As
a precursor to another record I'll talk on tomorrow, it felt essential
to lay a little groundwork with Cypress Hill's dynamite debut from 1991.
Nothing quite like this sound had existed beforehand. The Hill blew
minds with funky Latino vibrations and a bold advocation for the use of
marijuana at the forefront of their music. Unlike a lot of other acts in
Hip Hop, the trio would go on to have a decorated career beyond the
debut with a string of creative and commercially successful albums,
birthing songs known the world over like Rap or Rock Superstar and
Insane In The Brain.
Firstly
a disclaimer, this group were one of my first "favorites", who as a
young teen I bonded with immensely... these beats and rhymes are
practically baked into my brain. I can't tell you how many times I've
spun this one. Giving it another go as I right, I am reminded of how
well crafted these instrumentals are. Yet to lean on slamming
percussion, DJ Muggs flavors his grooves with bold, funky samples. It
has a little Bomb Squad flair for obnoxious noises and stabs among the
guitars, horns and trumpets. It mostly has a keen psychedelic edge,
resisting conventional melodies and arranging his loops to flow in
succinct persuading repetitions.
I
often forget how uplifting and warm the Hill once where. By album
three, Temples Of Doom, they were deep in the darkness. Despite having
devious classics like "How I Could Just Kill A Man" and "Hole In The
Head", Muggs keeps spirits up with a spicy measure of groove and funk
weighed up in a string of classic beats. However the lyrics are mixed in with rugged street talk and violence, swaying between more fun topicality. Variety comes with laid back
grooves, busying instrumentals pushing the noise and a playful helping of
Latino flair. In the records end stretch, the guitar sample on Tres
Equis illuminates brightly, doing all the work for Muggs as Sen Dog raps
in Spanish. A niche touch to give the record more uniqueness.
B-Real
is a phenomenal talent, all too overlooked as one of the greatests in
my opinion. He establishes himself with a youthful flair but his rhymes
are so concise, the flows mesmerizing and with that strong navel
inflection, inspired by the Beastie Boys, he proves himself on round one. So many of his distinguished particular
cadences and catered rhythms are established on this one. Flows and
rhyme groupings that get recycled and referenced in later records are in
abundance here at the inception. Lets not forget the hooks, this record is loaded with them. Hand On The Pump has one of
the best with its lala lala conclusion and Sen delivering the hype
between.
Every
track as something to offer and a write up can't go by with out
mentioning Stoned Is The Way Of The Walk. An absolute banging sleazy
spaced out beat with B-Real rhyming through the percussive breakdowns
without pause. Its timeless, despite having a distinctly "of the time"
feel, everything stands up. With knowledge of whats to come, Real Estate
seems a step ahead. It has the harder drum loop and focused attention
on its main sample and pumped up baselines. That's another point, the
music is laced with bold lines in the low end that glues much of it all
together.
This
record never lost its charms on me over the decades and right now it's
pleasures are so vivid. That is when I enjoy writing the most. What's
the point other than to feel the music as much as you can? I can barely
think of a bad word to say on this record, its a brilliant debut
statement. Stylistically stunning and sharp, flavored with a spice not
heard before in Hip Hop. Barely a weak spot, although everyone will find
their favorites among these sixteen cuts. A classic!
Rating: 10/10