Presto
State of the Art


3.5
great

Review

by Iai EMERITUS
June 11th, 2008 | 74 replies


Release Date: 2008 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Real smooth, nice hip-hop from a producer you might just be hearing more of in the next few years.

Hip-hop, more than any other genre, is prone to producing albums that make a statement. Blame it on the 'keep it real' culture, or the genre's inherent opposition to a realist, rockist, love-song narrative, or even on the fact that words are more important to rapping than they ever were to singing - whatever the reason, seemingly every hip-hop album you'll hear is making some kind of statement, taking some kind of stance. 50 Cent wants you to know that he's the toughest, baddest dude around, and so does DMX, so did NWA, so did countless others. Acts like Arrested Development and The Fugees wanted you to know about their social conscience, implying their separation from their contemporaries. De La Soul wanted everyone to stop taking themselves so seriously. Kanye West wants you to see every part of his personality, good and bad, and then wants you to praise him for being such a character. Jurassic 5 wanted to remind you about the old school and keep a grip on rap's roots ('holding on to what's golden', if you will). Rakim wanted you to see the art of rapping in a new light. Will Smith and Jazzy Jeff wanted to escape gangster culture and just make some great pop songs. Dr. Dre's spent his whole solo career paying tribute to weed and George Clinton, a statement of intent in itself. Jay-Z isn't a businessman, he's a business, man. LL Cool J's basically done all of the above at one point or another. And as for Public Enemy, Dead Prez, Immortal Technique, Lost Children of Babylon, The X-Clan, Paris? And how many artists have you heard either brag about how much money they're making and how many fans they've got, or say 'fuck the mainstream' and tell you about what real hip-hop is?

That's all great, and basically every classic hip-hop cut ever is a classic largely because of how well it makes the statement it does. Sad thing is, it keeps pressure on upcoming artists to make these statements, and because of that it keeps a lot of artists in a rut. Creativity gets shunned in favour of ideology. I know how old and jaded it makes me sound, but I remember the days when hip-hop, to me, was just a load of kids sat in the park in the summer, with a boombox and some tapes. Right or wrong, nobody cared about black power, poverty, or police brutality - we were kids, and crap like "Summertime", "Gangster's Paradise", and "Everyday People" was enough.

That's why I always feel a pang of excitement when I hear a record like State of the Art. There's no agenda here, no message, no statement - despite the name State of the Art, this is no diatribe of the current state of the hip-hop artform. It's just a bunch of laid-back hip-hop tracks, with a revolving door of rappers contributing - there are 17 guests in total, including heavyweights like Large Professor, CL Smooth, O.C., Sadat-X, and Blu (of recent Blu & Exile semi-fame). It's Presto's touch that defines the album though - jazzy, soulful, organic, light, and decidedly old-school without being defiant about it. Presto's own claim is that he likes to make his beats sound like a three-piece band, keeping a live, almost intimate feel to his essentially sample-based production, and that comes off throughout this album. The nearest reference I could give you is Nujabes, and that is high praise indeed, although his direct influences run more along the lines of Gang Starr, A Tribe Called Quest, and Pharcyde (again, his words).

The flaw here is the lack of a standout. Despite the array of talent on the lead single "Conquer Mentally" - Large Pro, Sadat-X, and O.C. all on one track - it's not the knockout you suspect it could have been, and elsewhere the only two songs that really jump out at this reviewer is the violin-led "Feel Me" (partly because it's a sonic departure, partly because it's a little bit more basic), and "On", which hits a little harder, has the album's best bassline, and boasts a "Planet Rock" quote for the hook. But neither are the kind of song that could take this album to the stars; while everything here is good, it's just that nothing is truly great. That's a real shame, because if this album is anything to go by, then Presto's musical ear, his attention to detail, his work rate, and his natural flair are all enough for you to wish him great success. Maybe if you hooked him up with just one charismatic, original MC, and got 12 tracks off them, you'd have a classic. It's worth keeping an eye on. But that's the future; for now we have this refreshing, enjoyable, fairly original album that a lot of heads will probably go crazy for.



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user ratings (5)
3.7
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
SHOOTME
June 12th 2008


2393 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Brilliant review, I now really want this.

xmattxhardcore
June 14th 2008


422 Comments


rap isn't music


Why does every rap artist make their CD unfathomably long? All it does is make the album that much worse.

