Blowout Comb | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Digable Planets |
Cover: | Blowout Comb Cover.jpg |
Released: | October 18, 1994 |
Recorded: | 1993–1994 at Bass Hits Recording Studio in New York City |
Genre: | |
Length: | 61:42 |
Producer: | Digable Planets, Dave Darlington |
Prev Title: | Reachin' (A New Refutation of Time and Space) |
Prev Year: | 1993 |
Blowout Comb is the second and final studio album by American hip hop group Digable Planets, released October 18, 1994,[1] on Pendulum/EMI Records. The album was written and recorded in Brooklyn, New York, where the group moved, with recording sessions beginning in 1993 and finishing in 1994. On Blowout Comb, Digable Planets abandoned the radio friendly style of their debut album and worked with a more ambitious, stripped-down sound. The album features a diverse range of samples and live instruments, and contains lyrical themes of the inner city and black nationalism.[2] It also features guest appearances from Guru of Gang Starr, Jeru the Damaja, and DJ Jazzy Joyce.
Upon its release, Blowout Comb received minimal label support, and virtually no pre-release publicity. It peaked at number 32 on the Billboard 200, and number 13 on the Top R&B Albums, making it a commercial failure. It featured the singles "9th Wonder (Blackitolism)" and "Dial 7 (Axioms of Creamy Spies)", which also did not chart well, and failed to match the success of the group's previous singles. Several music writers have attributed this lack of chart and sales success to the album's afrocentric content, and un-polished tone. Shortly after the release of Blowout Comb, Digable Planets broke up due to creative differences and displeasure with the music industry.
Although the album did not achieve commercial success, and received very little attention at the time of its release, Blowout Comb received generally greater acclaim amongst music critics and writers than the group's debut Reachin' (A New Refutation of Time and Space). It has been noted for its seamless production and has been described as a "textured soundscape of a mythical world of rhymes, jazz and urban ambiance." Blowout Comb is often regarded as Digable Planets' best album, and has gained an underground following in later years. In 2023, it was reissued on vinyl LP by Light in the Attic Records.
On Digable Planets' 1993 debut album Reachin' (A New Refutation of Time and Space), the group used many references to insects. These concepts were inspired due to "insects nature to stick together and work for mutually beneficial causes", which the group saw as a useful principle for African-Americans in low-income communities.[3] However, they abandoned these concepts on Blowout Comb, with group-leader Ishmael Butler articulating "All the insect concepts and imagery was outta there by the time we did Blowout. I felt that it had got misconstrued, kinda like De La Soul and the daisies. Blowout was a natural expansion of what Digable Planets were reaching for in the first place, but shallow ears got lost".[3] Ishmael Butler then changed his group-name from Butterfly to "Ish", Mary Ann Vieira changed her group-name from Ladybug to "Mecca", and Craig Irving changed his group-name from Doodlebug to "C-Know".[3] Black Moon's Enta Da Stage (1993) and Wu-Tang Clan's Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) (1993) have both been credited for changing Digable Planets' post Reachin' ... direction.[4]
In late 1993, Digable Planets moved from Philadelphia, to Fort Greene, Brooklyn, where they all lived in the same neighborhood.[3] Ishmael explained "New York City, New York was literally a Mecca for rappers so we went there and did it. Just the visceral energy; you walk outside and even if there's 20 inches of snow, somehow the city is rockin' and rollin'. I just approached it bright-eyed, like 'when I'm of age I'm going to New York. Rakim, he sounded like New York so I'm going there'. At an early age I had a sense that if you were gonna rap you had to go to New York if you were really gonna do it".[3]
While in Brooklyn, the group was heavily involved in the community, which they aimed to capture on Blowout Comb, making it a "Brooklyn album" and a "Brooklyn soundtrack".[3] "Borough Check", featuring Guru from Gang Starr, was one of the first songs recorded for the album and is an ode to Brooklyn.[3] It was stated that while in Brooklyn, the Digable Planets "observed, absorbed, and rocked the many styles of speak, gear, smoke, and sound that New York had to offer and incorporated the various shades into a stance that was strangely celebratory, wary, indulgent, and subversive".[5]
