On 2001's Hidden Beach Recordings Presents: Unwrapped, Vol. 1, a rotating group of jazz musicians offered smooth jazz interpretations of rap songs. Producers Tony Joseph and
Darryl Ross' novel concept was that the only thing wrong with rap music was, well, the rap part. You'd have thought that an idea so silly would be laughed off, but there is no accounting for the taste of smooth jazz fans, and the album actually topped Billboard's contemporary jazz chart for three weeks, offering commercial justification for a second volume. "Jazz, hip-hop, and R&B, it's all the same music," proclaims disc jockey Frank-Ski at the outset, articulating another silly idea. Of course, much of the musical background of rap songs tends to be constructed out of borrowings or outright samples from other songs, and when you strip off the rap, you are left with those tunes. Thus,
Coolio's "Gangsta's Paradise" minus
Coolio is
Stevie Wonder's song "Pastime Paradise," and "Summertime" minus
Will Smith's rap is
Kool & the Gang's song "Summertime." Here, the former is paced by
Karen Briggs' agitated violin improvisations, while the latter spotlights contributions from Hidden Beach saxophonist Mike Phillips and keyboardist
Jeff Lorber. The album offers the same appeal as a
101 Strings treatment of
Beatles songs -- it allows people who have been bombarded by popular music on the radio in their cars, their children's bedrooms, and the mall, to hear what for them are more palatable versions of necessarily familiar songs. Finally, rap music for people who don't like rap! It's still a silly idea, but obviously a commercial one. This limited-edition version contains a second disc featuring a promotional rap, two extra tracks, a live version of one of the other songs, and a computer-animated video starring a scantily clad woman with dragonfly wings. ~ William Ruhlmann