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Sir Mix-A-Lot

Mack Daddy  Hear it Now

RS: 0of 5 Stars Average User Rating: 4.5of 5 Stars

2007

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Sir Mix-A-Lot states his agenda right up front. He's a rock-solid conservative – everybody who fondly remembers the mid-Eighties breakthrough of rap say, "Ho!" With two crudely produced and derivative independent records under his belt, Mix-A-Lot has tapped the talents of onetime Def Jam mastermind and current metal maven Rick Rubin for his third – a shrewd and effective gambit. Mack Daddy, Sir Mix-A-Lot's major-label debut, exults in hormone-stoking funk beats and locker-room goof routines.

For openers, Rubin winds Mix-A-Lot's compelling false-arrest scenario ("One Time's Got No Case") around a Stevie Wonder clavinet figure (from "You Haven't Done Nothin'") propelled by a taut, bass-driven groove. "I fought with the brain and not the gat," Mix-A-Lot declares at the surprise ending of the track. He also thanks his lawyers.

The title tune of Mack Daddy suggests that, for Mix-A-Lot and his crew, posing like pimps and talking trash is all part of a night out with the guys. "A Rolls Royce full of big, black men in the suburbs mixing with the citizens" – even set to a throbbing, testosterone-pumped rhythm track, it sounds funny and true, not intimidating. Mix-A-Lot proves himself a nimble freestyle tongue waggler on "Lockjaw," though his strong suit lies in the randy come-ons and humorous storytelling of traditional hip-hop. "Baby Got Back" celebrates a section of the anatomy long revered by rappers ("beggin' for a piece of that bubble" is a new twist). Asserting the perilous nature of his hometown projects ("Seattle Ain't Bullshittin'") or the insidious effects of dope ("I'm Your New God"), Mix-A-Lot sounds altogether less assured. When he has to strain his narrow vocal range for impact, Mix-A-Lot puts a spin on his rhymes that becomes irritating. And while the National Rifle Association probably won't sample his anti-gun-control rant "No Holds Barred," it certainly could.

Mack Daddy bottles two timeless rock & roll qualities: gross irresponsibility and shameless macho. Consumed in moderate doses, this party album provides a bracing and abrasive tonic. (RS 628)


MARK COLEMAN





(Posted: Apr 16, 1992)

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