Black Up

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (94 ratings)
Black Up album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 36:26

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Michelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

06.28.11
For all its private-files feel, the music is instantly accessible
2011 | Label: Sub Pop Records

Ishmael Butler doesn’t like to repeat himself, and he’ll take as much time as needed between projects in order to make sure that he doesn’t. As Butterfly, he led the New York trio Digable Planets through a pair of very different, equally rewarding mid ’90s albums (1993′s Reachin’ and ’94′s Blowout Comb), then kept his head down for a decade. That group split in 1996, and Butler eventually made his way back to Seattle, where he grew up, and formed a solid funk-rock band called Cherrywine, whose sole, self-titled album came out in 2003. By decade’s end, Butler had a new group: Shabazz Palaces, which gigged around Seattle. Butler insisted that local press not reveal his true identity, but it leaked quickly regardless.

It’s not as if Butler had anything to be ashamed of. Black Up, Shabazz Palaces’ debut, is defiantly strange: murky, stoned, meditative, uncompromised, from the gamelan and eerie chant that drive “An echo from the hosts that profess infinitum” to the dank, minimalist percussion and disembodied soul wail that marks “Recollections of the wraith.” (All the titles are like that.) Yet for all its private-files feel, the music is instantly accessible: Butler’s far too… read more »

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Challenging, but oh so worth it.

Fbones24

For me, this album literally took about twenty listens before it clicked. During those listens, it slowly burrowed its way into my consciousness. For me, Hip Hop dies around 2001. This album transcends Hip Hop. It is all I have listened to now for months. I still can't explain why I love this album so much. The rhymes are sometimes loose and "syllabolically" inconsistent. The beats, however are mesmerizing and Butler's flow is like Heroin....slowly addictive where once it grabs you, you can't get out! This album is literally a musical trap. Listen to it and take a trip.

user avatar

one of 2011's greats

wordsgotmethewound

it's interesting the careful shroud of mystique, intrigue and anti-hype hype carefully crafted by Butterfly, I mean Ishmael - and Sub Pop. One can only surmise reinvention and distancing oneself from the DPs. But for as original and progressive as this hip hop record is, there are several nods back to digable... albeit mostly in vibe and phrasing. However, the coda on Swerve is a direct sample off of the Planet's Escapism - trading funk for black. Dig this record, pun very much intended.

user avatar

black up

pondo19

palaceer doesn't pussyfoot around. listen only if you're ready.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Townfolk Hip-Hop

By Tambi Younes, Label Relations Coordinator

Nirvana and Pearl Jam. This is who you'll hear about when the topic of Seattle's music scene is brought up in a historical context. It makes sense. Alternative music has always been the face of the Seattle scene. But before Kurt and Eddie, there was Ray and Quincy and Jimi. Seattle has soul, and the hip-hop community in the 206 is the living proof. They love their hometown and the music reflects that. "Townfolk Hip-Hop"… more »

0

Gimme Indie Rock!

By Marc Hogan, eMusic Contributor

Calling all poseurs, dilettantes, and part-time punks: Check your head and check your cred at the door. From Buzzcocks to Iceage, from dream-pop to chillwave, Gimme Indie Rock gives you the sickest vibes out of the scene that can't stand to be pigeonholed. Whether Dum Dum Girls or the Strange Boys, the Field Mice or Killer Mike, James Blake or PJ Harvey, you'll hear them all here-- where it's totally OK to hang the DJ. more »

0

Restless Ears Radio

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

If you're like me, one genre is not enough. You need to skip from indie rock to roots reggae to extreme black metal to grimy old-school hip-hop -- all within the space of an hour. Life is too short to relegate yourself to just one kind of music. That's what my station, Restless Ears Radio, is all about. It's for the listener who answers the question, "What kind of music do you like?" not with… more »

0

eMerging Artists

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

At eMusic, we take pride in being the place you hear about artists first. Whether it's through our eMusic Selects program - which brought you the first releases by Best Coast, Crystal Stilts, Strand of Oaks and more - or our Breaking Artist features, our editorial team is always on the grind to bring you the best new artists first. Our eMerging Artists station is your chance to be first on the Next Big Thing. more »

0

Bass, Beats & Bars

By Nate Patrin, eMusic Contributor

Hip-hop's spectrum is broader than ever, with a scene in every city and a thousand ways to control a mic. Bass, Beats & Bars ties it all together -- the hustler opulence of Rick Ross, the street-level grind of Freddie Gibbs and G-Side, underground scholars like Shabazz Palaces, and iconic veterans from DJ Quik to Pharoahe Monch. more »

They Say All Music Guide

Only a little more than a year after releasing two EPs — a self-titled one, and Of Light — Seattle’s Shabazz Palaces signed to Sub Pop for their full-length debut. Even on a high-profile label, former Digable Planets member Ishmael Butler (formerly Butterfly) maintains a shroud of mystique, rapping under the facade of Palaceer Lazaro and purposely avoiding publicity, interviews, and liner credits. Considering his long-term time in the game, his wordplay is still surprisingly relevant, and, masked as Lazaro, he reinvents himself by adding an air of sophistication to the persona of a streetwise gangster. Jazz references are no longer the norm and Butler steers away from the blaxploitation slang and rhymes about being an insect or a creamy spy, but he still has a distinctive, surreal style of flowing. Compared to former albums by Digable Planets, Cherrywine, Camp Lo (Butler guested on some of their tracks), or even on the prior Shabazz Palaces EPs (which were pretty dark to begin with), Black Up is a much harder-edged album. There are no obvious singles, and the beats are murky, splintered, and synthesized, reminiscent of the space-age rap of acts like Deltron 3030, Kool Keith, and Dälek. In a year when minimal production is on the upswing — a trend highlighted by the enormous buzz surrounding Odd Future and Tyler, the Creator’s bare-boned productions — Shabazz Palaces seems perfectly in tune with a modern underground movement that embraces the most ominous and difficult aspects of hip-hop. As the mainstream becomes more and more predictable, Shabazz Palaces’ inscrutability is a welcome change. Because the beats are so abstract, roots take precedent, and a strong presence on the microphone becomes the most important aspect. Butler fills this role with ease. His smooth, sparkling rhymes glue Knife Knights’ watery environment together to create a provocative listen from start to finish. – Jason Lymangrover

more »