The easy-flowing Things Fall Apart made the Roots one of the most popular artists of alternative rap's second wave. Anticipated nearly as much as it was delayed, the proper studio follow-up, Phrenology, finally appeared in late 2002, after much perfectionist tinkering by the band -- so much that the liner notes include recording dates (covering a span of two years) and, sometimes, histories for the individual tracks. Coffeehouse music programmers beware: Phrenology is not Things Fall Apart redux; it's a challenging, hugely ambitious opus that's by turns brilliant and bewildering, as it strains to push the very sound of hip-hop into the future. Despite a few gentler tracks (like the Nelly Furtado and Jill Scott guest spots), Phrenology is the hardest-hitting Roots album to date, partly because it's their most successful attempt to re-create their concert punch in the studio. ?uestlove's drums positively boom out of the speakers on the Talib Kweli duet "Rolling With Heat"; the fantastic, lean guitar groover "The Seed (2.0)" (with neo-soul auteur Cody ChesnuTT); and the opening section of "Water." The ten-minute "Water" is the album's centerpiece, a powerful look at former Roots MC Malik B.'s drug problems that morphs into a downright avant-garde sound collage. Similarly, lead single "Break You Off," a neo-soul duet with Musiq, winds up in a melange of drum'n'bass programming and live strings. If moves like those, or the speed-blur Bad Brains punk of "!!!!!!!," or the drum'n'bass backdrop of poet Amiri Baraka's "Something in the Way of Things (In Town)" can seem self-consciously eclectic, it's also true that Phrenology is one of those albums where the indulgences and far-out experiments make it that much more fascinating, whether they work or not. Plus, slamming grooves like "Rock You," "Thought @ Work," and the aforementioned "The Seed (2.0)" keep things exciting and vital. If this really is the future of hip-hop, then the sky is the limit. [The two hidden bonus tracks are "Rhymes and Ammo," the Talib Kweli collaboration that appeared on Soundbombing, Vol. 3, and "Something to See," another techno-inflected jam.] ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Phrenology (Clean)
11/26/2002
Videos from Phrenology (Clean)
All Music Guide Review
Track Listing
Similar Albums
Credits
- Bob Power
- Mixing
- James Poyser
- Strings, Guest Appearance, Moog Synthesizer
- Scott Storch
- Producer
- DJ Scratch
- Producer
- Richard Nichols
- Executive Producer, Mixing
- The Roots
- Main Performer
- Ursula Rucker
- Guest Appearance
- Shawn Taylor
- Assistant
- Tom Coyne
- Mastering, Mixing
- Jason Goldstein
- Mixing
- Kenny J. Gravillis
- Design
- Ahmir Khalib Thompson
- Producer, Sequencing, Mixing
- Mos Def
- Overdubs, Guest Appearance
- Steve Mandel
- Engineer, Assistant
- Jim Bottari
- Engineer
- John Adler
- Mixing Assistant
- Carlos "Storm" Martinez
- Engineer
- Jill Scott
- Vocals
- Nelly Furtado
- Vocals (Background), Guest Appearance
- Alicia Keys
- Overdubs, Guest Appearance
- Cody ChesnuTT
- Producer
- Pablo Arraya
- Assistant
- Scott Whiting
- Assistant
- Tracey Moore
- Background Music, Guest Appearance
- Ben Kenney
- Mixing
- Kamiah "Little Klang" Gray
- Producer, Guest Appearance
- James McKrone
- Assistant
- Shinobu Mitsuoka
- Assistant
- Kurt Nepogoda
- Assistant
- Steef Van De Gevel
- Assistant
- Nuah Vi
- Cello
- Omar Edwards
- ?, Arp
- Andre Dandridge
- Assistant
- Robert "LB" Dorsey
- Engineer
- Caliph Gamble
- Assistant
- James Blood Ulmer
- Guitar, Guest Appearance
- Jeff Chestek
- Engineer, Mixing
- Chris Gehringer
- Mastering
- Jef Lee Johnson
- Guitar, Guest Appearance























