![]() If you can remember which songs he speaks (the opener "Fear Not Of Man"), sings and raps by merely from skimming the tracklist, you’re probably not being honest. Hosted by one of the calmest rap voices you'll ever hear, Mos' debut was appropriately soothing, rhythmically hard, vocally liquid, full of melting-pot soul-jazz sonics as his loose cavalcade of compadres like Questlove, Common, and D'Angelo developed their awe-inspiring studio aesthetics. You could almost say that he was so demure about shifting from a rapped setting to a sung one that Mos got a raw deal compared to Andre or Cee Lo Green, who were seen as innovators by the time "Hey Ya!" and "Crazy" became worldwide smashes. The meditative, nearly free-associative "Umi Says" was released as a single anyway, with live drumming beneath electric Miles Davis atmospherics for five minutes, while Mos singsongs about "trying to do the best I can" and ultimately climaxing, "I want black people to be free, to be free, to be free." On the neighborhood anthem "Brooklyn," he sings a bit of Red Hot Chili Peppers' "Under The Bridge," which was neither something people were expecting from a moderately mainstream rapper in 1999 outside of maybe an MTV awards show, nor something listeners were expecting from someone who just a few tracks earlier was proclaiming Afrocentric preferences for Fishbone and Albert King over Korn and even the Stones. That's the environment Black On Both Sides was born into, and it was the most nonchalant of all, partly because when Mos Def sang, it didn't sound like he was doing it for a hit. "Rock N Roll" didn't really make a show of itself either the late '90s were so self-consciously eclectic that it was just a matter of fact that Lauryn Hill, Missy Elliott and Andre 3000 were beginning to cut their rhymes with straight-up singing. This was 20 years ago, long before Lil Peep sampled emo songs or Travis Barker grafted drums onto XXXTentacion tracks. But where White channels his ideas into paradoxical analog gadgetry, Mos Def sang the praises of Nina Simone on a song that turns into barreling hardcore punk. One of rap's most enigmatic figures then and now, think of Smith like Jack White, an artist who loves history so much he has to mess with it. But where Kweli has always adhered strictly to the boom-bap, Mos Def indeed showed another side of himself just a year later. The duo's explanatory "Astronomy (8th Light)" spends the entire song doing just that: "Blacker than the seed in the blackberry pie / Blacker than the middle of my eye," "Black like the perception of who on welfare," et cetera. And redefining both "blackness" and hip-hop was present in their work from the git. ![]() The Bed-Stuy polymath came to the world’s attention in 1998 with his fellow wordsmith Talib Kweli for just one album as Black Star, appropriately titled Mos Def &Talib Kweli Are Black Star. But those two sides might be "past" and "future," with who else but the man currently known as Yasiin Bey adjoining them. ![]() When Dante Smith titled his solo debut Black On Both Sides two decades ago this week, he may not have been thinking about time. ![]()
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