Clipping: Visions of Bodies Being Burned 12"

Clipping: Visions of Bodies Being Burned 12"


Tags: · 20s · indie
Vendor
Sub Pop
Regular price
Sold out
Sale price
$32.00

In Halloween 2019, Los Angeles experimental rap mainstays Clipping ended their three-year silence with the horrorcore-inspired album There Existed an Addiction to Blood. The following October, rapper Daveed Diggs, and producers Jonathan Snipes and William Hutson return with an even higher body count, more elaborate kills, and monsters that just won't stay dead. Visions of Bodies Being Burned is less a sequel than it is the second half of a planned diptych. It turns out, Clipping took to the thematic material of horrorcore like vampires to grave soil. In the years following Splendor & Misery – the band's acclaimed dystopian science fiction-rap epic – they simply made too many songs for one album. Before the release of There Existed..., Clipping and Sub Pop divided the material up into two albums, designed to be released only months apart. However, a global pandemic and multiple canceled tours pushed the release of the project's "part two" until the following Halloween season.

 

Visions of Bodies Being Burned contains thirteen more scary stories disguised as rap songs, incorporating as much influence from Ernest Dickerson, Clive Barker, and Shirley Jackson as it does from Three 6 Mafia, Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, and Brotha Lynch Hung. Clipping are never critical of their cultural references. Their angular, shattered interpretations of existing musical styles are always deferential, driven by fandom for the object of study rather than disdain for it. Clipping reimagine horrorcore – the purposely absurdist hip-hop subgenre that flourished in the 1990s – the way Jordan Peele does horror cinema: by twisting beloved tropes to make explicit their own radical politics of monstrosity, fear, and the uncanny.

 

Clipping intentionally recast their figures of monstrosity through the lens of an antiracist, antipatriarchal, anticolonial politics to address the struggles of our current era. The album's first single, "Say the Name," transforms Scarface's evocative lyric from "Mind Playing Tricks on Me" into a screwed-down Chicago ghetto house loop, mixing together a palette of inspirations from 90s industrial music to a certain mirror-bound, bee-keeping, hook-handed former-slave/urban legend. The second single, "'96 Neve Campbell" is a tribute to the self-aware "final girl" character of the post-slasher film cycle, featuring Inglewood's Cam & China, who prove they do more than survive the masked killer – they preemptive-strike his ass. The band also connected with fellow noise-rap pioneers Ho99o9 for the song "Looking Like Meat," which more closely resembles the full-on sonic assault of Clipping's first album, Midcity, than any of their music since. Among Clipping's peers, Ho99o9 reveal themselves to be the perfect collaborators to fit into the album's thematic world. Eaddy and the OGM deliver the most unhinged, viscerally alarming moment on the entire record.

 

Each track pairs a different expression of horror with one of Clipping's signature metamorphic takes on a hip-hop subgenre. "Eaten Alive" pays tribute to the Tobe Hooper film of the same name, aping the swampy drag of No Limit and their ilk over a jagged jazz-rap instrumental featuring Tortoise guitar genius Jeff Parker, and experimental LA drummer Ted Byrnes. "Enlacing" posits Lovecraftian cosmic terror as the result of a psychedelic drift into nothingness, played as a smeary, cloud rap haze. "Pain Everyday" uses real EVP recordings – said to be the voices of restless spirits – atop a cinematic, Venetian Snares-like breakcore collage, as a call-to-arms for the ghosts of lynching victims to haunt the white descendants of their murderers. And "Check the Lock" is a spiritual sequel to Seagram's classic track "Sleepin in My Nikes," describing a drug kingpin's paranoid descent into madness.