The Shining

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (165 ratings)
The Shining album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 36:25

eMusic Review 0

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Nate Patrin

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
A great producer's posthumous testament.
Label: BBE

The first post-mortem record from the legendary producer — and, doubtless, not the last — The Shining was already three-quarters finished when Jay Dee passed away earlier in the year. But this album doesn't seem like a disjointed cash-in. Everything here feels complete; this is a producer-driven record that coheres tighter than most. It helps that the right MCs are matched to the right tracks: Common rides the bounce of the self-consciously retro-futuristic "E=MC2," which would've been the best Dilla-produced track on Electric Circus by a mile, while Busta Rhymes sounds crazier than he has in a decade yelling at a mosquito kazoo chorus of Beethoven's Fifth on the brief leadoff "Geek Down." Best of all are the "Love" tracks: the minute-long but substantial jazz-funk loop "Love Jones"; the elusive Pharoahe Monch rap-singing nonchalantly intense R&B on "Love"; the chart-ready macro-snap of MED & Guilty Simpson's "Jungle Love"; and "Love Movin'," which gives the Roots 'Black Thought a rattling Afrobeat march to stomp through.

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look how fast this got 157 ratings.

djcureyes

that is my review.

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Busted

soreEyes

Busta Rhymes contribution on the first track is so cheesy and out of place. Other then that, the album rocs!

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Sublime Genius

Kewpie

This is a beautiful & submlime piece of work bar the first track which is a violent, harsh jolt. Get past this and the rest is amazing.

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Epic Melody

GajaMan

On the subject of this album, I want to write about the song "So Far To Go", which is my favorite. When I hear the beginning of this song, I notice an epic beuty to the sound, especially considoring the fact that the artist who created the melody is no longer among us. It's hard to explain, kind of like theres a whole story being told through it, but once Common starts rapping, it sort of dies away into the background.

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genius

monkeymaster

the man's a genius. check out champion sound by jaylib (collabo with madlib) that's on some other level also. and to the man who says the drums aren't programmed, of course they are programmed. dilla chopped up the breaks and then programs using the individual drum hits to create a new structured beat. the man didn't just use a sample without messing with it. if you want to hear a brilliant interview with the man check out dustbustersmusic.com

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true but....

madlabinc

to my man who wrote the review about the drum programing on won't do...i feel you but your off!!!the drums on won't do are sampled from the isley brothers(footsteps)the review you did was good,dilla is one of he best beat makers, but please if you give someone props,know the back ground of the artist!!!

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McNasty

MyManHenri

"1 won't do it, 2 is not enough for me no. " - Have you listened to that drum program? McNasty! I could not wait for eMusic - went and bought the Shining Dill-strumentals. Had to. To all the fans out there, do not forget the J Dilla x New Era hat. All proceeds go to The Foundation. www.smplsz.com

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One Love

j-mals

Some great shit on here. E=MC2 is for all those who like the old Common. J-Dilla brings out the best in everyone!

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Love that Dilla sound!

haropan

Another true genius we lost too soon...

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the first again!

JPLin

J DILLA!!!!

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Months before he passed away, J Dilla asked fellow Detroiter and longtime associate Karriem Riggins to help him complete The Shining. With the album apparently 75 percent complete, Riggins — an accomplished multi-instrumentalist and producer in his own right — was handed the masters and went about the completion of the album as if he were inside the mind of Dilla. Though it’s disjointed, a little bumpy, and — in places — perceptibly unfinished-sounding, The Shining is a very worthy addition to Dilla’s discography. A slightly more in-depth synthesis of studio creations and live instrumentation when compared to the productions that have trickled out during 2005 and 2006, the album is drenched in soul — save for a couple space-age basslines and other fleeting forms of alien synthetics — and features an impressive raft of Dilla’s favorite MCs and singers, big names and relative unknowns alike. And though it’s less than 40 minutes in length, Dilla was always about brevity, which means the meandering is kept to a minimum. On “Baby,” Dilla swaps lines with Guilty Simpson and Madlib in what amounts to an amusing locker-room boast fest. (Simpson, apparently a fan of The Surreal Life, claims he’ll “Beat your dog like Flavor Flav.”) The shamelessly gooey “So Far to Go,” featuring Common and D’Angelo, expands Donuts’ “Bye” to six minutes, allowing wide shafts of light to pour through the spaces between the subtle backbeat. “Dime Piece” is some prime 21st century quiet storm, a Dwele feature that coasts through twilight. Fittingly, the closing “Won’t Do” is all-Dilla, from the beat to the nasty MCing to an impressive vocal hook that’s nearly as dapper as anything delivered by Dwele. (Dilla’s not given nearly enough credit for being a top-flight R&B producer from the very beginning; compare the Pharcyde’s “Runnin’” to Mya’s “Fallen,” or check the instrumental versions of just about any one of his tracks.) It’s impossible not to wonder exactly what this album could’ve been, or where Dilla would’ve gone with his skills after its release. But it’s just as easy to marvel at the amount of quality music he generated while he was on this planet. – Andy Kellman

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