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View Poll Results: Greatest White Rapper Poll
Eminem 216 41.54%
Eyedea 8 1.54%
Brother Ali 7 1.35%
Slug 22 4.23%
EL P 11 2.12%
Beastie Boys 80 15.38%
Cage 3 0.58%
3rd Bass 3 0.58%
Sage Francis 22 4.23%
Vanilla Ice 18 3.46%
Everlast (House of Pain) 10 1.92%
ICP 3 0.58%
Lil Wyte 8 1.54%
Mac Lethal 0 0%
Paul Wall 3 0.58%
Kid Rock 6 1.15%
Aesop Rock 51 9.81%
Other (please specify) 49 9.42%
Voters: 520. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 06-06-2010, 06:03 AM   #1 (permalink)
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Songs don't have to follow the same strict concepts, but yeah, my favourite lyrics tend to have a unified bent to them, at least building around a theme. A lot of it does come down to how much effort I'm willing to put into breaking down a song, and I have a limit before my enjoyment begins to wane. Like, I love so many parts of the Tugboat Complex pt3 on their own, but I can't for the life of me put them together in a particularly satisfying way. Or, even if I can glean a sense of the song of a whole, there's still a whole bunch of pieces that I can't do anything with.

Still, anyone who can come up with "Now I'm thinkin who am I? Jabberwocky Superfly" is a brilliant lyricist.
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Old 06-06-2010, 12:03 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by matious View Post
It's like the chicken vs the egg.
I really like Float a lot. Thats one AR album i can go back to. But the newer material, he sounds more laid back. I liked it when he was more angsty.

Jester, you don't see hear the El-P influence over None Shall Pass?
I haven't listened to either artist in a long ass time,but i remember thinking it sounded too similar.
Nah, not really. None Shall Pass is like, mildly jazzy/poppy in its production, and Aesop Rock is still Aesop Rock. El-P's sound walks between spacious old school-ism and new school sonics.

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Originally Posted by Fruitonica View Post
Now that I've warmed to Aesop's voice I would say he is a much stronger MC than EL-P, at least as far as flow is concerned. They both have a really dense delivery, but Aesop never seems to trip, or bunch up like EL-P does in places where he crams too many syllables into a line.

Lyrically I think EL-P walks a much better line between abstraction and coherence. Aesop crafts incredibly dope lines, and half the time they add up to great songs - but a lot of the time I find it difficult to follow a thread through the song and I'm left with a bunch of disjointed images and no real message. Sometimes EL-P falls into this trap, but on the whole I can appreciate his songs in a holistic sense because all the pieces come together.

And production wise, Aesop is good but I wouldn't quite put him in the same league as EL-P.
I agree with most of that, but I think Aesop Rock's verses are very coherent. He's very stream-of-consciousness styled, and image oriented, but his verses and imagery flow together flawlessly. They don't always have to be clear; a huge part of Aesop Rock's appeal is the crypticness.

I entirely agree with Freebase.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fruitonica View Post
Songs don't have to follow the same strict concepts, but yeah, my favourite lyrics tend to have a unified bent to them, at least building around a theme. A lot of it does come down to how much effort I'm willing to put into breaking down a song, and I have a limit before my enjoyment begins to wane. Like, I love so many parts of the Tugboat Complex pt3 on their own, but I can't for the life of me put them together in a particularly satisfying way. Or, even if I can glean a sense of the song of a whole, there's still a whole bunch of pieces that I can't do anything with.

Still, anyone who can come up with "Now I'm thinkin who am I? Jabberwocky Superfly" is a brilliant lyricist.
Oh man, Tugboat Complex Pt. 3 is the most lyrically dense song of all-time. It's amazing. But I think that's one of the few Aesop Rock songs that are like, "...WHAT?"
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