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EMC: The Show

Juice Crew legend Masta Ace has successfully
reinvented himself as a concept-album maestro and mentor to younger artists.
The indie-rap super-group EMC pairs Ace with three of those protégés:
Milwaukee's Strick and Lyricist Lounge cut-ups Punchline and Wordsworth. On the
quartet's rock-solid debut effort, The Show, each of the group's
members ably inhabits a clearly defined role. Masta Ace reigns as the older,
wiser hip-hop elder statesman, Strick is his cocky sidekick, Wordsworth is the
sensitive deep thinker, and Punchline lives up to his moniker with smartass
battle rhymes.

The group members share a gift for casual
storytelling, as well as a fondness for mellow, melodic beats and sturdy song
concepts. "Winds Of Change" traces hip-hop's evolution from the golden age to
the current aluminum era, and the gang gets all touchy-feely with album-closing
tracks paying reverent homage to their mothers ("U Let Me Grow") and their
children ("Feel It"). At 24 tracks, The Show can't exactly list brevity
as one of its myriad virtues, but this is one of those rare hip-hop albums that
goes on forever because its members have a lot to say and a charming way of
saying it.

 
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