| ![[Nothing to Lose But Change]](../coverart/zazen-nothingtolose.jpg)  Elemental Zazen :: Nothing to Lose But Change  Gnawledge Records
 Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
 
 
 To save both reader and writer the trouble of writing Elemental Zazen's 
entire inspirational story twice, I recommend reading my 2008 review of 
"The Glass Should Be Full." 
I also recommend buying the album, but that appears to be hard to do 
right now as it's out of print
  and 
the lowest priced copy on Amazon.com is $19.38. Ouch. I'm really 
shocked that album wasn't released as a digital download at some point. 
Thankfully "Nothing to Lose But Change " is available 
as MP3 only, which means you can pick up the album for only $8.99. 
As a warm up you may have already heard one or two of the leaks we 
made available through the RR newsfeed, including his duet with 
Fashawn titled "Kill Em 
With the Beat." Joe Beats provided a symphonic backdrop with 
hard hitting drums that lived up to the song title, but it could just as 
easily have described the hard hitting lyrics both emcees spit on the shit
like Zazen's "Whoever tax the aristocrats/probably end up in a ditch 
with a slit wrist and fist" and Fashawn's ferocious flow: 
Fashawn: "Fuckin with them, herbs, I'll make you puff on my 'erbFrom the gutter now I'm rich as them white kids from the burbs
 Swerve like a malt liquor, spliff's what I prefer
 I'm sick and not sure if it's a gift or a curse
 Out the bottomless pit I used to pitch on the turf
 Now I'm swift with the verse, take take trips around the earth
 Pro-ceed to collect my chips that I disperse
 Similar to a fifty round clip when it burst"
 
The other guests on "Nothing to Lose But Change" are similarly high 
caliber, from the rock and rolling "Hollow Heart" featuring Canibus to 
liquid and hypnotizing melody of "Barbie Doll" featuring Jean Grae. 
As good as they are there's no question this is Zazen's vehicle, and he's 
not afraid to grab the wheel and take you for a ride on songs like the 
sinister sounding Metaform produced "Bricks and Mortality":
 
"Die upon never differing right from wrongNight from dawn, a firebomb from the fired thorn
 Feel the quiet calm in the violent storm
 Can't fight 'em all, paragon what you stare upon
 Leave 'em buried in the lawn while you mourn, clutchin a sterile guard
 and a sword, end up in the morgue as life's scores
 [...]
 Born without a heart, from the start scorned, into a form forlorn
 Never gone, addicted to the drugs and the porn
 Another overworked, underpaid, slave to the minimum wage
 Forced to pray for a way to escape
 The factory cage, betrayed by the same
 Betrayed as they lead us here to lead us through the maze"
 
If you're left with the feeling that Elemental Zazen is a bit of a firebrand 
on the mic, you're not entirely wrong. The sense one gets from his lyrical 
politics is akin to what one would hear from Immortal Technique or Chuck 
D, yet the intellectual rebellion never gets in the way of the rocking the mic. 
The musical backdrop goes a long way toward providing Zazen that balance. 
"Lockjaw" has what Zazen aptly describes as a "beat pounding" soundtrack 
courtesy of Jake One, all piano and attitude. The still underrated M-Phazes 
layers up an epic melody for "Words That I Write" that you'd expect for a 
DJ Khaled track featuring Akon, Lil Wayne and Rick Ross, though they 
probably wouldn't say lines like "religion, capitalism, an unholy alliance." 
Even when he's not rapping he's making a point on the Blue Sky Black 
Death produced "Greed," using samples of Michael Parenti talking about 
the failures of capitalism in countries from Poland to Brazil. The most 
unexpected collabo may be Left Coast stalwart Eligh lacing "Blood On 
the Track," but it doesn't change his rap:
 
"They're in love with the gat, use it on the poor and the blackBlamin the same neighborhoods where the coroner's at
 And foreigners trapped, while they stay ignoring the facts
 Should be a war of class, but we're scared of questions that's important to ask"
 
The album closes on the Kno produced "Wanted to Be" featuring Toussaint, 
but it doesn't really feel finished at all. At under 45 minutes long this 12 song 
album leaves you wanting more of Zazen's well produced, well thought out 
raps on the wealth (or perhaps welfare) of nations - and that's certainly the 
idea. It's not very often that you listen to a rapper with an activist agenda that 
has not only the ability to express those ideas eloquently but the music to 
back it up and the flow to keep you listening. Zazen has achieved that trifecta 
on "Nothing to Lose But Change," an album whose title seemed at first to 
be a pun on President Obama but in hindsight seems more like a double 
entendre asking us all to question whether this economy truly works for us. 
Given the staggering rates of unemployment and poverty worldwide let 
alone the growing recession in the United States, even the change in our 
pockets has failed us as change we can believe in, and that NEEDS to change.
 
Music Vibes: 8 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 8 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 8 of 10
 
Originally posted: June 7, 2011source: www.RapReviews.com
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