Most rappers recoil when you compare them to artists who came before. “No,” they insist, “what I’m doing is completely and entirely original”, as if they’re making music in exile, completely cut off from hip-hop’s history, and present. What these rappers fail to understand is that there’s an enormous difference between simply recycling, and building upon tradition, between wholesale copying, and adding your own home onto the musical foundation laid down by those who came before. What’s more, in the end, it’s always the homes with the strongest foundations that are left standing. So when … ...Read the full album review
Fans can also check out Big K.R.I.T's previous albums: Big K.R.I.T. - King Remembered In Time | Big K.R.I.T. - Live From the Underground | Big K.R.I.T. - 4EvaNaDay | Big K.R.I.T. - 4EvaNaDay | Big K.R.I.T. - ReturnOf4Eva | Big K.R.I.T. - ReturnOf4Eva | Big K.R.I.T. - K.R.I.T. Wuz Here
DJBooth Album Review
Most rappers recoil when you compare them to artists who came before. “No,” they insist, “what I’m doing is completely and entirely original”, as if they’re making music in exile, completely cut off from hip-hop’s history, and present. What these rappers fail to understand is that there’s an enormous difference between simply recycling, and building upon tradition, between wholesale copying, and adding your own home onto the musical foundation laid down by those who came before. What’s more, in the end, it’s always the homes with the strongest foundations that are left standing.
So when I say that newcomer Big K.R.I.T. is carrying on the legacy of fellow Southern heavyweights like UGK and Outkast, that should in no way diminish how undeniably dope his new album K.R.I.T. Wuz Here is, just like it doesn’t diminish Kobe’s accomplishments because Magic Johnson also once wore the same uniform. UGK was able to layer elements of intelligence and spiritually on top of their street swagger, an extremely difficult balancing act that K.R.I.T. also manages to pull off on Wuz Here. Now that doesn’t mean he doesn’t also have trailblazer tendencies. David Banner aside, his native Mississippi has no homestate hip-hop hero to hold up as their own, but if K.R.I.T. can continue to grow as both a producer and a rapper, Meridian, Miss. should soon be proudly calling itself The Home of Big K.R.I.T.
There are two easy ways to think about K.R.I.T. and this album, and they’re both wrong (although a little right). First off, you could listen to Wuz Here and think that he was yet another weed-smoking, pimp-obsessed Southern rapper, and you’d find evidence to support your theory. The album starts off with Return of Forever, a pimpishly paced joint featuring a fearlessly bold verse from Big Sant that pushes the joint “bi**h/ho” count into the hundreds. A closer listen reveals a deceptively complex beat, but on the surface, Forever lives shallowly on the streets, and is happy to do so. Closely related is the screwed influenced Country S**t, an ode to K.R.I.T.’s rural roots that may have its edges rounded, but ultimately is about nothing more than, as the chorus suggests, looking fly, candy yams, collard greens and p**y poppin. And just in case you thought that only those south of the Mason-Dixon line were interested in supremely soulful pimp anthems, K.R.I.T. reaches up north to bring Wiz Khalifa and Curren$y onto Glass House, a formula he largely replicates, though slows down significantly, on the chronically influenced No Wheaties, featuring Smoke DZA and, yet again, Curren$y. There are those who will listen to Wuz Here and think K.R.I.T. is heavy on hedonism and short on introspection, and as we can see, they wouldn’t be that far off.
Or would they? As well as K.R.I.T. plays the role of the production/emcee/pimp, there are moments, and a lot of them, on which its revealed that he’s a deeply intelligent and openly emotional emcee. Let’s start with my personal favorite Hometown Hero, a beautiful track that K.R.I.T. laces with a gripping piano melody and ethereal vocal sample while he expounds on the tensions between big dreams and small town reality (cue the Friday Night Lights references). Similarly, while Wuz Here never truly approaches ballad territory, I Gotta Stay comes close. The most lightly produced track on the album, Stay proves that K.R.I.T.’s relationship with women isn’t purely sexual as he reflects on love lost. The scope of his vision expands exponentially on the searching Children of the World, and then retracts again on the deeply autobiographical Good Enough. There are those who will listen to Wuz Here and think K.R.I.T. is a deeply serious rapper carrying the weight of the world in his mic, and they wouldn’t be that far off.
