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ANDRE AFRAM ASMAR
Race To The Bottom (Mush Recs)
Reviewed by Jason
Thornberry
Post 9.11 Western xenophobia could make
acceptance of this album unlikely without first
taking the masses of asses back to first grade
like we did with MLK in the 1960's. If a track
like "Scientism" didn't alienate you in the
nineties it certainly can today as you visualize
United Airlines Flight 175 meeting you at your
front window while this spins. Social and
political hypotheses aside, Race To The
Bottom is called a "soundtrack to life."
So if you put down your grievances (which Asmar
has nowt to do with anyway) away, and your
palette becomes unbiased again, you'll hear the
levels of sound he spent more than a year
assembling from scores of different musicians,
emcees, tapes, breakbeats, and sources I'm not
yet privy to. Play this for a friend and measure
their confused glance first at you, then the
speakers themselves. Cavernous dub reggae and DJ
Premier hip-hop production mixes with Brazilian
rhythms and middle-eastern vocals peacefully,
casually. It's natural enough to make you wonder
why it's not been attempted before. The voices do
stand out significantly, and could be where some
listener security ends -- at first. After you've
moved away from the past, Race To The
Bottom will reward you with new shades
of melody you initially mistook for dissonance.
Are these "versions" of songs from another
dimension, or just another viewpoint? And if this
is indeed a "follow up" release why don't I own
its predecessor?
[Pick this up at www.dirtyloop.com.]
© 2003 - Jason Thornberry
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