Exclaim!

SWET SHOP BOYS

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Cashmere There’s a lot to like about Swet Shop Boys’ full-length debut, Cashmere. It clocks in at a tight, welledited, filler-free 38 minutes; it’s full of three-minute gems that get your head nodding and your brain working hard to parse multi-layered metaphors, and that stop when you’re still wanting more. The production, courtesy of British beatsmith Redinho, is a singular blend of South Asian instrument­al samples and chiptune bleeps. What really makes Cashmere, though, are the contrastin­g styles of Swet Shop Boys’ two MCs, British rapper Rizwan “Riz MC” Ahmed — best known to North Americans as Naz from HBO’s The Night Of — and Das Racist alum Heems. The two are a perfect pairing. Thematical­ly, they tend to mine similar themes; life as a South Asian man in a post-9/11 and post-7/7 world, police brutality, the surveillan­ce state and, on a lighter note, their varying degrees of success with women.

Stylistica­lly, though, they’re very different. Riz MC drops dense, technical bars and has a knack for storytelli­ng, while Heems has one of the most unique flows in all of hiphop. He raps at a languid, spacious pace and has a gift for deceptivel­y clever punchlines that sound like free-associatio­n until you start picking them apart. The team is at their strongest on “No Fly List” and “Tiger Hologram,” on which Heems lulls you into a mellow, head-nodding sort of hypnosis before Riz comes in and blows up the spot. It’s hard to find a flaw on this album, quite frankly. It’s personal, political, funny and the production is spectacula­r. Even at its most serious, it sounds like Heems and Riz had a blast making it. (Customs, soundcloud.com/ customsmus­ic) CHRIS DART

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