×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
0045778685820
$14.50
$16.99
Save 15%
Current price is $14.5, Original price is $16.99. You Save 15%.
View All Available Formats & Editions

CD
Members save with free shipping everyday!
See details
See details
14.5
In Stock
Overview
It's unfortunate that the hype machine behind Sage Francis' second effort for the Epitaph label totally missed the breakthrough factor and decided to sell it as "his most personal record to date." Pound for pound, Human the Death Dance may be his most personal effort, but it's also an incredibly well-built full-length -- even when it borrows from a handful of genres -- and it's arguably his best lyrical effort, undoubtedly his best production-wise. While it's good news that the Sage Francis faithful are getting to peer into the man's head with this "personal" effort, Death Dance begins with a helpful crib sheet ("Underground for Dummies") that suggests newcomers are welcome here, too, and maybe even desired. When he delivers "You wanna promo copy buddy/You can download the tracks," it's not entirely clear whether he would have designed the world this way. He's cool with it, though, and declares "This is hip-hop for the people/Stop calling it emo", as if he's done with being pigeonholed, sick of being sold only to those "in the know." And really, why shouldn't he be? Any audience can appreciate the greatness of the organic blues beat producer Buck 65 lays on "Got Up This Morning." Sage's lyrics on the cut are equally smart and creative, with literary references thrown about in a flirty conversation between the protagonist and a sultry siren who just might be the Devil ("She asked 'What would Bukowski do?'/Don't go there!/He would make you his Mom"). Brilliant underground hip-hop producers Odd Nosdam ("Underground for Dummies") and Alias ("Keep Moving") both turn in great constructions, and composer/trumpeter/odd choice Mark Isham offers two elegant and sinister tracks ("Good Fashion" and "Waterline") that prove why he's the one who the film industry calls when they want slick 21st century noir. The truly personal numbers that close the album come after earning the listener's trust and patience, and the Isham/Francis connection comes from work for Hollywood, more signs that the man is ready to connect. In the end, the claim "his most personal record to date" becomes as important as "the one with the most black on the cover" or "the one with the most producers." What matters is that Death Dance works hard to immerse any listener in another world where angst, darkness, dark humor, ambition, the itch to create, and the hunger for all things creative demand attention. That this is the world in Sage's head is secondary.
Product Details
Release Date: | 05/08/2007 |
---|---|
Label: | Epitaph |
UPC: | 0045778685820 |
catalogNumber: | 86858 |
Rank: | 110594 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Sage Francis Primary ArtistMark Isham Track Performer
Jolie Holland Fiddle,Vocals
Tom Inhaler Acoustic Guitar,Piano,Bass Guitar,Electric Guitar
Buddy Wakefield Vocals
Laura Escudé Violin
Scott Begin Drums
DJ Orator scratching
Bernard Dolan Vocals
Nathan Harrop Harmonica
Roughneck Jihad Sampling
Bryan Lewis Saunders Vocals
Christopher Sneddon Synthesizer
Technical Credits
Mark Isham Composer,CollaborationAnthony St. James Cover Photo
Buck 65 beats,Collaboration
Ant beats
Alias beats
Sage Francis Arranger,Composer,Executive Producer,Author,Art Direction
Jolie Holland Collaboration
Miles Bonny beats
Tom Inhaler Arranger,Composer,Engineer,Vocal Arrangements,Vocal Engineer
Big Cats beats
Cooper beats
Irena Andreic Artwork
Richard F. Burton Author
Bernard Dolan Arranger
Evel Jump Contributor
Steve F. Author
Kurtis SP beats
Drew W. Speziale Illustrations
Chris Warren Engineer
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
The cover shot of a Fat Albert-ized Pharcyde roller coastering their way into a funhouse ...
The cover shot of a Fat Albert-ized Pharcyde roller coastering their way into a funhouse
makes perfect sense, as the L.A.-based quartet introduced listeners to an uproarious vision of earthy hip-hop informed by P-Funk silliness and an everybody-on-the-mike street-corner atmosphere ...
A collective of Southern rappers including members of Outkast and Goodie Mob, plus solo emcees ...
A collective of Southern rappers including members of Outkast and Goodie Mob, plus solo emcees
from Backbone to Witchdoctor, the Dungeon Fam seems to have cribbed a page from the Wu-Tang Clan's business model. There's certainly strength in numbers, but ...
Although G. Love & Special Sauce's self-titled album is their most popular (approaching gold status), ...
Although G. Love & Special Sauce's self-titled album is their most popular (approaching gold status),
it's not their best. Although there are quite a few musical surprises, the overall sound and quality of the compositions are neither as focused nor ...
Ill Communication follows the blueprint of Check Your Head, accentuating it at some points, deepening ...
Ill Communication follows the blueprint of Check Your Head, accentuating it at some points, deepening
it in others, but never expanding it beyond the boundaries of that record. As such, it's the first Beastie Boys album not to delve into ...
Leave it to Kanye West to make live hip-hop exciting again. On his first live ...
Leave it to Kanye West to make live hip-hop exciting again. On his first live
album, released officially only in Europe, West ditches the hypemen and instead enlists the help of an all-female orchestra. Sprinkle in a few guest appearances ...
Dr. Octagon has remained the most celebrated, mythical alias of rap innovator Kool Keith, despite ...
Dr. Octagon has remained the most celebrated, mythical alias of rap innovator Kool Keith, despite
his objections to the attention it's garnered over his other work, as well as his multiple attempts to kill off the character. Since the release ...
By the time the self-titled debut album by Nevermen (the supergroup trio of Anticon-affiliated MC ...
By the time the self-titled debut album by Nevermen (the supergroup trio of Anticon-affiliated MC
Doseone, TV on the Radio's Tunde Adebimpe, and Faith No More's Mike Patton) finally appeared in early 2016, the project had been in development for ...
The Urban Dance Squad's penultimate album was also its most heavily metal-influenced. Demagogue, the album's ...
The Urban Dance Squad's penultimate album was also its most heavily metal-influenced. Demagogue, the album's
opener and centerpiece, is an utterly bracing concoction of raw-throated rap and spare, bright metal guitar, all underlaid with minimalist funk drums. That formula remains ...