El-P I'll Sleep When You're Dead
  full reviewuser ratings (92) 
Tracklist:
1. Tasmanian Pain Coaster featuring The Mars Volta
2. Smithereens (Stop Cryin)
3. Up All Night
4. EMG
5. Drive
6. Dear Sirs
7. Run the Numbers featuring Aesop Rock
8. Habeas Corpses (Draconian Love) featuring Cage
9. The Overly Dramatic Truth
10. Flyentology featuring Trent Reznor
11. No Kings
12. League of Extraordinary Nobodies
13. Poisenville Kids No Wins/Reprise (This Must Be Our Time) featuring Cat Power

Ranking: #57 for 2007

user rating
4
excellent
Chart.

related

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recommended by reviewer
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  On 3 Lists

4.0
excellent
Thomas Bambaataa Ghidrah Towers USER (67 Reviews)

2007-05-25 | 29 comments | 3,384 views

Summary: The insomnious El-P creates something that isn't so much a hip hop album as it is a perfectionist snapshot of a morbidly twisted world.

6 of 7 thought this review was well written

If there was any good time to give up hope for mankind and denounce the Earth as a decaying pile of waste, it would have to be now. As Porcupine Tree returned with an album criticizing today’s youth, Nine Inch Nails returned with a concept album about the world’s imminent end, the Smashing Pumpkins are set to return with something along those lines of quasi-Orwellian pretentiousness, and El-P follows the trend with his long-delayed sophomore LP. Whereas Nas weeps for Hip Hop’s death, El-P claims that he awaits yours with hawk-like readiness according to the paranoiac album title. Indeed, the whole thing sounds like an insomnia-induced living nightmare, as El-Producto delivers a dense concept album about a futuristic, destructive society that both criticizes and satirizes today’s world, and tells stories of the catastrophic life itself.

But El-P is no stranger to the game of pessimistic sci-fi storytelling, he debuted ten years earlier with his group Company Flow, and as both a producer and MC, he helped make the group reach critical acclaim with their album Funcrusher Plus, hailed for revitalizing the underground hip hop scene. Funcrusher similarly touched on these futuristic dark concepts, but left room to also incorporate more traditional hip hop themes. I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead, much like his first full-length Fantastic Damage takes it to an entirely new level, El-P turning his beats from darkly atmospheric with a slightly aggressive bite, to all out maniacal with beats as layered and stinging as an onion.

I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead’s clattery collages of percussion sounds more like the base of an industrial album rather than a hip hop one. The songs rarely focus on melodic hooks or full on choruses, relying on the fierce force of drum beats and plethora of buzzing, spacey, tinny noises. El-P’s approach to entice the listener relies on the constant morphing of the beats, adding more and more clashing noises, bringing in samples that barely peep through the mix, and when melodic samples do take the lead, they rarely stick around before morphing into something else. Oddball vocal clips, buried guitar licks, and dusty horn samples are often the victims of the landslide of jagged beats.

While El-P’s adept arranging has helped the album gain its reputation as something unique in the current rap world, the sheer amount of focus on the soundscapes often distracts, and nearly drowns out the small appearances by the likes of Trent Reznor, Omar Rodriguez-Lopez and Cedric Bixler-Zavala. Not that their contributions are big anyway, with Reznor contributing some backing vocals to Flyentology, and the Volta duo predictably contributing a few girlish yelps over some wah guitar in the album’s brooding opener. El-P stated that he’s not a fan of albums relying heavily on guest spots, and stays true to that here, letting his confrontational rhymes shape the songs. Yet upon first listen, lyrics are the last thing on one’s mind; I personally didn’t even think I would dig through the album long enough to absorb the lyrics. But when the lyrics do hit, they are how the album lures into detailed listening.

