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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Hip Hop at its most dark and desolate.,
By
This review is from: Sleep No More (Audio CD)
Not much is known about DJ Signify, something that can only be attributed to the highly reclusive career he’s led up to this point. Until now, he has released two stunning mix tapes, ‘Signifyin Breaks’ and ‘Mixed Messages’, Signify also contributed to Anticon’s controversial, ‘Music for the Advancement of Hip Hop’ compilation. ‘Sleep No More’ is an extension of his mixtape work and an expedition into dark, industrial production, so much so that the album is sold as the soundtrack to an imaginary horror movie. It’s hip-hop at its darkest and most chilling. While it isn’t quite the terrifying affair the press release makes out, it does have a twisted, almost psychotic edge.Along with his two unlikely henchmen, Sage Francis and Buck 65, Signify embarks on a desolate journey through eerie loops, stark drums, and timely scratching, all seamlessly threaded into one unique whole. While ‘Sleep No More’ is ostensibly a full-length album, it plays a lot more like a mix tape than a conventional LP, essentially meaning that you need to experience the piece in its entirety. As hard as that may be to grasp, there is something quite enchanting about ‘Sleep No More’; both in its scope and execution that provides a sense of accomplishment for the creator and the listener. However, the album mystifies and frustrates in equal measure. When Signify sticks to instrumentals, ‘Sleep No More’ wanders aimlessly, as on the disconcerting ‘Shatter & Splatter’ and the head splitting ‘Migraine’. Elsewhere, ‘Dirty’ chugs along without any real direction. In fact of the instrumental tracks, only opener ‘Fly Away’ and the three parts of the ‘Pee-A-Boo’ trilogy are engaging enough to warrant further investigation – especially ‘Part II’ where the album finally erupts in a fit of clever beats and turntablism. Unfortunately, its might is such that is makes the surrounding tracks sound a bit sparse. The album is aided immeasurably by the vocal signposts that are expertly supplied by Buck 65 and Sage Francis. Frankly, all but the most resilient minds will find the human interaction welcoming. The contrasting styles of the two narrators lend themselves well to the instrumentation. Buck 65 is constantly stumbling on the tempo while Francis offers more elegantly classic diction. However, both supply interesting nuances to Signify’s grey landscapes. Buck’s dark tale of a desolate motel on ‘Stranded’ makes it a menacing proposition, “the bathroom was crawling with roaches and beetles / the sign above the toilet said ‘don’t flush your needles.” His somewhat enervated drawl on ‘Winter’s Going’ and ‘Where Did She Go’ make those two of the stronger tracks. While more energetic, Sage Francis is no less meticulous in his delivery. His accounts on ‘Kiddie Litter’ and ‘Haunted House Party’ spare no detail and help to morph ‘Sleep No More’ into the horror movie it was intended to be. This is not an easy record to listen to. ‘Sleep No More’ unveils its personality with time, and requires repeated listens for one to fully appreciate its scope. DJ Signify has crafted an intriguing and stylish piece of work which unfortunately loses sight of its substance too often. It’s an expansive album that definitely improves with every listen, but at over an hour in length, few will have the patience to discover what lurks in its dark corners.
4.0 out of 5 stars
one of the best progressive hip-hop albums releasd that year,
By Alan Ranta (Tiny Mix Tapes) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sleep No More (Audio CD)
I was extremely excited when I heard this album was in the works [in Dazed & Confused of all places] and that anticipation elevated unchecked for several months until now. Finally the album joining the Johnny Cash of hip-hop, Buck 65 and Sage Francis, the dangerously skilled and confrontational, with relative newcomer DJ Signify is here. It could just be my own high hopes bringing this album down for me but, although the creepy samples, scratching and fuzz doom of Signify's beats create a thick atmosphere and both MC's are their usual selves, not too much really stands out about this project considering the ingredients. It is by all standards a great trip-hop album as chill-ghostly as Portishead's Dummy but it's not mind-blowing. Instead of using this as a chance to push themselves and try new and daring things, Sleep No More basically comes off like a regular Buck 65 album with a more hellish overtone as opposed to his occasional fun side. But, then again, I did have pretty high expectations so those Lex Records fans unfamiliar with Buck's work will fall immediately in love with this. It is still one of the best progressive hip-hop albums released this year.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Quality,
This review is from: Sleep No More (Audio CD)
This album is an amazing amalgamation of the soundscapes and beats that make up the other side of hip hop today. Having teamed up with two almost poetic rappers Buck 65 and Sage Francis this CD has been in constant rotation since I obtained a copy. Not having heard of either of the colaborators on this album before I was delighted to find such fine wordsmiths exist and the quality and complexity of their ryhmes adds a lot to this already accomplished album. Each time you listen to this album something different will stand out. A worthy addtion to any record collection.
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