Boot Camp Clik – Casualties Of War

    In the year 2000, Priority Records released
    Basic Training. A compilation of the greatest hits from Brooklyn’s Boot
    Camp Clik
    , it’s usually considered the proverbial nail in the coffin
    for such an album to be released, which was particularly disturbing,
    considering that is was only a few short years prior where the Bucktown natives
    had the game on smash.

    Similar to fellow New York natives the Wu-Tang Clan, the
    collective efforts of Blackmoon, Smif-N-Wessun, Heltah Skeltah
    and Originoo Gunn Clappaz churned out catalogues of instant
    vintage, and despite never attaining that commercial success, remained a focal
    point in the underground scene.

    Unfortunately, after the negative response from their first group effort For
    The People
    , lagging sales of their subsequent releases, label drama and
    inner turmoil within the group (causing fan favorite Rock to
    temporarily leave the crew), their entire momentum came to a screeching halt,
    leaving their fans wondering if they’d ever reach that pinnacle of hype again.

    After a short hiatus, the BCC
    released The Chosen Few to moderate sales and a well-received
    response. But it wasn’t until Duck Down’s “Triple Threat”
    campaign in 2005 which saw them return to their true form, punctuated by
    resident super-emcee Sean Price’s Monkey Barz.
    Following last year’s independent smash, The Last Stand, all eight
    members return again for their fourth group release, Casualties Of War,
    a compilation of tracks left on the cutting floor during their Last Stand
    sessions.

    Kicking things off the head-pounding ‘The Hustle,” Steele
    supplies the song’s hardest quotable over faint sampled wails and moans: “General
    Steele/Boot Camp, Black Panther/Black fist, black gloves/wrapped around a black
    snub”
    . The stutter-step pulsations of the Nottz-produced “Bubblin’ Up”
    provides an excellent back drop for the Camp‘s
    franchise player, Sean Price, to go absolutely nuts: “I
    dumb down my dialect and double my dough/you muthafuckas better act like you
    know/Sean Price’s a scholar, well-versed in the field of rap/valedictorian, I
    don’t even feel the track”
    .

    Whereas The Last Stand featured soul-filled heatrocks from the likes
    of 9th Wonder, Pete Rock and Large
    Professor
    , Casualties Of War opts to turn to lesser-known
    producers while applying those same techniques. Unfortunately, while there was
    a sense of cohesion in the former, the beats seem more scattered and out of
    place in the latter, sometimes causing normally hard-hitting lyrics to feel
    softer than a Twinkie filling. Dan the Man and Fred
    Bear’s
    wanton sampling of The Meters’Just Kissed My Baby”
    for “What You See” inspires lazy verses at
    best. The noisy
    “BK All Day” is instant fast-forward material, and the usually reliable Marco
    Polo

    comes in with a few snoozers as well, in the forms of
    “I Want Mine” and “My
    World.” Fortunately, the ever-improving
    9th Wonder does make an appearance
    with “I Need More,” and
    Jaywan Inc’s harmonica-fueled “Jail Song” provides the best
    moment of the album.

    Casualties Of War is nothing more than an appetizer to whet Duck
    Down

    fan’s appetites until their next official full-length. However, with
    Ruck’s Master P now floating around, only
    the die-hards should pick up this compilation to get their fix.

    2 thoughts on “Boot Camp Clik – Casualties Of War

    1. This review is written by someone who doesn’t really understand music let alone hip hop. Although the tracks don’t necessarily flow from each other this doesn’t make it a weak album. It can be seen as a positive that the tracks draw from different aspects of rap and the album doesn’t pigeon hole itself to one sound. I’ve just listened to the album all the way through and its brilliant. I am looking to my second listen. Boot Camp are one of the few outfits still perservering with street real hip hop.

    2. Ya not even a compilation album. Do you know what you’re talking about at all? Not perfect but still good.

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