I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead is as much a product of Phillip K. Dick renegade science fiction as it is of social consciousness. El-P fearlessly mixes in elaborate back stories, ultramodern premises with his messages, creating mini hip-hop operas drenched in scathing cynicism and a doomsday streak. While songs like Drive and Smithereens provide general scopes on the album’s setting, as I’ll Sleep... progresses the stories focus in on more specific situations. Habeas Corpses (Draconian Love) changes it up dramatically, with El-P and label mate Cage taking the roles of two prison guards who execute prisoners every second morning, and rape the female ones for fun. While this is usually the foundation for some sort of sadistic porn film, the plot takes a surprisingly humanistic turn as El-P loses the hardheaded maverick persona and shows his soft side for the first time, and describes a prisoner that he’s fallen in love with to Cage. Though Cage loves his job of killing (“it’s almost romantic”) and boinking prisoners, he agrees to keep El-P’s secret desire to actually meet the prisoner. The follow-up The Overly Dramatic Truth directly addresses the prisoner, describing his own cold, jaded nature to the naïve girl. Flyentology takes the most cryptic view on the album, densely ridiculing religion’s denial of logic with the hook, “There are no intellects in the air/there are no scientists on the way down/just a working example of faith first physics.”

Though El-P is no stranger to high concept rants, here he adds true dimensions and passion into it along with his label’s Definitive Jux’s signature dark, dense beats stepped up a notch. His flow and demeanor has gotten calmer since his Company Flow days, and is less frantic and more on beat than in the past. But with it’s unapologetically brash sound and fast paced nightmarish trips through myriads of apocalyptic imagery makes it a hard record to immediately delve into, especially the couple of shorter songs that intersperse the longer ones. It’s not a casual listening album, but the subtle melodic touches of El-P and his seemingly maniacal attention to detail can make it an addictive, enthralling experience.

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Comments:Add a Comment 
Justanothernimrod


Comments: 477
05.25.07

Album Rating: 4

awesome review, I really enjoyed El-p's first record so I can't wait to hear this!

711


Comments: 1342
05.25.07


Great review obviously. This sounds really neat, Ill definately check this out.

FriendofTheDevil70


Comments: 384
05.25.07


Hmm, sounds interesting, I'll have to check this out.

Great review

The Jungler
Emeritus


Comments: 4828
05.25.07


Great review. I had no idea El-P was in Company Flow, but I've heard a few of their songs. Really good stuff.
Album title is so good.

Kage
Emeritus


Comments: 1174
05.25.07

Album Rating: 4

Great review! I really like this album.

La Revolucion


Comments: 1060
05.27.07


One of my top hip-hop releases of the year so far.

jrowa001


Comments: 7898
07.05.07

Album Rating: 4.5

just got this album, its very good

Digging: Junius - The Martyrdom of a Catastrophist

711


Comments: 1342
07.05.07


Yeah, awesome album.

Two-Headed Boy


Comments: 4506
07.05.07


When'd you do this? :confused:

Awesome work as usual. Sounds like a gud listen.

Digging: Electric Wizard - Dopethrone

711


Comments: 1342
07.05.07


Two Headed Boy you would like this I think.
psst listen to my song

pixiesfanyo
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 1194
09.08.07


I've been rediscovering this album since I purchased a hard copy. Much better than I thought on my first go around.

Digging: Do Make Say Think - Other Truths

planewreck
Emeritus


Comments: 2983
10.21.07


Album rules. The rating might lower, but it's pretty awesome right now.

Digging: Animal Collective - Fall Be Kind

Shadelurk


Comments: 34
10.31.07


dope review, dope album

iyae


Comments: 53
11.03.07

Album Rating: 4

seriouslly...how good is the song "up all night"??? man. i just LOVE the production on that one.

Justanothernimrod


Comments: 477
11.08.07

Album Rating: 4

SMITHEREENS is so f'ing good!

Iai
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 3192
11.08.07

Album Rating: 4

Awesome album.

Digging: Shpongle - Ineffable Mysteries From Shpongleland

Ataraxia


Comments: 55
01.28.08

Album Rating: 4

I love this fucking album.

JordanS


Comments: 285
01.28.08


This is phenomenal, up there with stuff like 3030, Liquid Swords, Enter the Wu, and OK. I got this on Vinyl awhile and I've been playing it every night.

Run the Numbers, Draconian Love, and Poisonville are my favorite tracks.

chris21


Comments: 159
01.29.08


haven't heard the whole album however flyentology is probably the best song ive heard from it so far.



istaros


Comments: 310
07.10.08


"Tasmanian Pain Coaster" is an incredible opener - the syncopation, the rhythmic cycling, the samples and the timing with which they're used, the buildup in intensity. incredible.



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