| ![[Master of Ceremonies]](../coverart/stylesp-master.jpg)  Styles P :: Master of Ceremonies  E1 Music
 Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
 
 
 "Cause to me, MC means move the crowd" - Rakim
 
Long-time Yonkers, New York artist David Styles, better known 
as Styles P, knows more than what it means to be an emcee. After all it 
would be hard to have a 15+ year rap career without at least knowing one 
or two things about what it takes to be a "Master of Ceremonies." For the 
man of many monikers (Holiday Styles, S.P. and The Ghost among them) 
those things can be boiled down to two essential qualities: keep putting out 
product constantly, and always keep your core fanbase happy. The latter 
means a Styles P album/mixtape has a few consistent themes each time: I 
ride a lot, I smoke a lot, and I don't mess with people who aren't as G as me. 
The former means despite only having four official studio albums, the 
last of which was "Super Gangster 
(Extraordinary Gentleman)," you can hear a new S.P. LP every year.
 
2011 means it's time for The Ghost to materialize in a studio and lay 
down something his label E1 Music can press, shrinkwrap and ship to 
stores worldwide. "Master of Ceremonies" is the results of those efforts, 
a 12 song album coming in just about 90 seconds short of 45 minutes 
total. That might lead some wary consumers to complain that he and his 
D-Block affiliates have dropped longer mixtapes, but there's a quality 
difference here which can be bottom lined as "you get what you pay for." 
You can have a free download any time you want, but can you have a 
free track produced by Pete Rock with guest vocals by Pharoahe Monch? 
Not likely. Songs like "Children" prove a studio album was worth the wait:
 
Styles: "(Children) in the hood seem to die at a young ageWakes and funerals'll make it feel like a Sunday
 All they talk about, is money and gunplay
 Only light they gettin is the one from the sun rays
 (Children) no light bulb bright idea
 Shame when "kill that nigga" is the right idea
 Like a nigga lose his life, every night out here
 Kinda hot, but they talk about ice out here"
 
Another thing Styles has learned over the years from Jadakiss and Sheek 
Louch is that when you surround yourself with fan favorites, the shine 
tends to rub off and spread from one emcee to the others. It's little wonder 
that "Harsh" is a hit then, complete with a minimal Phonix beat that's 
big on the bottom and has Busta Rhymes and Rick Ross performances to 
make the cypher complete:
 
Styles: "Root for the villian and shoot with no feelinLike Audio Two yeah the crew is "Top Billin"
 Blowin the dutch in the coupe with no ceilin
 Invisible bully like the Gooch when I'm illin
 Cash too green, it's taped to the toilet
 Like I'm Michael Corleone in the bathroom scene
 Young black Vito, chopped and wrapped kilos
 Clap torpedos, stack, Doritos"
 
Busta: "They say we bad for business cause the coke price droppedHow we flooded and we bubble white 'til it's white hot (WHAT!)
 Pot purchases we chop it up to pieces
 'til only the shake is left countin the profit and a bezel (WOOO!!!!)
 Eight million dollar yacht, scotch, a little refer
 Diamonds so big they call it obnoxious little creature (OH!)
 Money to cop original paintings of Mona Lisa
 High the way I feel a cloud sittin on my caesar"
 
Of course what is good for the gander is good for the geese on a Styles P 
album, so his guests tend to rap about the same topics he does - being a 
successful street pharmacist slash rap artist slash gun toting hustler. If 
you'd like to point out there's no way The Ghost could do most of the 
things he raps about and not be in prison, it's (A.) likely you don't own a 
copy of "Money, Power & Respect" 
and (B.) are just going to be the ten thousandth person in line to make that 
critique. Another lesson of emceeing this "Master of Ceremonies" can 
offer is that "real" is a trivial word and "reality" is entirely malleable. 
The champagne and expensive cars lifestyle is unobtainable to the 99% 
anyway, so if those are the trappings of "keeping it real" in a fake fantasy, 
exactly what difference would it make? Whether it's Hollywood or 
Holly-hood, it's still meant to be a story to keep the masses entertained.
 
Now at the brass tacks level, if you want to argue whether or not Styles 
is a great hip-hop orator, he's not making top ten of any category other 
than "Best Rappers From Yonkers," and that's not an exceptionally long 
list to begin with. If you want to argue whether he's the most charismatic, 
there's a charming appeal to his husky East coast flow, but he's not going 
to draw you in like a Nas, a J-Live or a Talib Kweli. At times, he even 
borders on being monotone. If you want to argue he injects more reality 
into his fantasy than many of his peers, that's an argument you could win. 
Though there are clearly songs like "How I Fly" featuring Avery Storm 
and "Don't Turn Away" with Pharrell where he enjoys a lavish lifestyle, 
songs like the Statik Selektah produced "Feelings Gone" are the flipside 
of the coin, where the ends may not have justified the means after all. 
What I can tell you about "Masters of Ceremonies" is that while I'm not 
one, I know one when I see one, and Styles P definitely qualifies. It's 
an inoffensive 40+ minutes that won't change the world, with some 
escapist fantasy tinged by harsh reality, that will keep the core fans happy.
 
Music Vibes: 7 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 7 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 7 of 10
 
Originally posted: October 18th, 2011source: www.RapReviews.com
 |