Jabee has, in turn, proven to be a worthy ambassador for the state and to its youth, one who has been chomping at the bit to stretch his legs beyond its borders. That turn comes with Everything Was Beautiful and Nothing Hurt, released nationally through the Murs 316 imprint, owned by renowned LA emcee Murs. The underdog steps up to the plate, too, delivering a polished effort as adept at hip-hop touchstones as pushing the envelope in new directions.
Jubilant, R&B-tinged opener EWBANH plays by the book, but its successor, Dreams, rolls the dice a little more liberally with a classical piano riff pierced with timeless rap percussion. Gs Era and Dont Love Back bear a similar sonic flavor, one that Knock Knock and the El-P-produced Stephanie crunch up into club-friendly bangers. The latter is especially potent.
However, Push and Uncle Curtis might be the true highlights; theyre dark, smoky selections that twist the blues into modern times much in the way The Black Keys and Friends (Raekwon, RZA and more) did with recording project Blakroc.
The genre-defying On My Way to Heaven ? built upon a folk song written by Horse Thiefs Cameron Neal ? brings the album to a close on a brave note, one that feels all too appropriate for Jabee as he gets his long-deserved chance to play beyond Oklahoma, championing its sensibilities all the same.
Everything Was Beautiful and Nothing Hurt is available now on iTunes.
This article appears in Dec 25-31, 2013.
