
Minneapolis MC becomees a true hip-hop heavyweight.
Brother Ali - The Undisputed Truth
[3.5/5] You have to root for a guy who can turn all his physical quirks-from albinism to a lazy eye-into a feel-good anthem like 2003's "Forest Whitaker." There's no similar knockout blow on Brother Ali's third album, The Undisputed Truth, but hip-hop's Whitest Great Hope should certainly lure more fans into his corner. He's paired again with Rhymesayers' resident mastermind, Ant, who reinforces Ali's witty, sometimes political flow with plenty of Golden Age flavor. The downside is comparisons to Ant's production on Atmosphere's brilliant 2005 release You Can't Imagine How Much Fun We're Having will be inevitable-and these sampled soul-and-blues beats are mostly solid, not spectacular. However, Ali has evidently paid attention to old-school tourmates like Rakim; even when he's just paraphrasing Public Enemy, his rhymes carry genuine heft. (RHYMESAYERS) Dan LeRoy
Official Website: http://www.rhymesayers.com
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Also in this issue:
- Good Charlotte
- The Queers
- Bayside
- The Boils
- Ted Leo And The Pharmicists
- Nothington
- Big D And The Kids Table
- Relient K
- Signal To Noise
- Sounds Like Violence
- Explosions In The Sky
- Aereogramme
- Air
- Arcade Fire
- Aqualung
- Between The Trees
- Clair De Lune
- Daphne Loves Derby
- The Nein
- Seafood
- Maria Taylor
- Comeback Kid
- Alabama Thunderpussy
- Autonym
- Big Business
- Daggermouth
- The End
- The Handshake Murders
- Life In Your Way
- Otep
- Since The Flood
- xDEATHSTARx
- Lovedrug
- Jesse Malin
- The Agency
- Call Me Lightning
- The Higher
- Kaddisfly
- Kingfield
- RTX
- Son Volt
- Southern Culture On The Skids
- The Stooges
- RJD2
- !!!
- Daníel Ágúst
- Dälek
- LCD Soundsystem
- Skinny Puppy
- Other sections...




























[3.5/5] You have to root for a guy who can turn all his physical quirks-from albinism to a lazy eye-into a feel-good anthem like 2003's "Forest Whitaker." There's no similar knockout blow on Brother Ali's third album, The Undisputed Truth, but hip-hop's Whitest Great Hope should certainly lure more fans into his corner. He's paired again with Rhymesayers' resident mastermind, Ant, who reinforces Ali's witty, sometimes political flow with plenty of Golden Age flavor. The downside is comparisons to Ant's production on Atmosphere's brilliant 2005 release You Can't Imagine How Much Fun We're Having will be inevitable-and these sampled soul-and-blues beats are mostly solid, not spectacular. However, Ali has evidently paid attention to old-school tourmates like Rakim; even when he's just paraphrasing Public Enemy, his rhymes carry genuine heft. (RHYMESAYERS) Dan LeRoy
Official Website: 
