Southern Rock Opera

There are a lot of albums out there that play on the rock opera concept, with the story running through the album, so given the title of this album, it does exactly what is says on the box.

This was a great album, long, at over 94 minutes, but great. The theme was really good and worked nicely all the way through, as the story unfolds you can see it’s about someone who wants to be a rock legend, and how being from Alabama has influenced them.

With references to Alabama’s history, including Govenor Wallace. There were also so many mentions of Lynyrd Skynyrd, and particularly Ronnie Van Zant, that it was obvious that this was a bit of an homage to them and the influence they had on music from the South.

It was a really great concept album, with some tracks being narrative storylines over music, others from the perspective of different people, including the Devil. I really enjoyed it.

Welcome To The Afterfuture

Another night in the gym, another new album. Yesterday I picked Mike Ladd and Welcome To The Afterfuture. Never heard of them, or heard anything by them. From what I read he’s a poet who got into rap, so given my ambivalence for the Jay-Z album, I tried to go into this with an open mind.

It was much more poetic that I was expecting, soem tracks were more like a street poet than a rapper. And other tracks did fall into the rap style more, but it was a little bit more melodic than the other albums I have listened to recently. It didn’t have the aggressive edge that you sometimes get with this genre, but at the same time, it wasn’t the melodic funky feel that I got listening to A Tribe Called Quest.

Being more poetic than rap meant that some of the lyrics were surprising, there was a line about Ramadan omelettes in the Himalayas in one of the tracks which felt more like it was reminiscing about the past. And in another there are a load of references to Bladerunner (not surprisingly the track is called Bladerunners).

There were a good couple of tracks at the start which I used for my treadmill warm-up, they had a good pace and meant I could plod along a lot better.

Generally, it was a good album, and I was pleasantly surprised. I must learn not to judge albums based on my experience of other albums that might be in the same genre.