eMusic Review 0
"Welcome to Purple Haze: previously written in 2001," an unidentified voice gravely intones at the outset of Harlem rapper Cam'ron's 2004 masterpiece. Wait, what? That doesn't make any sense at all. Oh well, too late!
With this inexplicable statement, listeners are plunged headfirst into Purple Haze, a dizzying and ludicrous maze of a rap record in which everyone seems to be spouting nonsense at once with the utmost seriousness. The record is 23 tracks long, and features prominent samples of Cyndi Lauper, Carl Orff's "Carmina Burana" and the Hill Street Blues theme — as well as frequent interjections by some guy named "Mizzle." Very little of it, in other words, makes any sense on first contact — except those beats, a pleasingly sticky-grimy mixture of cheesy pop samples and hammering drums. It is one of the most maddening, hilarious and endlessly intriguing rap records to see release on a major label at any time in the last ten years.
It is also the high point in Cam'ron's long, itinerant career — with his previous album, Come Home With Me, he had tasted platinum, and he was buzzing hard from the success. Purple Haze is what happens when this man, at the height… read more »