Blowout Comb had a higher record budget, with more musical ambitions,[6] which sought to utilize different samples and sounds that were un-common at the time, as the group viewed most other hip-hop artists' music as "recycled".[6] The album has been illustrated as "a block party, but transformed by Digable's 'ghettopoesis' into a cool abstraction of street life",[6] and "a motley clash of sounds that celebrate boom box batteries-in-the-freezer ghetto ingenuity as a raw, empowered expression".[5]
While on a world tour in support of their album Reachin' ..., the group collected vinyl records from various countries, and formed a deep rapport with various musicians they were performing with.[3] Both of these factors influenced the overall sound of Blowout Comb, with its eclectic samples and live instruments.[3] Ishmael Butler credits engineer, producer and instrumentalist Dave Darlington for helping him create the album.[3] He recounted "Every song on Blowout is a mix of live instruments and samples. I would program the drums and tell someone 'yo, this is what I hear right here', then we'd record and get to slicing".[3] Several music writers have described it as "being hard to tell the difference between the samples and the live instruments because they blend so well".[3]
Several music writers have also noted Blowout Combs vocals as being "low in the mix".[3] Ishmael Butler stated "I read where George Clinton said the stuff that's inaudible the first couple of listens adds longevity to a record, because it draws the person in. You might catch a word or a phrase on down the road, and that makes that record all the more intriguing". Ishmael also mentioned "The vocals were to be woven in with the fabric of the music, not necessarily something that was on top. The record label was like 'nobody can hear what you're saying', but I felt like if the music was engaging enough, then over time it would provide a richer listening experience".[3]
Many of the lyrics on Blowout Comb include references to the Five-Percent Nation, as well as the Black Panther Party, which weren't present on the group's previous album.[2] [3] Prior to recording, Ishmael took a trip to Los Angeles, where he stayed in Watts with several elders who were highly educated in black history.[3] While on this trip, he absorbed many of their teachings, and reflected on his parents', who were both Black Panther members.[3] He incorporated many of these concepts into the album's lyrics, as he didn't want Digable Planets' Afrocentrism to get overlooked by the cross-over appeal of their 1992 hit single "Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)".[3] Group-member Mecca clarified "it was time to be more direct on how we felt about things, and the need to assess them".[6]
Blowout Comb also contains many references to Urban culture, with a range of allusions to block parties, corner stores, public housing, barbershops, incarcerated freedom-fighters, black nationalist texts, and African-American artists.[5] It also includes many references to Brooklyn, New York as well as the borough's characteristics and credos.[5] Hip hop writer R.H.S. wrote that "On Blowout Comb, the beloved Brooklyn borough, and by extension New York city as a whole, is lovingly depicted in all of its wondrous microcosmic complexity as a place of convergence and collusion".[5]
While several music writers and journalists have viewed Blowout Combs lyrics as being more "ambiguous" and "hard to decipher", others found them to be more "looser" and "less scripted" than their previous album.[2] [5] [6] In an interview with Los Angeles Times, Ishmael Butler explained "We made a concerted effort to be more literal and less abstract. The first album is lyrically much more abstract. The language is so personal it's almost cryptic. Nobody who isn't real hip can really understand it".[7]
The blowout comb was a popular black grooming product in the 1970s, when Afros gained strong popularity. Digable Planets named the album after them because "it means the utilization of the natural" and "a natural style".
The album's liner notes depict advertisements for fake Soul food restaurants and local events. The artwork was modeled after the distinct design of the official Black Panther Newspaper, which Ishmael Butler came across one day while at a relative's house. Many pictures of Ishmael's trip to Los Angeles, prior to recording the album, are also shown in the artwork.
