Back to Dust explained

Back to Dust
Type:studio
Artist:Sev Statik and DJ Dust
Cover:Back to Dust.jpg
Recorded:2006–2007
Studio:Backwater Studios
Mother Of Invention Studios
New England Recording Company
Genre:Alternative hip hop, Christian hip hop, underground hip hop
Label:Rawkus
Producer:DJ Dust
Chronology:Sev Statik
Prev Title:Sliver LP
Prev Year:2007
Next Title:Shotgun
Next Year:2008

Back to Dust is a studio album by Albany, New York-based rapper Sev Statik and Atlanta-based producer DJ Dust, originally released on October 9, 2007, through Rawkus Records. It was the fourth studio release by Sev Statik and the second studio release for DJ Dust. Back to Dust features numerous guest appearances, including Manchild and Playdough of Deepspace5, Theory Hazit, Supastition, LMNO of The Visionaries, and Raphi, Griffin, and Triune of Tunnel Rats. The album was selected by Rawkus for inclusion in its "Rawkus 50" promotional campaign, and was released as a digital download. A physical version of the album was released on July 7, 2008, through Braille's Hip Hop IS Music label. Back to Dust met with critical acclaim. In 2010, Theory Hazit released a remixed version of the album.

Background

Sev Statik was active as a rapper in the Albany area since the early 1990s. After released two EPs in 1996, in 1997 he co-founded the supergroup Deepspace5 and joined the West Coast hip hop collective Tunnel Rats.[1] In 2002, Sev Statik released his debut studio album, Speak Life. Two more studio recordings followed: Slow Burn in 2005 and Sliver LP in 2007.

DJ Dust was active as a DJ for the group Indianapolis group deadpoetsociety during the mid-1990s. In 1998, while at a conference, he met Manchild, a member of The Pride and a co-founder of Deepspace5.[2] [3] The two founded the project Mars Ill, and DJ Dust also joined the Deepspace5 collective. DJ Dust released a solo album, No Fame, in 2006.[4]

Release

Back to Dust was first released on October 9, 2007, through Rawkus Records. The album was selected by the label as part of its Rawkus 50 campaign,[5] a program in which fifty hip hop artists were selected from submissions to the label.[6] Following the October 9 release date, the album was uploaded to iTunes on October 16. Sev Statik and DJ Dust also partnered with the rapper Braille's Hip Hop IS Music to release a digipak version of the album. This version came out the following year on July 7.[7]

Style and lyrics

The album was described falling within alternative and underground forms of Christian hip hop. Christianity Today found the style similar to that of Mars Ill, Deepspace5, Tunnel Rats, and LPG. The production uses a diverse assortment of musical elements, including jazz-style piano, frenetic drum kits, soulful vocals, harpsichord licks, and spoken word and a cappella passages. DJ Dust also made extensive examples of mid- to late-1990s rock, jazz, and blues, as well as excerpts of preaching. While some tracks featured complex layers of soundscapes, others are very minimalistic and simple in their construction.

The title of the recording, Back to Dust, is a reference to 3:19 NKJV, where God reminds Adam that he will return to dust upon his death. Working from this theme, Sev Statik approaches a diversity of interconnected topics, such as mass media brainwashing and family problems, but highlights life, death, and creation throughout.

Reception

Back to Dust was critically acclaimed upon its released. Christianity Today awarded the album four-and-a-half stars out of five, calling it "Alternative rap at its finest."[8] The reviewer, Andree Farias, said that he was hard pressed to single out any favorites, as "Cut after cut, bar after bar, the tandem offers some of the most redemptive hip-hop the Christian scene has seen in recent memory." He did caveat that the appeal of the album might not be immediate, as it needs to be taken in and savored slowly.

Jerry Bolton of The Phantom Tollbooth gave the album a perfect score of five stars, exclaiming that "Back To Dust, quite simply, is so good that I couldn't believe my ears. It took a month of regular rotation to quiet my cynicism and fully agree with my initial feeling: this is the best collection of beats & rhymes this year."[9]

Remixed version

Back to Dust: Remixed
Type:remix
Artist:Sev Statik and Theory Hazit
Genre:Christian hip hop, underground hip hop
Label:Point Man
Producer:DJ Dust, Theory Hazit
Chronology:Sev Statik
Prev Title:School Shooting
Prev Year:2010
Next Title:Sondial
Next Year:2011

On May 29, 2010, Sev Statik released a version of the album remixed by Theory Hazit.[10] Originally, Sev Statik's fellow Tunnel Rats member Dert was scheduled to release the album.[11]

Track listing

Notes and References

  1. Web site: MVRemix Interviews – Sev Statik. Heinzelman. Bill "Low Key". May 2005. MVRemix. MVRemix Media. February 26, 2016.
  2. Web site: Deepspace 5 Interview, Deepspace 5 2010 Jesusfreakhideout.com Interview. Fryberger. Scott. October–November 2010. Jesus Freak Hideout. February 26, 2016.
  3. Web site: aphire :: interviews :: mars ill. 2004. Light Online. February 26, 2016.
  4. Web site: Mars Ill Artist Database, Mars Ill Discography, CDs, Mars Ill Albums. Jesus Freak Hideout. February 26, 2016.
  5. Web site: Sev & Dust selected on Rawkus 50 and teamed up with HipHopisMusic. September 3, 2007. Rapzilla. February 26, 2016.
  6. Web site: Rawkus Announces 'The Rawkus 50'. February 13, 2007. XXL. February 26, 2016.
  7. Web site: Back to Dust, by 7EV STATIK. 7EV STATIK. Bandcamp. February 26, 2016.
  8. Web site: Back to Dust. Farias. Andree. October 2007. Christianity Today. https://web.archive.org/web/20090907011552/http://www.christianitytoday.com/music/reviews/2008/backtodust.html. September 7, 2009. February 26, 2016.
  9. Web site: Reviews of The Phantom Tollbooth. Bolton. Jerry. November 11, 2007. The Phantom Tollbooth. February 26, 2016.
  10. Web site: Sev Statik, "Back To Dust: Remixed By Theory Hazit" Review. Jesus Freak Hideout. February 26, 2016.
  11. Web site: Sev Statik new album + Back to dust will be Remixed. September 26, 2007. Rapzilla. February 26, 2016.