Hall of Justus – Soldiers of Fortune

    Since 2001, the Justus
    League
    has given North Carolina
    some of the most attention it’s ever received outside of basketball. Franchise
    trio Little Brother–emcees Phonte and Big Pooh, and producer 9th
    Wonder
    –has been dubbed by backpackers and critics alike as the new
    millennium version of classic alternative acts like De La Soul and A Tribe
    Called Quest
    , while 9th has sold
    his sample-driven backdrops to everyone from Jay-Z to Destiny’s Child.
    Accordingly, these successes have drawn attention to releases by the rest of
    the crew’s talented members, and have spawned a working relationship with New York’s veteran Boot Camp Clik. With their first all-in
    effort, Soldiers Of Fortune, the Justus League continues their good run
    while releasing a perfect introduction to all of its representatives.

    Little Brother
    expectedly churns in two winners, but the fashion in which they deliver them is
    as unpredictable as Ron Artest
    without his medication. “Life Of The Party” sees Phonte and Pooh trading
    in 9th’s soul samples for Nottz’ see-sawing synthesizers, and “Back
    At It” brings street emcee Cormega
    along to trade punch lines over a beat by Buckwild,
    another new collaborator. Otherwise, the League’s
    two most well-known members, Phonte
    and 9th Wonder, have noticeably
    limited contributions to the disc–9th
    Wonder
    offers a sparse (albeit dope) two beats to the album, and including
    the aforementioned LB tracks, Phonte only has three appearances.
    Fortunately, other proven group members handle the slack by alternating between
    sturdy solo displays like Joe Scudda’s
    “Secret” and harmonious joint efforts like Big
    Pooh
    and L.E.G.A.C.Y.’s “Basic.”
    In-house producer Khrysis also
    continues to earn his keep and battle 9th
    for the crew’s “Best Producer” title, lacing an epic-sounding down-the-line
    joint with “Tour Of Duty” and bleak, melancholy strings for the duo of Chaundon and L.E.G.A.C.Y. as The Embassy
    on “Seeing Is Believing,” plus five other tracks.

    While not as strong as the team veterans, JL newcomers also hold down Soldiers Of Fortune respectably.
    Lyricist Jozee Mo spits charismatic
    braggadicio on both the solo joint “Feelings” and the Pooh-assisted “Try Me Again,” while relieving stress with Sean Price and singer Kal Royal on “Tired.” Newly-installed
    resident beatmaker E. Jones backs Scudda, Chaundon and Phocuz with
    multi-layered heat on “Moving Fast,” and though he’s not an official Justus League member, affiliate Skyzoo contributes highlights with his
    own “S-K-Y” and various cameo verses.

    While certain tracks on the disc aren’t as good as the
    others, Soldiers of Fortune is void
    of blatant wack moments and full of material to hold you over until new
    releases from Little Brother, 9th Wonder and the rest of the members.
    On “Life Of The Party,” Phonte
    spits, “We all on one page, we all on one
    accord.
    ” And their harmony equals audible bliss.

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