Review
Copywrite
God Save The King

Man Bites Dog (2012) Jon E.

Copywrite – God Save The King cover artwork
Copywrite – God Save The King — Man Bites Dog, 2012

Copywrite is a rapper from Ohio. Having made his name along with his MegaHertz group (that included Rjd2). He became respected amongst the backpack underground hip hop fans in the late 90's. While since then Copy has maintained a solo career and created a couple classic singles and a LP that many in the underground may still consider a classic. So between that "classic" LP (that was originally released in 2002) the artist has seldom released proper LP's this being only his 4th official album.

When it comes down to it many of the aforementioned underground rappers went one of two ways, either overly lyrical relying on complicated rhyme schemes and questionable topics for sake of attention or guys who were genuinely good rappers without the budget to get the best beats or advertising to get the attention they may have deserved. It would be hard to deny Copy his abilities the man showed his skill on many tracks for for a long time with little notice. Instead he seems to almost rise above with this record.

The main thing to notice is the variance of the beats and guests. While the beats a generally snare heavy compositions there are more than a few moments of natural instrumentation, most notably guitar, showing up. When this trick is used the music is given an almost bluesy quality allowing the emotion of the lyrics shine through. When Copy relies on more basic production there is almost a forcefulness that comes to his voice making the songs alternate from soulful and emotional to aggressive. This is good as it gives a strong variance throughout the album and giving the listener a taste of what Copy has always been good at.

Overall this album could get Copy some new fans as underground rap in general seems to have almost dissipated in a sense. The internet allows new rappers to start getting attention faster and faster meanwhile they should be watching some of their elders. CopyWrite has put in his time and has managed to create a more complete album with stronger more personal lyricism without completely forgetting the vicious lyricism that got him noticed in the first place.

7.3 / 10Jon E. • February 20, 2012

Copywrite – God Save The King cover artwork
Copywrite – God Save The King — Man Bites Dog, 2012

Advertisement

DCxPC 2025

Recently-posted album reviews

The Cure

Songs of a Lost World
Capitol, Fiction, Lost Music, Polydor/Universal (2024)

It's been sixteen years since The Cure released their last album. I don't know if anyone really knew what to expect, but it's one of the most influential bands in history so expectations were high. The Verdict? Those expectations were met. It'd be silly to say Songs of a Lost World is a "return to form" as the band and … Read more

City Mouse

So Far Out
Brassneck Records, It's Alive (2024)

There are few bands that hit with the mix of raw emotion and musical talent as a live City Mouse show. There are even fewer bands that can capture that live feeling on a record. It’s been a long 7 years since Get Right, but So Far Out keeps it moving as if no time has passed. Of course, the … Read more

Machine Girl

MG Ultra
Future Classic (2024)

Ideally, I would be a bit more interested in art. In visual art- paintings, sketches, MS Paint monstrosities- whatever. I wish I knew more about the meaning of a brush stroke or even had the desire to know more about the meaning of a brush stroke. I spend a lot of time listening to music and, subsequently, I see a … Read more