HIPHOPグループ、Dilated PeoplesにてDJを務めているDJ BABU。その類まれなるビートメイキングの才能が惜しみなくほとばしるインスト集第2弾。2007年に発表された「THE BEAT TAPE Vol.1」がネット上で話題騒然となり、翌2008年に「THE BEAT TAPE Vol.1.3」を発表。「俺は振り返ることはしない。これを聴けば俺の才能を疑ってる奴らも黙るしかねえだろ!俺だってDr. DreやPete RockそしてDJ Premierを尊敬してるHIPHOPヘッズの一人さ。そういったインスピレーションを形にした俺のビートをみんなにも聴いてほしいだけなんだ」と語るBABU。さあ、HIPHOPバカの真髄を味わいたいなら今、この作品で!
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The second installment in Babu's Beat Tape series sees the Dilated Peoples and World Famous Beat Junkies DJ/producer unveiling no less than 40 of his studio creations. Much like the original, the tracks featured on Vol. 2 clock in at an average of a minute and a half -- just enough time to entrance listeners in their nuanced layers before ushering in the next beat, whether it be abruptly or seamlessly. A number of Babu's tracks ("Mr. Lone Lee," "Ready," "I'm Gonna Stay") are already tailor-made with scratched-up hooks and sound prime for any hungry MC willing to take them on, while others play like album interludes peppered with spoken word samples that themselves feel like breaks in the action even while Babu is keeping things moving (see "Yacht Hop," "G Yeah"). The signature Dilated production style -- characterized by crisp drums, dramatic brass and string arrangements, soul singer vocal samples, and plenty of piano loops -- is dominant throughout, but Babu does play around with more sinister sounds, too. The distorted bassline and keyboard plinks of "Ghost Romper Room" and the creepy synth arrangements of "Mortay" sound like tongue-in-cheek nods to the Alchemist, while, on "Phlip the Trac," Babu revisits the GZA's "Liquid Swords" and does indeed flip the RZA's original track into a breezier kind of headnodder. ~ Matt Rinaldi
Rovi