The Rap Music Plug Podcast is the remedy to the “I don’t have anything good to listen to” problem. Through in-depth artist interviews, album reviews, and general rap commentary on the best that the underground rap scene has to offer, this is your one-stop shop to knowing what to add to your queue, play next, or pop into your record player. Are you a rap music fan? And not just any fan... but a true rap music fan that wants to move past the surface level discussion, and get into the nitty-gritty of what makes rap music so great? Are you someone who loves the feeling of discovering new music, but find it hard to navigate through the thousands upon thousands of new albums that get released every single day? If any of this applies to you, this show is EXACTLY what you need. My absolute PASSION is music. So I gladly do the dirty work of virtual crate digging, searching for the next great rap album... so you don’t have to. My name is Rohan. I am The Rap Music Plug, at your service. -- Fiending for some more quality rap content? Visit the RMPP website: https://rmpp.squarespace.com/ Want to support and help us grow? Become a RMPP Patron, and gain access to exclusive content: https://www.patreon.com/therapmusicplugpodcast Looking to connect? DM me @rapmusicplugpod on Twitter and Instagram, or shoot me an email at qlctv.podcast@gmail.com
Episodes
Monday May 17, 2021
#53 - Wiki & NAH - Telephonebooth REVIEW
Monday May 17, 2021
Monday May 17, 2021
(Go to 0:55 to skip the intro)
Wiki is a New York rapper, once part of the experimental hip-hop group Ratking, who is certainly a unique voice in the game. Teaming up with experimental producer NAH seemed like a natural fit for the left-field MC.
NAH's production here is very skeletal, but by no means dry. It draws from a distinctly 80s 90s sound pallet, infusing these instrumentals with pop, electronic, and rock influences.
The structure of this album's beats feature off-kilter very left-field drum patterns, 80s-90s pop, rock, electronic tones in the instrumentals... with a very glitch-hoppy aesthetic in the rhythms, along with these consistent blasts of bright sound that give this album a beautifully psychedelic feeling.
Telephonebooth gave me a similar feeling to Earl Sweatshirt's Some Rap Songs. Strictly in the sense that the songs were very short, with many ideas coming in and out quickly.
The key drawback I see in Telephonebooth though, is the other edge of the double-edged sword related to the nature of this album's leanness.
Wiki is very focused on these very short tracks, which is very appreciated. Except, unlike Some Rap Songs, Wiki doesn’t fully captivate me lyrically at all times, with an overall message that is less clear than I’d like.
Although he is definitely very focused on a specific topic on each track, is he always presenting complete thoughts? I don't think so. Often you don't get the full scope of the ideas presented on this album. This is largely due to the fact that the songs are just so short... and is magnified by the fact that these songs manage to have hooks and/or a lot of repetitive pseudo-hooks.
This brings me to the overall narrative I got from this album, which works to alleviate the importance of these drawbacks.
Wiki tackles each song like a mini conversation with someone on the phone. He's still transparent and vulnerable on the album, but he chooses to cover a large breadth of topics, versus deep-diving on one particular one.
Surely common themes emerge, but the details aren't deeply explored. So I do see myself wanting more detail at times... but there is simultaneously something intriguing in the way he gives you so many different but related thoughts.
The genuine and raw atmosphere that he cultivates with his lyrics is great... and makes me keep wanting to press play over and over again.
RMPP Preferred Cut: "No Work"
Listen to Telephonebooth here: https://wiksetnyc.bandcamp.com/album/telephonebooth
--
For artist development/writing services, DM me @rohview on Twitter and Instagram, or shoot me an email at qlctv.podcast@gmail.com
Let's stay connected! Find me here: https://rmpp.carrd.co/
Comments (0)
To leave or reply to comments, please download free Podbean or
No Comments
To leave or reply to comments,
please download free Podbean App.