Welcome to blogs.villagevoice.com
Blogs
  • News
    • » News Home
    • » Daily News
    • » Runnin' Scared - News Blog
    • » Tom Robbins
    • » Wayne Barrett
  • Music
    • » Music Home
    • » Top Picks
    • » Find a Bar or Club
    • » Pazz & Jop
    • » Down in Front
    • » Sound of the City
    • » Siren
    • » Submit an Event
    • » Jukebox
    • » Join Music Newsletter
    • » Entertainment Ads
  • Calendar
    • » Calendar Home
    • » Top Picks
    • » Comedy Events
    • » Submit an Event
    • » Entertainment Ads
  • Restaurants
    • » Restaurants Home
    • » Restaurant Guide
    • » Restaurant Reviews
    • » Sietsema's Counter Culture
    • » Find a Bar or Club
    • » Fork in the Road (column)
    • » Fork in the Road (blog)
    • » Sponsored Online Menus
    • » Choice Eats Tasting Event
    • » Join Dining Newsletter
    • » Restaurant Ads
    • » Happy Hours App
  •  
  • Arts
    • » Arts Home
    • » Calendar
    • » Books
    • » Theater
    • » Art
    • » Dance
    • » Obies Theater Awards
  • Films
    • » Films Home
    • » Now Showing
    • » Movie Showtimes
    • » Reviews
    • » Join NY Film Club
    • » Movie Ads
  • The Ads
    • Ad Index
    • Flip Book
    • Media Kit
    • » Fitness Health & Beauty Guide
    • » Sponsored Online Menus
  • Classifieds
    • Free Online Classifieds
    • Real Estate For Rent
    • Sexy Black Book
    • Virtual Career Fair
    • Personals
    • Real Estate for Sale
    • Place an Ad (print)
  • Blogs
    • » Runnin' Scared
    • » Sound of the City
    • » La Daily Musto
    • » Fork in the Road (blog)
    • » All City
  • Columns
    • » La Dolce Musto
    • » Tom Robbins
    • » Sex
    • » Horoscope
  • Best Of
    • » Arts & Entertainment
    • » Bars & Clubs
    • » Food & Drink
    • » People & Places
    • » Shopping & Services
    • » Sports & Recreation
    • » Best of Ads
  • Bars/Clubs
    • » Bars/Clubs Home
    • » Gay Bars & Clubs
    • » Bars/Club Ads
    • » Happy Hours App
  • Archives
    • Advanced Archive Search
    • Locations Map
    • Event Search
  • Reader Recommendations
  • Promotions
    • Street Team
    • Join The Street Team
    • Contests & Promotions
    • Text Alerts
    • Buy Village Voice Merchandise
    • Supplements Archive
  • Site Map

Top

blog

Stories

 

Rick Ross: Rap as Summer-Movie Escapism

By Tom Breihan, Friday, Aug. 4 2006 @ 5:50PM
Comments (6)

ross.jpg
Speedboat music

Rick Ross isn't just a bad rapper. He's terrible. I mean, he's awful. He rhymes "Jiggaman" with "millionaire," and it's virtually impossible to come up with any sort of creative pronunciation that makes that one even kind of work. He also rhymes "fly place" with "fly fireplace." His beat-riding abilities have largely degenerated since the time when he was a third-string Slip-N-Slide post-bounce guy; there's only one song on Port of Miami ("I'm Bad") where he manages to keep up with the track's drums. He actually uses multitracking vocals to play hypeman for himself ("They call me the [BOSS] / I be calling the [SHOTS] / It's Ricky Ross, that boy be balling [A LOT]"); it's like he can't even manage to get a whole line out of his mouth without punching in. The fact that a guy like this, someone whose pure rhyming abilities are basically just a big black hole, managed to get a huge deal and a big push from Def Jam is essentially inexcusable. But he's made a pretty good album. It's fucked up, and it kills me to say it, but it's true.

