I'll Sleep When You're Dead

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (346 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 54:43

eMusic Review

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Tim Noakes

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
A bumpy ride through El-P’s New York state of mind, post-9/11.
Label: Definitive Jux / The Orchard

In the five years since he released the aggro rap classic Fantastic Damage, El-P has become even more paranoid. On this, his second solo LP, the Brooklyn-based beatmaker/MC takes the listener on a bumpy ride through his New York state of mind. It's a dark journey. Packed with thumping drums, frantic machine gun vocals, cyborg fantasies and synth lines worthy of John Carpenter, I'll Sleep When You're Dead blends together the best elements of Company Flow's Little Johnny from the Hospital, Cannibal Ox's The Cold Vein and Fantastic Damage. The album comes with an intriguing guest list, cleverly utilising the distinctly un-hip-hop talents of: Trent Reznor, Tunde Adebimpe from TV on the Radio, members of the Mars Volta, former Chavez frontman Matt Sweeney, Yo La Tengo's James McNew, Head Automatica's Daryl Palumbo and Cat Power's Chan Marshall. The result is a musically engrossing, if somewhat oppressive, internal war report from one of hip-hop's most consistently imaginative producers.

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destroys other albums!

shempboogie

been listening to this regularly for over a year and I'm still not over it. the slow songs aren't my thing but when it hits it hits friggin' hard!first seven tracks are all monsters! actually skip drive get no kings

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After the apocalypse ...

kagikaze

... all music may sound like this. Might be worthwhile.

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This is HipHop

MetalFaceBrewery

It's weird...you can't listen to the whole thing all the way thru and be happy but the songs on there that are good are great. Great like amazing...been a head for 20 years now and I'm not used to music impacting me anymore. I'm not 18 and looking for things to influence my life anymore but at almost 30, this album made me step outside myself and recognize the absolute brilliance of El-P. The last track is better than any poem or track I have ever heard.

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Disappointing

emrf

The beats are pretty cool, but the whole dystopian thing is really overdone, and the rhymes aren't great. Just give "Draconian Love" a listen. Maybe you'll like it, but it makes me feel embarrassed for the MC. That's never a good sign.

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Oh.My.God.

thingfish23

I thought Ace's "None Shall Pass" was addicitve 'til I copped this. It has seldom left my player/head since. "Drive" doesn't do it for me, nor "Overly Dramatic Truth" (the subject matter isn't nearly as interesting as the music on that one, which is too bad really...) All the rest is dope - and what you don't like at first will grow on you. Git it.

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Best hip-hop I've heard this year

asteele77

First heard about this album on the Sound Opinions year-end review show. Bought it on their suggestion, and I couldn't be happier. I put it on my headphones on the way to work today and was completely enraptured till the last note of the final track (which comes as a bit of a surprise, by the way). His production is incredibly, almost airlessly dense, with lots of electronic noise and heavy drums. It all meshes with his lyrics, which are decidedly dark and apocolyptic. The whole album works extremely well. Kudos. Kanye can go suck an egg.

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The leader for a reason...

a1va1

Some of the most thoughtful, raw and entertaining production. Memorable one liners through out the album, unique flow and a detectable passion on every syllable. The future of forward thinking hip hop.

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Yez zer!!

malotics

A million people can't be wrong. This is and was the album to cop for 2007. Definitly cop this one.

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Buy This!

DrBloodmoney

This is the best album of 2007 so far. Seriously, go buy it. Now.

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Passion in every track

Amateur

I really like this is cd, it's never boring or predictable and El-P's rough lyrics and delivery make this a great cd to vent to after a frustrating day at work. His most accessible yet.

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They Say All Media Guide

With even commercial rap’s fortunes on the decline during 2007 and Rjd2 going indie rock, the rap underground must have seemed like a lonely place to El-P. Perfect time for a community album featuring contributions from most of the Definitive Jux community as well as some expertly fitted outsiders (the Mars Volta, Nine Inch Nails, even Cat Power). As a producer, El-P’s only gotten better since Fantastic Damage. If a Bomb Squad production made it sound like the Apocalypse was nigh, El-P’s tracks come post-apocalypse — no less heavy but dark, dusty, and brittle, marching numbly like an army of the popping and locking dead. I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead is definitely the best-produced and most powerful Definitive Jux record since Cannibal Ox’s The Cold Vein — which makes it the best in underground rap during that time. Meanwhile, El-P’s improved as a rapper as well. Although what he’s trying to say or mean exactly is often in doubt, he’s better than any of his past CoFlow compatriots at matching the air of doom inherent in the sound (“I might have been born yesterday, sir/But I stayed up all night”). By the time Chan Marshall of Cat Power wraps up the record — playing a sampled soul siren — I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead is revealed as one of the most powerful hip-hop albums of 2007. While Public Enemy exposed the hypocrisy and greed of the ’80s, El-P reflects his era just as well; the sense of stress is palpable, an “after the end of the world” feeling that’s waiting anxiously for something else to be born. – John Bush

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