08-11-2009, 00:35
released Nov 3rd
Attention Deficit
![[Image: n19882sqqqu.jpg]](http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/drn100/n198/n19882sqqqu.jpg)
from the album - Triumph
YouTube - Wale - Triumph (Attention Deficit)
from amg
The self-proclaimed "Ambassador of Rap for the Capital," Washington, D.C.-based rapper Wale (pronounced "wah-lay") was able to transcend his local sensation status and become a national rap contender using go-go-inspired hip-hop as the vehicle for his lyricism and clever wordplay. Olubowale Victor Akintimehin was born in D.C. in 1984 to Nigerian immigrants who first arrived to America five years prior. Moving to Maryland at age ten, however, Wale was mostly raised in suburban D.C. He attended both Robert Morris College and Virginia State University on football scholarships, but then transferred a third time to Bowie State. The music bug already had bit him hard, and soon he quit Bowie State to turn towards a recording career.
Wale got his first airplay circa 2003-2004 with "Rhyme of the Century," thanks to the help of a local radio DJ who believed in his potential. This landed him in the "Unsigned Hype" column in Source magazine the following year. In 2006, Wale signed to local start-up imprint Studio 43, owned by a former VP of Roc-a-Fella Records, and enjoyed a string of hits in the D.C.-Maryland-Virginia area that year. Many of those records sampled from '80s go-go, a more raw, percussion-driven offshoot of disco originating in D.C., like the popular "Dig Dug," a tribute to Ronald "Dig Dug" Dixon of go-go band the Northeast Groovers. The use of the Internet and MySpace were big factors for his success, which is how British über-producer and DJ Mark Ronson (Amy Winehouse, Christina Aguilera, Rhymefest) caught wind of the go-go MC in 2007. Wale then struck a production deal with Ronson's Allido imprint and released the 100 Miles and Running mixtape that summer. Despite not being signed to any major label yet, tons of press, ranging from XXL magazine to The New York Times, started to cover the D.C. sensation in 2007 and 2008. After a bidding war that included Epic, Atlantic, and Def Jam, Interscope finally grabbed Wale for its roster in early 2008.
album review from xxlmag
Washington, D.C., is ecstatic. After years without any representation, thereâs finally a brother running the city. His swagger is impeccable. His sense of style is on point. His way with words is captivating. His African roots give him universal appeal. Heâs the peopleâs champ, and his name is Olubowale Folarin, but you can just call him Wale.
Much like President Obamaâs rise to power, Wale had to put in a lot of legwork to become Chocolate Cityâs first nationally celebrated MC. The 24-year-oldâs push actually kicked off back in 2006, when his go-goâfueled track âDig Dug (Shake It)â got regular radio play in the D.C., Maryland and Virginia areas. That led to the release of two well-received mixtapesâPaint a Picture and Hate Is the New Loveâand DJ/producer Mark Ronson signing on as Waleâs running mate. The joint ticket went on to rally more public support with âW.A.L.E.D.A.N.C.E.,â off Waleâs 2007 mixtape, 100 Miles & Running. The recordâs success earned the rapper a major-label endorsement from Interscope, in 2008, and paved the way for Waleâs inaugural album, Attention: Deficit.
Every rapper on the campaign trail makes promises of changing the status quo, but few actually deliver on that lofty goal. Consider Wale the exception. Staying true to his hometown roots, the 2008 XXL Freshman 10 alumnus infuses his opus with heavy doses of go-go funk, while still maintaining his hip-hop edge. The Cool & Dreâproduced lead single, âChillinâ,â finds Wale teaming up with techno-pop star Lady Gaga for a distinctly D.C.-sounding anthem. Known for their signature synths, the Miami beatsmiths switch their sound up even further on the Jazmine Sullivanâguested âWorld Tour,â which is a nod to A Tribe Called Questâs 1993 gem âAward Tour.â Over a summery sound bed of sparkling piano keys and rugged percussion, Wale spits, âMama ainât raise no fool, true/But me and my brother never made it outta school.â
What Wale manages to avoid is regurgitating the same frivolous concepts and mundane subject matter that so many rookies feast on. In fact, on the Ronson-helmed â90210,â he boldly touches on females suffering from bulimia and coke addictions (âShe throws up whatever she eats/She leave the bathroom with her nose bleed/She live her whole life like TV/And she do anything for everythingâ). The rapper pens another introspective tale, in the form of âDiary,â featuring Floetryâs Marsha Ambrosius. Local producers Sleepwalkers provide the melodic backdrop for a heartfelt letter to a woman too hurt to love. After his promises of eternal devotion fall on deaf ears, a frustrated Wale retorts, âEvery problem that you ever had with another man I gotta face.â
