Second Nature

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Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 19   Total Length: 74:09

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Nate Patrin

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
All Natural, Second Nature
2004 | Label: Thrill Jockey

What N.W.A. did for East Coast gangstas, Common did for Midwestern "conscious" MCs, and nobody resurrected Resurrection's vibes quite like Common's fellow Chicagoans in All Natural. Their '98 debut No Additives, No Preservatives broke them on regional college radio with the stay-true backpacker buzz single "It's O.K.," but it's their sophomore record that stands as a breakthrough. Lead rapper Capital D's subject matter is familiar — "Chatham" is one of the underground's better hood-strife anthems, and "Queens Get the Money" is a likeable precursor to fellow Chicagoan Kanye West's "Gold Digger" — but he rhymes with enough panache (and enough classic-style beats) to keep things lively.

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Eh...

getgreg

Couple stand out tracks, overall though not that great.

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Solid Hip-Hop

Halien

I really like All Natural and this album is a classic with some really good beats and some great guest appearances. Unfortunately, juvenile homophobia permeates the lyrics of a lot of the songs which is pretty lame in my opinion. Overall I still recommend it to the underground hip-hop fan.

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Midwestern Hip-Hop

By Nate Patrin, eMusic Contributor

Like the South, the Midwest has long been an R&B stronghold that took its time breaking through nationally in the hip-hop scene. There were a few subtle flashpoints in the early '90s — St. Paul, Minnesota's DMG got signed by Scarface to Houston's Rap-A-Lot label and released a lost gangsta classic, Rigormortiz, in 1993; one year later Chicago's Common (then known as Common Sense) would release his poor-selling but widely beloved sophomore album Resurrection and… more »

They Say All Music Guide

All Natural’s first full-length release in several years is another example of a rap album that should have been shorter. But it’s still a satisfying effort despite its excessive length. Capital D delivers fast-paced, intelligent, complex rhymes and seems comfortable with both social consciousness and braggadocio; he’s not perfect, however, so sometimes his delivery sounds rushed or his rhymes seem uninspired (e.g., “Mayor Daly” and “On the Daily”). Of course, the album also features several guest MCs, including J.U.I.C.E. (on “Ill Advisory,” where his style contrasts effectively with Capital D), Daily Planet’s Spotlight (on “Queens Get the Money,” whose anti-gold-digger message contrasts with the positivity of most of this album), and Atmosphere’s Slug (who shines on “Uncle Sam”). Meanwhile, DJ Tone B. Nimble shows off his turntablist skills and shares production chores with Capital D, Molemen’s Memo (who handles the decks on the percussion-heavy “Chatham” and two other tracks) and His-Panik (who layers strings over the heavy bassline of “The Stick Up” and piano over the sloomy drums of “Queens Get the Money”), Lone Catalysts’ Jason Rawls (who adds a piano loop that blends perfectly with MC Jason Sands’ delivery on “Renaissance”), and G(riot) (whose tracks include the affecting instrumental “The Next Mile”). The production is somewhat uneven, but overall this is a solid, understated, jazz-inflected album that will definitely reward listeners’ attention, even though it won’t send the future of music in any unexpected directions. – Todd Kristel

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