
Ice-grilling backpackers (yes, they're still around) take heed: his output is a welcome breath of dusty fresh air. Sure, this record is a laugh overall, but don't pass this guy off as some patsy Har Mar Superstar jerkoff.

The kickdrum-heavy, snot-nosed rhyming of "Schoolly D Knew the Time" pays homage to the Philadelphia emcee, further exposing the knack Edan has for a dirty, basement production style. Skillz Ferguson) evidences some convincing lyrical ability over a beat that runs the gamut of hip-hop references, flipping up eleven (!) times. At the risk of being a cornball, if you aren't smiling during this song, check your pulse. Over a poppy, Latin guitar, he reads: "Falafels with tahini/ Eggs scrambled with Monterey Jack cheese/ Cream of broccoli soup/ Portobello mushrooms/ Pigs in a blanket/ Mueslix." and so forth. While it's completely dull running down the technical on a song like this, it should be emphasized that Edan has honed in on his craft this clever recreation of a sound long dead in hip-hop is shockingly well-executed.Īctually, let's forget legitimizing- "Beautiful Food" is the funniest shit I've heard in years. Friends", a priceless plea for a new buddy to cool out with, comes complete with a young LL Cool J whisper: "Let's go over and play some video games/ At the arcade you know we'll just hang out/ Yeah, and we'll work on our rhymes/ My metaphors are okay, how are yours?" Adorable! Production-wise, the track is surprisingly nuanced with 808 drum rolls, immersed in timely handclaps. Lif arex92t enough hip-hop cred, Edan makes it abundantly clear on his own records: he knows what he's doing.Ĭombining the hilarity of his Biscuithead 12-inch debut (1999's "Sing It, Shitface") with the nostalgia of the recent Critical Beatdown-era tribute track "Ultra 88", this record is a retardedly good time. If recent outside production credits to Count Bass D and Mr. But by calling this release simple and amusing- and going along with the Golden Age production techniques- Sprain Your Tapedeck shouldn't be dismissed as mere 80s kitsch. Edan has himself mastered the tricks of all Roland's various x0x rhythm machines, putting his talent to good use to create this harmlessly facile, yet just plain fun, six-song (four are new) follow-up EP to the excellent Primitive Plus. Ditching the J-O-B, this rapper/DJ/producer instead bows down to the almighty Tadao Kikumoto, mastermind behind Roland.
#Edan sprain your tapedeck full
The best comes last - a late-night homage to spiritual mentor Schoolly D that is a pitch-perfect trip back to 1986, when, if you think about it, hip-hop's future seemed much more unpredictable, full of possibilities, and enticing than it did circa 2002.Evolution does not imply progress, only change, so there's no problem with Boston's triple-threat Edan ignoring this modern technological path. And only Edan could make the recitation of a menu or cookbook ("Beautiful Food") not merely funny, but dazzlingly so.

#Edan sprain your tapedeck crack
Friends A2 MCs Smoke Crack A3 Beautiful Food B4 Run That Shit B5 Clinical Rhymes. Only Edan, the aluminum smoker, would have the shamelessness to plead with other MCs to hang out at the park and arcade with him, to buy each other ice cream and work on metaphors together ("Let's Be Friends"). EDAN THE HUMBLE MAGNIFICENT Sprain Your Tapedeck 12 vinyl A1 Lets B.

The four new songs are all clean winners, the humor ratcheted up yet another notch.

Are trying to put together sounds from different periods of time that you like or does it just come out naturally E: I think that both of these options that you gave me represent something that just comes about naturally. In fact, Sprain Your Tape Deck is essentially a continuation of the Edan aesthetic, part wild-style throwback and part future Dada, where old-school 808 drum loops mingle with the rapper's one-of-a-kind b-boy world view. HHC: There is a duality in your production style between addictive 90s-style melodies and abrasive early 80s-sounding tracks. But the album back-pedals only in the respect that it repeats a pair of songs from Primitive Plus, "Run That Shit" and the instant classic "Emcees Smoke Crack," so it is not a retreat at all, especially when you consider the great leap into the deep end of rap oddness that his previous effort represented. Two steps forward for every one step back is the basic pattern of this fine follow-up EP to Edan's brilliant debut full-length.
