The Juggaknots cover

The Juggaknots

Released

The Juggaknots’ self-titled debut on Fondle ‘Em was the second entry in the cult label’s short, hard-to-find, but massively influential catalog. And even before a 2002 Re:Release expansion that rescued it from vinyl-only scarcity, it felt more substantial as a nine-track, 36-minute EP/LP midpoint than a lot of the skit-bloated, filler-crammed 70-minute rap offerings to hit shelves during the peak-CD late ’90s. You can credit that in part to Breeze Brewin’s ability to be as devastating with a message track as he is in pure-battler form. Of course he’s nice with the bitter punchlines and the interrogative delivery in that latter state; there’s plenty of it in “Jivetalk,” “Epiphany,” “I’m Gonna Kill U,” and especially the imposingly agile-flowing “Troubleman” — that last one a rare moment where Breeze’s brother/beatmaker Buddy Slim gets to obliterate the mic alongside him (and over a loop from Coltrane’s version of “My Favorite Things,” just to complete the audacity of the thing). But the conceptual storytelling that made Breeze such a good fit for Prince Paul’s rap opera A Prince Among Thieves three years later is what pushes Juggaknots over the line from underground collector gem to true lost classic. “Clear Blue Skies” became such a standout off its depiction of white intergenerational familial panic over mixed-race relationships — a masterpiece in the rapper-dual-role so convincingly inhabited by Breeze that some people still mistake it for a Breeze/Slim back-and-forth —  that bootlegs turned it into the EP’s new de facto title track. But the crack-wave horror stories of “Loosifa” and the next-gen youth violence warnings of “Romper Room” are no less deeply felt, inhabited with lines containing whole social panoramas that toe the line between traumatized anger and intensely sorrowful empathy.

Nate Patrin

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