DJ Spooky
The Secret Song
Breaking the record down track by track is of little service as the album seems to be intended as one long, 80 minute suite with many musical themes repeating themselves. But a few tracks require singling out. First there is the trio of Dub tracks. But these dubs are no more than loops of great riffs created by others (two by Led Zeppelin, one by Radiohead) which were then laced with strings and allowed to repeat for several minutes. What that has to do with the economy is anyone’s guess. Next there are the Jazz tracks, such as the flute driven “Heliocentric” and the electric keyboard workout “Pax Per Fidem.” Both are pleasant enough tracks, but they don’t do much and after a few minutes the listener’s thoughts will stray. Again, whatever connection Spooky is trying to make between these songs and the economic collapse are completely unclear. What fair better are tracks such as the woozy “Iaco’s Lament,” the shuffling “Salt Satyagraha,” and best of all, the driving “Point Counterpoint.” It is on these songs that the queasiness, uncertainty, and anxiety of our current crisis are most apparent and where Spooky shows his skill as a composer. It is perhaps slightly ironic that the Jazz tracks work much better than the more traditional Hip Hop tracks driven by loops and samples, such as “Multiphonic,” an overly complicated song that nonetheless fails to hold the listeners attention.
Of the two songs that adhere most closely to the album’s intended concept the first, “5 Million Ways to Kill a CEO,” featuring The Coup [click to read] doing what they do best – threatening to take down capitalism one CEO at a time, is by far the more memorable and enjoyable, the west coast Rap crew injecting desperately needed energy. The second, the title track, is a microcosm of what is wrong with the album as a whole. Over a by the numbers Trip Hop backdrop, all loping beat and tinkling keys, a disembodied voice delivers the aforementioned meaningful diatribe about the state of the world’s economy in Chinese. One can assume that Spooky’s intention here is to show how the recession is a worldwide problem and how music can unite varied cultures. But why not present the lyrics in English as well? By only presenting his “message” in a language that most of his audience doesn’t speak he robs it of the power it could have. This album makes it seem that Spooky approaches his music almost completely cerebrally. A lot of people are quick to call Trap rappers “ignorant” or “simplistic” but listen to an album like Young Jeezy’s The Recession [click to read] back-to-back with The Secret Song and it is hard to imagine anyone would claim the former didn’t do a better ( and infinitely more visceral) job of capturing these chaotic, confusing times.
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