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When soon-to-be-renowned Boston hip-hop duo 7L & Esoteric collaborated with the Wu-Tang Clan’s Inspectah Deck on the title track to 7LES’s debut EP Speaking Real Words in 1999, the timing was perfect. The upstart duo was building a serious buzz on the East Coast and beyond, while Deck was still winning praise for his gold-selling solo disc Uncontrolled Substance. As flashy pop-oriented rap was pumped on commercial radio stations, their natural chemistry and sympatico skills shone as a beacon to real hip-hop fans, a base of listeners who were soon asking about their next musical summit.

14 years later, the hunger for sharp lyrics and head-snapping beats hasn’t dissipated. In the face of the ever-worsening status quo of watered-down and vapid radio rap songs, the call for something real has only gotten stronger, and once again the time is right for a call to action – for someone or something to come in and send wack rappers running for the hills in fear. Enter CZARFACE, the upcoming full-length album from Inspectah Deck and 7L & Esoteric, to be released on indie stalwart Brick Records on February 19, 2013.

With both lyricists in prizefighting form, CZARFACE is a showcase for lyrical finesse, superior rhyme skills and teacher-approved sharing skills. To wit: a track like the single “Cement 3′s,” where Deck and Eso trade incisive, rewind-worthy verses over a hypnotic head-thump beat from 7L, while Roc Marciano delivers the final verbal body blows. Unsurprisingly, respect for real hip-hop runs deep, and CZARFACE brings an army with it—consider the star-studded guest list which includes Action Bronson, Vinnie Paz, Oh No, Mr. MFN eXquire and Deck’s fellow Wu-Tang Clansmen Ghostface Killah and Cappadonna.

Aside from one track blessed by the almighty DJ Premier, production on CZARFACE belongs exclusively to DJ 7L, who provides the musical backbone which holds the album together. His ability to craft a hip-hop sound that’s current and exciting with a classic feel left Deck impressed: “This is one of the first albums I’ve heard in a while that gives you so many different feels. You hear the ‘80s hip-hop style, ‘80s R&B and rock combined with what’s going on now. That’s creating something new, in my opinion.”

As Deck states, summing it all up: “When you see our face, you see the face of hip-hop, you see the face of music in this form. People do what they do—there’s techno rap and all kinds of rap out there. But this is that speaking-real-words rap. Go ahead and dissect everything we’re saying, you’ll get plenty out of it.”

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3 Responses to "CZARFACE (Inspectah Deck x 7L x Esoteric) In-Studio Footage"
  • Franklin J Moneypockets says:

    Eh. The beat for the lead single is boring. ANT used that main sample much better on Atmosphere’s Tears for the Sheep. Deck’s verse was not impressive. The one bright spot is Esoteric’s voice has actually improved, bucking the trend of many white MCs whos voices have become damn near unlistenable(Eminem, Vinnie Paz, Necro)

  • Mike says:

    Deck sounds on fire in the booth at the beginning – he sounds 36 Chambers. There have been times I’ve heard him in recent years when he’s sounded tired, but this is back to his old flow.

    “Speaking Real Words” was a classic joint for me and it’s so fresh to see this collaboration happen so long after. And 7l and Esoteric were always good at studying their trade and crafting it; it was never that they were the best group out there, but rather the most studied, the most focused, the most bent on delivering shit that sounded like shit they grew up listening to and wanted to hear more of.

  • Comments (3)

    Franklin J Moneypockets

    December 21st, 2012 at 3:18 am