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Ms.
Jade
Girl Interrupted
label: Interscope
released: 11.05.02
our score: 4.5 out of 5.0
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Timbaland
has long established himself as the auteur producer, the man with
the ability to take stray, zig zagging beats and make improbable
hip hop masterpieces. As a consumer, a Timbaland-touched record
comes with the guarantee of at least a few tracks will play like
the Ten Commandments of rump shaking. So it was with great anticipation
that I picked up Ms. Jade’s Girl Interrupted. Not
that he always has most perfect ear for protégées,
as anyone whose ever heard Magoo rap will readily attest to. In
addition (as my grandma would say) bless his heart, he does display
the sort of persona of someone who’d say “I’ll
drop those beats as soon as you drop 'dem drawers.” Thankfully,
this record is not a case of a keeping a promise to a knob-polishing
climber.
Let
me get my reservations out of the way first so that I can commence
licking Ms. Jade (aka 23 year old, Chevon Young) in mile high
compliments. The first half of Girl Interrupted sounds
like a production ghost town. Although her vocals still have a
bruisy stick and move power to them, the backdrops sound too quiet,
cluttered with tinny drumbeats and starving for a dose of big,
thunking bass. It’s unfortunate that Timberland would so
thinly gird such a swaggering vocalist like Jade. The albums first
single “Ching Ching”, despite the brilliantly side
kicking Nelly Furtado, morphs quickly from catchy to “if
they repeat the chorus one more fucking time. . . “ and
sounds like an empty matchbox of a song.
Fortunately,
the second half of the record more than compensates for a few
flimsily built tracks at the beginning. On “Feel the Girl”,
Miss Jade drops lyrics with Eve’s cocky bravado but with
a deft delivery that sounds like a pair of quicksilver hands on
drum skins. “Big Head” has Jade slinking in tight
over vocals that sound coyly tongued on top of a driving martial
beat. Her vocal delivery manages a combination of menace and velvet
that, although evoking other emcees, is entirely hers. Timberland
acts as the funk poppa Wizard of Oz, who drops in every now and
then with a beat-laced rhetorical question or just to make the
man behind the magic known. On the albums second half, the producer-prodigy
chemistry is so dangerously cool it practically needs weapons
inspectors.
Although
she’s not the most political artist, she’s a razor
sharp observer of the gap between what we say and what we do.
There are several tracks on Girl Interrupted that skew
the hypocrisies of our everyday shortfalls which is much more
than your average Timbaland release tackles. On “Keep Ur
Head Up” she swipes at men who refuse to take responsibility
for their children saying: “trying to escape responsibility/be
a man/if you won’t even take a blood test, nigga/you ain’t
a man”. On “Different” she rattles off a bitch
slapping indictment of everyday crimes against the greater good,
including a few lines in which she off-handedly dubs men as “whores”.
On these tracks her voice has a percussive slant that hits your
body like an extra layer of beats. Of all the female emcees coming
out the gate this year, Miss Jade is definitely the one to watch.
So
far this album has flown inexcusably below the radar. Granted,
it’s an uneven effort, but most debuts are. Once Jade gets
her sea legs, she’s bound to leave her competitors in her
ill flowing wake. Until then, turn it up and get in touch with
your inner badass.
12-Feb-2003
7:10 PM

If you
liked Girl Interrupted...
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Tracklist:
1. Intro
2. Jade's a Champ
3. She's a Gangsta
4. The Come Up
5. Ching Ching (featuring Nelly Furtado)
6. Get Away (featuring Nesh)
7. Ching Ching - Part Two (featuring Timbaland)
8. Step Up
9. Interlude
10. Count It Off (featuring Jay-Z)
11. Really Don't Want My Love (featuring Missy
Elliot)
12. Dead Wrong (featuring Nate Dogg)
13. Feel the Girl
14. Big Head
15. Different
16. Why U Tell Me That (featuring Lil' Mo)
17. Keep Ur Head Up (featuring Nesh) |
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