LMNO & Kev Brown – Selective Hearing Part 2

    In a time when too many artists release over-thought concept albums, it’s nice to come across a record like LMNO & Kev Brown’s Selective Hearing, Part 2. The two artists have stuck to a simple theme: James Brown. The opening line of the opening song, “The Ultimate,” which features suitably funky breaks and The Godfather of Soul’s trademark ad-libs and grunts urging the emcees on, is “James Brown is the ultimate,” and that serves as the thesis for the whole sequel collaborative LP. All the music on the album is made up of samples of Brown’s work – and work he had a major influence on. But the legend’s music is not the only thing inspiring the duo; the man’s outsized ego and immodest nature inform their lyrics as well. Each track features both raw, forceful Funk (sometimes very manipulated, sometimes played fairly straight) and boastful, shit-talking verses. Selective Hearing Part 2 has a uniform sound, but it’s a pleasure to the ear, and a reminder of who made a way for this thing of ours.
        

    A onetime DJ Jazzy Jeff protege, Kev Brown challenges himself with a new approach, both in his catalog and his work with L. Occasionally, that production leans a little too heavily on the sample, like on a track like “Ya Know,” where the breakbeat and James Brown’s cut-up vocals are more interesting that any other song accent. For the most part, this is hardly a problem and the album has a stack of stand-out tracks. “We Stay Rockin’” features a great staggering, metallic beat augmented with symbol splashes. Brief but impactful guest spots by Declaime and Mr. Brady (“What’s up Kev, man, this beat’s outrageous / I banged it so loud that it woke up my neighbors / We got flavor your shit’s full of additives”) lyrically stay in line with LMNO and Kev Brown’s old school bluster. “Kragenoff” also features a notable guest spot, this one by Kaimbr who over the tracks tinny guitar line, crispy snare, and throbbing bass, spits comical lines like “Duck hunting, I got nines / I need a ten ‘doe / Touch down in L.A. for endo / With kinfolk.” Beyond their bragging and boasting LMNO and Kev Brown make a point to set themselves apart from current trends, for example Kev Brown’s line on “James Brown”, “Might take ‘em a minute to over-stand / I’m lo-fi, Low Budget / What of it? / They sound so lost it’s time to get rugged,” or LMNO’s claim to be “Doing what’s natural in a world of plastic” over the molasses-thick bassline in “Gotta Get It.” Elsewhere, on “James Brown Pt. 2,” LMNO shows a gift for more abstract lyricism which he uses to make something original out of a relatively mundane act, “Needles drop, find the groove / Scratch the surface, somethin’ so smooth / Move with the sun and moon in good shape / The way the deejay’s run too come through with laptops or crates / Snatched off a cassette tape and ran into a dub plate.”
       
    The second installment of Selective Hearing‘a two best tracks are the ones that do the most with The Hardest Working Man In Show Business’ music. First up is “Good Gawd.” Kev Brown’s intense mixture of thudding piano, horn splashes, and the ever-present drums and bass creates a pulsating, intoxicating beat. Over which he spits “I’m real talk they not hardly / James told me to go in / I guess we gon’ crash the party,” and that fits in perfectly with the record’s main conceit: James Brown’s bone-simple Funk, a healthy ego, and talent on the mic are all you need to create great Hip Hop. That is, of course, if you also happen to be extremely talented at putting those pieces together. “Raw, gritty, dynamite soul, superman rap” is how guest Hassaan Mackey describes it in his exceptional guest verse. That description certainly fits “Guaranteed,” where Kev Brown uses the Funky People Records founder’s music to create an almost psychedelic background featuring a distorted, fried guitar sample that occasionally bursts into the foreground in startling clarity. The track also features some of LMNO’s best lyrics: “My head’s high / My overhead’s low / Came from the middle with two places to go / I chose to grow/I’m not hard to like and not easy to impress.”
       
    The album may not be revolutionary in its conception or execution, as you can find similar Brown studies such as Edan’s Sound of the Funky Drummer. But halfway through a year that will see LMNO release an album a month, this is the far-and-away his greatest, most meaningful work of 2010. Just as was the case in their 2008 union, when the Visionaries emcee and the Low Budget emcee/producer cross paths, the bi-coastal duo meet each other in the middle of a groove. At a time in Hip Hop where James Brown’s blueprint feels like its gone to crates out of reach, Selective Hearing Part 2 brings it back, like the deejays who taught us in the first place.

    21 thoughts on “LMNO & Kev Brown – Selective Hearing Part 2

      1. how u giving this a 2? what are you basing your opinion on? beats, rhymes, what??

        and what do u have against Drake? ive been a backpacker/hip hop head since ’93 and used to hate on Commercial shit more than ANYONE, but Drake is NICE! u need to hear that he gets co-signs from all your fav rappers for u to like him? just cuz he’s getting paid by that faggot gremlin, doesn’t mean he “sucks cock”.

        im curious, what is RJF Music… i’d like to check out any music u have.

    1. I’ve only heard a few tracks, but the album sounds incredible so far. @WTF-MAN did you get a leak? I don’t think you get LMNO, he is one of my favorite rappers. Has never been fake, always been real, and has an original style and flow. This album is good as bought from me.

    2. I’m giving this a 5 just to balance out the bullshit other reviews. LMNO is fucking ill, and Kev Brown always delivers with the classic production. Instant buy. If you don’t like hip-hop and try to compare LMNO to drake and nicki minaj you shouldn’t be listening to this album in the first place.

    3. I like it when dudes get together. Kev don’t produce enough anymore, and 12 albums a year from LMNO is 11 too many.

    4. Picked it up on the strength of the first Selective Hearing. Sick concept, I just realized that LMNO’s name is James + Brown (Kev). While Bambaatta, Kool Herc, & Flash are godfathers of hip-hop, the godfather of soul James Brown’s music is definitely inclusive in the “core” of hip-hop’s birth and existence.

      In an overproduced, plastic world, it’s refreshing to hear new music that’s exciting and vibrant that’s steeped in respect and influence of the roots of hip-hop. Kev Brown’s delivery both on the drum machine and mic expose others that are doing too much, but lack soul.

      LMNO is difficult to understand for novices, but truly is the MC’s MC. I’ve seen critics blast him, but heads that truly understand the craft of being a lyricist, (ie: delivery, content, rhyme structure), and the art of MCing. Cats like Ras Kass sang their praises of LMNO, but of course, guys like WTF-MAN probably think Ras Kass is wack as well…lol

      1. strong co-sign my dude. he’s definitely the MC’s MC. cats aint knowing and yet think they have the right to blast him. glad to hear this SH2 is good. i know i was digging SH1.

      1. it doesn’t stand for anything, early in his career he was james k then just “jk” and since the alphabet goes jklmno he just took the “lmno”

      2. @Noodles..How did you come up with your answer? I didnt know the alphabet went JKLMNO…In that particular order? LoL

        LMNO=Leave My Name Out

    5. Kev Brown should create music with other peeps than LMNO, He should give out more with Low Budget mc’s(Kenn Starr, Kaimbr, CY Young etc)! 5 for Kev!

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