DJ Rhettmatic & Buff1 – Crown Royale

From Freeway & Jake One to Celph-Titled & Buckwild to Skyzoo & !llmind, 2010 has been the year of the Rap duo. In each of these instances, the two artists jettisoned a track listing of varying names for a more intimate and focused project. Right in the thick of this is Buff1 & DJ Rhettmatic, who have spent the last two years crafting Crown Royale. However, while the collaboration sounds good on paper, does their effort reign supreme?

With over two decades of production and deejay experience under his belt working with The Visionaries as well as the Beat Junkies, Rhettmatic’s repertoire of keenly-crafted yet manageable beats provide Buff1 a generous spring board for his rhymes. Outlined by piercing keys and moderate drums on “The Path I Chose,” a frustrated Buff1 denounces the ‘crabs in a bucket’ mentality that hinders today’s Rap scene. Giving insight to the problem, he rhymes, “These rappers wanna get love but they don’t wanna give it though / They on some ‘I’m above showing love’ like a mistletoe / The hate is in their blood like a drug to their system flow / See, they be getting high just ‘cause someone else is miserable.” On “World Go Crazy,” another topic of significance plagues Buff1’s mind; the almighty dollar. With ‘cha-ching’ bells liberally ringing throughout the track, Buff1 challenges his listeners to “try to stay modest while also making your pockets smile.”

Despite his usually engaging flow, Buff1’s voice lacks charisma when it’s necessary. With a heavy backdrop of fierce drums and erratic chants for extra flavor, “We Gotcha” carries the same kind of energy that would get the crowd buzzing at a show. However, Buff1 comes off as monotone by comparison. “Get It Up” languishes in similar territory as his demands to “clap them hands for me and my man” feel uninspired. His performance on “The Chosen Show” fares much better, likely because of the competition (i.e. nine other rappers) that accompanies him on the record. Overall, Buff1’s verse makes its way to the middle of the pack while Rap luminaries Fashawn, Chino XL and Bishop Lamont steal the show.

The rest of Crown Royale epitomizes the less-than-impressive consequences that can occur when each artist is unable to compromise for the other. Whether shedding light on the woes of his hometown (“GM”), pondering the meaning of life (“Looking For Answers”) or acknowledging the support of his fans (“Thank You”), Buff1 and DJ Rhettmatic can’t seem to find perfect harmony. Sure, a glimmer of hope will surface (“Right Here”), but it’s too little too late for the duo.

Crown Royale is a digestible mix of ’90s boom-bap nostalgia and Motown sensibilities that is likely to get lost in a myriad shuffle of year-end releases. Over the years Buff1 & DJ Rhettmatic have become staple figures in their respective regions, and there’s little question that their individual successes will continue. With that said, their latest project should be considered an afterthought on their radar.

Purchase Crown Royale by DJ Rhettmatic & Buff1

11 thoughts on “DJ Rhettmatic & Buff1 – Crown Royale

  1. Well that review is some ole bullcrap.

    I think the album has a decent variety of subject matter that I personally enjoy it, but either way, I love the album in my opinion, but if you compare Carter 4 to this album. Buff1 & DJ Rhettmatic will kill Lil Wayne any day of the week.

  2. I disagree with your comments about Buff1 lacking Charisma on this album, and to be real with you, I think your review comes off as being written by someone who is saturated with music, and who simply doesn’t know a good release when it shows up.

    Not to trash-talk any of the other acts that you mentioned in this review, but you completely missed one supremely important quality that this collaboration has that others don’t: The Live set.

    Watching Crown Royale perform is a completely different thing than listening to this record. I’ve seen them twice already and both times, they performed “We Gotcha” slightly different each time, which is something you can’t say about most collaborations. You have producer/MC combos but you don’t have Legendary DJ/MC combos these days like this one.

    The Album is in the grand scheme of what I think Crown Royale is, just their calling card; you have to see these guys perform live (they have this routine they do that is kind of funny to watch, reminded me of the same kind of comedic charisma that Cheech & Chong have, which is great to see live).

    To say “that is likely to get lost in a myriad shuffle of year-end releases” only speaks for your perception of this album. I personally think it’s one of the better albums I’ve spent my hard earned bux on this year, and one last thing – I also think the sound quality is great. It doesn’t sound distorted like a lot of releases I’ve bought this year sound (on CD).

  3. I disagree with this review. Without going into a long thing to dispute the reviewer. This is a very solid album lyricly and beat wise

  4. I thoroughly enjoyed listening to “Crown Royale.” While less than incredible, Production is at least on-par and cohesive, chemistry is mad nice, and these dudes get additional props for Originality!! 3.75/5 (3.5 = dx rating)

  5. How can you listen to that cd and give what sounds to be negative feedback, the writer of this review probably enjoys listening to Future or Schmurda. The cd wasn’t an instant classic but it was solid the whole way through & has replay value.

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