DJ Muggs & Planet Asia
Pain Language
One of Hip Hop's all-time great producers, DJ Muggs [click to read] is no stranger to producing entire albums. From Cypress Hill to Funkdoobiest to Soul Assassins to GZA, Muggs has a near unfuckwitable track record spanning two decades. If anyone is going to help Fresno's finest reach his full potential, it is Cypress Hill's backbone.
Pain Language starts off on a high note; royal horns carry "Sleeper Cell" as Asia rocks the rugged production. "9mm" is pure chaos all around, and PA thrives, spraying his verbal weaponry. Another perfect marriage is made on "Drama" with Asia weaving an intense story over the serene production. Planet Asia doesn't always sound so comfortable over Muggs' dark soundscapes, he struggles to find a flow over a trademark beat on the title track. "That's What It Is" is very much the same, as Asia sounds lost over the driving production. As he struggles again to find the mark on the ominous "The King Is Here," you can't help but wish B-Real or GZA had been giving this instrumental.
PA sounds re energized each time he's joined by a guest. Killah Priest, Cynic & Scratch come through on "Black Angels" and Asia tears up with is one of Muggs' more lackluster joints on the album. The duo stays true to their language theme, going back to the origin of the word assassin on "Hashahins." The lyrics don't follow suit, but the Chace Infinite and Turban-assisted song still works. The album closes out the way it came in; on a high note. Perhaps the highest, Chase and GZA appear on the appropriately titled and very dope "Triple Threat."
There is little to turn your nose up at on Pain Language, but little to go wild about either. While Muggs provides far from his best work on the boards, the album reveals once and for all that Planet Asia's strength just doesn't lie in solo albums. His unique style is a beautiful compliment to another emcee (see the underground classic Cali Agents How The West Was One), but on his own it grows tiresome and his relative lack of dimensions as an emcee shows. No shame in that, not every good actor is a leading man. Nevertheless, until we get another Cali Agents album, Pain Language is a solid effort worthy of some study.
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