Most Popular
-
Cock and Awe
St. Louis pickup artists rule the roost.
-
The strange and violent world of St. Louis' bail bondsmen
-
A Village Runs Through It: The RFT unveils its big bold plans for that big damn hole
-
All In A Name
Did the Post-Dispatch deliberately give its new blog the same title as the competition?
-
Heat Rises: Pappy's Smokehouse elevates humble barbecue to ethereal heights
-
Was it Colonel Mustard or Professor Plum who killed MLK? (4)
-
John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory. (3)
-
Heat Rises: Pappy's Smokehouse elevates humble barbecue to ethereal heights (3)
-
The strange and violent world of St. Louis' bail bondsmen (2)
-
A to Z (2)
-
Tegan and Sara find their sister act soaring with The Con
-
Fifteen things you might not know about the Bottle Rockets, on their fifteenth birthday
-
B-Sides gets personal with Alicia Keys, as she is, and examines the parallels between Metallica-worshippers Apocalyptica and Harptallica
-
Using Their Illusion: Ferocious — and funny — locals the Livers hope video builds the radio star
-
Slice of Life
John Vanderslice celebrates warmer weather with an exclusive mix of tunes.
-
Kentucky Derby: T Minus 23 Hours
06:29PM 05/02/08 -
Kentucky Derby: T Minus 25 Hours
03:57PM 05/02/08 -
What You Missed This Week -- And What's in Store Next Week...
05:35PM 05/02/08 -
Get the new Museum Mutters CD for FREE!
04:34PM 05/02/08 -
Three for Three: 5.2-5.4
04:45PM 05/02/08 -
Changes in the Land of ~scape
03:00PM 05/02/08
What we are writing about
- 7-Up
- A Closer Walk with...
- Araka
- Central West End...
- COCA
- Cory Spinks
- Craft Alliance
- foie gras
- Kevin Kline Awards
- Ludo
- Mensa
- Mexican cuisine
- Mosaic
- musicals
- Othello
- Playstation
- RFT DJ Spin-off
- sexual harassment
- St. Louis theater
- The Black Rep
- The Ghost of the Forest
- Three Monkeys
- Tuesdays with Morrie
- University City
- Vashon High School
- Washington University
- White Flag Projects
- Wii
- Xbox
- ~scape
National Features
-
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Last Step to Redemption
Drug counselor Richard Entrekin swam a little too easily in a sea of sharks.
By Amy Guthrie -
Village Voice
The Cro-Mag Diaries
Remembering the brutal life and times of John "Bloodclot" Joseph, New York hardcore icon.
By Rob Harvilla -
Miami New Times
Class Warfare
At a Florida school, kids threaten teachers, whose bosses look the other way.
By Francisco Alvarado -
SF Weekly
Party Crashers
If you think Ralph Nader won't screw the Democrats again, you're not paying attention.
By John Geluardi
When asked about their musical influences, Loose Screwz and Scripts "The Nature Boy" of the East St. Louis rap duo Scripts 'n Screwz respond, "OutKast!" without hesitation. Unsurprisingly, the production style on The New Noise is moderately reminiscent of the Atlanta supergroup's experimental efforts of the late '90s. The title track sets the tone for the album, with its smooth vocal performances and energetic distortion, although the pair takes a more laid-back approach on "Fairy Tale" and first single "Big City Lights," both of which are more accessible to casual rap fans. "Hands High" is akin to Kanye West's more recent efforts, laying heavy synths over melodic drum patterns, while "The War Outside" and "Eastwood" deliver a grittier sound with a hard rock edge, and the bass-heavy "Like This" is the closest thing you'll find to the Southern/crunk style of rap currently dominating St. Louis' nightclubs and airwaves.
Lyrically, Noise tends to avoid most of the biggest clichés associated with the genre; its songs thoughtfully touch on subjects like war, poverty and crazy women. One of the strongest tracks, "My First Rhyme," is an emotional dedication to Scripts' grandmother and Screwz's sister, both recently departed. Although Noise can lack polish at times, the album is ambitious and well-executed, providing listeners an impressive amount of variety — while offering an intelligent alternative to commercial rap.
7 p.m. Friday, May 2. Vintage Vinyl, 6610 Delmar Boulevard, University City. Free. 314-721-4096.
Want your CD to be considered for a review in this space? Send music c/o The Riverfront Times, Attn: Homespun, 6358 Delmar Boulevard, Suite 200, St. Louis, MO 63130. E-mail music@riverfronttimes.com for more information.







