While comedic
rap has been around since
the Beastie Boys first fought for our right to party in the mid-'80s, it seems as if we've entered into a kind of golden age of "white-boy" rappers who
rap it like they mean it, even if their raps are more
Beck than
Big Daddy Kane. Enter
Jamie Kennedy. Best known for his role in the 1996 horror film
Scream,
Kennedy is an actor and stand-up comic and, as his 2006 pseudo-reality
MTV show
Blowin' Up would have you believe, a serious
rap artist. Along with his musical partner
Stu Stone,
Kennedy spent most of
Blowin' Up doing just about everything except what the show's title implied -- making it big in the
rap world. Instead, the duo found themselves in such embarrassingly comedic situations as attempting to surreptitiously give
rap icon-turned-actor
Ice-T their demo tape while
Kennedy filmed a role on
Law and Order: SVU as well as meeting with
Joe Simpson -- father/manager of
Jessica and
Ashlee -- where
Kennedy played him a song about how he really likes his ex-girlfriend's left breast. Okay, so
Kennedy is a not-so-serious rapper, but he does seem to take the music seriously, as is evidenced by such guest artists on
Blowin' Up as Canadian rapper
Kardinal Offishall,
E-40, and the deliciously respectable
Paul Wall who helps out with what is perhaps the album's best moment, the commercial jingle for the mattress superstore
"Mattress Mack." Notably, in this episode,
Kennedy and
Stone have to shoot the commercial wearing mattress costumes. It's not only a funny cut, but a funky one that makes the most of
Wall's "sizzeruppy" Southern-style
rap. Elsewhere,
Kennedy and
Stone showcase their knack for picking out specific details that add a sense of truth to their jokes as on the send-up of '80s style
"1984" which features such cringe-inducing lines as, "1984 lying in the grass first time I ever got some ass. Pop Rock in my mouth, wanna go down south, but the Whopper in my stomach really gave me gas" and, "Listen crazy muthaf*cker, let's skip class. I got a fresh pack of Hubba Bubba Berry Blast. I got money to kill and ass to burn, Drakkar Noir and a salon perm." What's so great about the track is that while the lines are funny,
Kennedy and
Stone play it straight, which only serves to make the joke funnier. In that sense,
Blowin' Up is similar to
"Lazy Sunday" and the other
SNL raps perpetrated by
Chris Parnell and
Andy Samberg. Admittedly, while still humorous, some of the tracks here are a little too easy and juvenile, as on
"Crooked Stick" in which
Kennedy expounds upon his deformed appendage. Similarly,
"Bologna" featuring
Kennedy as the gay rapper "Blane" is, while silly, stupidly offensive. However, tracks like
"Rollin' w/Saget" in which milquetoast comedian
Bob Saget raps about being a "blunt" smoking badass, and
"Knuckle Up" in which
Kennedy and
Stone call out young-Hollywood hipsters like
Ashton Kutcher and
Colin Farrell as "bitch-ass waiters" and viciously rap, "I need a coffee make it quick. I don't need to see your headshot, you ain't legit. I don't need to read your screenplay it reads like sh*t" are devastatingly funny and fall just shy of keen social satire. ~ Matt Collar