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Undun [Clean, Import]

The Roots Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
Price: £12.12 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Frequently Bought Together

Undun + How I Got Over + Phrenology
Price For All Three: £25.86

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  • How I Got Over £6.87
  • Phrenology £6.87

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Product details

  • Audio CD (6 Dec 2011)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Clean, Import
  • Label: Def Jam
  • ASIN: B005VR92SS
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 331,621 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Product Description

BBC Review

To grow up in an urban landscape is to struggle with perseverance and survival, a regular cat-and-mouse game in which the winners find ways to navigate the desperate metropolis and the unlucky fall victim to life’s tempting seductions. It’s a dangerous battle boasting certain success stories and weighted with unfortunate casualties. There’s the young man with an uncanny skill, whose divine ability lifts him from the despair; there, another young person seemingly content with the street game, for whatever reason. Then there’s the enigmatic figure stuck somewhere in-between, a conflicted soul with the inkling to play it straight, yet he chooses a life of fast money and crime, cutting his life terribly short in the process.

On The Roots’ new album, undun, the Philadelphia octet tells the story of that character, depicting the demise of semi-fictional character Redford Stephens through a series of sparse soul melodies, thoughtful string arrangements and stomping hip hop grit. Here, The Roots tell the story backwards, beginning with Redford’s death and backpedalling through the circumstances that ordered his steps. The result is a remarkable display of creative unity and a stellar masterpiece sitting alongside the group’s best work. While undun continues The Roots’ recent trend of dark recordings, it does so with a comprehensive flair that caters to listeners old and new, nodding to the despondent vibe of 2006’s Game Theory while flashing optimistic glimpses of light, similar to 2010’s How I Got Over.

And while the drums bang with intense ferocity, the words take centre stage on undun, as Black Thought and a host of others — including frequent collaborator Dice Raw, and Phonte of The Foreign Exchange — wield rhymes that embody Redford’s restless spirit, establishing an aggressive tone along the way. "With undun, we hoped to give voice to an imagined internal dialogue that could take place as a deceased black youth looks forward into our post-modern void," Roots bandleader Ahmir ‘?uestlove’ Thompson wrote in a recent blog entry on The Huffington Post. To that end, the group hits the mark. I Remember finds Thought discussing calmer times, even if the character’s current lifestyle has washed away his memories. Sleep, with its scant percussion and trunk-rattling bass, feels like a sobering funeral song with Redford speaking from the grave. "There I go, from a man to a memory / I wonder if my fam will remember me," Thought rhymes.

Eventually, undun transitions from hip hop to avant-garde fare, turning the album on its ear with a short instrumental collage of cascading piano keys and classical compositions. Multi-instrumentalist Sufjan Stevens repurposes his own song, Redford, for the first interpretation of undun’s four-part closer. Will to Power finds ?uestlove and pianist D.D. Jackson playing musical tug-of-war over a frenetic jazz breakdown similar to Water, from The Roots’ Phrenology album of 2002. All told, undun stands firm as a moving eulogy, full of life in its own murky way and amazingly cohesive in its approach. While the album’s main character lived only 25 years, the music here has the vitality to live much longer.

--Marcus J. Moore

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Story Well Told 6 Dec 2011
By The Wolf TOP 100 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD
There is a story to be told here and The Roots tell it well. Never a band
to follow the hip hop mainstream, 'undun' is up there with 'Things Fall Apart'
(1999) and 'Phrenology' (2002) as one of their finest works to date.
The tale of Redford Stephens is a Rake's Progress of-sorts, possessing
contemporary resonance and honest emotional clout rare in the genre. What
it's got above all else, however, is a bunch of damned fine tunes, wrapped
up in arrangements of sparkling clarity which eschew many of the collective's
usual "experimental" tendencies. This is not to say that the project makes any
compromises to greater commercial accessibility; the social commentary cuts
like a knife; an examination of individual moral choices. Life and death stuff.