Post-Documentary, it's almost become a cliche to say that you don't have to be a great rapper to make a great album as long as your record label is willing to dump truckloads of money into your production. But to put everything in perspective, I just got back from listening to the new Young Dro album, and he's another young rapper with dubious skills and superstar backing. The album was OK, and the beats were all the sort of humid, organic tracks that T.I. routinely murders these days, but there's a big difference between that album and Port of Miami. Dro's album doesn't sound like it was built around him; it just sounds like T.I. let him have half the beats he bought for King, and so Dro just comes off sounding like T.I.'s barely-rapping cousin or something. With Port of Miami, all that money was spent with a specific purpose in mind: it's all there to help Ross inhabit the persona he's built for himself. There's nothing particularly groundbreaking about that persona; his kingpin schtick is pretty much just the logical conclusion of all the trap-talk that's become so popular in the last couple of years. Guys like T.I. and Jeezy have become immensely successful talking about doing street-corner drug-deals and anchoring their stories in the mundane squalor of a dealer's day-to-day life, so Ross takes out all the dirt and grit and just presents himself as the top of the pyramid, the drug-dealer who never actually has to endure personal interactions with dope fiends. Interestingly enough, Jay-Z, Ross's big backer, started his solo career by working a much more fleshed-out and complex version of the same archetype. Ross doesn't give us any of the intricacies; he just tells us about all the money and connections that the life has brought him. It's shallow stuff. But here's something no one has really mentioned about the album: all the samples seem to come from movies or TV. Two tracks sample the Moroder songs from the Scarface soundtrack; another uses the theme from S.W.A.T. Cool & Dre's beat for "Boss" is built from something that sounds a lot like an uncredited sample of Berlin's "Take My Breath Away" (from Top Gun, duh), and the martial synthetic strings on Akon's track for "Cross That Line" remind me of the score from The Terminator. There are so many cinematic signifiers so deeply entrenched in the album's production that it just really drives home the point that Ross is very self-consciously playing a patently ridiculous character. He doesn't do a whole lot to hide the reality that he's just making completely escapist entertainment utterly devoid of socially redeeming qualities. And, you know, escapist entertainment has its place.

One thing about escapist entertainment is that it has to be just dazzlingly sleek, and the beats on this album really are magnificent. Cool & Dre, the Runners, DJ Toomp, and even Jazze Pha have come up with some seriously epic burners, all swooping synths and enormous drums. Ross may not have a whole lot to offer as a rapper, but his voice is great: a megaton boom, all precision-bomb plosives and drawn-out, hissed s-sounds. Ross is a big guy, maybe six-foot-five, and his stature gives his voice an extra heft. All of us tall people have long chest-cavities and big, deep voices (check the podcast; I sound like Ted Theodore Logan on Quaaludes), and Ross knows to let his words take on an authoritative resonance; Slim Thug does the same thing even better. And so Ross takes the ridiculous and half-drawn character he's invented for himself and inhabits it completely. The result is a kind of musical equivalent of a cheesed-out special-effects movie, the sort of thing that you might not want to pay ten bucks to see in the theater but that you'll enjoy thoroughly when it comes on TBS at 2 p.m. on a Sunday. It slows down a whole lot in its second half, but then, so do most blockbuster movies; you can even draw parallels between a movie's obligatory and ill-advised romantic subplot and the obligatory and ill-advised sex-jams on Port of Miami. It's not Raiders of the Lost Ark, but maybe it's The Rundown or The Transporter. When you're in the right mood, that's all it needs to be.

Comments (6) Write Comment
Share

Related Content

  • Young Dro's Heroic Goofiness February 21, 2008
  • Jay-Z is Afraid to Fight October 26, 2006
  • Things I Learned Watching American Gangster September 25, 2007
  • "Swagger Like Us" vs. M.I.A. August 25, 2008
  • Jay-Z vs. Jay-Z January 15, 2008

More About:

  • Ricky Ross
  • T.I. (Rapper)
  • Young Dro
  • Hip-Hop and Rap
  • Dirty South

Comments (6)

RD says:

Let's Try this scene...Rick Ross stars in his own biopic as the character 'Mediocrity' who elopes with the baddest, sexiest, volouptous female in the flick. She goes by the name of 'Def Jam'. Def Jam's Father 'Jay' is completely smitten with Mediocrity for the basest of reasons: the other suitors are busy or unavaible at this time. Mediocrity and Def Jam procreate to form a big, muddy mess of a disappointment. The End.

Break Down that allegory...

RD

Posted On: Sunday, Aug. 6 2006 @ 12:13AM
Colins here says:

Well done RD...

Posted On: Sunday, Aug. 6 2006 @ 10:46PM
tray says:

I think you're underrating this immensely. What's the difference between this and Jeezy's stuff? Ross can't rap... but neither can Jeezy. Ross relies heavily on background vocals... so does Jeezy. Ross rhymes fly place with fireplace... well, Jeezy's first two lines on Air Forces, probably his best song, were something like

Everybody already knows I'm a real street nigga
Everytime you see me, I'm with real street niggas (That's RIIIIIIGHT!)

Ross, in fact, one-ups Jeezy by making an album about absolutely nothing. Whereas Jeezy cluttered his album with autobiographical detail, crack recipes, etc., the closest Ross comes to narrative is "I push and I push." It's brilliant. He's whittled down Jeezy to his essence - big voice, big beats- and unwittingly created a parody of the whole genre. Stuff like this gives me hope that hip-hop still has a future. Oh, and stop jocking this Plan B - he has some talent, but he shouldn't be rapping. Guys like that belong in the emo-punk business.

Posted On: Wednesday, Aug. 9 2006 @ 2:59PM
Ms. Moore says:

Why is that Cam can take words like purple and make up a word like "shlurple", but Rick Ross can't rhyme fly place with fly fireplace? I'm sayin, he should be able to get it how he can get it. Thats what you call 'makin it do what it do'. Don't hate. Thats why he's the movement.