So how do we reconcile these two sides of K.R.I.T.? We don’t have to. He doesn’t have two sides. Instead, he has only one, very complicated side. Like – wait for it – Outkast and UGK, he’s talented enough to simultaneously reflect the world around him and reflect on it, like on the narrative-driven They Got Us, which shows us the painfully human side of the strippers and hustlers glorified elsewhere on the album, and the revolutionary funk-soul of 2000 & Beyond. K.R.I.T. Wuz Here isn’t a perfect album, it could have used a more critical eye, but we can now rest assured that the future of Southern hip-hop has at least bright hope. Will Big K.R.I.T. ever truly make it to the top? Only time will tell, but no matter where he goes, the world will now know where he once was.
Listen to More: Big K.R.I.T Written by Nathan S.
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Member Reviews and Ratings
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Total Ratings: 12
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Tastemaker Total Ratings: 432 |
I'm completely blown away. I really shouldn't be because I've heard K.R.I.T. a few times before, but his depth, talent and creativity goes beyond any expectations. Every song is as great as the last, and most of them he is the one singing on the hook if not the entire song. I would say my favorite songs, but i would end up listing most of the tracks. THIS IS THE BEST ALBUM OR MIXTAPE OF 2010, simply because all the song are naturally dope and aren't formulaic like some of B.O.B. and other up comer's tracks lately. I don't know if it's the soul in his voice or his great storytelling, but something really hits home with Big K.R.I.T. I can't wait to hear more from him, but I'll have plenty to hold me over in the meantime. 4.5 stars
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| Posted on May 07, 2010 |
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DJ Booth Member Total Ratings: 225 |
Yea i wouldnt rate it a 5 but i would rate it a 4 or 3.5
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| Posted on May 10, 2010 |
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Tastemaker Total Ratings: 1217 |
Excellent review Nathan. I have listened to this tape multiple times and it is something spectacular to say the least. K.R.I.T. combines so many elements of storytelling and musical creativity that really help set him apart from half the stuff that is currently out there. There were a couple hits and misses, which was covered in the all around positive reviews, however my five most noteworthy tracks are:
1. Hometown Hero 2. Viktorious 3. Neva Go Back 4. As Small As a Giant 5. No Wheaties All together, near-classic tape. Big K.R.I.T. defines versatility in a number of different ways. He produced more than half this project and not only can he rap, but he can sing as well. It's like Nathan said in the review, the world will without a doubt know where K.R.I.T. once was. 4.5 |
| Posted on May 12, 2010 |
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| Posted on Jun 29, 2010 |
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DJ Booth Member Total Ratings: 12 |
Lets hope he doesn't get on Def Jam and turn to mud. I dunno whass been up with these Southern rappers, they love f@ckin up a good thing.
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| Posted on Jul 07, 2010 |
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DJ Booth Member Total Ratings: 16 |
I got be honest this is what I've been waiting to hear from Southern Hip Hop in along time. The music is so honest and pure not watered down like the majority of music that hits the air waves... From tracks 1-19 I can relate on the daily bases of being in the industry and living as a person... Overall I give it a 5 star and have all my friends and associates in Atlanta listening if anybody knows who handles promo hit me asap I'm willing help launch this young man efforts in my demographic and region...
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| Posted on Jul 07, 2010 |
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DJ Booth Member Total Ratings: 143 |
nice!
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| Posted on Nov 05, 2010 |
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| Posted on Dec 16, 2010 |
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DJ Booth Member Total Ratings: 54 |
Sweet :)
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| Posted on Dec 16, 2010 |
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DJ Booth Member Total Ratings: 281 |
This is amazing I listen to it in every kind of mood and it always offers me something new....
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| Posted on Feb 03, 2011 |
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DJ Booth Member |
Big KRIT will eventually be seen on the same level as UGK and Outkast. It's just a matter of him putting out more music and developing a larger fan base. He is without a doubt the most talented up and coming rapper/producer in the game right now. It you don't have this, get it.
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| Posted on Feb 11, 2011 |
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| Posted on Jul 26, 2011 |
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| Posted on Jan 31, 2012 |