Hip-hop seems adrift, with no particular faction dominating the pop psyche (or the charts). Bling-rap isnt resonating as much lately, these being trying times and all. The current landscape is perfect for a multi-facted, thinking artist such as Mos Def, whose fourth studio album, The Ecstatic, continues his impressive body of musical work.
The 35-year-old Brooklyn native who has, perhaps more than any other rapper, made a mark in film, TV and theater has never had much use for rules. And even though Mos Def is a middling music star, he still approaches his recordings with a decided indie hip-hop aesthetic.
That shows in his choice of producers Madlib, Preservation, Mr. Flash, J Dilla who collectively let the rhythm tracks breath, allowing room for Mos Defs relaxed, conversational flow. Complementing the urban scrapyard of sounds, snippets of found dialogue and arcane samples are various jazz elements like vibes and horns and a handful of Middle Eastern-type chants.
Mos Def, a Muslim, avoids clichéd hood themes in favor of utopian ideas (Revelation) and commentary about everyday life (Workers Comp).
The album has moments of clever irony like, on the intro the The Embassy, where a captain addresses his passengers and describes in detail the guns they have in the cabin.