
Wax Tailor, aka JC le Saout, made a remarkable impact worldwide with his debut ‘Tales of the Forgotten Melodies’. A sweeping, cinematic hip-hop album that had critics citing similarities to DJ Shadow and RJD2. ‘Tales...’ propelled this Frenchman to stardom in his home country (notching up 60,000 home sales) and his debut was heralded as Radio Nova's album of the year.
An artist's second album is often seen as the moment of truth. With ‘Hope & Sorrow’, set for release this June, Wax Tailor confirms his musical identity. Often categorized as trip-hop or downtempo hip-hop, Wax Tailor breaks musical barriers using a sonic palette to demonstrate his life chronicles tainted in soul, jazz, and funk. There's no weaknesses here at all, each track has its own vibe, and all the guest vocals are strong. In fact that's one thing that sets this apart from Tailor's debut; his choice of vocals, with more than a few tracks featuring female singers, perfectly compliment the music.
An artist's second album is often seen as the moment of truth. With ‘Hope & Sorrow’, set for release this June, Wax Tailor confirms his musical identity. Often categorized as trip-hop or downtempo hip-hop, Wax Tailor breaks musical barriers using a sonic palette to demonstrate his life chronicles tainted in soul, jazz, and funk. There's no weaknesses here at all, each track has its own vibe, and all the guest vocals are strong. In fact that's one thing that sets this apart from Tailor's debut; his choice of vocals, with more than a few tracks featuring female singers, perfectly compliment the music.













fter years of work with artists across the spectrum (The Roots, Jazzanova, Josh Wink), Philly-born poet/singer Ursula Rucker has released her first full-length album, Supa Sista. The disc runs the gamut of social consciousness, from inner-city school system politics (the tabla-infused "Philadelphia Child") to child molestation (the chilling "Song For Billy"). The exquisite "7," featuring M.A.D. and Vicki Miles, recounts the construction and gradual erosion of a relationship: "The belly flutters...The soft sweet-as-apple-butter kisses...From night flights inside fancy and fantasy/Now we a family." The track "What???" takes the "near non-existent state of black music" to task; while Rucker's didactic tone is a bit awkward (the rest of the album speaks volumes more by sheer example), it's an accurate and long-overdue diss from within: "No Crissy, no thongs...No lies about your ghetto rep." "Digichant" explores the long-festering debate on technology (is the world shrinking by speed of communication or are we growing more isolated?), Rucker's voice digitally pitched up and down across a backdrop of electronic programming: "Can you/Fuck me with your modem/Talk dirty while you finger your diseased keys?" Supa Sista's mix of new jazz, soul and analog synthesis creates a muggy sweetness that's strung cohesively by a slew of producers (Alexkid, King Britt, among others). "All they can or want to see/Are scantily clad asses that swing/And beg to be slapped/During self satisfying sex/Say my name," Rucker says on "Womansong." This ain't no Destiny's Child; it's Nuyorican poetry, it's the unadorned essence of hip-hop.





