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May 7, 2012

10

Album Review: billy woods ‘History Will Absolve Me’

by @thoughtontracks

When I first heard billy woods’ music in 2005, the hip hop music scene was in a strange place.  A diverse independent boom that peaked in 2000 was all but over.  Even my favorite rapper at the time, MF DOOM, began to slip and had me questioning the future of the genre.  A large part of DOOM’s appeal was his detached perspective, choosing to only rhyme in the third person.  This was a calculated decision, as was the decision to wear a mask and assume multiple characters across his various projects.  With DOOM becoming less and less prolific and my ears turning more and more to other genres to find new music, billy woods threw me a life raft.  Impressed by his choppy, authoritative verses on Backwoodz Studioz’ Terror Firma project, I quickly acquired his two previously released solo albums and was blown away by his writing ability and unique style on the mic.

It seemed that billy learned a lesson or two from DOOM, also choosing to hide his face and often rhyming in the third person.  However, billy didn’t invent characters in the same way that DOOM did.  Instead, he chose to create individual concept tracks where he rhymes from any number of perspectives to give listeners a feel for walking in another’s shoes.  While woods’ raps are more content driven and DOOM’s more flow driven, they both have a penchant for rhymes and phrasing that is in many ways more similar to great poets and authors than it is to their contemporaries.

DOOM and woods had more than that in common though.  Both of their fathers were Zimbabwean and both of their mothers were from the West Indies.   I believe this helped cultivate their outsider perspectives on not just the rap game, but on America and the world in general.  After being born in Washington, D.C., woods’ family moved back to Zimbabwe to participate in the Zimbabwean revolutionary struggle.  This struggle ended white supremacy in the country and led to a socialist regime headed by Robert Mugabe.  The same Robert Mugabe who appears on the cover of History Will Absolve Me (woods wants to make clear though that the cover is not necessarily a pro-Mugabe statement).  He moved back to DC (by way of Jamaica) as a youth, but his time in Zimbabwe, as well as his family’s history there, would have a huge impact on woods’ music and his artistic perspective.

Not long after I started listening to billy’s music, he announced he would be forming a group known as the Super Chron Flight Brothers with fellow MC Priviledge.  The Flight Bros. released 3 albums and several mixtapes during a prolific 4 year run, but shortly before their final album Cape Verde was released in 2010, Priviledge left the group, leaving billy as a solo artist.  While the Super Chron albums were very good, billy was the clear star of the group and they left me yearning for more woods solo material.  As soon as the breakup was announced, I realized my desire for another billy woods solo album would soon be fulfilled.  Less than two years later, History Will Absolve Me has arrived, and it does not disappoint.

The album’s first single “Body Of Work” features a plodding, atmospheric beat from Willie Green and strong verses from Masai Bey and Roc Marciano, but it’s woods’ album-defining closing verse that steals the show.  Ownership is a major theme on the album and his Zimbabwean tale of a white ruling class farmer who loses his life and his land because of the sins of his fathers is a chilling example of how fickle a concept ownership is.  Woods raps “Is it really stealing when you robbing from robbers?” commenting on the way even murder can seem just when you look at things through a historical perspective.

On “DMCA” he speaks on the concept of ownership in the digital age and its role in the history of America- “We only here ‘cause some crackers aint wanna pay tax, on they Earl Grey / but see nothing wrong with owning slaves / So fuck a sample, I don’t gots to pay, when I take your shit, that’s the American Way / Downpour torrential.  Torrents have your whole album and the instrumentals / It’s like writing a fucking novel in pencil”.  He goes even deeper into the original American’s concept of ownership on “The Man Who Would Be King”, painting an unflattering  picture of a conquistador – “walk like Quetzalcoatl among the conquered, Dick hard / Put myself in the stars, his woman in the dirt / Face down, ass up / Doing God’s work”.

While most rappers who attempt covering these types of topics come off as preachy and didactic, woods instead chooses to pinpoint the worst aspects of all sides and rip them to shreds.  On “Sour Grapes”, he assumes the perspective of a gluttonous 1%’er mixing fine dining metaphors with sharp implied criticisms- “I’m your boss’ boss, did it my way / Hit the highway to rob, some took a loss, and came hat in hand / eying a seat at the table but I let ‘em stand, Selfish / Butter poached shellfish, the charred flesh of the helpless / Scoop marrow from bone / I can only imagine those loans have grown”.  His historical perspective allows him to form realistic opinions on the future and on the modern human condition, similar to writers like Phillip K. Dick and Kurt Vonnegut.  On “Sour Grapes” he also predicts that “student debt the next ship to sink like that subprime shit did” and on “Human Resources” he describes the existential plight of man- “Only problem with being your own god is you still gotta die”.

Woods’ artistic range goes far beyond historical deconstruction though.  The 2nd verses on “Crocodile Tears” and “Pompeii” tell two common, but different, tales of inner city self-destruction.  On “Crocodile Tears” billy illustrates how easily a kid from the hood with a seemingly bright future can fall victim to the traps of the same hood at the first sign of outside adversity.  The “Pompeii” verse examines how quickly a small hustle can snowball into a dangerous operation, especially once more people (and variables) are brought into the mix.  At the end of the verse he puts death, and the crabs-in-a-barrel theory, into perspective- “At the funeral, your team pour some liquor, then commence to plottin’ & plannin’ / Divide your re-up before the first shovel full of dirt landin’”.  While woods seems to take these individuals to task for their actions, he does it in a way that shows he can understand their perspectives.

