis Mayfield nod. (But the project's catchiest hooks belong to other folks. That's the downside to that.)

I appreciate the late-70s/early-80s vibe that wafts throughout, and I like how so much of Badu's sound templates are cyclical. She debuted with her feet firmly planted in the neo-soul stuff, but her follow-ups have featured stylings that could be lifted from different eras. "Honey," on this project, sounds like something straight from 1982 R&B radio.

Second, some of the tracks have some decent musicianship moments.


What I dislike:

"What good do your words do if they can't understand you?" She should have asked herself that, a few times throughout handling this project.

I get the sense that Badu wants to reach people, to affect our perspectives and belief systems for the betterment of the world. That she esteems her art as playing a role in that kind of movement is what separates her from many of her counterparts.

But, I think a lot of what hinders this from being a good project is that most people probably don't think we need Badu to educate us, we don't look to her as a guru with The Answer and a lot of what she puts forth on the album isn't revolutionary (I was hearing this sort of stuff at the HBCU I attended, almost 2 decades ago). It's just new agey psychobabble to a lot of folks. So, I totally see where the "Rainbow Children" comparisons have merit. TRC doesn't hit its stride, to me, until a few tracks in. When it finally does, it maintains cohesion and rhythm.

But, Badu's project is scattered, unfocused and comes off a bit lazy to me. Her singing's lazy, the writing's lazy (the concepts are OK. I get it, even the sci-fi-ness of it all. But the concepts' execution is pretty inconsistent), the production is hit-or-miss... And, the chanting creeps me out. lol

I think she could have done better. And, if she's trying to pass off clutter and scatteredness as signs of enlightenment (which is the reasoning I'm hearing on this thread), I'm dreading Part II.


here i was all ready to pull my pants down and declare my devotion and then you took a quick turn to hate-ville. pout

lol
Space for sale...
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Reply #623 posted 03/09/08 9:08pm

ThreadBare

sosgemini said:

ThreadBare said:

I've been joking with Rhonda about this project. "I bet it's a great album to listen to, if you're stoned ," were my words. (Calhoun, I could have bought Alice Smith's CD instead, right?)

Anyway, my thoughts:

What I like:

The Roy Ayers involvement and Curtis Mayfield nod. (But the project's catchiest hooks belong to other folks. That's the downside to that.)

I appreciate the late-70s/early-80s vibe that wafts throughout, and I like how so much of Badu's sound templates are cyclical. She debuted with her feet firmly planted in the neo-soul stuff, but her follow-ups have featured stylings that could be lifted from different eras. "Honey," on this project, sounds like something straight from 1982 R&B radio.

Second, some of the tracks have some decent musicianship moments.


What I dislike:

"What good do your words do if they can't understand you?" She should have asked herself that, a few times throughout handling this project.

I get the sense that Badu wants to reach people, to affect our perspectives and belief systems for the betterment of the world. That she esteems her art as playing a role in that kind of movement is what separates her from many of her counterparts.

But, I think a lot of what hinders this from being a good project is that most people probably don't think we need Badu to educate us, we don't look to her as a guru with The Answer and a lot of what she puts forth on the album isn't revolutionary (I was hearing this sort of stuff at the HBCU I attended, almost 2 decades ago). It's just new agey psychobabble to a lot of folks. So, I totally see where the "Rainbow Children" comparisons have merit. TRC doesn't hit its stride, to me, until a few tracks in. When it finally does, it maintains cohesion and rhythm.

But, Badu's project is scattered, unfocused and comes off a bit lazy to me. Her singing's lazy, the writing's lazy (the concepts are OK. I get it, even the sci-fi-ness of it all. But the concepts' execution is pretty inconsistent), the production is hit-or-miss... And, the chanting creeps me out. lol

I think she could have done better. And, if she's trying to pass off clutter and scatteredness as signs of enlightenment (which is the reasoning I'm hearing on this thread), I'm dreading Part II.


here i was all ready to pull my pants down and declare my devotion and then you took a quick turn to hate-ville. pout

lol


hmm Dude, keep your pants on. I'm not hating. I have most of her albums. She just seemed to have gotten lost in the "Puff" this time.
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Reply #624 posted 03/10/08 11:23am

MsLegs

sosgemini said:

ThreadBare said:

I've been joking with Rhonda about this project. "I bet it's a great album to listen to, if you're stoned ," were my words. (Calhoun, I could have bought Alice Smith's CD instead, right?)

Anyway, my thoughts:

What I like:

The Roy Ayers involvement and Curtis Mayfield nod. (But the project's catchiest hooks belong to other folks. That's the downside to that.)

I appreciate the late-70s/early-80s vibe that wafts throughout, and I like how so much of Badu's sound templates are cyclical. She debuted with her feet firmly planted in the neo-soul stuff, but her follow-ups have featured stylings that could be lifted from different eras. "Honey," on this project, sounds like something straight from 1982 R&B radio.

Second, some of the tracks have some decent musicianship moments.


What I dislike:

"What good do your words do if they can't understand you?" She should have asked herself that, a few times throughout handling this project.

I get the sense that Badu wants to reach people, to affect our perspectives and belief systems for the betterment of the world. That she esteems her art as playing a role in that kind of movement is what separates her from many of her counterparts.

But, I think a lot of what hinders this from being a good project is that most people probably don't think we need Badu to educate us, we don't look to her as a guru with The Answer and a lot of what she puts forth on the album isn't revolutionary (I was hearing this sort of stuff at the HBCU I attended, almost 2 decades ago). It's just new agey psychobabble to a lot of folks. So, I totally see where the "Rainbow Children" comparisons have merit. TRC doesn't hit its stride, to me, until a few tracks in. When it finally does, it maintains cohesion and rhythm.

But, Badu's project is scattered, unfocused and comes off a bit lazy to me. Her singing's lazy, the writing's lazy (the concepts are OK. I get it, even the sci-fi-ness of it all. But the concepts' execution is pretty inconsistent), the production is hit-or-miss... And, the chanting creeps me out. lol

I think she could have done better. And, if she's trying to pass off clutter and scatteredness as signs of enlightenment (which is the reasoning I'm hearing on this thread), I'm dreading Part II.


here i was all ready to pull my pants down and declare my devotion and then you took a quick turn to hate-ville. pout

lol

clapping evillol
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Reply #625 posted 03/10/08 12:17pm

Graycap23

paisleypark4 said:

Years from now it will be described as a Masterpiece.

end.

lol.....a master piece of Sh*t.....and the END of her career.
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Reply #626 posted 03/11/08 9:50am

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

Rhondab said:

I think what some are missing is the very thing you guys are criticizing the cd for not being is the very reason why many DO like it.


I like that its disjointed, incomplete and self indulgent. I like the chanting.

Its like organized chaos to me. I GET it!

and i'm no weed head. I don't listen to the bassline or how a lyric should have been phrased....but how a song simply makes me FEEL. This is FEELING cd. She wasn't trying to be technically correct.

clapping CO-SIGN INFINITELY! nod

How much you wanna bet Return of the Ankh is going to be what people who aren't feeling this album want?
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #627 posted 03/15/08 2:58pm

CalhounSq

avatar

I still gotta pick it up... as a person who bought Worldwide Underground THREE separate times lol I'll say this: I'm gonna take my time w/ it & give it several listens before I form an opinion on it. I think w/ her we want her shit to be instant, like the first album & Mama's Gun, but some of it just has to grow on you (like WU did over years). I just hope I like it cool
heart prince I never met you, but I LOVE you & I will forever!! Thank you for being YOU - my little Princey, the best to EVER do it prince heart
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