After baring his soul for the ladies, Wale puts his armor back on in the company of men. Holding his own alongside hip-hop heavy weight Bun B on the reality checkinâ âMirrors,â Wale employs a stutter flow that barrels through Ronsonâs sonic collage of strumming guitars, funky bass line and fading horns. The upstart MC does his thing on his hypnotic duet with Gucci Mane, âPretty Girls,â but meets his match on the high-octane âBeautiful Bliss,â where North Carolina native J. Cole exhibits and undeniable hunger when he drops witty bars like, âYou see me, let me in/All I wanna do is eat like a freaky lesbian.â
Aside from a few head-scratchinâ lines on âMama Told Meâ (âI would invest in a poncho/âCause I wonât punch-out like Glass Joeâ) and his narcissistic tendency to say his own name ad nauseam, Wale creates an impressive body of work for his first term in office. Not only does he stock his cabinet with a diverse list of musical advisers, ranging from DJ Green Lantern to rock band TV on the Radioâs David Sitek, he tackles key issues like education (âBe Rightâ) and suicide (âContemplateâ) head-on. With hip-hop continuing to take a creative downturn, Attention: Deficit is a long-overdue stimulus package. On the robust âTriumph,â Wale makes one resounding promise to his rap constituency: âI ainât tryna be politically correct/But I wonât stop until I get my respect.â
Track Listing
1 Triumph Akintimehin, Sitek 02:25
2 Mama Told Me Akintimehin, Balmoris, Bell ... 03:37
3 Mirrors Akintimehin, Axelrod ... 04:17
4 Pretty Girls Akintimehin, Balmoris, Brown ... 04:11
5 World Tour Akintimehin, Fareed, Irvine ... 03:47
6 Let It Loose Akintimehin, Williams 04:49
7 90210 Akintimehin, Deijon, Ronson 03:21
8 Shades Akintimehin, Balmoris ... 03:56
9 Chillin Akintimehin, DeCarlo ... 03:24
10 TV in the Radio Akintimehin, Sitek, Warsame 03:20
11 Contemplate Akintimehin, Fenty, Perry 03:33
12 Diary Akintimehin, Ambrosius, Bang ... 04:31
13 Beautiful Bliss Akintimehin, Ambrosius, Bell ... 05:04
14 Prescription Akintimehin, Balmoris, Mason ... 03:27
Attention Deficit
![[Image: n19882sqqqu.jpg]](http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/drn100/n198/n19882sqqqu.jpg)
from the album - Triumph
YouTube - Wale - Triumph (Attention Deficit)
from amg
The self-proclaimed "Ambassador of Rap for the Capital," Washington, D.C.-based rapper Wale (pronounced "wah-lay") was able to transcend his local sensation status and become a national rap contender using go-go-inspired hip-hop as the vehicle for his lyricism and clever wordplay. Olubowale Victor Akintimehin was born in D.C. in 1984 to Nigerian immigrants who first arrived to America five years prior. Moving to Maryland at age ten, however, Wale was mostly raised in suburban D.C. He attended both Robert Morris College and Virginia State University on football scholarships, but then transferred a third time to Bowie State. The music bug already had bit him hard, and soon he quit Bowie State to turn towards a recording career.
Wale got his first airplay circa 2003-2004 with "Rhyme of the Century," thanks to the help of a local radio DJ who believed in his potential. This landed him in the "Unsigned Hype" column in Source magazine the following year. In 2006, Wale signed to local start-up imprint Studio 43, owned by a former VP of Roc-a-Fella Records, and enjoyed a string of hits in the D.C.-Maryland-Virginia area that year. Many of those records sampled from '80s go-go, a more raw, percussion-driven offshoot of disco originating in D.C., like the popular "Dig Dug," a tribute to Ronald "Dig Dug" Dixon of go-go band the Northeast Groovers. The use of the Internet and MySpace were big factors for his success, which is how British über-producer and DJ Mark Ronson (Amy Winehouse, Christina Aguilera, Rhymefest) caught wind of the go-go MC in 2007. Wale then struck a production deal with Ronson's Allido imprint and released the 100 Miles and Running mixtape that summer. Despite not being signed to any major label yet, tons of press, ranging from XXL magazine to The New York Times, started to cover the D.C. sensation in 2007 and 2008. After a bidding war that included Epic, Atlantic, and Def Jam, Interscope finally grabbed Wale for its roster in early 2008.
album review from xxlmag
Washington, D.C., is ecstatic. After years without any representation, thereâs finally a brother running the city. His swagger is impeccable. His sense of style is on point. His way with words is captivating. His African roots give him universal appeal. Heâs the peopleâs champ, and his name is Olubowale Folarin, but you can just call him Wale.
