Obelisk Movements

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
As if time-warped from the early '90s, Atlanta's Micranots--I Self Divine and DJ Kool Akiem--deliver complex, conscious rhymes over thick, fuzzy, heavy-snare-kick beats. It's easy to forget that stirring music still lurks in the underground, but Obelisk Movements is a potent reminder of the power of music to be not only sonically compelling, but also spiritually moving. On "Analyze," I Self Divine drops revisionist history lessons: "I'm Jesus / No need for churches / I read Malcolm, Frantz Fanon outcomes / I got a complex, hypocrite, outdone / Analyze." "Illegal Busyness" is a grounded, vicious assault on inner-city drug economies, while "Queen Supreme" pays respect to the strength of black women--their mothers get a paean, too ("Mother's Day"). With their combination of knowledge of self and boom bap, the Micranots evoke the early work of KMD, Blackalicious, and Freestyle Fellowship. Be warned--they come with a pure black whirlwind. --Jon Caramanica

Music Review:

  1. Out of the Vein (Clean) (Bonus DVD)
  2. Places In Arizona
  3. Positively Negative (With guest guitarist Ronnie Montrose)
  4. Present Tense/Tongue Twister
  5. Reckoning
  6. Red River Crossing
  7. Reggae Worship: First Fruits
  8. Sandinista
  9. Soon Over Babaluma [Limited Edition] [Original recording remastered]
  10. Sounds of the Satellites

Music Review

music review

Music Review

How Animals Move

Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 4; Midsummer Night's Dream

La Bonne Chanson

Music: Vol. 2 Omerta, Onuri E Sangu

Morning Sun [CD-single] [Import]

Moodswings

Master of the Forest

Peace, Love & Truth [Content/Copy-Protected CD] [Import]

Martie Peters Group

Malcolm Arnold: Dances

Lost Tracks

La Patata [Limited Edition] [Import]

Marciano Y Otros

What Now

In This Life Together