Tuesday, February 3, 2009

So Cold Now Available!

Good day!

So Cold is now available! If you are a member of BustMyRhyme.com, you can download it and an exclusive bonus track from http://ntalekt.bustmyrhyme.com. You can also download it at http://www.soundclick.com/NTalektSoCold.

I've got player below, but you can download it all for yourself at either site mentioned. The download includes full artwork, lyrics, and more!

Enjoy, and thank you for your support!



N. Talekt

Monday, February 2, 2009

Song Review: N. Talekt - Diamond

So, here's a twist.  I've been receiving some pretty favorable reviews for the "Diamond" track from So Cold (which releases tomorrow!) but a recent one just really hit home for me.  I don't want to belittle any of the other reviews I've received over the past couple months, as I appreciate them all, but I felt like this reviewer definitely saw what I was trying to accomplish and was able to give an in-depth review because he so thoroughly understood the song.

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Larry Ludwick's Reviews: "Diamond":

Summary Opinion

So I cheated. I guess since my review list takes quite a while to complete, some of the people near the end might have many of their pieces reviewed by others before I jump in. By this time when I am getting to review N.Talekt, I have seen other reviews of ‘Diamond’. No matter, I hope I give my own perspective in reviewing where I get as close to the artist as the artist is willing to get close to the listener.

There is always a question for a creator about how much you want to put yourself out there for all to see. Letting it all out can be cathartic (cleansing). There are others that might think opening up, literally exposing your guts, can make you vulnerable especially in the fairly hard mindset of Hip Hop music. And let’s face it, if you expose yourself and get feedback that is dismissive or even cold, you are being injured as deeply as you can be because you don’t have a protective shell up. An artist can choose to not deal with personal subjects or to mask the message in mystery lyrics.

N Talekt takes the open approach and I hope this has helped him with his life. I think this is a good choice for him because he writes well … I say, really well. The mark of a good writer, and I have to say particularly in Hip Hop, is someone who uses words for the meaning they convey and not as mere filler or the way to complete a rhyme. I listen to N Talekt’s story in this song and I find I have to hear every word because nothing is a throwaway. He is a talented writer which is borne out by most of the songs on his page.

Genre in Soundclick and the world again steps in to confuse musical selection rather than to help. When you think of Hip Hop, you come down normally with a narrow view of what can be done and how it is done. You expect a driving beat, hooky hooks, fire-paced spitting, and generally posturing and bragging. So much of Hip Hop fills that definition that I feel the great writing and performing is exactly as the opening of this song suggests. The diamonds are hidden in the dirt. ‘The diamond in the dirt that ain’t been found.’

N Talekt seems to keep the throttle pulled back, don’t expect to be carried along by the percussive drive at breakneck speed. This is a good thing because this gives you a chance to hear what he is saying. No lyrics provided, but I find everything pretty clean and clear. The song is about some hard details of life that literally stopped N Talekt from producing his music. I find it hard to imagine cutting off the outlet that usually gives meaning to your life when you most need it. Yet, the same thing happened to me …loss can be like a blow to the chest that stuns you and stops the breathing process. In the true depression that can follow loss, the things that seemed so meaningful can seem frivolous or meaningless. Hopefully time provides healing and you can come back to address what has happened after a quiet period of introspection. I think N Talekt has done this. This is a great thing because now he has something with which to touch us all because the message is universal.

Even if he had not done such a good job of producing and creating this piece, it would have been worth hearing. Happily it is also well done and catches you by the throat if you are willing to be as vulnerable as the artist. For myself and for N Talekt, I will say not to be troubled because these loved ones are with you … I don’t mean just in memory… they are with you and you know it.

Production

The opening has a technique that I am not sure is successful if I interpret it correctly. The song begins with the statement of the hook, which is just fine, but behind it there is some delivery with a telephone filter. It is actually the first lines of the lyric, which are then repeated at full dynamics:

Ask me how I’m doin if I’m breathing then I can’t complain
It’s difficult to get a leg up when you’ve got an ankle sprain.


This is just a minor thing. The technique is called ‘the zoom’ … you start with something distant to get someone listening closely and when they are leaning forward, you shift to full volume, dynamics, etc… It makes the ‘zoom in’ to full dynamics so much more dynamic. Hmmm… my problem with this example is that the hook is interfering with comprehension of those telephonic lines. It would have been better to bring down the hook or wait until it ended to just have the lines by themselves. This is really minor, but then again I do get to mention a technique that almost any producer can use.

What else, well nothing then, because there is nothing wrong here and much is very good. No lyrics, but I don’t need them. I love to see lyrics as a reviewer, but lets face it … if a general listener needs a lyric sheet, then you have a problem with your mix. So thanks to N Telekt for understanding that listeners want to understand what is being said especially in Hip Hop.

I don’t know who is responsible for the backing track, but it really suits the feel of this song well. The drums establish a strict beat but have a swing in the kick that is somber. The music has a soulful reserve that supports the serious theme.

The mix is balanced pretty much as well as you could want. Every element is in place, the effects are tasteful and no element steps out of the mix.


Music

Hip Hop is usually backing and verbiage. I get into N Telekt’ delivery immediately. He delivers some switched up wordage that could sound squeezed in if he slipped up, but he does not take a single misstep. There is a laidback feel to the song but the words come fast. Despite this pace, N Telekt gets real emotion into his delivery. Not the normal anger associated with Hip Hop, but a sense of real pain being brought to the surface.

The music in the backing is reserved, soulful, and even funeral in pace and feel.

Content

The notes on the song state that this piece explains a hiatus that N Telekt has taken from producing his music. I have already discussed the effect of personal tragedy on the music that can often help us deal with the blows of life and how some blows are stunning.

Just to state it starkly and out in the open, this is purely well written. It is not hype or flash, but just writing that deserves and rewards with attention to the meaning.

There are two points woven into this song. The first is about Hip Hop and the competition aspect of it all. It basically comes down to saying this competition makes Hip Hop look like a game lacking any serious purpose. N Telekt feels that this form of music should deal with the depth of life rather than shallow bragging rights and one-upmanship. The final lines can be misleading if you don’t think about what they are saying:

The last thing I worried about
Is impressin’ y’all
True kings don’t demand respect
You respect the don.


This sounds like normal bragging rights Hip Hop chatter, but the meaning is almost elusive. N Talekt is saying he does not care about impressing his listeners because there are other more important things on his mind. This is a direct slap to all Hip Hop types concerned with the big flash sound without content. Secondly he is stating that if you have to ask for or demand respect, then you don’t deserve it. It is more a matter of getting respect for what you are … respect that is given freely having been earned.

The second point of this song is to tell a personal story of N Telekt’s struggles with the kicks of life. You are in a particularly hard place to be when you are crushed by the multiple losses of loved ones and when you now become the rock that has to support the family. The trouble with all this is you get everyone else through, but in the end you suffer the deepest trauma. You eventually realize that you need support too, but there is only the dependency of others.

Just as I realized when my music returned that I was on the road to my recovery, I sincerely hope this is the same sign for N Telekt.

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Listen to "Diamond":


















Larry Ludwick's music can be found at:

It is a mixture of Electronica, New Age, Smooth Jazz and even some Classical.

N. Talekt