"Attack of the Attacking Things is Jean Grae (formerly known as What? What?), after dozens of similar cameos over several years of underground records, finally battling demons on her own turf, trading on both her unaltered... more » gift for lyrical delicacy, and her distinctive, deliberately understated vocal style." -Harry Allen, Village Voice« less
"Attack of the Attacking Things is Jean Grae (formerly known as What? What?), after dozens of similar cameos over several years of underground records, finally battling demons on her own turf, trading on both her unaltered gift for lyrical delicacy, and her distinctive, deliberately understated vocal style." -Harry Allen, Village Voice
"I liked the verse Grae dropped on Mr. Lif's latest disc, so I figured I'd pick this up and give it a go. The price was cheap and there have been some "Next Big Thing" rumblings about her, so I was curious.On first listen, you'll probably be hit with the fact that Grae is a REAL woman. As real as any woman you'd meet in the grocery store. No "sex kitten" or "gangsta tomboy" persona to be found here. It's pretty freakin' refreshing to listen to a female rapper who doesn't come off like a two-dimensional male fantasy come to life. ..... Lyrically, the verses are smart and witty and grounded in reality.The album is subtitled "The Dirty Mixes" for a reason, though. The beats are pretty skeletal and really don't do justice to her rhymes. The recording is pretty lo-fi and you can't help but wonder what would happen if someone gave her a top notch beat to work with and some real studio time.Between that and the length being just a bit longer than the average EP, "Attack Of The Attacking Things" comes off more like a mission statement than an actual album. It's definately worth a listen for fans of (good) hip hop, but now I'm going to be waiting impatiently for whatever comes next. She definately is someone to watch for."
Yes, it's long, but please read this review!
P. T. J. | Detroit MI | 09/04/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"You know how people say the best music ever made was written in someone's basement? Well, Jean Grae does you one up, she wrote, produced and recorded her entire album in small, corner-studios, wherever she could get at, and let me tell you something, this record validates that statement one hundred percent. Jean's first solo LP, "Attack Of The Attacking" things is genius, or rather jeanius, but either way, it is easily one of the most incredible, and most incredibly slept on albums of all time. Real quick - the reason I titled this review so simply as "read this review," is because this album has become practically impossible to lay your hands on,and whether they're discontinuing it or taking it off the market or what, make some noise in protest! It would be an absolute travesty to hip hop music, period, to take this record off the shelves!
If you know thing one about Jean Grae, you know she can rap. She can write, rap, produce, she can do practically anything. Seeing as she learned to read at age three, Jean's relationship with language goes back a long way, but even more than that, it's her intelligence that truly makes her music what it is. Listening to her music isn't like listening to rap. Not a single line in this album is compromised for the sake of hitting the right rhyme, or emphasizing the right beat. She doesn't seem to have to even think about it. She weaves comprehensive stories that might as well have jumped out of five-star novels, and puts them to catchy, blissfully melodic loops. The result is absolutely amazing. So if I say one important thing in this review, here it is: W-O-W.
Buy this album. Yes, in the tiny little pixilated picture you can barely make out online, the cover of this album looks extremely bootlegged, (oh what irony,) but in person, it's actually a pretty cool album cover, and the cartoon layout on the back is artistic and creative. Props to Jean for working so well with a low budget. But enough about the cover-art. If you make one mistake, ONE MISTAKE with this album, it would be not buying it because you think it looks unprofessional, or some other rubbish. Don't do that. The music on this album is absolutely incredible, and while Jean's release "This Week" champions the top of her discography list as the best, I have to say, "Attack of the Attacking Things" is a near miss, and even though "This Week" may, overall, be a better album, this record has a few very strong features that her other releases simply lack. Such as...
Jean's softer side. Yes, I said it, Jean has a soft side. Everyone knows it, all you have to hear is "P.S." on "This Week" to know it, but "Attack of the Attacking Things," I believe, is EASILY Jean's most introspective, emotional, and downright moving work yet. Track 8 - "Love Song" is one of the most incredibly moving songs I've ever heard. Over a beautifully haunting, melodic track, Jean weaves a story in third person about a young, naïve girl who is constantly taken advantage of by predator men. Then, slowly, towards the end, after mixing "I's" and "Her's" throughout the song, Jean drops the pretense and admits the story is all true, and all about her. "Maybe it's easier to talk about this stuff in third person," she says as she closes out the track with her last verse, and the listener can't help but feel close to Jean.
Aside from poignant, emotional tracks, Jean also proves she isn't afraid to say what she means, point blank, and does her best to try and inspire change in the black community, or society period. This is something not seen on her other albums. It's not that Jean isn't conscience on her other albums, she is, but she's never said it so straightforward, and I love it. I hope to hear more tracks like this from her in the future. The track is called "Block Party," a deceptive title, and as the opening line, she says "I don't want to preach or come off bitter, this is a commentary, auditory, editorial, about the state of things, state of mind and state of being." From there, she goes on to make some of the most absolutely intelligent, unsaid and covered up truths and observations I've ever heard, begging for change. "You need to get out your house, get off your block, go see something, go change something." To her fellow women, Jean says "Ladies, know your worth, the way we're giving it up, we might as well auction ourselves on ebay, to the lowest bidder, so what if his dough is better? Money doesn't make the man, maybe self sufficiency would better make you understand."
