Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Mos Def|The New Danger

The New Danger

Mos Def

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Language available : english

When it takes you five years to follow up a debut of near-landmark stature, you're setting yourself up for failure. Mos Def's second solo album is not disastrous, but it's a sprawling, overambitious mess. A handful of songs from this 75-minute affair feature Black Jack Johnson, the rock band Mos set up with some very respected musicians: bassist Doug Wimbish (Sugar Hill house band, Living Colour), drummer Will Calhoun (Living Colour), guitarist Dr. Know (Bad Brains), and keyboardist Bernie Worrell (Parliament/Funkadelic). While that's a deadly cast of support, those guests seem to have gone into this inspired more by the negligible rap-meets-rock Judgment Night soundtrack than their own past work. The grooves and riffs are basic (of the dull variety), and the vocals rarely surpass echo-heavy shouts of "Let's go!" "Come with it!" and "F*ck you, pay me!" As poor as those songs are, the lowest point of the album is "The Rape Over," a rewrite of Jay-Z's "The Takeover" that jacks Kanye West's beat from same that, for all its sharp rage, is ruined by the line "Quasi-homosexuals is running this rap sh*t" (it's not a boast). Unsurprisingly, the hottest moments tend to come when Mos sticks to what he does best. One slight exception to this is "Modern Marvel," a nine-minute suite smeared with a series of Marvin Gaye samples. Mos sings in whispers (he makes Pharrell sound like Luther, but he has the required spirit), momentum floats in as easy as a light breeze, and then the MC shifts into goosepimple-raising mode. Throughout the whole thing, Mos Def's conviction is apparent. Even with that in his favor, in addition to considering the extra-genre dabblings on Black on Both Sides, The New Danger sounds confused. It should've taken Mos at least three more records for him to reach this state of restless aimlessness. What grates most is that Q-Tip's Kamaal the Abstract, the best out of the rash of horizon-broadening records from rap artists the past few years, remains unreleased.

© Andy Kellman /TiVo

More info

The New Danger

Mos Def

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From 13,50€/month

1
The Boogie Man Song (Album Version (Edited))
00:02:22

Mos Def, Author, Producer, MainArtist - Raphael Saadiq, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

2
Freaky Black Greetings (Album Version (Edited))
00:02:20

Mos Def, Author, Producer, MainArtist - Bernie Worrell, ComposerLyricist - Black Jack Johnson, ComposerLyricist

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

3
Ghetto Rock (Album Version (Edited))
00:03:53

Mos Def, Author, MainArtist - Minnesota, Composer, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

4
Zimzallabim (Album Version (Edited))
00:03:41

Easy Mo Bee, Producer - Mos Def, Author, Producer, MainArtist - Black Jack Johnson, Composer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

5
The Rape Over (Album Version (Edited))
00:01:34

Mos Def, Author, MainArtist - Kanye West, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

6
Blue Black Jack
00:05:44

Mos Def, Composer, Author, MainArtist - Minnesota, Composer, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

7
Bedstuy Parade & Funeral March Explicit
00:04:32

Mos Def, Producer, MainArtist, ComposerLyricist - Paul Oscher, ComposerLyricist

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

8
Sex, Love & Money (Album Version (Edited))
00:04:09

Warryn Campbell, Composer, Producer - Mos Def, Author, MainArtist

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

9
Sunshine (Album Version (Edited))
00:04:25

Mos Def, Author, MainArtist - Kanye West, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

10
Close Edge (Album Version (Edited))
00:03:09

Mos Def, Author, MainArtist - Minnesota, Composer, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

11
The Panties
00:04:11

Mos Def, Author, MainArtist - Minnesota, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

12
War (Album Version (Edited))
00:03:07

Mos Def, Author, Producer, MainArtist - Psycho Les, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

13
Grown Man Business (Album Version (Edited))
00:03:24

Mos Def, Author, MainArtist - Minnesota, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

14
Modern Marvel (Album Version (Edited))
00:09:19

Mos Def, Composer, Author, MainArtist - Minnesota, Composer, Producer

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

15
Life Is Real (Album Version (Edited))
00:03:11

Molecules, Producer - Mos Def, Author, MainArtist

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

16
The Easy Spell (Album Version (Edited))
00:05:32

Mos Def, Composer, Author, Producer, MainArtist

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

17
The Beggar
00:05:18

Mos Def, Composer, Author, Producer, MainArtist - Bernie Worrell, ComposerLyricist - Black Jack Johnson, Composer, ComposerLyricist

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

18
Champion Requiem (Album Version (Edited))
00:04:52

Mos Def, Author, MainArtist - 88 Keys, Producer, ComposerLyricist

℗ 2004 Geffen Records

Albumbeschreibung

When it takes you five years to follow up a debut of near-landmark stature, you're setting yourself up for failure. Mos Def's second solo album is not disastrous, but it's a sprawling, overambitious mess. A handful of songs from this 75-minute affair feature Black Jack Johnson, the rock band Mos set up with some very respected musicians: bassist Doug Wimbish (Sugar Hill house band, Living Colour), drummer Will Calhoun (Living Colour), guitarist Dr. Know (Bad Brains), and keyboardist Bernie Worrell (Parliament/Funkadelic). While that's a deadly cast of support, those guests seem to have gone into this inspired more by the negligible rap-meets-rock Judgment Night soundtrack than their own past work. The grooves and riffs are basic (of the dull variety), and the vocals rarely surpass echo-heavy shouts of "Let's go!" "Come with it!" and "F*ck you, pay me!" As poor as those songs are, the lowest point of the album is "The Rape Over," a rewrite of Jay-Z's "The Takeover" that jacks Kanye West's beat from same that, for all its sharp rage, is ruined by the line "Quasi-homosexuals is running this rap sh*t" (it's not a boast). Unsurprisingly, the hottest moments tend to come when Mos sticks to what he does best. One slight exception to this is "Modern Marvel," a nine-minute suite smeared with a series of Marvin Gaye samples. Mos sings in whispers (he makes Pharrell sound like Luther, but he has the required spirit), momentum floats in as easy as a light breeze, and then the MC shifts into goosepimple-raising mode. Throughout the whole thing, Mos Def's conviction is apparent. Even with that in his favor, in addition to considering the extra-genre dabblings on Black on Both Sides, The New Danger sounds confused. It should've taken Mos at least three more records for him to reach this state of restless aimlessness. What grates most is that Q-Tip's Kamaal the Abstract, the best out of the rash of horizon-broadening records from rap artists the past few years, remains unreleased.

© Andy Kellman /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

Moanin'

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Moanin' Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
More on Qobuz
By Mos Def

TRUE MAGIC

Mos Def

TRUE MAGIC Mos Def

Black On Both Sides

Mos Def

The New Danger

Mos Def

The New Danger Mos Def

Sensei On the Block

Mos Def

You Are Undeniable

Mos Def

Playlists

You may also like...

UTOPIA

Travis Scott

UTOPIA Travis Scott

Paint The Town Red

Doja Cat

HISS

Megan Thee Stallion

HISS Megan Thee Stallion

HISS

Megan Thee Stallion

HISS Megan Thee Stallion

Not Like Us

Kendrick Lamar

Not Like Us Kendrick Lamar