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Dashah - Rap Burglar 2.5
Rap Burglar 2.5

Dashah

Rap Burglar 2.5

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by Jake Paine | 03.07.09
Deejays have often had some of the best ears for what truly deft rapping ought to sound like. From Premier to Toomp to Quik, this has been proven true by how these mixmasters bring the best out of top emcees. X-Ecutionerz founder Rob Swift was instrumental in working with acts like Akinyele and Large Professor [click to read] in the early '90s, and after evolving into deejay trio Ill Insanity, sought out Long Island emcee Dashah to complement the scratches. Initially released in the third quarter of 2008, this digital-only gem has been subsequently updated, stamped as Rap Burglar 2.5, and given all the more is the one of the most nostalgic, digestible storytellers you've probably never heard of.

From the same Wyandanch region of Long Island that spawned luminaries like Rakim [click to read] and Erick Sermon [click to read], Dashah has a '90s approach to his writing and delivery. "Thought Y'all Knew" carries a syncopated flow as rhythmic as the beat, as the force-fed words warn, "I'm in the kitchen, pushin' something harder than crack." Like the top '90s New York emcees, Dashah refuses to be soft, and still manages to counter the drug-dealing topics of present-day. "The Promoter" uses the vivid and liquid storytelling styles of Masta Ace [click to read] and Nas with a twist at the end, a la Common's [click to read] "Testify." This is smarter rap than the norm. "My Notebook" aligns closely with Nas' "Book Of Rhymes" [click to read], to explore the lyricist's toolkit. Although the subject matter may be a weathered road, Dashah and his production don't reinvent the wheel, but accommodate the fan that still believes rap's best years lived over a decade ago.

Strangely, Rob Swift, Total Eclipse and Ill Insanity keeps a distance ("Above The Clouds" aside) from the album's production - although presenting the project. Instead, Natural Diggers and DJ Pause hold rank. Switzerland's Diggers crew contributed a bulk of the bonus tracks, having placed "Reflection" and "Thought Y'all Knew" on the first edition. The latter reworks the same "Recognize" sample used by Premier with The L.O.X., but with new scratch choruses assembled by Nas, Wu and others. DJ Pause's "Coulda Woulda Shoulda" and "Sittin' On The Train" remind us why vocal Soul sampling was hot in the first place, with a sound a bit more Hi-Tek [click to read] than Heatmakerz. Dashah's lyrics don't ignore contemporary times or references, and still manage to feel dusty. The beats do just the same.

If there's anything Rap Burglar 2.5 is actually stealing, it's everything conservative Hip Hop fans enjoyed about the mid-'90s. This is not "Illmatic, Reasonable Doubt and Doggystyle in one" (so said The Game), but a simple reminder that lyrical integrity, the art of storytelling and beats built upon great sample records of yesteryear are all still possible. At a time where new rappers are flooding your hard drive with "see if it sticks" content, Dashah is the best emcee out of Long Island in years, with a winning "don't go to them, let them come to you" approach.

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