Throwback Album: Ultramagnetic MCs' “Critical Beatdown”

Throwback Album: Ultramagnetic MCs' “Critical Beatdown”

By Rapstation Editor for Rapstation.com

Monday already got you staggering for the weekend? If so, may we prescribe this week's throwback album, which comes in the form of Ultramagnetic MCs high-voltage debut record, Critical Beatdown.

Born into Hip-hop's Golden Age, Ultramagetic MCs is a New York-based rap group rostered by TR Love, Moe Love, Ced Gee, and Kool Keith. Despite being their first album, Critical Beatdown gained notoriety as what critics acclaimed as a “classic” for its era, as well as Pitchfork's precise citation as “one that stands tall today as one of Golden Age's most ageless.”

The album features 15 tracks overflowing with sky's-the-limit energy, from hard-hitting hooks to razor-sharp beats and sounds. Honorable mentions go out to Keith's stand-out rhymes on “Watch Me Now”, as well as “Give The Drummer Some”'s very impressive creative design authored by the late Paul C.

If you're a Kool Keith fan, then you've most likely familiarized with his distinct enigmatic antics and multiple personas. Critical Beatdown, on the other hand, both depicts his earliest years into Hip-hop and foretells the journey of a brilliant lyricist. Add that with Ced Gee's cohesive production skills, and what you have is one-hundred percent, “electrifying” magnum opus.

What made this album stand out amongst a sea of several Hip-hop giants was its tremendously innovative design, showcasing funk-driven samples and unorthodox rhyme schemes, which the group exhibits flawlessly. And though the album released with modest reception, Melody Maker applauded it in retrospect, “full of scratch-tastic heavy beat, gold plated hip hop which manages to combine the minimalist ground-breaking Sugar Hill sounds with the show-no-mercy aural assault of the then-emerging Public Enemy.”

By Jods Arboleda for RAPStation.com