One last thing that must be said, briefly, for this album, is the outstanding production. I have to say, "Attack" has some of the most beautifully melodic loops - EVER. From jazz, to rock, to R&B, to your hard-hitting rap baselines. Not only that, but every loop fits the mood, such as track 7, "Thank Ya." This has an addictive, jazz/rock loop behind it, over which Jean uses her biting sense of humor. "It's scary, like women that ain't really women, to dudes that try to holla at them, wait, that was confusing."
SUMMARY
For those of you who know Jean, and for those of you who don't, BUY THIS ALBUM. For ages now, going on five years, I have confidently proclaimed Talib Kweli as my all time favorite rapper, but finally, Jean may have usurped him from that position and taken his place. Well, they're neck-in-neck, at the very least. One thing must be said for Jean - she is the ONLY rap artist, the ONLY musical artist period who consistently puts out albums which I can listen to straight-through without having to skip a track. Yup. Jean Grae has yet to put out A SINGLE SONG I don't like. That's dumb-founding to me. Ultimately, what makes Jean so great, is her talent for words, and her sense of humor. Please hear me on this; Jean is beautifully human. It's easy to idolize a rapper like Talib Kweli who focuses so relentlessly on conscience rap, and I absolutely love him for that, but there's something about Jean Grae's candid emotion and honesty, her talent for using sardonic wit to point out painful truths, and her movingly personal narratives that make it easy to love Jean Grae as a person trying to make a difference, and view her as a human, and not just idolize her as a symbol.
To Jean: Don't ever stop. All the turmoil you've gone through, everything you've fought for has been worth it, because whether you realize it or not, you DO effect people, and without a doubt, inspire (at least me) to do everything I can to make a difference, not as a symbol, not with money, not with influence, but as a human, who can connect with others on a deeper level.
"
When hip hop is art and truth imperative . . .
alice | Bronx, United States | 10/09/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
""overdue like the rain in New York"When this album (finally) dropped, it was a sonic manifestation of hip hop and new york. Jean Grae is truly endowed with one of the greatest flows i have ever heard...she could read a phone book to a good beat and have everyone's head bobbing.Fortunately,her lyrics are far from mere digits,exploring and pushing issues with that rare gift of eloquently maneuvering between complexity and simplicity. She creates lyrics that could just as easily be studied in my graduate classroom in Columbia as in the middle school where i teach in the Bronx. She is difficult to categorize without limiting her, and i hesitate to compare her to another artist though if you have never heard her, the closest that comes to mind is Common in both flow and the ability to put complex issues into profound, succint, and hip-hop eloquent vernacular. Jean Grae presents a complex world through the lens of her own diligent, ever-changing, and seeking introspection and, somewhere in the communication of it, compelling art results. Yeh, i wish this album was longer. What a great criticism though....there are plenty of recent albums that i wish were a lot shorter..."
JEAN GRAE IS A REAL MC, AND I ENPHASISE REAL
Tino Tek | London, England | 11/02/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)
"I knew this girl had skills but man is she good (or girl as the case may be). This lp although quite hard to get hold off is something I would recommed real hip hoppers to seek out.
Straight from brooklyn this girl carries an essence about her which is both refreshing and old school at the same time. I first heard of jean when I read the review of this album in the source magazine a few years ago and at the time I tried looking for this album but had no luck I could not find it anywhere and eventually gave up on it, still I never forgot about it, I started hearing her on other albums and I could not believe that I was hearing a female mc with so much talent yet she recieves barely any recognition. So I started the search recently again and I was able to find a copy on amazon for a very cheap price and after hearing this lp I was not dissapointed.
The production on this lp is solid containing a nice new york feel, it has a similar vibe to Masta Ace's A Long Hot Summer album using a soft yet hard tone at the same time, basicly the type of beats I expect to hear from a place like brooklyn.
On the rhyming tip expect less lil kim think more along the lines of Lauren Hill, yet Jean in my opinion is better, she brings a realness to her rhymes which just screams authentic, there is nothing corny about her.
Overall this is an excellent lp yet I feel the best is yet to come so I will deffinatly be checking her future releases and I suggest you do too."
Solid Effort
7th Angl | Ontario, Canada | 09/12/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)
"In the spirit of conscientious female lyricists, Jean Grae releases an EP on par with other notable debuts, such as Bahamadia's "Kollage" or Mystic's "Cuts for Luck, Scars for Freedom". What distinguishes Grae though, is a panache for brazen rhymes which at times border on heated freestyles. A trait which Grae does share in common with her peers is introspection and provocative rhymes that deal with feminism, and the cumbersome male-dominated hip-hop climate.
Each track flows seamlessly into the next, and is replete with banging production from the likes of Da Beatminerz and Masta Ace, amongst others. "Love Song" is a powerful, auto-biographical (?) narrative detailing Grae's liberation from an abusive relationship, and has Grae re-discovering the value of self, shattering the veneer of security the former relationship seemed to afford her.
There are other songs like this which feature Grae as a sagacious social commentator and activist, which fortunately overshadow a handful of cruder tracks, with ignorant and vulgar rhymes that are really better suited to Foxy Brown or Lil Kim. Perhaps Grae feels empowered when emceeing in this state, but overall it detracts from her style. She is much more adept at addressing topical issues like domestic abuse, loss, and plaguing societal ills. A good effort overall, which deserves acclaim for its personality and meditative quality."