The Bacon Review

An annual Top 31 countdown of the best albums of the year

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#22 on the 2016 Bacon Top 31

December 10, 2016 by Royal Stuart

This Unruly Mess I’ve Made by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis

These guys really know what they’re doing. They’re insanely popular, and they’ve built it all up themselves. But if you listen to the music created by lyricist / rapper Macklemore and his music-producing cohort Ryan Lewis, it becomes clear they’re just fumbling through it all like everybody else. The brutal honesty of Macklemore’s lyrics on this new record, the duo’s second full-length collaboration, step well beyond the refreshingly lucid lyrics of their debut, The Heist.

Next to chart-topping songs like “Downtown,” (which is insanely raunchy — when was the last time you heard a song with the word “scrotum” in it?), and “Dance Off” (which video is shown above, featuring none other than Idris “‘Stringer’ Bell” Elba), Mack sings about the inner turmoil of being an imposter for his success, of being white and finding it difficult to fight for #blacklivesmatter, of being a dead-beat father who’s never around. The album’s truths are at once arresting and refreshing.

But then it comes to the global acceptance of them. Nothing brings out my own insecurity about being a white American male more than listening to Macklemore do his thing. I feel guilty listening to him with my son, especially when we get to the song “White Privilege II” and the spoken-word passage of the mom clearly talking to Macklemore and saying

“You’re the only hip-hop that I let my kids listen to
’Cause you get it, all that negative stuff it isn’t cool”

Because it causes my son to ask questions, questions that are hard for me to answer, that make me uneasy in my “whiteness.” And while it’s not true that Macklemore & Ryan Lewis is the only hip-hop I let my son listen to, all of his points hit a nerve (as it’s supposed to).

And that’s where Mack’s lyrics shine — in that moment where you stop, and you think, and you examine your own world and decide “am I doing everything I can in this fucked up world of ours?” and realize you most certainly are not, and you start to edge yourself towards being that ultimately unattainable “better person.” And you keep on trying, thanks in small part to Macklemore & Ryan Lewis.

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23. LNZNDRF by LNZNDRF
24. Puberty 2 by Mitski
25. Light Upon the Lake by Whitney
26. A Corpse Wired for Sound by Merchandise
27. Away by Okkervil River
28. case/lang/veirs by case/lang/veirs
29. Love Letter for Fire by Sam Beam & Jesca Hoop
30. Barbara Barbara, We Face a Shining Future by Underworld
31. Preoccupations by Preoccupations

December 10, 2016 /Royal Stuart
2016, advented, macklemore, ryan lewis, idris elba
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Macklemore & Ryan Lewis — Downtown

August 29, 2015 by Royal Stuart

Say what you want about Macklemore. You either love him or you hate him. But there’s no denying that he and Ryan Lewis know how to create a hit song. I’ve now listened to the song above, “Downtown,” twice, and already that chorus (sung by Foxy Shazam’s Eric Nally) is on constant repeat in my head.

It’s been three years since M&RL released their platinum-selling, independently released, mega-hit album The Heist. On August 5th they released their first new recording since that album, “Growing Up,” which is one of their more touchy-feely songs, all about Macklemore’s soon-to-be-born child. (Macklemore and his wife had a baby girl, Sloane, back in May, after “Growing Up” was written and recorded.)

And now here’s sure to be the first hit from their new as-yet-unnamed new album. There’s a lot I don’t care for in “Downtown.” Macklemore is definitely pushing the envelope of his good-boy image with some of the lyrics within (nobody needs to hear about his or anybody’s scrotum, for instance). But the production, that chorus, the prog-rock way the song bounces from one stanza to the next (is this a new genre of music, Prog Hip Hop?) — I love it. It blends old school hip hop (yes that’s Kool Moe Dee, Melle Mel and Grandmaster Caz you see there), over-the-top orchestration (a la Queen, or more recently, fun.), a touch of Seattle (Hi Junior!) and a little West Side Story. Filmed in Spokane, “Downtown” gets me moving in my seat. As soon as it finishes I want to start it over again.

I can’t wait to see what the rest of the album has to offer, whenever it comes out.

August 29, 2015 /Royal Stuart
macklemore, ryan lewis, foxy shazam, kool moe dee, melle mel, grandmaster caz, queen, fun
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April 18, 2013 by Royal Stuart

Most likely you’ve already watched this video by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis that was posted yesterday, but in the off chance you haven’t seen it: watch and be amazed as you find yourself reaching for the mouse as soon as it ends to hit “replay.”

This song, “Can’t Hold Us” featuring Ray Dalton on the chorus, is off of Macklemore and Ryan Lewis’s fantastic album The Heist, which was #8 on last year’s Musical Bacon Calendar.

April 18, 2013 /Royal Stuart
watched, macklemore, ryan lewis
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December 24, 2012 by Royal Stuart

#8 on the 2012 Musical Bacon Calendar

The Heist by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis

Hip hop is not my forte. I find it quite difficult to write about hip hop, because while I’ve enjoyed various hip hop and rap acts over the years, I don’t have the history needed to draw the lines of connection between new and old artists. So please forgive me if my review of the awesome album at #8, The Heist, by Seattle’s own Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, is little more than “I LOVE THIS ALBUM.”

My love of Macklemore started back in early 2011, with the death of beloved Mariners sportscaster Dave Niehaus. Macklemore wrote a touching tribute to Niehaus that literally brought a tear to my eye. He even got to perform the song in tribute to Niehaus on the grass at Safeco back on April 8, 2011. It’s a touching song for a good man, and it won me over to what Macklemore was trying to accomplish.

Fast forward to this past October, when Macklemore and Lewis released The Heist, which features “My Oh My” — the Niehaus song — and 17 other fantastic songs. The music that Ryan Lewis puts together to flow up and down behind Macklemore’s intelligent rhymes is sublime, at once leading the song and taking a back seat at the same time.

If you’ve liked hip hop in the past, you’ll find it hard to not like this album. The album alternates between comical songs, like “Thrift Store” above, and music-with-a-cause, like “My Oh My” and the popular “Same Love,” a rare pro-homosexuality and gay marriage song from the hip hop community. It does have it’s moments of base, teenage humor mixed in with the soapbox songs, making it difficult to recommend the album for everybody. But overall, this is an immensely likable album.

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9. Heaven by The Walkmen
10. State Hospital EP by Frightened Rabbit
11. A Thing Called Divine Fits by Divine Fits
12. Some Nights by fun.
13. Tramp by Sharon van Etten
14. Fear Fun by Father John Misty
15. Love This Giant by David Byrne and St. Vincent
16. To The Treetops! by Team Me
17. The Master: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by Jonny Greenwood
18. There’s No Leaving Now by The Tallest Man On Earth
19. Transcendental Youth by The Mountain Goats
20. A Church That Fits Our Needs by Lost In The Trees
21. Hospitality by Hospitality
22. Free Dimensional by Diamond Rings
23. History Speaks by Deep Sea Diver
24. A Different Ship by Here We Go Magic
25. Negotiations by the Helio Sequence
26. Moms by Menomena
27. The Sound of the Life of the Mind by Ben Folds Five
28. Shields by Grizzly Bear
29. Every Child A Daughter, Every Moon A Sun by The Wooden Sky
30. Fragrant World by Yeasayer
31. Reign of Terror by Sleigh Bells

What is the Bacon Calendar?

2011 Musical Bacon Calendar
2010 Musical Bacon Calendar
2009 Musical Bacon Calendar

December 24, 2012 /Royal Stuart
2012, advented, macklemore, ryan lewis
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