CD Review: TOPR’s Marathon of Shame
By Glenn Jackson
TOPR (Top Ramen) has been on the Bay Area scene for a good length of time. He’s got four releases to his name prior to The Marathon of Shame and a respected history in the Bay Area hip-hop scene. However, this is the first album of his I’ve heard and like most indie and underground hip-hop albums, I can’t listen to the whole thing. Sorry. The beats and the lyrics are pretty solid throughout most of the album but there is nothing to it. Most of the same themes, beats, and rhymes, as a lot of decent hip-hop records, just nothing spectacular.
TOPR’s delivery lacks a certain uniqueness and I find it hard to think of a white underground rapper that his style doesn’t remind of. The obvious comparisons to Slug (of Atmosphere), Sage Francis, etc. may seem too obvious but are unfortunately pretty accurate. TOPR’s lyrics are definitely the standout aspect of this album. His experience as a battle emcee pays off in some great lines such as “I’m sick of groupie girls and their stupid pills / Bitch, don’t go out until those bruises heal.” But TOPR’s lyrics are at their best when describing the “urban struggle” in the Bay Area. The album’s final song, “Here’s to You,” is a powerful anthem for a modern, young working class. The chorus, “So everybody in the house put your hands up if your job sucks or you’ve ever been in handcuffs / Something ain’t right / We deserve more out of life / I raise my brew, here’s to you / And everybody in the place to be who thinks to themselves everyday, ‘man, this ain’t the way it should be’ / It ain’t right / We deserve more out of life / I raise my brew, here’s to you” is an intelligent and resonating theme to end the album on.
“The Marathon Shame” is out now along with a full-length DVD.