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Music
Atmosphere's When Life Gives You Lemons . . .
Ostensibly mature indie-rappers woo baristas, unconvincingly
by CHRISTOPHER R. WEINGARTEN
April 29th, 2008 12:00 AM
Atmosphere
When Life Gives You Lemons, You Paint That Shit Gold
Rhymesayers

Get in where you fit in: Too $hort raps about girls, Cypress Hill raps about weed, and, until now, Slug rapped about Slug. But for his fifth album with rap duo Atmosphere, he's officially inactivated his LiveJournal, opting instead to spin fictional tales of various grumblers lurching around the streets of Minneapolis: strippers, junkies, chain-smokers, teenage moms, blue-collar drones, frustrated waitresses and, of course, the nighthawks who obsess over them. Maybe empathy is catching up with him, so he's rhyming about other people as penance for building a career on his own first-world problems. But Slug is no Buck 65, let alone Tom Waits. He doesn't so much paint a scene as draw feelings on a road map: Girl is confused because she's in an unfamiliar bed, and then she's guilty because she threw up in a stranger's toilet again: "And then the chills begin/And then the 'God please kill me right now' hits," etc.

But grown-ass Atmosphere gets its sharpest growing pains due to a change in production techniques. After one too many lawsuits, producer Ant abandoned his armada of kitschy, heart-tugging samples and started recording live instruments. He's trying to make what Sage Francis couldn't last year: NPR-friendly hip-hop, a Feistian bargain, indie-rap made for a year where "indie" sells but rap doesn't. So the piano twinkle and mere droplet of a beat on "Like the Rest of Us" sounds like Slug doing Regina Spektor; the coos and plucks of "Me" are Yael Naïm; the barista-strum acoustic rap of "Guarantees" aims for Elliott Smith and ends up with Uncle Kracker; the skipping hand-clap gospel of "Puppets" is pure Moby Playtime; and, for some reason, "Dreamer" sounds like Michael McDonald—funkless, martial, stiff, and innocuous, perfect for an upwardly mobile 21–45 demo that seeks neither boom nor bap with their soy latte.

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Alex on Sat May 31, 2008, 05:17, says:
"When Life Gives You Lemons" is a different Atmosphere album than anything Slug and Anthony have ever released previously. However, instead of an ignorant review like the one your employee gave, maybe a listener should actually listen to the music before judging. Slug's lyrics have matured just as the author has, and now the rapper muses on various characterizations.

In particular, your reviewer enjoys ripping "Your Glasshouse" without taking a moment to ponder its meaning. Obviously, the person you pay for his wise remarks on music should be expected to transcend a surface understanding of music; however, this person understands the song to be just about a hungover girl lost when she wakes up in the morning. If you read anything about Atmosphere and considered Slug's words, you would find the political, symbolic undertones of the song.

This reviewer should be relieved of their duties. As a professional company, you should be embarassed that this person is allowed to review music. Show some respect to musicians.
foil on Sun May 4, 2008, 22:44, says:
I don't see how you can give *this* Atmosphere album such a middling review.. best stuff they've released since the Lucy Ford collection... I can't even listen to the stuff put out since then, but I really like this album... Slug finally finds something to rap about aside from himself/women.
JonnyMilba on Thu May 1, 2008, 00:18, says:
I find it funny that there's always some reviewer who, when he doesn't personally like an album, decides that indie is too indie and lumps in into the "tries too hard and ends up being a pretentious wanna-be" category. I think it's time for this to stop. Indie is indie. Criticize the music, don't turn your review into a variable grab bag of cliched musical references and hipster rhetoric.

I mean, come on. How much of a stretch is it to call Guarantees "barista-strum acoustic rap"? It's not even played acoustically for crap's sake. Then to say it aims for Elliot Smith? How much Elliot Smith has this reviewer heard anyway? The same goes for Naim and Spektor. The chord structure in their songs isn't anywhere near Atmosphere's stuff, but just because they both use pianos and guitars in their music, I'm supposed to be critical of it? Gimme a break.

I'm not even a big Atmosphere fan and this review pissed me off. Someone fire this cheap hack of a reviewer and publish someone who can at least write intelligent criticisms.


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