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Swollen
Members
Heavy (2003)
Review
by: Jason Thornberry
Date: 2/11/04
The
fans that have been with the productive S&M since
their early days, and have seen the Canadian hip-hop group
swell from a duo to a nearly invincible quartet get another
surprise. A new year brings, wait for it, yet another
album!
Unlike The Fall, or other groups prolific-to-the-point-of-exhaustion,
Swollen Members keeps the quality control meter pointed
toward HIGH. Why, they re-drafted original member Moka
Only, and gained the production and turntable skills of
Rob The Viking. And since forming their Battle Axe record
label ("our own label, never get dropped") have
released three albums, with added instrumental editions
of each. But Heavy is, without doubt, a defining
work. An added DVD with each of their videos and a bio
given by the members at various stages of a tour pads
the package perfectly as they prepare for the superstardom
they should already have.
Heavy
is perfect. "Paranoia" has Moka Only's unforgettable
chorus, Madchild advises you to consider his scrotum a
large pacifier on "Watch This", "Therapy"
requires at least three-listens-per-day as guest DJ Revolution
strings one-sided arguments together, and Son Doobie steps
in ready and sweaty for the hidden track. All the while
they keep the mood light with between-song crank calls,
and a string section straight from grandma's favorite
radio station that somehow fits "Bottom Line"
impeccably.
This
is far from the slanted and enchanted emo-rap of utilitarian
dorks like Sole, Sage Francis, or the majority of the
Anticon playhouse. Hip-hop groups passionate and confused
enough to headbang and stagedive in the middle of their
shows are not to be taken lightly. Especially when they're
balancing tracks this dangerous.
Heavy should establish Swollen Members as leaders
of the now school, free from the manufactured drama and
cheese of their peers – they're just warped enough
not to require any of it. And being worthy of membership
in the legendary Rock Steady Crew shows that the right
people are actually listening.
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