Rating:
Genre:
Rap
Release Date: 04/18/2006
Super-producer
Dallas Austin was so knocked out by
da Backwudz that he signed the duo and reactivated the
Rowdy label. According to him, cousins
Big Marc and
Sho Nuff (yeah, like
Bruce Leroy's nemesis in
The Last Dragon) are the best group to come out of Atlanta since he moved to the city 20 years ago. That's the kind of remark one might expect from someone who has spent the majority of the last few years working with U.K.
pop groups like
Sugababes and
Duran Duran -- does he really think the duo has more to offer than
Goodie Mob or
OutKast? Even without the full support and crazy claims from
Austin,
da Backwudz would have a lot to live up to. They're technically from the backwoods of Decatur, but they certainly fit within the context of fellow groups and MCs that have come from Atlanta proper. They don't pretend that they haven't been inspired by
Goodie Mob and
OutKast, and it certainly shows throughout
Wood Work, their first album. Early single
"I Don't Like the Look of It (Oompa)," produced by
Milwaukee Black & the Execs, was a great and daring way to assert
da Backwudz as a distinct group with a specific lineage; using a sample from the
Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory soundtrack and a neo-
Timbaland tribal beat, the track carries an off-kilter mix of humor and menace. Tracks like
"You Gonna Luv Me" and
"The World Could Be Yours" -- also produced by
Black, a Midwesterner who does little to affect the duo's Southernness -- combine Southern machine bump with flipped
soul samples worthy of
Just Blaze or
Kanye West, and the MCs are adept over slow-grinding
funk and bracingly tense
soul, utilizing their heavy drawls and lyrical versatility. There's a drastic drop in quality during the latter half of the disc, but this remains a strong start. To be even more just, the first half is tremendously tight. There's the potential for at least two stronger albums, especially if the duo continues to develop alongside
Black.
~Andy Kellman, All Music Guide