audio review : Compton ( album ) … Dr Dre

audio review : Compton ( album ) ... Dr Dre

Detox seemed like a sure thing near the end of 2010 when, after producing every song on Relapse; one of Eminem’s best two albums; Dr Dre released what was supposed to be its first single; a glossy party banger entitled Kush, featuring Snoop Dogg. It was a good start. But instead of finally putting the album out, he followed with one of his worst, albeit one of his most popular, songs; I Need A Doctor; and fell back into relative obscurity. It was an odd move rarely heard of in the world of popular music. Albums are pushed back, but almost never canceled after their first singles are released. The world was used to waiting though, for an album rumored and teased so ridiculously long that it was becoming a rap legend. Will fans ever get that Chronic epilogue? Dr Dre suggested not as he spoke about it in the past tense during a recent radio interview. “I didn’t like it,” he said, “It wasn’t good.”

That suggests he likes this album and thinks it’s good. It’s what Detox was originally supposed to be; a Dr Dre album with all-new songs. It sounds like all-new songs, but it doesn’t sound like a Dr Dre album, which, considering the sonic differences between the two Chronics, isn’t necessarily a bad thing. What’s disappointing are the songs themselves. If we’re comparing them to what came several years before, they simply can’t compare. There’s no fun here. Humor is pushed aside for solemn thug poetry. The club is passed by for a Compton street corner, but where are the drugs and the hoes? Worst of all is the lack of catchy hooks to sing along with. Where’s Devin? Who are all these dudes? Where’s DJ Yella? “Where Ren at?” Kendrick Lamar is overrated. This sounds like one of his albums. Eminem was the best rapper by far in 2001. Why can’t he go back to rapping like that in every verse?

This isn’t Detox; I have to keep telling myself that; but it doesn’t have to be. It just has to be good. Dr Dre apparently thinks it is. I disagree. There’s nothing for me to latch onto here. The first song sounds surprisingly like the typical trap music of today. Dre didn’t used to follow. He used to innovate. Not that he made most of these beats (himself) anyway. The man is 50 years old. Perhaps I should give him a break, but why? He’s still making songs, so I can still critique them. “I ain’t heard nothing that I can consider classic,” he says of other rappers’ songs, but, even with a team of ghostwriters and ghostproducers on hand, I’m having a hard time hearing anything I can even consider good here. Even the beats, the best parts of the album, leave a lot to be desired. I’m not from Compton, so you might say it just isn’t meant for me, but I like both Chronic albums and never smoked weed. Go figure.

my rating : 3 of 5

2015
 

MCA :

Preach on, this album was so disappointing. I’m upset because we all deserve better.

R. J. Werner :

Amen!

DST :

I’m glad someone said it. After checking out the movie “Straight Outta Of Compton” and listening to the old albums, we were hype to listened to new music from Dre after all these years. The first time my friends & I heard “Compton”, we thought Dre broke into Kanye West’s studio and stole his instrumental tracks. Man what a huge let down. I hope someone will find those “Detox” tracks & released a bootleg version of it so we can judge if Detox was bad or was Dre just being his worst critic.

video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 3 ]

video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 3 ]

Well, the first two seasons were good. This one represents a sudden and significant drop in quality. It’s the dialogue and storyline that can’t, for even one episode, rise above mediocrity. The comedy is mostly lame and the drama arcs are silly in comparison to the ruckus Vee, now dead, brought in Season 2.

Inmate Piper Chapman and her baggy eyes have become almost completely unlikeable. The fact that “transsexual” men are still men is (finally) addressed and the plot makes practical use of the women’s dirty panties, but there’s not much else to compliment about this disappointing season.

my rating : 3 of 5

2015

video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 4 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 5 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 6 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 7 ]

video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 2 ]

video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 2 ]

The first episode is an odd departure. After it, the series goes back to normal or at least as normal as it gets at Litchfield. If there does exist a real-life prison with a cast of characters enveloped in a neverending drama storm this entertaining, their story isn’t shot and edited this brilliantly.

Forget Piper Chapman. Her mess of a love life is overshadowed by the other, more interesting people around her; the familiar ones from Season 1. The new inmates are more caricatural than realistic, but Vee at least provides the plot with a major source of conflict and Soso is cute to look at.

my rating : 4 of 5

2014

video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 3 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 4 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 5 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 6 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 7 ]

video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 1 ]

video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 1 ]

Piper Chapman is bisexual. I don’t think that word is ever said during the entire season, but that’s what she is. She’s not “straight” nor a “lesbian”. She’s into girls and guys, or at least one of each; her fiancé Larry and her girlfriend Alex. It’s an important distinction because the theme of Orange revolves around sex and romance. It’s a prison soap opera filled with constant drama. The analogy is high school because what’s petty in the real world is serious enough to fight or kill someone for in prison. There are also plenty of laughs. It’s the combination that entices as you find yourself coming back to follow not just the lives of Chapman and her two partners, but also her fellow inmates; one of which really is a fellow.

Why a man, albeit one who alters his body to be like a woman, is sent to a women’s prison is never addressed, though the scenes sometimes cut from current time to backstory. Each episode focuses on one or two characters, and that does wonders to humanize them, but it’s not consistent. Certain people are covered more than once while others are completely overlooked. Also, the initial idea to end each episode with a wild cliffhanger is abandoned after only three. Soon a show that started-off great has settled into an inferior comfort zone. The drama is sometimes over-the-top and the comedy occasionally misses the mark; the Michael Jackson bit comes to mind; but the show is both zany and endearing on the whole.

my rating : 4 of 5

2013

video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 2 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 3 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 4 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 5 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 6 ]
video review : Orange Is The New Black [ Season 7 ]

audio review : 13 And Good ( song ) … KRS-One

I’m surprised to hear a song like this from KRS-One. It’s a story about him having sex with a 13-year-old girl, which, as far as the law is concerned, makes him a rapist. That’s despite the fact that she didn’t bother to tell him her age until he asked. By then it was too late. They’d already fucked and she’d already fallen in love. “I want to be with you forever,” she tells him.

It’s a tricky predicament and a serious issue for men who go to parties looking for sex, but KRS-One handles it with misplaced satire by getting the girl’s Pops involved and ending the story with an outrageous twist. What her father does is possible but extremely unlikely under the circumstances. It’s a major turn-off on a song that was relatively believable until that point.

my rating : 3 of 5

1992

audio review : Sex And Violence ( album ) ... Boogie Down Productions

video review : Goodfellas

video review : Goodfellas

These “good” fellas are ruthless mobsters. When they need money, they take it and dare whoever it is they’re taking it from to go to the cops. If you cross them, they’ll whack you, bury your body and go out for drinks. They’re organized criminals, wiseguys, above the law in more than enough ways to keep things running smoothly for themselves. As a kid, Henry Hill always wanted to be one of them.

Goodfellas focuses on him doing just that. The first third is mainly backstory and the plot doesn’t really shoot-up until the final third. That’s when the Lufthansa heist goes down and things begin to fall apart. The movie is too long and some of the acting seems caricatural; Karen is particularly annoying; but it’s an interesting glimpse into the (real) life of the Lucchese crime family.

my rating : 4 of 5

1990