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Meth may be hip-hop’s most mis-appreciated MC. True, until Supreme Clientele transformed Ghostface into a Golden Child for the hip-hop literati, Meth was the most visible member of what was then one of the world’s most popular hip-hop acts. His classic smoked-out voice, his towering stage presence, and his easily memorizable lyrics from 36 Chambers’ “Method Man” made him, for the all the pop listening public seemed to care, the true pointman of the Clan – a mid-90s urban icon who attracted media attention in ways more critically beloved Wu brethren like Raekwon and GZA never managed. Subsequent recording and film projects with Redman (Blackout!!! and How High, respectively) solidified his status as a larger-than-life embodiment of urban cool/stoner goofiness for the MTV crowd.
The public embraced (and Meth fed) this image so eagerly that, twelve years after his debut, few seem to regard him as either a master technician or a capable, unique lyricist. So much the worse for all involved.
Flow-wise, Meth is on a level occupied by few others. They don’t just call him the Method Man because he’s “like roll that shit, light that shit, smoke it,” but also because “there’s like mad different methods” to his style: he can switch-up his delivery several times in a single verse, shifting from machine-gun to sing-song in an instant. 50 Cent and Chamillionaire sound like they were taking notes. Even among the Wu, he stands apart. Unlike Inspectah Deck, the Clansman closest to Meth in terms of structure and preferred slanguage (a.k.a. the “really dope but at least recognizably conventional MC” – compare their lyrics to the free-abstraction weirdness of the rest of the WTC and get back to me), or the notoriously flow-crazy Ghost, Meth’s vocal inflections give his verses a visceral, mantric quality.
When putting together his verses, Meth combines his flexible flow with what I like to call the “shiv style” of rhyming: he picks up random, inoffensive pieces of language and refashions them into dangerous weapons. This is not the happy-go-lucky cultural recycling of Nelly (“Ande-rei, ande-rei, Mami, E-I, E-I, uhooooooh) or Young Joc (“Eeenie, Meenie,
Bless the globe with the pestilence
The hard-headed never learned
Play my position in the game of life standing firm
From foreign land
Jump the gun from the frying pan
Into the fire
Transform into the Ghostrider
Who got my back in the line of fire holdin’ back?
WHAT?!
My peoples, if you with me, WHERE THE FUCK YOU AT?
Niggas is strapped and they tryna twist my beer cap
Erb got my wig fried like a bad perm
What the blood clot
We smoke pot
And blow spots
You wanna think twice, I think not
Now Iron Lung ain’t gotta tell ya where it’s comin’ from
Guns of Navarone tearin’ up your battle zone
Rip through your slums
There’s a reason his lyrics might not strike listeners on first spin: they’ve heard a lot of what he’s said at some other point in their lives, spouted by parents, police officers, or high school English teachers. And that’s the genius of Meth. He recasts clichés by revealing their latent malice… or injecting something sinister of his own. Sharpened up in the uniquely Meth-style, even the blunt clutter of everyday language comes out on point.
2 comments:
good read again but it seems you cut it short in the end. there are a couple of more things that could be said, more examples to be given. i hope you go more in depth in the ghost piece. peace.
That was a great read!
Peace,
IslaSoul
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