Anticon has to be applauded for their constant efforts to push the limits of hip-hop.
Clouddead's self-titled full-length managed to match the ambience of
Brian Eno's experiments with
Kerouac lyrics and confounding beats. But
Dose One's other outfit,
Themselves -- his duo with producer
Jel -- while nearly as ambitious, fails to really engage the listener. Sure, The No Music has its high points --
Jel is in top form when working with ambient samples without the pretense of being hip, like the dreamy opener, "Home Work," for example. And
Dose One's nasal vocals are powerful in catchy singsong pieces like "Mouthful" and "Good People Check." But the rapid-fire word-dropping on "Live Trap" is likely to detach listeners from any hope of connecting, and
Jel's beats can be less than inspiring. The No Music is still rewarding for those who dig deep enough, but it's
Anti Pop Consortium and the "Definitive Jux" producers like
El-P and
RJD2 who pushed hip-hop the furthest over the edge in 2002, with insane samples, mad lyrics, and unexpected, distorted beats building a cacophony that's impossible to ignore. ~ Charles Spano