| Rating |
Summary |
|
| n/a by Billboard |
Elsewhere, 'Criminal' and 'I Will Not Apologize' find the group making its most acute, nail-driven points in years. |
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| n/a by www.blender.com |
Rising Down is tightly focused and appealingly modest in its ambitions. |
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| n/a by Pitchfork Media |
Rising Down isn't always an easy listen, but it's an exciting one, and its abrasiveness never gets in the way of a good throw-your-hands-up beat or a well-crafted lyric. |
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| n/a by Popmatters |
Rising Down does prove to be an provocative peer of cultural riot-acting and pragmatic contextualization--though, as contemporary pop music, it provides a much more immediate delivery of social ethics from a street-level perspective. |
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| n/a by www.villagevoice.com |
The production style displays unique shadings and shifts in sound, suggesting an attention to sonic detail emblematic of a drummer with the deep musical (especially jazz-related) knowledge that ?uestlove owns. But this may also sustain the most oft-heard complaint against the Roots: the seeming inability of their lead vocalist, Black Thought, to unfailingly deliver hip-hop quotables. |
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| n/a by www.ew.com |
Kicking off the Philadelphia hip-hop band's 10th CD is a snippet from a 1994 conference call with then label Geffen, in which rapper Black Thought goes apoplectic. This is the first of many bad vibes on Rising Down, which turns the downcast mood of 2006's haunting Game Theory outward at the world at large, with gripes about drug laws, school shootings, conflict diamonds, and--that most alarming bellwether of our times--BET programming. |
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| n/a by www.boston.com |
On the Roots' superb, inky-black tale of paranoia, 2006's Game Theory, the walls were closing in. On the equally gripping Rising Down, the group's 10th album, out today, the walls are getting demolished. |
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| n/a by www.nowtoronto.com |
This time, the Mos Def/Common/Talib triumvirate contribution is expectedly solid. Saigon proves his debut's delay is criminal. Malik B shows how much he needs to be the permanent Prince Po to Thought's Pharoahe Monch. And Kamal, Hubbard and ?uestlove flesh out a series of sonically stunning numbers midway through. |
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| n/a by www.rapreviews.com |
Stop wasting time and go to the store to get Rising Down right now. |
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| n/a by www.courant.com |
It's a gruff, sometimes paranoid album with a decidedly subjective point of view, but Rising Down cuts no corners as its tells some hard truths to a society that is only too happy to stay in the dark. |
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| n/a by www.avclub.com |
The Roots' uncompromising sucker punch of an album captures the sound of battle-scarred survivors intent on being the last band standing in a world and music industry steadily falling apart. |
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| n/a by www.slantmagazine.com |
Playing against typecast, Rising Down is not an appropriate soundtrack for your next fraternity party or bong load. It's more of a call to arms. Radio Raheem might well be proud. |
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| n/a by www.pastemagazine.com |
These damaged siren songs are a harsh counterpoint to the organic flow of The Tipping Point, but nonetheless deliver an honest and abrasive diatribe within The Roots legacy of civil commentary and inspired musicianship. |
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| n/a by www.adequacy.net |
Its absolutely astonishing that after so many years of excellent and superb music The Roots are still one of the best bands around. With Rising Down they have not only proved it but they have silenced all of the doubters and haters out there; this is really a special band. |
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| n/a by www.sputnikmusic.com |
With 75 Bars being the only real dud on the album, Rising Down proves to be more of a collection of songs that work together as a whole than one cohesive album. |
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| n/a by thephoenix.com |
Rising Down is a grim mirror of a particular time and place, one that will still be worth the look when (if?) things get better somewhere down the line. |
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| n/a by www.lostatsea.net |
Encapsulating everything that has come to pass since their debut with Organix in 1993, Rising Down is the best The Roots release to date, bar none. |
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