The "preaching to the converted" problem San Francisco rapper
Paris shares with so many other politically charged rappers has a lot to do with titling songs "Bush Killa" or in the case of his 2008 effort, juxtaposing images of Uncle Sam, a baby, and a hand grenade. This leaves no chance of anyone being blindsided by the anti-War, anti-Bush, or other anti-establishment messages contained within, but there's a circle within
Paris' circle of hardcore fans that might be disrupted by
Acid Reflex's key track, "The Violence of the Lambs." While so many of his contemporaries are rapping the praises of the democratic presidential hopeful
Barack Obama,
Paris offers commentary on the man without mentioning his name by laying the infamous Reverend Jeremiah Wright's "we bombed babies" speech over a soulful beat. It's a speech that
Obama denounced and the dry presentation of it here seems to suggest the rapper/producer believes the revolution will not be elected, at least not a revolution that would satisfy
Paris. Strongly agree or strongly disagree, it's a brilliantly constructed track, most effective as the album was released in late 2008. This might explain why a bulk of the other tracks sound unfinished, a major letdown for the casual fan since
Acid Reflex is
Paris' first official full-length in five years save the 2006 collaboration with
Public Enemy,
Rebirth of a Nation. While the words are all top-notch and will have fans starving for material declaring the album a triumph, the beats sound out of touch and the hooks are short on supply. As hard as it is to criticize an album that aims to give $30,000 away to further education -- three random copies were packaged with a "Golden Ticket" good for a 10K scholarship -- it's uncompromising to a fault and just doesn't live up to previous efforts. ~ David Jeffries