Electric City
June 14th 2008


15756 Comments


here come the idiots

xmattxhardcore
June 14th 2008


422 Comments


Well, that was somewhat harsh and uncalled for. I'm sorry, I try to like this kind of stuff and it fails every time. I just can't get past the retarted lyracism, lack of any vocal talent or any instrumentation. Most of this is sampling from something an outstanding artist has done in the past. It's all to cliche and boring for me.

I don't even think rap fits the definition of music.This Message Edited On 06.14.08

SHOOTME
June 14th 2008


2393 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

rap isn't music




Don't be an asswart, please.



xmattxhardcore
June 14th 2008


422 Comments


Defend your point, dumbass. I hate people that contest certain points without any rationalization.

joshuatree
Emeritus
June 14th 2008


3744 Comments


I don't even think rap fits the definition of music.


lol

xmattxhardcore
June 14th 2008


422 Comments


Not the traditional definition at least. It makes humanity look juvenile.

SHOOTME
June 14th 2008


2393 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Defend your point, dumbass. I hate people that contest certain points without any rationalization.




The Roots, and Rage Against The Machine use no samples, and write lyrics about things other than that gangster shit you always complain about hip-hop for. That fits the definition of music.



Don't be such a whiny baby and accept that other people have different ways of expressing musically.

Electric City
June 14th 2008


15756 Comments


what rap have you heard, mattcore or whateverThis Message Edited On 06.14.08

SHOOTME
June 14th 2008


2393 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

he is probably basing all of his rap experience on Soulja boy.

Electric City
June 14th 2008


15756 Comments


i saw some black eyed peas in those ratings

SHOOTME
June 14th 2008


2393 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

what kind of an assfart gives Black Eyed Peas a 2.5 and says Rap isn't music, hypocrite yes?This Message Edited On 06.14.08

xmattxhardcore
June 14th 2008


422 Comments


Rage againt the machine suck, but I won't go any further into that, just accept it, I do not like them. And you failed to defend your point once more. If their way of expressing music is such that it makes no god damn sense and just sounds like shit overall, then both they and you are mentally retarted. I have accepted the fact that people like shitty music, but I will never think it's ok.

I've heard a shit load of rap, every radio hit you can imagine, plus I have given entire albums a chance. I've yet to see a redeemning quality.

xmattxhardcore
June 14th 2008


422 Comments


he is probably basing all of his rap experience on Soulja boy.

an intelligent assumption. And by the way, it's "Matt". I would like to change that emo shit, I've been over this with a lot of people, grow up.

SHOOTME
June 14th 2008


2393 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

And yet you give Black Eyed Peas (their worst album in fact) a 2.5. Point void.

xmattxhardcore
June 14th 2008


422 Comments


Point is not void. Why don't you actually try to back you point up? Let me look through your list (which I must say was a very mature thing to do) and point some shit out that I don't like. You could do that for everyone on this site. And it was very average, I've heard nothing else by them. Besides that, it was a long time ago that I heard that.

joshuatree
Emeritus
June 14th 2008


3744 Comments


if you don't like hip-hop, or if youre retarded enough to think its not music, why the fu[FONT="Verdana"]c[/FONT]k would you listen to every single imaginableThis Message Edited On 06.14.08

SHOOTME
June 14th 2008


2393 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

hip-hop is music. So is hardcore, and most genre's considered music. You just never gave enough to understand, maybe, another person's view of something. Maybe you don't see it as music, maybe others do, maybe some people don't consider P!ATD music just because they dislike how it sounds. It is all opinion. All you state is that samples get really old, you dislike they're message, and is repetitive, thus not music in your opinion. Well, I could say a band like P!ATD is "not music" because they:



1. Copied The Beatles on their second album, completely.



2. Don't play those classical instruments themselves.



3. I dislike what they stand for.



But that would be wrong, because in many others view, it is music. It all depends on taste. Your taste is pop punk, emo, and hardcore, which is fine and all. My taste is Hip hop, alt rock and Metal, which is good to me, but you may not like. This Message Edited On 06.14.08

xmattxhardcore
June 14th 2008


422 Comments


I find it funny that even after you edit your message there are still plenty of screw ups, lol. And I am not "retarded". It isn't music. If I demolished a house and said that it was heartfelt and emotional would you constitute it as being music? The singles are unavoidable and like I said previously, I try to like it, it's just too bad that it sucks.



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