There are fourteen tracks in the collection. Intelligent rapping; lyrical
interludes and always with the big strong beats (the wonderful interplay
between Greg Porn and Bilal Oliver is an especial highlight). The delicious
Curtis Mayfield-like guitar licks on 'Kool On' weave in and out of a rich
mix of loose-limbed funky rhythm, soulful wailing and razor-sharp narration.
'I Remember' is another beautiful song, full of pathos and strong melodic
vocal inventions. Sufjan Stevens guests on the sublime realisation of 'Redford
(For Yia Yia & Pappou)'; a moving and perfectly articulated postscript and
three final related instrumental pieces : 'Possibility (2nd Movement)', with its
plaintive string chorale; the angular and jagged lacerations of 'Will To Power
(3rd Movement)' and the prayer-like conclusion of 'Finality (4th Movement)', with
its dark final piano punctuation mark which brings the album to a chilling close.

With 'undun' The Roots continue to demonstrate that they are as out on their own
as they ever were. I remain prepared to follow them wherever they may go next!

Highly Recommended.
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By p
Format:Audio CD
This album is the best album of 2011 and one of the best albums ever made. Every track is glorious and the roots are a very good indication that real music still lives. I love the album and can't wait for the next album to come.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Welldun 31 Jan 2012
By J. Morris TOP 100 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD
Undun is the 13th album for the group and - on first listen - is a little faceless, lacking the sure-fire radio hits that packed out albums like Phrenology. After all, this is a totally different style of album; an existential concept album telling the story of the fictional character Redford Stevens and his life, this has been done a few times now to varying degrees of success (Plan B & The Streets both have albums in this vein).

However, despite the initial impressions Undun has subtleties and hooks that you don't even hear the first time around, resultantly this album has grown on me massively in just three of four listen-throughs. Despite this, I am still confused as to why "Make my" is the lead single for this album - although it isn't bad, it is nowhere near the best track of this album ("I Remember" in my humble opinion) and there are others "Stomp" or "Kool On" that would be more radio-worthy, the order is somewhat confused to; the album feels very unbalanced and tails badly towards the back end.

So why five stars you say? After that string of criticism, how can this album be worth five stars? It's the level of intelligence in the lyrics & music, neither condoning or glamorising Redford Stevens life imbues this album with a level of humanity and psychological depth that is rarely captured by hip-hop. Black Thought's vocals and delivery after 13 albums is just so polished that you can't help but be drawn into the story when this is coupled with orchestral piano & strings and infectious rhythm, it keeps you coming back for more.

A slow burner, likely to be dismissed by the cursory listener, but give it a chance, lend it your attention and you'll realise the Roots are just getting better with age.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars A Masterpiece
For potential buyers out there who don't usually listen INTENTLY, try it with this one. You will be amazed. This piece is exquisitely crafted in every way imaginable. Read more
Published 9 months ago by quiet
5.0 out of 5 stars mature hip hop
Having listened to hip hop for many years its refreshing to listen to something thats as creative as this as most of the hip hop albums being released are the same old guns,drugs... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Mr. R. A. Middleton
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant
This won't take long. This album is brilliant, buy it now. One of the best from 2011, intelligent, thought provoking and killer tunes
Published 16 months ago by gordonnorman
5.0 out of 5 stars one of the greatest
this is one of the greatest albums ever made. Buy this then by an open topped car and play this whilst keeping the speed below 5mph.
Published 16 months ago by sagitaar
5.0 out of 5 stars superb,sublime ground breaking
Superb album from The Roots.Ground breaking hip hop concept album.
Trust me this is THE SERGEANT PEPPER OF HIP HOP ALBUMS,magnificent music,and lyrical genius telling the life... Read more
Published 16 months ago by J. Pirie
5.0 out of 5 stars Hip Hop @ It's Finest Hour.
The Roots r consistent and with this album they take the whole thing to beyond another level. As a band I have to say the thought and production behind this project gives the... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Raggs
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
An album with the a concept set out from the start can be difficult to follow but with quest production and everyone else on the album is amazing and one you know what to listen... Read more
Published 17 months ago by ethanmc27
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