Throughout woods’ discography he has found ways to offer glimpses of his personal life as well, however fragmented.  Billy recalls being labeled an outsider among his own race upon moving back to America for the seventh grade on “Freedman’s Bureau”, “They dark as Chris Tucker calling me a spear chucker? / Kid, they really mindfucked ya” and talks about the advantage of hindsight on the emotional album closer “The Wake”, “I could go back, tell myself everything I know / But me at twenty-three would probably shrug a shoulder, put stoge to fire like you’re preaching to the choir”.  The Man Mantis produced single “Blue Dream” featuring singer L’Wren, is about the end of a long term relationship and is as personally revealing as any song woods has made.

With a run time of 1 hour and a track list featuring 18 songs (no skits), History Will Absolve Me is a substantial album.  All of the guests hit their marks (especially Elucid and his visual breakdown of how police profiling and abuse of power lead to systematic violence on “Freedman’s Bureau”), but none manage to steal billy woods’ thunder.  Backwoodz Studioz’ in-house producer/engineer Willie Green contributes eight tracks that serve as excellent examples of why he’s becoming my favorite beat-maker around.  Sound quality has been a common complaint on previous Backwoodz releases and Green makes sure that’s not the case on History Will Absolve Me.  Up-and-coming producers AM Breakups and Marmaduke also contribute several standout tracks.

Billy woods is a true artist whose work will live on and be analyzed long after he’s left this world.  In a genre of music often viewed as disposable, materialistic, and violent, he seems determined to prove that hip hop’s criticisms don’t define it.  Although he doesn’t speak much on rap as art form, he does offer this biting criticism of the dumbed down major label culture on the A.M. Breakups banger “Duck Hunt”- “Rap like simpleton, see new tax bracket/ so called goons, turns out they schools was magnet”.  DJ Addikt closes the album by scratching this soulful vocal sample at the end of “The Wake”- “This music is so much bigger than me”.  The most refreshing thing about billy woods’ music is that in this era of individualism, it’s rarely about him.  The crux of his appeal as an artist is that he doesn’t tell you what to think, he simply wants to make you think.  Cop History Will Absolve Me on iTunes or a deluxe version with a T-Shirt and an autographed lyric booklet at Backwoodz Studioz.

Connect with billy woods via Facebook

Written by John Bugbee

10 Comments Post a comment
  1. Public Agent
    May 14 2012

    I am going to have to say that this is the best edited hip hop album of this year. This album is right on time and requires multiple listens, listens blazed listens without being blazed listens in the car headphones walking around alone at night and STILL it will keep saying things and still the layers in the beats come out. This is art without a doubt and it is hilarious to me how so many people put it in the political realm due to the political references. They are there but the man says a million different things about all kinds of different subjects he speaks metaphysics, everyday, comedy, thought provoking LYRICS. This album is definitely dense and all the guest stars are pretty dense too. (ROC MARCIANOS LATEST WORK THOUGH INTO A DIFFERENT TYPE OF BRAVADO IS DEFINITELY DENSE WITH MULTIPLE LISTENS PULLING STORIES TOGETHER) I mean thats how it should be right. Another thing is that this record is NOT corny AT ALL in a time where cornball shit is coming out left and right. (Handle your high and take a breath and LEARN young rappers CALM DOWN) Marciano is another who comes to mind that does not play with cornball records. Woods has gotten better in my opinion. It took time for me to realize his genius. Vordul Mega messes with Woods alot and he is on an extra song on certain discs of this album. He has worked with Woods alot. Vordul Mega is ridiculous. His raps make him sound enlightened and on another plane entirely. Some say that the guy is repetitive and I would say that is like saying a buddhist is repetetive. He DISPLAYS his surroundings and his surroundings are everything in the EVERY DAY CITY. I think History Will Absolve Me is worthy of WAY MORE recognition then it is getting.

    Reply
    • May 14 2012

      Thanks for the thoughtful and passionate comment. We’re obviously big fans of the record as well. John has his ears on a lot of good hip hop. I hope you’ll stop by from time to time to check out what he has been writing on.

      Best,

      Rob

      Reply
  2. John Bugbee
    May 16 2012

    Yeah, thanks for the thoughtful comments PA. billy’s style can take some getting used to, but once you get it, his music becomes very addictive. I agree with your comments about Vordul too. The bonus track he’s featured on “The Darkness” is bad ass. billy bodies Priviledge and Vordul’s former partner Vast with his verses while Vordul blacks out on his middle verse. Word is, Vordul has another solo album in the works with Backwoodz Studioz, definitely a project to look forward to.

    Reply
  3. Feb 28 2013

    This is certainly the 2nd posting, of your website I really read through.
    Nevertheless I actually enjoy this specific one, Hunter Douglas Blinds “Album Review:
    billy woods History Will Absolve Me | Thought on Tracks” the most.
    Thank you -Kassie

    Reply

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