YING YANG TWINS
U.S.A. (United State of Atlanta)
Blender, late summer 2005
by Simon Reynolds
“Wait”
is, no contest, 2005’s most striking single. The track’s radically
emaciated structure--just that four-note sequence of 808 bass-thud, a
few fingersnaps, and a faint rustle of hi-hat--eclipses even previous
pinnacles of minimalism like the Neptunes-produced “Grindin’”. Yet many
who dig the Ying Yang sound recoil from the words as mere
sexual-harassment-with-a-beat. You don’t have to be prudish or PC to
flinch at lines like “I’m gonna beat that pussy up”--less a would-be
seducer’s come-on murmured into a lady’s delicate shell-like than the
boast of a schoolyard bully about to go on a nerd-crushing rampage,
surely?
If “Wait” pushes beyond your personal comfort
zone, prepare to be outright traumatized by “Pull My Hair”, the
stand-out track on the Ying Yang Twins’ fourth album. Built, like the
bulk of U.S.A., by the Atlanta duo’s audio-svengali Mr.
Collipark, the track is absolutely stunning, from its low growling
bassline and spare snare-clicks to the eerie spatial placement of the
vocals, whose sculptural vividness verges on psychedelic. What comes out
of D-Roc and Kaine’s mouths ain’t pretty, though: “look, bitch/you’ve
been talking a whole lotta shit/but wait ‘til you see my dick… your ass
is in trouble… fuck you ‘til you crack”. Creepier still, the album
implies that domination and degradation is what women “really want” by
framing “Wait” and “Pull” with “Sex Therapy” skits, in which female
callers tell a radio host how they like to be approached (“step up with
swagger… and take control with me”) and what turns them on (“I can’t
lie--I likes its rough”). Forming a triple-X trilogy with “Wait”
and “Pull”, “Bedroom Boom” is more softcore, all caressing harpsichord
ripples and baby-oil vocals from Avant. But clunker lines like “spread
your legs like a bald eagle” show the Twins have got some ways to go
before they truly master the Keith Sweat mode.
Just
as you’re thinking that D-Roc and Kaine should go get lessons in
love-making from Al Green, “Long Time” turns up, its gorgeous chorus
borrowed from the Reverend’s “Belle.” Gospel-crunk featuring neo-soul
singer Anthony Hamilton, the track is U.S.A.’s only song of
devotion, but tellingly, the object of adoration here is masculine (the
Almighty Lord). “My Brother’s Keeper” likewise reserves its tenderness
for man-to-man relationships, wrapping the lyrics (about fraternal
loyalty in the face of adversity) in a dreamy swirl of sound that
recalls Michael Jackson’s “Human Nature”. But U.S.A. does spare a
scrap of empathy for Womankind on “Live Again”, an uncharacteristically
compassionate portrait of a single mom stripper struggling to escape
the clubs. Maroon 5’s Adam Levine (fresh from cameoing on Kanye’s new
LP, he’s clearly the new Michael McDonald, the whiteboy rated “soulful”
by African-Americans) croons sweet’n’sad about how the girl's existence
is as confined as “a little box”. As these gestures toward depth and
range suggest, Ying Yang Twins also chafe at the fetters of genre. But
soon they’re back toiling at the crunk grindstone, rasping out song
after song in praise of ass, thongs, and female compliance. It may not
feed the soul, but it clearly pays the bills.
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