Skip to main content

The 80s Ain't Going Nowhere

Page 1

The Cool Kids – The Bake Sale | mxdwn.com Reviews

Home

About

Contact

Advertising

Newsletter

Shop

Home > Reviews

RSS feed

The Cool Kids – The Bake Sale December 5th, 2008

Goto comments

Leave a comment

The ’80s Ain’t Going Nowhere

On The Bake Sale, MySpace and music blog sensations The Cool Kids live up to the critical geekage by resurrecting the sound and spirit of hip-hop’s golden era. The Cool Kids, consisting of Chicago duo Mikey Rocks and Chuck Inglish, work primarily within the minimalist boom bap template of late ’80s hip-hop. Every woodblock, 808 kick drum, and punchy snare on the album is meticulously placed with old school vibe in mind. Opener “What Up Man” sets the aesthetic tone for the entire album. Here, like on most of The Bake Sale, the beat is the focal point of attention. Comprised of samples of the duo mouthing “tick,” “clap,” and “bass,” these vocalizations are played back on a drum machine. This is exactly what made old school hip-hop so fun, the most basic parts used to create a stylish, swaggering whole. The standout track “88,” also the year Mikey Rocks was born, sounds like Paul’s Boutique-era Beastie Boys. Over nasty drums, the duo laundry lists dances and fads that were in long before they were able to take part. Even one-hit wonders Men Without Hats get a shout-out in the middle breakdown section with a direct quote from “Safety Dance.” On the closing track “Jingling,” listeners get a flow and swag that recalls Clipse (think “Mr. Me Too”) minus the coke talk. The LL Cool J-referencing “you’re jingling baby” chorus is the final in a long list of direct verbal and sonic attributions. Long before everybody got a little paid and way too serious, this is what hip-hop was: freshness. While Mikey and Chuck aren’t God’s gift to MCing, their calm lyric delivery works well with their tracks. Throughout The Bake Sale, The Cool Kids knowingly wink, with tongue planted firmly in cheek, at the old school. What makes The Bake Sale work is the watchmaker-like precision of the beats and the easy swagger the duo displays on the mic. By Torrie Jones

Posted in Reviews

Recent Posts in Reviews Ted Leo and the Pharmacists – Living with the Living In concert: Doves (Trocadero, Philadelphia, Pa., June 5, 2009) Eagles of Death Metal – Heart On White Lies – To Lose My Life The Bloody Beetroots – Romborama Kleerup – Kleerup In concert: Davy Knowles and Back Door Slam (World Café Live, Philadelphia, Pa., June 15, 2009) Above & Beyond – Anjunadeep:01 In concert: Tony Lucca (The Fire, Philadelphia, Pa., May 17, 2009) Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest

Archives

Editorials

August 2009

High Fidelity

July 2009

News

June 2009

Reviews

May 2009

Top Story

April 2009

The Bake Sale [Digipak] Shop at

March 2009

Price

February 2009 $6.95

January 2009 December 2008

Alibris

November 2008

$10.76

October 2008 September 2008

$14.98

August 2008

Compare Prices for All 6 Sellers ($6.95 - $14.98)

July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008

Leave a comment

Trackback

Trackbacks (0)

Comments (0)

March 2008 February 2008

No comments yet.

January 2008 December 2007 Name (required) E-Mail (will not be published) (required) Website

http://www.mxdwn.com/2008/12/05/reviews/the-cool-kids-the-bake-sale/[9/11/09 4:23:01 PM]

Categories

September 2009

November 2007 October 2007 September 2007

Features


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook