Review: The Rap Guide to Wilderness

Baba Brinkman鈥檚 new eco-conscious hip-hop album is a wild experiment.

In its genesis, hip-hop was a griot鈥檚 tale of urban life for black and latino youth in America. Whether it's the snap-hop from Atlanta of the early 2000s, or the rising nerdcore hip-hop of today, it鈥檚 safe to say that rap has penetrated nearly every crevice of human existence. So it was only a matter of time until hip-hop and science collided, too. There was a glimpse of this hybrid in 2013, when Wu-Tang Clan member GZA judged a for students in New York City. But now, Canadian rapper Baba Brinkman has taken it full throttle with a seven-track EP that鈥檚 all about ecology.

Brinkman got his start in hip-hop as a grad student at the University of Victoria; for his thesis he aligned the art of freestyle rapping with 14th-century literature. The unlikely blend set the course for Brinkman鈥檚 career. In 2004, he performed a rap-infused version of The Canterbury Tales at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The project鈥檚 success led to a show called 鈥淭he Rap Guide to Evolution鈥 in 2009; it was wildly successful and even landed an off-Broadway run.

In December 2014, Brinkman released a nature-inspired album, . Brinkman is no rookie when it comes to the topic of conservation; his father founded the Brinkman Group, which has planted more than one billion trees since 1970. For this album, Brinkman also collaborated with the Wild Foundation, a non-profit conservation organization 鈥渁imed at reaching out to a totally new demographic of people outside of our wilderness community.鈥

I鈥檓 one of those people, who, incidentally, knows a thing or two about hip-hop, but isn鈥檛 too in tune with the trees. While trying this whole 鈥渕usic as a bridge鈥 thing, I wasn鈥檛 sure if I was invested in swapping out my black man鈥檚 plight for songs about biodiversity. But I was willing to give it a chance. Could this album make a believer out of me?

First, let鈥檚 talk about the music itself. Although hip-hop is rooted in the lyrics, production is just as important, and good production is hard to come by. Hard-hitting base and snare, commonly known as the 鈥渂oom-bap,鈥 is what gives hip-hop its punch; the melodies built around that rhythm is what ushers in the emotions. Most of the tracks on Wilderness were produced by Soulful Spider, a London-based producer best known for remixes of Top 40 singles. The intro track, 鈥淕o Wild,鈥 has a reggae-inflected beat, mixed with enthused lyrics and samples of animal sounds. It could have turned out cheesy and predictable, but luckily, the squawking is interspersed so that it perfectly collides with the back beat. Another production gem is 鈥淧arty of Life,鈥 a song that opens with Cuban drum patterns and lands in the middle of a Sunday church service, thanks to the well-balanced organ. The guest features on the choruses are great, too. Canadian jazz singer Tia Brazda lends her vocals to the hook and makes you feel like you鈥檙e in a giant Mardi Gras celebration. 鈥淏ottleneck,鈥 meanwhile, plays out like a nature geek鈥檚 version of Magna Carta Holy Grail. Singer Sean Ross is the Justin Timberlake to Baba Brinkman鈥檚 Jay Z.

Wilderness taut production also sets off how unfocused Brinkman can be lyrically. Similies and punchlines are what make hip-hop a true art form. But some of Brinkman鈥檚 songs, like 鈥淣ever Cry Wolf鈥 and 鈥淏ottleneck,鈥 make it sound like he鈥檚 reading a PhD dissertation over a CASIO drum track. In 1914, the last passenger pigeon died/in 1865 they still blackened the evening skies/No one thought it would happen to such an abundant species/a broken branch can鈥檛 evolve again after it鈥檚 deceased,鈥 is one of the unpolished bits in 鈥淏ottleneck.鈥 But when Brinkman is on, he鈥檚 really on. 鈥淲alden Pond,鈥 the strongest track on the album, has a bass-heavy beat that carries the same sort of strut you might find on an Azealia Banks mixtape. Brinkman mixes different flows and cadences, and then introduces a staccatoa double-time style of rapping that has been popular for the last few yearson the second verse. 鈥淲alden Pond鈥 brings the concrete jungle to the actual jungle fairly seamlessly. It can even pass as a contemporary radio trackI鈥檝e randomly found myself humming it over the last few weeks.

People are drawn to hip-hop because it narrates their own personal experiences. Will this album induct more people into the nature squad? I doubt it, but I do think it鈥檚 a track to conservation education for future generations. Like the chorus of 鈥淪eed Pod鈥 says, 鈥We can鈥檛 go back to the wild/let鈥檚 give it a chance to rebel/Put a seed in the hands of a child/and see what branches out.鈥

Final thoughts: The Rap Guide to the Wilderness is way more interesting (and intellectual) than anything I鈥檝e ever heard from Macklemore. Thrift shops are cool and all, but Brinkman has me dreaming of lazy Saturdays in the Amazon, where the air smells a lot fresher.