Find » Arts & Entertainment » Music » Choobakka - My Time: Spanish Speaki...

Choobakka - My Time: Spanish Speaking Emcee's First Outing on Big Daddy Records is a Letdown

By A to the L, published Nov 02, 2006
Published Content: 25  Total Views: 1,895  Favorited By: 2 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 3.0 of 5
OK, put all thoughts of Star Wars and wookies out of your head for the duration of this review. We gotta take this shit seriously, son. With a mixture of black and Puerto Rican blood running through his veins, this Spanish speaking, uniquely named Brooklyn resident has dropped “My Time”, his debut release, and in fact, the first release of fledging label Big Daddy Records.

The album starts with one of the weirdest opening cuts I’ve heard in a long time. ‘What’s My Name’ features a fairly standard sounding Dirty South influenced beat, with the most horrible chorus of voices chanting Choobakka’s name throughout. Couple this with some uninspiring, “this is me, back up and bounce” lyrics, and you have all the ingredients for a wack cut. But for some unknown reason its strangely addictive. Its definitely not the style I expected from a New York emcee though.

The next couple of cuts are a mixed bag too. ‘She’s Feelin’ Me’ features Choobakka trading verses with Lady J, who also drops an extremely catchy chorus. The beat is another start-stop affair, with a nice little flute sample flitting in and out of the background. Its all about the chorus on here though. ‘All Eyes On We’ is a distinctly reggae-influenced affair, and features Sean Paul on the mic helpouts. Its OK - nothing special, and owes a massive debt to Bubba Sparxxx’s ‘Ugly’.

Things don’t really rise to any greater heights with ‘Out The Ghetto’ or ‘Big Daddy Money’ either. The former is a standard rags-to-riches affair that you’ve heard a thousand different rappers spit a thousand different times, and while its certainly not bad, there’s nothing remarkable here that makes it stand out either. The latter cut is obviously the radio friendly cut - a much lighter, almost poppy beat, with a syrupy female hook, that again isn’t the worst of the bunch, but doesn’t stand out from the crowd either.

Takeaways
  • A unique name, but not a unique album - this is decidely average.
  • Tired storylines and subjects retrodden over and over again.
  • Nothing to mark this out as special - not surprising if it gets lost in the bargain bin.
Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Most Commented On