Much like President Obamaâs rise to power, Wale had to put in a lot of legwork to become Chocolate Cityâs first nationally celebrated MC. The 24-year-oldâs push actually kicked off back in 2006, when his go-goâfueled track âDig Dug (Shake It)â got regular radio play in the D.C., Maryland and Virginia areas. That led to the release of two well-received mixtapesâPaint a Picture and Hate Is the New Loveâand DJ/producer Mark Ronson signing on as Waleâs running mate. The joint ticket went on to rally more public support with âW.A.L.E.D.A.N.C.E.,â off Waleâs 2007 mixtape, 100 Miles & Running. The recordâs success earned the rapper a major-label endorsement from Interscope, in 2008, and paved the way for Waleâs inaugural album, Attention: Deficit.
Every rapper on the campaign trail makes promises of changing the status quo, but few actually deliver on that lofty goal. Consider Wale the exception. Staying true to his hometown roots, the 2008 XXL Freshman 10 alumnus infuses his opus with heavy doses of go-go funk, while still maintaining his hip-hop edge. The Cool & Dreâproduced lead single, âChillinâ,â finds Wale teaming up with techno-pop star Lady Gaga for a distinctly D.C.-sounding anthem. Known for their signature synths, the Miami beatsmiths switch their sound up even further on the Jazmine Sullivanâguested âWorld Tour,â which is a nod to A Tribe Called Questâs 1993 gem âAward Tour.â Over a summery sound bed of sparkling piano keys and rugged percussion, Wale spits, âMama ainât raise no fool, true/But me and my brother never made it outta school.â
What Wale manages to avoid is regurgitating the same frivolous concepts and mundane subject matter that so many rookies feast on. In fact, on the Ronson-helmed â90210,â he boldly touches on females suffering from bulimia and coke addictions (âShe throws up whatever she eats/She leave the bathroom with her nose bleed/She live her whole life like TV/And she do anything for everythingâ). The rapper pens another introspective tale, in the form of âDiary,â featuring Floetryâs Marsha Ambrosius. Local producers Sleepwalkers provide the melodic backdrop for a heartfelt letter to a woman too hurt to love. After his promises of eternal devotion fall on deaf ears, a frustrated Wale retorts, âEvery problem that you ever had with another man I gotta face.â
After baring his soul for the ladies, Wale puts his armor back on in the company of men. Holding his own alongside hip-hop heavy weight Bun B on the reality checkinâ âMirrors,â Wale employs a stutter flow that barrels through Ronsonâs sonic collage of strumming guitars, funky bass line and fading horns. The upstart MC does his thing on his hypnotic duet with Gucci Mane, âPretty Girls,â but meets his match on the high-octane âBeautiful Bliss,â where North Carolina native J. Cole exhibits and undeniable hunger when he drops witty bars like, âYou see me, let me in/All I wanna do is eat like a freaky lesbian.â
Aside from a few head-scratchinâ lines on âMama Told Meâ (âI would invest in a poncho/âCause I wonât punch-out like Glass Joeâ) and his narcissistic tendency to say his own name ad nauseam, Wale creates an impressive body of work for his first term in office. Not only does he stock his cabinet with a diverse list of musical advisers, ranging from DJ Green Lantern to rock band TV on the Radioâs David Sitek, he tackles key issues like education (âBe Rightâ) and suicide (âContemplateâ) head-on. With hip-hop continuing to take a creative downturn, Attention: Deficit is a long-overdue stimulus package. On the robust âTriumph,â Wale makes one resounding promise to his rap constituency: âI ainât tryna be politically correct/But I wonât stop until I get my respect.â
Track Listing
1 Triumph Akintimehin, Sitek 02:25
2 Mama Told Me Akintimehin, Balmoris, Bell ... 03:37
3 Mirrors Akintimehin, Axelrod ... 04:17
4 Pretty Girls Akintimehin, Balmoris, Brown ... 04:11
5 World Tour Akintimehin, Fareed, Irvine ... 03:47
6 Let It Loose Akintimehin, Williams 04:49
7 90210 Akintimehin, Deijon, Ronson 03:21
8 Shades Akintimehin, Balmoris ... 03:56
9 Chillin Akintimehin, DeCarlo ... 03:24
10 TV in the Radio Akintimehin, Sitek, Warsame 03:20
11 Contemplate Akintimehin, Fenty, Perry 03:33
12 Diary Akintimehin, Ambrosius, Bang ... 04:31
13 Beautiful Bliss Akintimehin, Ambrosius, Bell ... 05:04
14 Prescription Akintimehin, Balmoris, Mason ... 03:27

