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EPMD - Out of Business
Date: 1999 Label:
Def Jam
Styles: Hardcore Rap, East Coast Rap,
Hip-Hop
Track Picks: Rap Is Still Outta
Control, Right Now, Symphony 2000
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ReviewAfter the popular, praised
1997 comeback album Back in Business, Erick Sermon and Parrish Smith returned
with another solid effort that proved they remained one of the best combos in
hip-hop, as relevant and tight in 1999 as they were ten years earlier. Most of
the tracks are in-house productions (either Sermon or Smith), a true rarity in
the '90s hip-hop world, and they lend the album a continuity sorely lacking
considering the legion of rap albums that feature a different producer for each
track. And as the duo has done for ages, EPMD does more than just trade in
familiar riffs to drive the tracks on Out of Business. The only familiar sample
is on the "Intro," and even there, Sermon and Smith turn "Fanfare for Rocky"
into something over and above the original. The pair's raps have definitely
progressed in the past ten years, as "Pioneers," "U Got Shot," "Right Now," and
"Hold Me Down" more than prove. One of the album highlights is the
anti-crossover diatribe "Rap Is Still Outta Control," featuring Busta Rhymes
(another rapper who's been around long enough to know) and including great lines
like, "They took our music and our beat and tried to make it street/And then got
in the magazine to try to sound all sweet." Still, EPMD occasionally falls prey
to current trends, with obligatory string-sample productions on "Symphony" and
"Symphony 2000" (the latter with Redman, Method Man, and Lady Luck) that serve
only to obscure the great guest raps. Despite the title, in the liner notes EPMD
dispels any rumors that this could be the duo's last album.
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