Soundbite: Talib Kweli

The success of “Get By” was probably the worst thing that could’ve happened to Talib Kweli. After four years of languishing in the “conscious” underground, the Kanye West-produced single did not compromise Kweli’s style or ideologies but still gained the airplay that had eluded him. But what followed the success of “Get By” was a string of releases that uncomfortably straddled mainstream aspirations and Kweli’s more literate brand of hip-hop that, not surprisingly, also marked a drop in quality.

His fourth album, “Ear Drum” marks a return to form for the Brooklyn emcee. He’s working with an all-star lineup of producers, including Just Blaze, will.i.am, Kanye West, the legendary Pete Rock, and longtime collaborator DJ Hi-Tek. The list is long and the album feels even longer: Whereas the 20 tracks of 2000’s “Reflection Eternal” felt warranted, the nearly 79 minutes of “Ear Drum” is a bloated, desultory display of both occasional, startling brilliance and misplaced hip-hop affectations.

On “Stay Around,” Kweli simultaneously addresses and discredits his naysayers: “Kweli you should rap more street/And never ever get your mack on please …/Kweli I know you’re getting some love/But you can’t spit like a thug.” Though he’s trying to dismiss the criticisms, he ends up reinforcing them throughout the album. He’s right: He really shouldn’t be making songs about women, nor should he be spouting gun talk.

On tracks like “Hot Thing” and “In The Mood,” which has a horrendous verse by usually reliable Kanye West, Kweli plays the part of a bohemian lothario, but his lasciviousness is never believable. When he says “Let’s stop talkin’ cause it’s feeling like an interview/I know you’re into me/So let me get into you,” it sounds silly, not sexy.

He sounds even more out of place spewing hustler braggadocio. On “Say Something,” with a chorus that exhorts Kweli to “talk (trash) now,” lines like “I’m the type of (person) that’ll put lead in your grill” are utterly ridiculous. He sounds like he’d sooner shove a book in your face than a gun.

That said, Kweli is still capable of writing some great songs. “Everything Man” and the Just Blaze-produced “Hostile Gospel Pt. 1 (Deliver Us)” stand among the best songs of Kweli’s canon. With a hook by Norah Jones and a dreamy backdrop by reclusive L.A. beatsmith Madlib, “Soon the New Day” is the wiser, mature Kweli who excels at storytelling. He is even able to proudly rap alongside southern hellions UGK on “Country Cousins” and the booming verse by Bun B is one of the album’s best.

The rest of “Ear Drum” is a mixed bag. There are some good (“Holy Moly,” “My Weather Report”) and others utterly forgettable (“The Nature,” a bizarre song with Justin Timberlake). Still, this album has enough high points to remind us why we liked Talib Kweli in the first place.

E-mail Phuong at tphuong@media.ucla.edu.

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