The Roots | Undun

Def Jam (2011)
By MICHAEL C. WALSH  |  December 14, 2011
3.5 3.5 Stars

roots-main

The year was 1999, and the Roots were entering a cool-kids club thanks to the release of Things Fall Apart. You can probably rattle off the names of their fellow travelers: Black Star, D'Angelo, Common, et al. Perhaps foremost though, was producer J Dilla. Questlove once praised the late great's drum programming as "musically drunk and sober at the same time." And 12 years later, we have the Roots 13th studio album, their most fully realized effort since Things and the first to pay proper respect to Jay, who died in 2006. There's a concept here: a gangbanger's life story told in reverse. But the "concept" is almost irrelevant. Despite the album's discordant tendencies, MC Black Thought comes as brutish as ever, and their now-standard cast of collaborators (P.O.R.N. and Dice Raw) sound more at ease over these lanky beats than they did on more combustible previous efforts. It's uncertain if Undun will ever be hailed as a "classic," given the malleability of that term amongst hip-hop heads. But at the tail end of a year in which mixtapes have usurped full-lengths — in terms of both quality and press coverage — its satisfying unity is a rebuke to the disposability of the blogosphere.

THE ROOTS | House of Blues, 15 Lansdowne St, Boston | December 26 @ 7 pm | All Ages | $35-$45 | 888.693.2583

  Topics: CD Reviews , Music, CD reviews, the roots,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY MICHAEL C. WALSH
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   A$AP ROCKY | LONG.LIVE.A$AP  |  January 16, 2013
    A$AP Rocky is a living, breathing Tumblr aggregator.
  •   JOLLY GOOD ODDS: HOLIDAY GAMBLES  |  December 04, 2012
    'Tis the season for letting it ride on the Patriots, reveling in riches when they cover the spread, and wincing when they don't.
  •   SIX-PACKS FOR THE HARDPACK  |  November 07, 2012
    Five canned local craft brews to throw in the cooler for your next ski trip.
  •   EMERALDS | JUST TO FEEL ANYTHING  |  November 07, 2012
    Compared to their predominantly improvisational past releases, everything here seems calculated.
  •   GLOBETROTTING WITH SETH TROXLER  |  November 01, 2012
    The last time Seth Troxler played Boston it was to a room of about 50 people. That changes this week when he plays Sónar.

 See all articles by: MICHAEL C. WALSH