An overdue overview that is era-specific instead of career-spanning, Innovative Life compiles several
Arabian Prince productions originally released in the 12" format on Rapsur, Street Kut, and Techno Kut, along with the fruit of a dalliance with the early
N.W.A. As detailed in the phenomenal liner notes, this disc sheds a spotlight not just on
Arabian Prince but the West Coast, which tends to get a very short shrift throughout coverage of electro and pre-gangsta-era hip-hop. Not all of the content here is gold -- "Strange Life," the first single, is a limp curiosity, recorded with musicians who knew much more about
Poco than
P-Funk -- but plenty of it rates with any of
Arabian's
Kraftwerk/
Bambaataa-spawned brethren on the East Coast, not to mention his fellow L.A. scene running mate,
Egyptian Lover. All the ingredients of classic electro are present -- the bounding machine beats, synthesizers set to either "paranoid" or "assault," cyborg vocals, wordplay that switches from the sci-fi-obsessed to the playfully (rather than crudely) lecherous. (The timeline here cuts off just before
Arabian cut "It's Time to Bone.") The most noteworthy missing track would be
J.J. Fad's "Supersonic," easily the most well-known
Arabian production, but anyone around at the time of its release can likely replay it in his or her head from start to finish. ~ Andy Kellman