Imbued with love, honesty, and selflessness, The Good Fight is virtuosic in its musicality, direct in its language, and infinitely relatable.
In a landscape overrun with abstract indulgence and shallow trend-chasers, the Prince George’s County, Maryland artist has created a record that reminds you that it’s music before it’s hip-hop.
For Oddisee, “The Good Fight” is about living fully as a musician without succumbing to the traps of hedonism, avarice, and materialism. It’s music that yields an intangible feeling: the sacral sound of an organ whine, brass horns, or a cymbal crash. It’s a meditation on our capacity to love and the bonds binding us together. It’s our ambition and greed warring with our sense of propriety – a list of paradoxes we all face when living and striving.
Oddisee’s production simmers in its own orchestral gumbo. You sense he’s really a jazzman in different form, inhabiting the spirit of Roy Ayers and other past greats. The Fader’s compared him to a musical MC Escher, calling hailing his “grandiose and symphonic sound” and “relevant relatable messages.” Pitchfork praised his “eclectic soulful boom-bap.”
A1 | The Boogie Man Song | 2:21 | |
A2 | Freaky Black Greetings | 2:20 | |
A3 | Ghetto Rock | 3:53 | |
A4 | Zimzallabim | 3:42 | |
A5 | The Rape Over | 1:34 | |
A6 | Blue Black Jack | 5:46 | |
B1 | Bedstuy Parade & Funeral March | 4:34 | |
B2 | Sex, Love & Money | 4:08 | |
B3 | Sunshine | 4:26 | |
B4 | Close Edge | 3:10 | |
C1 | The Panties | 4:11 | |
C2 | War | 3:24 | |
C3 | Grown Man Business (Fresh Vintage Bottles) | 3:24 | |
C4 | Modern Marvel | 9:20 | |
D1 | Life Is Real | 3:12 | |
D2 | The Easy Spell | 5:32 | |
D3 | The Beggar | 5:19 | |
D4 | Champion Requiem | 4:53 |