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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Review: Nicholas Wonder makes solo statement with 'My Thesis'

A lone man’s strain (“Moving On”) opens Nicholas Wonder’s debut solo album, My Thesis, in a Bob Seger “Turn The Page” fashion. One might find the brief ballad an unlikely intro to a hip hop album yet the melody is connubially tied, by an untrammeled saxophone, to the title track, which follows.

My Thesis is a commingling of sub-genres grounded in hip hop soul. Wonder’s verbal strategy for this recording flows in the same vein as his socially conscious writing for Vitium, the artist’s internationally acclaimed hip hop, funk project, which he boldly declares a “first class revolution” on a track titled “First Class.”

A true poet, Wonder’s wandering lyrics will make you wonder as he articulates keen observations of disregarded societal flaws, speaking to a degenerating generation on “Prescription Kids” and world at war on “Drifting ...”.

Pure originality is difficult to attain in any art form; hip hop, a genre built on cultural cross-references, is no different. Wonder and his supporting cast of instrumentalists and audio engineers, including Vitium bandmate Jerry (JL) Lang II, New Zealand-based Soulchef, Cleveland-based Adam Korbesmeyer and None Other Than, distinctively repurpose a variety of techniques from defining epochs in hip hop and R&B music, with rhythms on the album reflecting retro and modern styles.

Recommended song: “Trippin’”
Sounds like: Lupe Fiasco, Common, The Roots

Executive producers: None Other Than (mixing) and Nicholas Wonder
Additional production: Adam Korbesmeyer (mixing/engineering, Pro-Plane) and Soulchef
Mastered by: Chris Keffer
Recorded at: Ante Up Audio

Get a free download of the song "My Thesis" by clicking "download" below. Download the full album on Nicholas Wonder's Bandcamp site for $5.




Editor's note: "Moving On" is the opening song on the printed version of My Thesis. The online version of the album begins with the title track, "My Thesis."

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