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Upon learning the background of the album, one begins to realize that Exit 13’s cover is more than just a hastily thrown together adventure, but may actually be symbolic of the schizophrenic nature in which the album was recorded. Originally produced by 50 Cent, the album was delayed for two years by bickering and the eventual ouster of 50 - the final product only retains two songs from the original sessions, with the rest being re-recorded or re-tooled by a hodge-podge of different producers. Apparently this process turned bitter, as LL has publicly announced that Exit will be his last album for Def Jam, the label he’s been with since age 16 and that once offered him the position of president. You can put all the tough-guy imagery you want on the outside, but the mess surrounding the recording bodes ill for the album’s contents…
Unfortunately, the outside has corrupted the inside like mold growing on an overripe fruit. Coherence has always a problem in hip-hop, with very few artists have the cojones to pare down an album or the vision to produce something with even a semblance of a unified theme. Exit 13 suffers from both problems - 19 tracks clocking in at over an hour produced by upwards of ten different people, resulting in an album as scatterbrained as the cover. Remarkably, there are only a few genuinely horrible stinkers, and at least a couple songs that could be considered good if they weren’t surrounded by piles of festering junk. After dumping 50 Cent, LL chose to put his production money into the hands of a group of relative unknowns, a few mediocre also-rans, and former super-producers (Marley Marl!) Amongst the relative unknowns are a few Top-40/R&B producers (like Ryan Leslie), a species that LL has had success with before (as on the hugely successful Mr. Smith,) but who as a group aren’t exactly known for their groundbreaking work. Mr. Leslie’s tracks sound like LL Cool J rapping over the “Rap” demo setting on a cheap 80’s keyboard - a popular sound today indeed, but it has become as tired as LL sounds rapping over it. Throughout the song “Fall in Love” the man who once boasted about his battle rap skills lazily rhymes an endless series of lines with the word “thighs” over a weak Casio beat that sounds equally juvenile and dated. The problems don’t stop there, unfortunately; many tracks sound dated, “Cry” features LL not rhyming, but simply ending each of his phrases with “girl,” “Mr. President” would have been more topical two years ago than a few months before Bush leaves office, and “Feel My Heart Beat” seems to have sampled 50 Cent more than it “features” him…
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-Mojiferous
1 comment:
Your review is garbage and most of you're missing some facts on how the album came to be.
nice try
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