6/10/2023 0 Comments Best lyrical rap songs![]() ![]() ![]() Ms Jackson (2000)īehind Ms Jackson’s effortless singalong chorus – “woooooh!” – lurks a clever, complicated meditation on a relationship collapsing, addressed not to the ex-partner, but their mother. Outkast had referenced George Clinton before, but SpottieOttieDopaliscious was the point at which the duo really laid claim to being P-Funk’s hip-hop heirs, with all the head-turning weirdness that entailed: dubby echo and roots reggae-inspired horns, samples of prog-era Genesis’s guitar filigree, rhymes closer to spoken word than rapping. If the central theory of André’s verse – that your bedroom skills while procreating affect the quality of your child’s life – doesn’t stand up to scrutiny, everything else about ATLiens is perfect, from the warped Chambers Brothers sample to the quality of the bragging: “I’m cooler than a polar bear’s toenails!” 7. Its darkly compelling title track goes so far as to present them as twins the hook, meanwhile, bore the influence of Prince. Its intro sounds remarkably like the opening to Marvin Gaye’s What’s Goin’ On, while the gorgeous chorus mirrors its message of confusion about “this crazy world” … at least until it announces that the answer is to skin up, an activity it lauds as “simply marvellous”.Ī lot of Outkast’s third album was focused on the bond between the duo in a climate where André’s outlandishness had provoked criticism while Big Boi’s ostensibly more straightforward persona had not. There is a distinct hint of musical satire about Crumblin’ Erb. On the surface, Elevators is just a hymn to their early success (André punctures the celebratory mood by suggesting he is still broke), but the music is unsettlingly odd: weird, scattered electronic bleeps, a chorus that sounds like something from a musical in which the entire cast is off their heads. Things got strange fast in Outkast’s world. The beat – based on the Five Stairsteps’ 1967 hit Danger She’s a Stranger – fits the brooding mood perfectly. Two Dope Boyz (In a Cadillac) (1996)Ī track that revels in Outkast’s outsider status within hip-hop – “greetings Earthlings!” – with the cool confidence of people who know they have the talent to back the boast they are not just different, but better. In which Big Boi and André wittily cordon off a beautiful but cash-obsessed lady: “One of them freaks who gets geeked at the sight of an ATM receipt.” The way it turns the profoundly unpromising phrase “roses really smell like poo” into an unshakeable earworm and a global hit single is – sorry – not to be sniffed at. André’s verse pours scorn on gangsta rap – then resurgent thanks to the cliche-ridden platinum-seller Master P – and offering “time travellin’, rhyme javelin, something mind-unravellin’” as an alternative. Return of the G (1998)Ī bold statement of artistic intent in the face of criticism, Return of the G’s title is a double bluff. Outkast at the Grammys in 2004, where they won three awards, including album of the year. An explosion of fantastic melodic hooks and deft rapping, featuring an early guest appearance by Janelle Monáe and powered by the marching band mentioned in its chorus, it should have been a huge hit. The soundtrack to an unloved film, Idlewild was released to a decidedly mixed reception, but Morris Brown is an under-appreciated delight. Production is by Organized Noize, with guest appearances from Goodie Mob’s Big Gipp and Cee-Lo Green, the latter entirely consuming the first third of the track. Git Up, Git Out (1994)Ī seven-and-a-half-minute-long, supremely funky and conscious-rhyme-laden introduction to the Dungeon Family, or at least part of said sprawling crew. The ferocious, distorted synths, frantic beats and soul interludes of GhettoMusick proved his partner didn’t have the monopoly on thrilling experimentation. ![]() ![]() GhettoMusick (2003)īig Boi’s album in the split Speakerboxx/Love Below double set was overshadowed by André’s – home to Hey Ya! and Roses – but its highlights were vertiginous. ![]()
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