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Guns Don't Kill People...Lazers Do

by

Major Lazer

 
Guns Don't Kill People...Lazers Do
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Avg: 3.5 (158 ratings)

  • We Say...

    Is it a dancehall hurricane? Musical cocaine? Whatever name you give it, Major Lazer's addictive first single, "Hold the Line (feat. Mr. Lex and Santigold)," seems destined to become a breakthrough success. Diplo & Switch, the DJ duo behind Major Lazer, already achieved some mainstream renown for their work on M.I.A.'s "Paper Planes." "Hold the Line" takes that legacy one step further, rewinding and digitizing beat-heavy Jamaican dancehall into a throbbing dance floor-filler for the cyber age. While the song is certainly helped by Mr. Lex, whose deep reggae vocals cover a stormy surf guitar line, the single's real treasure is the genre-defying Santigold, who raps and caws with dizzying speed over a schizophrenic collage of ringing phones, neighing horses and other found oddities.

  • They Say...

    Pan-American dance diplomats Diplo and Switch moved from Brazilian baile funk and Baltimore club music to Jamaican dancehall for Guns Don't Kill People... Lazers Do, the debut album for their Major Lazer project. (There was also a one-off Top Ten hit and Grammy-nominated Record of the Year in there too, for M.I.A.'s "Paper Planes.") The results are impressive standard-bearers for dancehall, displaying the duo's ample facility for floating the type of productions that have made dancehall the most experimental and extreme type of commercial dance music since it dawned in the mid-'80s. Inveterate DJs and music fans, both Diplo and Switch are well versed in the style, and they apparently had no difficulty recruiting dancehall's best and brightest for features, including vocalists Mr. Lex, Ms. Thing, and Mr. Vegas as well as production powerhouse Vybz Kartel (they also lured in a pair of non-dancehall types, Santigold and Amanda Blank). As other producers have known, including the Bug and DJ /rupture, dancehall music is perfect for experimentalist dance producers. It's a careening and unpredictable style, where hooks can be fashioned from any noises: sirens, horns, vocal tags, horses neighing, cellphones buzzing, babies crying -- and of course, lasers. The beats are pummeling, equally reliant on digital pulses and martial snares, but they drop out often (the better to lay down some more offbeat effects). The productions here conform to dancehall more than they play against type, even spreading to the affectionately silly weed anthem "Mary Jane" and a pair of slack (aka sex-heavy) tracks, "Bruk Out" and "What U Like." (Unfortunately, on the latter, an epic battle of the sexes between Einstein and indie rap sensation Amanda Blank never materializes.) The highlights come early on, when Santigold and Mr. Lex combine fiercely on the opening "I'll Make Ya" (aka "Hold the Line"), and also on "Anything Goes," where Turbulence earns his sobriquet with a screaming extroverted performance over Major Lazer's hailstorm of beats and sweeping strings. Side two is more scattershot, with everything from a surprisingly weak piece of Auto-Tuned dance-pop to a production tour de force on "Pon de Floor," with Major Lazer joined by Vybz Kartel. It's as much as could be expected but not quite as much as it could have been, and considering the rumors of more productions and guests that didn't see the light, it's likely there'll be more to come.

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