| Slakah
The Beatchild represents the evolution of the enigmatic producer.
Five years ago the urban landscape was ruled by the super production
gods. Names like Dre, The Neptunes, Timbaland and Dilla (R.I.P.)
conjure up visions of walking celestial beings blessing us with
musical gems. Then the internet came and completely changed the
producer paradigm. In the past the artist/producer title was a choice,
now it's a prerequisite as musicians struggle to stay relevant in
the hearts and minds of 'gimme, gimme', attention-deficient listeners.
If an artist is going to get by in '08 they have to be a musical
multi-tasker and Slakah fits perfectly into that lane. He's a musical
chameleon whose gifts are only truly realized in the presence of
other talented artists and musicians. This is why The Soul Movement
Vol. 1 is such an effective introduction to this kid's budding abilities.
Featuring collaborations from the cream of Canada's burgeoning talent
(Drake, Tona, Divine Brown, Shad, Melanie Durrant, Ray Robinson,
Ebrahim and so many others) the album is feel-good new soul with
enough of a world-inflected influence to keep it fresh. It's an
ALBUM! Meaning the songs are built to complement and augment each
other so grabbing one or two songs and popping them into your I-pod
won't do this soulful effort justice. Standout tracks are Enjoy
Ya Self, Get Down Right, The Answer, Crate Love, B-boy Beef, I'll
Be Alright & Bad Meaning Good. The album's six featured interludes
are of the Shit-I-wish-this-was-a-full-song variety so when you
add those to the aforementioned songs you realize The Soul Movement
Vol.1 is really worth enjoying in its entirety (sorry attention-deficient
kids!). If you come from the 'Go to the store, buy the album, go
home, sit back and listen while reading the liner notes' era then
The Soul Movement Vol. 1 is an album you'll readily add to your
collection. If you're from the 'Go to the internet, find new music
and throw it into my I-pod blender' era, then this album is a great
introduction to a different (some may even say better) soul-listening
experience. - Ty Harper
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