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An album worth the wait from NZ's hip-hop soul diva
Most things Mu (from Fat Freddy's Drop) has anything to do with take time. Sometimes an age - remember the eternal wait for Fat Freddy's debut album which finally surfaced in 2005? But as that record proved, they're worth the wait and hip-hop soul diva Ladi6's debut album, Time Is Not Much, which was three or so years in the making, is no exception.
Mu co-produced the album with Parks (Ladi6's musical collaborator and life partner) and refreshingly it's not littered with guests. Even her cousin Scribe's bolshy rap on Call You Out ("I'm trouble, I'm B-A-D.) is short and succinct and more effective because of it.
And while Mu and Parks' ebbing and loping production presence comes through, and the powerful playing of a great band is a hallmark of the album, Ladi6 (real name Karoline Tamati) makes Time Is Not Much her own with her unique, nasal serenades and smooth, commanding raps.
It's a touching and sad record, with the title the name of a poem written by Tamati's 10-year-old cousin Boogie who died earlier this year, but it's also inspirational. There's no moping here. So Far and Down & Out, two of the more forlorn tracks, are delivered with sweetness and a take it on the chin confidence. And Walk Right Up, with its addictive reggae skank and purring organ, is one of the local songs of the year.
There's also a slinky, late night mood that comes through in the latter half of the album with Believe Me's phat, shin-shattering bass, the percussion party and rambling on More Than Fake, and the posturing, finger-pointing Jack Knife has a sniping hardcore attitude.
Considering the number of years she's been around - her first big song If I Gave You the Mic was with all girl hip-hop crew Sheelahroc in the early 2000s - and the promise she's showed, it's a relief to get a body of work that finally realises her potential.
- Scott Kara
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