Backwoodz Studioz, the New York label started by billy woods, has long been a bastion of challenging, forward-thinking rap music. Though it’s been simmering just below the surface for years — woods initially established Backwoodz to release his solo album Camouflage in 2003 — the label arguably had its breakthrough moment in 2018 with the release of Paraffin, the third record from Armand Hammer, woods’ duo with ELUCID.
The momentum continued, and 2021 saw Backwoodz level up once again, as Armand Hammer joined forces with veteran producer The Alchemist (who is on his ownlegendarystreak) to release Haram, a critically-acclaimed odyssey that gave the label one of its most visible albums since its inception. Since then, Backwoodz has had one of the most unimpeachable release runs in recent memory, culminating in an incredible nine-album schedule in 2022 (10 including the reissue of woods’ History Will Absolve Me).
When discussing Backwoodz, it would be remiss to not credit engineer Willie Green. His work on each of these releases — whether mixing, mastering, or both — is consistently impeccable. Green knows exactly when and how to add effects, using filters, delays, and distortion to add depth and dimension. His attention to detail makes each Backwoodz release an immersive listening experience. Here is the breakdown of Backwoodz establishing themselves as the new leader of the underground in 2022.
All of these albums are available at the Backwoodz Studioz website and Bandcamp page.
billy woods x Preservation – Aethiopes
There may not be a better album to illustrate Backwoodz talents in 2022 than billy woods and Preservation’s virtuosic collab project Aethiopes. The album’s opening verse, wherein woods wonders if his new neighbor is former Ethiopian dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam, ratchets up to Rear Window-level tension in just a minute and a half. On “NYNEX,” he offers a sober assessment of how little the world has ever changed: “The future isn’t flying cars, it’s Rachel Dolezal absolved.” He can also be bleakly hilarious, offering the kind of withering gallows humor usually found in a Cormac McCarthy novel. Woods’ declaration that “life is a zipline in the dark” on “Remorseless” elicits the kind of spasmodic laugh the crowd in a horror movie emits after a jumpscare. When life gives him lemonade, he counters by “pour[ing] his spirit of choice.”
Preservation’s shifting-sands production beautifully complements woods’ layered writing. The beats morph, slither, and bend beneath woods’ feet, creating an otherworldly backdrop that elevates Aethiopes beyond his past work. The Ethiopian jazz of “Asylum” gives way to the mournful squall of horns and synths in “No Hard Feelings.” There’s wailing Moog theremin on “Remorseless,” which comes after the roots/dub workout of “Protoevangelium.” “Haarlem” ends with Fatboi Sharif rapping over what sounds like pianos being dropped down a stairwell. It’s thrilling at every moment.
The world woods so adeptly builds in Aethiopes isn’t new. It’s our current one, pockmarked and scarred by the viciousness of history. It’s an explanation of the violence that lurks behind every interaction, how cruelty becomes commonplace, and the ways we’ve learned to cope with collapse. Woods is a mind-bendingly good writer, penning short stories the length of a rap verse. It’s easily one of the best albums of 2022 and a new pinnacle in a career full of them.
E L U C I D – I Told Bessie
In that sense, I Told Bessie, named for the grandmother with whom he lived in Crown Heights, feels like a spiritual text. Rather than provide any moral code, Bessie offers a collection of spells: one for protection, one for understanding, one to experience love, one to accept who you are. The beats are spacious and atmospheric, assembled by a murderer’s row of production talent. ELUCID sounds comfortable on everything from the Swishahouse bounce of Sebb Bash’s “Bunny Chow” to Alchemist’s ominous and droning beat on “Nostrand.” The overall effect is that of a flickering candle, slowly revealing the contours of the space around you. I Told Bessie is a hypnotizing listen and will take you to some powerful places if you give yourself over to it. “There’s…many portals,” ELUCID continues on “Betamax.” “[Where] the fuck you going with the door closed?”
billy woods x Messiah Musik – Church
Messiah Musik, in his second full-length showing for Backwoodz, expands the parameters of his heavy bag sound. It’s still all syncopated loops and winter-trudge drums, but he more fully explores some of the weirder patterns his previous work has hinted at. Some of these beats, like the third switch up on “Fever Grass,” could fit comfortably on a record like Portishead’s Third. Other tracks show the depth of his influences; “Cossack Wedding” channels DJ Paul; “Frankie” sounds like Madlib scoring a Giallo film.
