The Ecstatic

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Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 45:35

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Britt Robson

eMusic Contributor

Britt Robson has written about jazz for Jazz Times, downbeat, the Washington Post and many other publications over the past 30 years. He currently writes regula...more »

06.09.09
Mos returns to show us how rapping is supposed to sound
2009 | Label: Downtown Records

Comparing The Ecstatic to decade-old, deified Mos Def classics like Black Star and Black On Both Sides is juggling apples and oranges in a time warp. Let's just say the rapper/actor has re-engaged his "A" game and delivered one of the ten best hip-hop platters of 2009.

The beats on The Ecstatic elasticize from cinematic Bollywood to stripped-down Brooklyn. Its spoken-word samples of Malcolm X and Fela Kuti are perfectly calibrated mood-setters, its guest rappers are old-school all-stars too vibrant for nostalgia. The bountiful highlights include producer Madlib purloining his Beat Konducta in India series while Slick Rick plays naive soldier in Baghdad in "Auditorium." Then there's the pair of tracks from producer Preservation, who steals the show from the bigger names, first by applying a warm, laconic, piano-and-trumpet groove on "Priority," then by pirouetting off Fela's Afrocentric verbal sentiments with a brittle, pile-driver polyrhythm of wood blocks and hand claps — hopscotchin', jump-ropin 'music — on "Quiet Dog Bite Hard." Finally, Black Star die-hards will freak to hear Mos reunite with Talib Kweli over a guitar-heavy J Dilla mix on "History."

Mos Def commands the project with intellectual rigor, stylistic adventure and artistic intuition, coming hard and… read more »

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Not a huge hip hop aficionado, but...

paultaylor_2009

I still appreciated Mos Def's "The Ecstatic". I tend not to let my music and politics mix, nor desire it when they do mix, but I was able to get past that because there is a lot of good stuff to focus on: nice flow from track to track, intelligent lyrics, plus at least one track I could blast ("Priority") and feel cool.

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Intelligence has never sounded so bad ass

mdl338

He's always been a brilliant lyricist, but I think this is his best solo project to date in terms of production value, beats and song-craft.

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very impressed

acrobatastic88

for artists in the game as long as Mos its hard to surprise people or present something different, but still retain your original audience. he does a fantastic job of this w/ The Ecstatic

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phenom

mipinok

at first listen i did not get this album. about the 3rd/4th time around something clicked. mos is making very relevant and timely social commentary on this record and creating a sound i haven't heard anywhere else with the mixture of middle eastern sampling. fyi i do not have his other albums, some of which are characterized as classics so i can't compare this work to his historical sound.

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Ecstasy

a-dub-u

If I didn't already love Mos-def, then this album would have been a one night stand. He got me aroused, I fell for it, and then I didn't c-m. There are some really interesting new beats on this album, the DJ's and Producers did their job but Mos fell short. Maybe too much time in Japan. That said, it is still in heavy rotation because the mother f_cker can do what he wants and it sounds good!

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unavailable?

bioillogical

"We're sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (Ireland) at this time. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause." Well, I'm sorry and apologize for any inconvenience caused by me and others illegally downloading this album.

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Hip Hop Album of The Year

GMCaptain

I simply can't stop listening to it and I've had it for months. This is REAL hip-hop.

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Brilliance without the fire

scientifik

Maybe my expectations were too high because I think Mos Def can walk on water at times, but I feel like there is a fire or focus missing from this album. Seems sharper that the New Danger, but just not the poison dart flows he was delivering with Black Star, Black on Both Sides, and various Rawkus releases back in the day. I really wanted this to be mind blowing, but after a few listens I felt it wasn't pushing the boundaries like I've come to expect.

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They Say All Music Guide

During the first several years of the 2000s, it wasn’t unreasonable to want Mos Def, one of the most dazzling living MCs, to make a rap album. After he released 2006′s True Magic, his first all-rap release in seven years — following the back-to-back instant classics Black Star and Black on Both Sides — it was easier to understand why he had been devoting much more time to acting and diversions like The New Danger. It was evident that he was not inspired, no doubt prompting a fair portion of his followers to think, “OK, maybe we should have been more specific: please make a good rap album.” On The Ecstatic, it’s not as if Mos Def makes a full return to the lucid/bug-eyed rhymes heard on decade-old cuts like “Hater Players” and “Hip Hop.” Instead, he comes up with a mind-bending, low-key triumph, the kind of magnetic album that takes around a dozen spins to completely unpack. Oscillating between cerebral gibberish and seemingly nonchalant, off-the-cuff boasts, it’s obvious that Mos Def is back to enjoying his trade. For those who are deeply into the Stones Throw label, the album won’t take quite as long to process. Some of the productions from brothers Madlib and Oh No were pulled from their instrumental releases, including a pair from the India-themed installments of the Beat Konducta series. Altogether, they provide much of the album’s dusty off-centeredness; even though “Supermagic” has Mos Def at his most energized and alert, its needling psychedelic guitars and sweeping Bollywood drama are transportive. Combined with backdrops from Georgia Anne Muldrow, Preservation, the Neptunes’ Chad Hugo, and the Ed Banger label’s Mr. Flash, the album is a gumbo that adds juicy dub thwacks, regal synthetic horns, tangled piano vamps, dashes of spiritual jazz, and rolling Afro-beat, almost all of which is cloaked in light reverb. Though there are highlights throughout, two of the most notable tracks are at the very end: “History,” where Talib Kweli joins in over a wistful J Dilla beat, and “Casa Bey,” where a playful Mos Def somehow keeps up with Banda Black Rio’s deliriously frantic samba funk. – Andy Kellman

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