
Rakim is a 56 year old MC/producer from Long Island, New York notable for being 1/2 of the seminal golden age duo Eric B. & Rakim. They put out 4 classic albums together from the mid-80s to the early 90s, with their debut Paid in Full & the sophomore effort Follow the Leader laying out the groundwork for future generations of hip hop to come. Kid Wizard eventually went solo in late ‘97 signing to Universal Music Group for an acclaimed debut The 18th Letter & the follow-up The Master while not as acclaimed still received positive feedback. Reception to The 7th Seal a decade after The Master was more mixed due to the lackluster production although the lyricism was certainly praised, but is returning after 15 years for a self-produced solo EP.
“Be Ill” featuring Kurupt & Masta Killa was a soulful boom bap choice of a lead single allowing the trio to talk about being down & real whereas “Now’s the Time” featuring B.G., Compton Menace & Hus Kingpin keeps it rugged explaining that the time is in fact now & they’re the last to know it. “Love’s the Message” featuring the late Nipsey Hu$$le, Planet Asia & WWE Hall of Famer Snoop Dogg takes the cloudy boom bap route instrumentally asking if you can see what they see while the symphonic “God’s Playground” featuring DMX, Fred the Godson, Skyzoo & 38 Spesh declares that the chase is on.
Canibus, Chino XL in what would be the final feature of his lifetime, KXNG CROOKED & La the Darkman all join The God for “Pendulum Swing” hooking up kicks, snares & strings looking to make a major change in the game together referencing Neuralink founded by Tesla CEO, SpaceX founder & Twitter owner Elon Musk leading into “International” featuring Joell Ortiz, Kool G Rap & TriState nearing the conclusion of G.O.Ds Network (REB7RTH) on some piano/boom bap shit wanting the money as opposed to violence. “Sign of 7” featuring Big Twins, Method Man, the late Prodigy & X-Raided finally ends the EP with the quintet luxuriously talking about being the mob including a reference to WWE Hall of Famer Ozzy Osbourne.
This man has to be in my top 3 with Nas & Kendrick Lamar, so it makes me more than thrilled that hear that his “G.O.D.” status extends to more than just lyricism by showing Rakim’s chops as a producer & resulting in one of the best EPs of what’s already been a prolific year in hip hop culture. The God hasn’t lost a step lyrically, the production is WAY better than The 7th Seal & a majority of the guests hold their own weight on the mic being some of the best that the east, west & south have to offer.
Score: 4/5
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