Posted On: Friday, Aug. 11 2006 @ 3:03PM
RawReport_K says:

This review is pretty much on point the whole album is produced like a movie to reiterate the character of the real Rick Ross...but Ross the artist does have strong ties to the Boobie Boys, a 85 million dollar drug cartel from Carol City that was taken down around the turn of the century. He's playing off of that association.

Posted On: Sunday, Aug. 13 2006 @ 5:19PM
Cheru says:

Officer Ross

Posted On: Sunday, Jul. 27 2008 @ 8:56PM

Write Comment


Comments may not show up immediately after submission. Please wait a minute after posting a comment for it to appear.

All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking "Post," you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.

Tools

Search Status Ain't Hood


Follow

Email tips to tips@villagevoice.com

SlideShows»

  • Smell the Glove Party
  • Driven by Boredom's 9 Year Anniversary Party (NSFW)
  • Late-Night at the Shank
  • More Slideshows >>

Twitter Feed

Follow villagevoice on Twitter

More Twitter >>

VVM on Digg

  • 1
    diggs
    Army of Prose: How I Kicked My Habit(s), With a Little Help
  • 1
    diggs
    Funds Pulled for Anaheim-to-Las-Vegas Choo Choo - Orange Cou
  • 1
    diggs
    Judge Goes Easy On Guilty CHP Pedophile - Orange County News
  • 122
    diggs
    Bitch Who Left Jesse James is Back!
  • 2
    diggs
    Colorado Health Dept. Opposes Medical Marijuana for PTSD
  • 1
    diggs
    Stephen Colbert Discovers Sweet Shamrock
  • 108
    diggs
    Old Man Charged With Hate Crime for Grabbing Woman's Butt
  • 74
    diggs
    Firefighter Can't Extinguish Flame of Passion - In His Pants
  • 83
    diggs
    Six Fictional Restaurants That Should be Real
  • 2
    diggs
    Another Costa Mesa Medical Marijuana Dispensary Closes
  • 230
    diggs
    Sign This is Going to Be a Long Day (Pic)
  • 198
    diggs
    Malnourished Easter Bunnies Seized
  • 323
    diggs
    Man arrested for peeing on 7 Hispanic girls
  • 349
    diggs
    Cheech and Chong: 5 surprising facts
  • 344
    diggs
    How a Bag of Rice Can Save Your iPhone’s Life
  • 505
    diggs
    Wachovia Admits It Laundered Millions in Mexican Drug Cash
  • 407
    diggs
    Top 10 Kit Kat Flavors You’ve Probably Never Tried
  • 348
    diggs
    Missouri Lawmaker Wants Women to Give Reason For Abortion
  • 353
    diggs
    Woman Gardens Topless Near School; Kids Like It, Cops Don't
  • 392
    diggs
    Dad Tries to Sell Son on Craigslist for $5,000
  • 8775
    diggs
    Legalization of Marijuana Bill in California
  • 5801
    diggs
    Guess Who is Facing 21 Years in Prison?
  • 5051
    diggs
    Guys Dates Several Prostitutes. No Sex. Just Regular Dates.
  • 4605
    diggs
    Get Up, Stand Up: Ammiano Introduces Marijuana Legalization
  • 3753
    diggs
    Denver Airports Controversial 32 FT Zombie Mustang Sculpture
  • 3743
    diggs
    Guy Dumps His Cheating Girlfriend Live on Radio (Audio)
  • 2720
    diggs
    Meet Scientology's Worst Enemy
  • 2695
    diggs
    Decision Tree: Should I Buy an iPad? (PIC)
  • 2631
    diggs
    The best (PIC) of Colin Powell you'll see today.
  • 2589
    diggs
    Police Get The Wrong House In Galveston, Assault 12-Year old

Links

Village Voice Music
17 Dots
Allhiphop
Nick Barat
Mike Barthel
Andy Beta
William Bowers
Brooklyn Vegan
Daphne Carr
Robert Christgau
John Darnielle
Discobelle
Ryan Dombal
Chuck Eddy
Tom Ewing
Fader
Sean Fennessey (1)
Sean Fennessey (2)
Sasha Frere-Jones (1)
Sasha Frere-Jones (2)
Government Names
Eric Harvey
Marc Hogan
Jessica Hopper
Idolator
Michaelangelo Matos
Anthony Miccio
MTV News
Nah Right
Noz
Paperthin Walls
Matthew Perpetua
Amanda Petrusich
Pitchfork
RCRD LBL
Simon Reynolds
Julianne Shepherd
Al Shipley
Brandon Soderberg
Spine
Nick Sylvester
Jonah Weiner
Douglas Wolk
XXL Blogs
About Us | Work for Village Voice | Esubscribe | Free Classifieds | Advertising | Privacy Policy | Problem With the Site? | RSS | Site Map
©2010 Village Voice, LLC. All rights reserved.