Music / hip hop

Blade of the Ronin


Reviews (2)


Tiny mix tapes

2015

By

By

EMBLING

2015

"I'd be overselling this record if I claimed that it was exciting, intellectually stimulating, or innovative, but at the same time, I'd be selling it short if I didn't respect the fact that Blade of the Ronin is the first rap album I've heard in a very long time that pays absolutely no heed to market trends. None of these songs were written for the radio or the club, and none would be improved if/when blasted from car stereos on sweaty afternoons. Blade of the Ronin's greatest success lies not in avoiding the commonplace, but rather in their commitment to pre-SDCC juvenilia, as well as to a more holistic sense of sincerity. Even if Cannibal Ox fall prey to a few too many groaner lines, there's no pun so obvious or reference shoehorned in indelicately enough that could detract from the immersive quality of their overgrown manchild fantasias".


Pitchfork

d. 10. Mar. 2015

By

By

Winston Cook-Wilson

d. 10. Mar. 2015

"There's no doubt that Blade of the Ronin is the work of two very particular and oversized personalities, but the album does not feel like either a blast of fresh air or a return to form after wayward solo careers. Where The Cold Vein felt like an alien object dropped to Earth, Ronin arrives in 2015 sounding a bit commonplace. That's not totally Can Ox's fault: By now, indie rap of this sort has become a recognizable subgenre in the wake of so many DOOM alteregos, Anticon releases and a continuing stream of Internet-celebrated underground rappers with absurd or psychedelic tendencies".



Information and editions