Open Mike Eagle - Brick Body Kids Still Daydream
With the first song of his 2014 masterpiece, Dark Comedy, Open Mike Eagle reintroduced himself by defining his style: âIâm bad at sarcasm so I work in absurdity.â On that album, Mike deconstructed our overstimulated and over-surveilled society with ease and caustic wit. But what do you do when the world warps and bends into a shape so absurd that it can no longer be exaggerated?
Brick Body Kids Still Daydream is a searingly political record for systolic political times. It chronicles the life cycle of the Robert Taylor Homes, a housing project on the South side of Chicago that was demolished completely ten years ago. Families that had lived under the same roof for three generations were forced to scatter, condemned by bureaucrats and faceless cranes and public indifference. Mike Eagle brings the Robert Taylor Homes back to lifeâliterally, with arms and eyes and a head like the dome of a stadiumâand fights until the last brick is made to crumble.
As always, Mike slips in and out of various grey areas; on the opener âlegendary iron hood,â he raps, âyou think itâs all good, but itâs really a gradient.â The nostalgia (â95 radiosâ) is a little bit painful, the triumph (âhymnalâ) comes through painstaking, incremental work. Everything needs to be earned, even the radio signals that are picked up through tinfoil wrapped on childrenâs hands.
The thesis becomes fully formed on âbrick body complex,â where the hook is a towering statement of identity: âDonât call me ânigga,â or ârapper,â my motherfucking name is Michael Eagle.â But this is not a departure from the man-as-building conceitâthe flesh and blood and brick and mortar are inextricable.
In case there was any ambiguity about the political and cultural forces that lead to the Robert Taylor Homesâ eventual destruction, Brick Body Kids Still Daydream ends with perhaps the most powerful song of Mike Eagleâs catalog to date. âmy auntieâs buildingâ is a tour de force. âThey say America fights fair,â he raps. âBut they wonât demolish your timeshare.â This is the point: the decay and eventual destruction of public housingâand of the physical lives of Black Americans generallyâhas been normalized in a way that should be grotesquely absurd. âThey blew up my auntieâs building / Put out her great-grandchildren / Who else in America deserves to have that feeling? / Where else in America will they blow up your village?â
Production comes courtesy of Exile, Toy Light, Andrew Broder, Illingsworth, DJ Nobody, Kenny Segal, Caleb Stone, Lo-Phi, Elos, and Has-Lo, who produces and guests on â95 radios.â âhymnalâ also features a superb turn from Sammus, who maintains the same rhyme scheme throughout her defiant verse.
As grave as the albumâs stakes are, itâs still anchored by Mike Eagleâs irrepressible sense of humor. (His live comedy show, The New Negroes, is upcoming via Comedy Central.) âno sellingâ is a hilarious take on practiced indifference, and âTLDRâ bridges the economic gap with withering wit: âIf you was rich and âbout to be broke, I can coach you / âCause I can show you how to kill a roach with a boat shoe.â
Eagle has earned rave reviews in Pitchfork, the LA Weekly, and wherever brilliant, avant-garde rap is appreciated. Brick Body Kids Still Daydream is his most overtly political work to date, and puts to use all the dazzling technical skills heâs perfected over more than a decade at the forefront of rapâs underground. In chaotic and increasingly fractured times, it has a few crucial things to bring to your attention.
Additional Production By Jodan Katz
Guitar by Dan Miller
Artwork by McKay Felt
All Songs Mixed and Mastered by Daddy Kev
Open Mike Eagle is Published by Wichita Songs/Domino Music Publishing
Executive Produced by Michael Tolle, Michael Eagle, Mark Bowen
Mello Music Group Copyright 2017