If Aethiopes seems mythical, Church feels brutally real. The stories woods tells have the foggy feeling of deep memory, full of the tiny, devastating details that stay firmly stuck in the rivulets of your brain. He continues to operate at an impossibly high level, writing about the human condition like few can, rapper or otherwise.
ShrapKnel – Metal Lung
The beats, handled mostly by fellow Backwoodz artist Steel Tipped Dove, are smoked out and colorful. Warped-tape drones nudge up against hypnotic drums (“Cold Burn”), chunky grooves burst through shimmering noise (“Damn, Alice!”), vocal samples throb like a headache (“A Tribe All Stressed”). It’s thick but not impenetrable, tense without being overwhelming. It all feels like you’ve had one too much of whatever substance was on offer, but you never fully tip into oblivion. The covert art from Shane Ingersoll fits perfectly: a tangled, vibrant cityscape building upward while collapsing in on itself, Castro and PremRock at the center of it all.
AKAI SOLO – Spirit Roaming
AKAI takes a similar tack with Spirit Roaming, but alters it slightly. He wants to “grasp every crack in the terra firma,” taking as many different journeys as possible that may all lead to the same place. You can hear this manifest in the way he flows, as he sometimes begins and ends a rhyme scheme in a single bar, ignoring any “traditional” patterns. It’s evident in his production taste; there are 14 different producers on Spirit Roaming, but it sounds like one cohesive statement. AKAI favors lumbering beats with murky, noise-obscured samples, but they all feel luminous, glowing around the edges like clouds obscuring sunshine. Across the album, he catalogs his moments of survival. He volunteers to bag up fruit at the local co-op (“S.O.M.”); he learns to look at darkness from new angles (“Musashi”); he embraces simplicity (“For A Few”). Spirit Roaming is a beautiful, soul-bearing document of AKAI SOLO trying his best to crack the riddle.
Defcee x Messiah Musik – Trapdoor
Trapdoor is also the label’s first full-length produced by longtime Backwoodz collaborator Messiah Musik. Defcee has often described the Baltimore producer’s work on the album as “the beats RZA lost in the flood.” Messiah finds off-kilter loops and pairs them with drums that thud like boots on a Chicago winter snowpack. Chiming guitar lines and dusty piano samples snake between Messiah’s crushing snares, providing the precise emotional backdrop for Defcee’s ruminations on the prison industrial complex, substance abuse, anxiety, and (of course) garbage rappers. The two make a perfect pair; their ability to build and sustain tension with no wasted space makes Trapdoor a harrowing and deeply rewarding listen.
Hajino x Duncecap – Go Climb a Tree
Jeff Markey – Sports & Leisure
These beats are spacious and warm, consisting of samples chopped and warped into tiny psychedelic grooves. Everything is smeared with tape hiss and the drums are often muffled, but Markey’s not making innocuous beats to study to. He has a real ear for melody and texture. Dub delay on “Mo Lava” sends bits of the track’s horn and piano into the stratosphere. On “Quick Realignment,” Markey submerges the chord progression under a pool of distortion. He expertly mixes the samples of “Head Fake” into stratified layers, creating a trippy, disorienting effect. It makes for a deeply absorbing headphones listen. Members of the extended Backwoodz universe (Defcee, woods, Fatboi Sharif, SKECH185, and more) appear every now and then, but the album is so skillfully sequenced that it never feels jarring. Markey knows how to produce for each of his guests, but most of all, he knows how to sustain a mood.
Be sure to check out some of our other articles about 2022 in Hip Hop.
And check out all of our 2o22 HipHopDX Award Winners.
Read the full article here