The album was released to rave reviews and critical acclaim. In a contemporary review for the Chicago Tribune, music critic Greg Kot wrote that the tension between the group's dreamy delivery and the seriousness of their questions about the African-American community gives substance to the music's elated mood.[8] Heidi Siegmund of the Los Angeles Times wrote that it maintains a subtle but consistent mood that, unlike their debut album, warrants repeated listening. Time magazine's Christopher John Farley found Digable Planets' rebellious lyrics "constructive" and felt that the live musicians employed by the group lets the songs develop into extended jams. Farley asserted that the album "should further establish jazz-rap as pop's most dynamic new genre."[9] Robert Christgau, writing in The Village Voice, said that, although the raps are not as "down-to-earth" and the music is less jazzy than their debut, Digable Planets sound surprisingly exceptional with a live band and less samples, and rap candidly and uniquely, particularly Ladybug, whom he cited as the "genius" of the group.
In a mixed review, Eric Berman of Rolling Stone magazine found the music sluggish and formless, despite the group's admirable experimentation and "creamy" raps. Martin Johnson, writing in the Chicago Reader, credited the group for successfully reinventing themselves with streetwise, black nationalistic lyrics, but felt that the music fizzles out as they get distracted with their own rhetoric.[10]
Blowout Comb was voted the 34th best album of the year in The Village Voices annual Pazz & Jop critics' poll.[11] Spin magazine named it the fifth best album of 1994, and editor Craig Marks wrote that Digable Planets improved drastically with boldly political lyrics and music that was as expressive as Curtis Mayfield and Stevie Wonder.[12] In a retrospective review, AllMusic's John Bush cited its production as some of the greatest beats ever on a hip hop album and asserted that, unlike Reachin, the "underrated" Blowout Comb has proven to be an enduring classic. Mark Richardson of Pitchfork called it one of the more accessible albums in popular music history to relax to, although it offers a rich, underlying influence of history and knowledge for those who choose to listen to it as "a richly rendered world with so much to explore".
The album did not match the commercial success of the group's previous album, and was a commercial failure. Whereas Reachin charted for 32 weeks on the Top R&B Albums and peaked at number five, Blowout Comb spent 13 weeks and reached number 13 on the chart.[13] According to Kyle Ryan of The A.V. Club, critics originally attributed this failure to the lyrics' black power messages.[14] Colin Larkin, writing in the Encyclopedia of Popular Music (2000), said that part of the reason was because the album lacked a song as catchy as the group's debut single "Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)". Music journalist Peter Shapiro viewed it as a failed attempt at abandoning pop for "street" appeal by another group whose original success derived from a more amiable style of hip hop.[15]
Shortly after the release of Blowout Comb, Digable Planets disbanded in early 1995 due to the passing away of Mecca's parents, creative differences, and displeasure with the music industry.[14] Ishmael Butler remarked "we got into the music business at a time when it still had to be original; it was more about the music. Then it started to be more economic, more material, and that disillusioned us. Being young and everything like that, we just sort of copped out. Because we weren't really the industry types; it wasn't really like that for us, so we didn't feel like we were losing out on things."[14] Ishmael also stated in an interview with Vibe that the group didn't like the music industry because "they have nothing to do with art".[16]
After splitting up, the group members went on to record solo work and side projects with other artists.[14] Years later, Craig Irving reformed Digable Planets for a reunion tour in 2004, and since then, they have toured extensively.[14] In 2005, they released a greatest hits compilation titled , which contains two newly recorded songs.
Credits for Blowout Comb adapted from liner notes.[17]
Chart (1994)[18] | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
U.S. Billboard 200 | 32 | |
U.S. Top R&B Albums (Billboard) | 13 |
Year | Song | Chart | Peak position |
---|---|---|---|
1994 | "9th Wonder (Blackitolism)" | U.S. Billboard Hot 100 | 80 |
U.S. Hot Dance Singles | 10 | ||
U.S. Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles | 37 | ||
U.S. Hot Rap Singles | 8 | ||
1995 | "Dial 7 (Axiom Of Creamy Spies)" | U.S. Hot Dance Singles | 45 |
U.S. Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles | 88 | ||
U.S. Hot Rap Singles | 32 |