Showing posts with label Dizzy Wright. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dizzy Wright. Show all posts

Saturday, November 25, 2017

Dizzy Wright - 'State of Mind 2' (Album Review)


Unlike his one time Funk Volume labelmate Hopsin, Las Vegas emcee Dizzy Wright is on the right track when it comes to giving fruit-bearing subject matter. Wright’s second album of the year, and the followup to The Golden Age 2, bursts forth with wisdom, ultra-positive as usual for the independent rhyme-artist. The album, State of Mind 2, the sequel to Wright’s 2014 EP, advocates for an alkaline diet, rediscovers the importance of black activism, exhorts us to consider others’ hardships and much more. Guests like Audio Push, Ill Camille and Jon Connor promise lectures for above-and-beyond thinkers, and producers Roc N Mayne, DJ Hoppa, FreezeOnTheBeat and others guarantee a mixture of traditional hard-hewn sounds and relaxing soul and jazz. It has the typical Dizzy Wright feel and format and not many new talking points (the newest of which are Wright’s abbreviated raps on healthy eating) but fans and newcomers will still appreciate his commitment to intelligence, philosophy and consciousness. (3 out of 5 stars)      

Stream here 

Official Dizzy Wright website

Monday, July 4, 2016

Dizzy Wright decompresses, cools out and gets a few things off his chest in 'The 702 EP'

The 702 EP by Dizzy Wright
Las Vegas emcee Dizzy Wright is still in a "good place" with his music, and being on his second solid EP of the year so far, he's definitely doing more for his career and fanbase in the long run than he may think now.  On Saturday, July 2, Wright independently (nice) released The 702 EP, a homecoming set of records for him, a time to relax, take a vacation (if only in verse) and air out some grievances, relieving himself of a lot of built-up tension in the process.  The production team handling the music duties includes most of the folks who worked on Wright's February '16 Wisdom And Good Vibes EP adding Louie Haze and LarryMakingAllTheHits with good guest work supplied by Easy Redd, Reezy and Sk8 Maloley.  It's a concise eight-track update from perhaps Nevada's best active rapper at the moment and a good steppingstone between LPs for the young lyricist.

There is never any shortage of energy in Dizzy Wright's vibrant line-spitting here.  Any search he might have considered going on for the most clever original rhymes in the making of this album was evidently sidetracked, since his main focus is on going for a specific feel, mission and message - in this case, take a load off, shout out LV, have some fun, stay motivated, get a little political, identify toxic relationships and maintain defenses.  There are moments in the first four cuts where Dizzy Wright sounds like a typical mainstream rapper more so than in his last two projects, but he doesn't embarrass himself or make himself look a fool.  Again, that is his hangout, me-time section of 702, and he's careful not to commit any form of lyrical suicide or faux pas common among some other rap personas or embellish about his life beyond belief.  He's not an angel, but he's far from being a devil as well.  702 is about Dizzy Wright the real person, not a character called Dizzy Wright.

The whole procession has a general gentle sway, hardly ever banging thunderously production-wise.  It perfectly captures the mellow hazy feel of Wright's western home stopover before the Golden State.  The EP is in fact good despite starting a little disappointing in content, but it ends with a very good, purposeful second half.  It appears that Dizzy Wright is just about past or on the road to getting completely over the problems with and memories he had of his prior, now defunct, label home Funk Volume, not to mention his mixed feelings about the fans' reaction to the disbandment.  He exits 702 focused, directed, on-guard and more experienced and wise than before.  Hopefully he sees now that to make his next LP totally next-level, he'll need to move on from the past and rap on even newer trends, happenings, social movements, current events in his life and so forth, while preserving his moving, motivated delivery and loyal-to-hip-hop rhyme schemes.  702 is Dizzy Wright taking a break from the chaos and madness of life, and there's nothing wrong with that, as long as his peaceful respite to retool goes undisturbed.

3 out of 5 stars