Since arriving in the stateside underground rap scene in the mid-2000s, the German production team known as
Snowgoons have made a lot of noise. Garnering critical and popular acclaim for their murky, decidedly sinister beatwork, the three-man crew (made up of
Det,
Illegal, and
DJ Waxwork) has collaborated with a variety of hardcore lyricists on two extraordinary full-length LPs on
Babygrande Records. Both
German Lugers (2007) and
Black Snow (2008) had lengthy lists of guest vocalists (everyone from
Smif-N-Wessun and
Killah Priest to
El Da Sensei and
Wise Intelligent), most of whom were on hand for just one track apiece. On their third LP,
A Fist in the Thought,
the Snowgoons rely largely on three up-and-coming MCs from South Carolina,
the Savage Brothers (
Qualm and
Knowledge) and
Lord Lhus, making for an unlikely regional collaboration. This decision in itself can be taken as both a strength and a weakness. On the one hand, it makes
A Fist in the Thought a more cohesive work than
the Snowgoons' two previous LPs, which can come off a bit compilation-ish, but on the other hand, it makes for less lyrical diversity. Many of the spine-tingling beatscapes, often built on classical piano lines, choir samples, and dramatic orchestral string arrangements feel like the stuff of an apocalyptic horror movie soundtrack. And the raspy-voiced vocalists fit right in for the most part with uncompromisingly violent lyricism that moves between Southern gothic gangsterism and disturbing sci-fi-obsessed imagery.
The Snowgoons' craftsmanship behind the boards is consistent on each of the record's 17 tracks, but the lyrics often fail to impress. The rhyme styles and vocal tones displayed here are undeniably reminiscent of
Violent by Design-era
Jedi Mind Tricks and
Lord Lhus could easily be mistaken for
Vinnie Paz on any number of tracks. The SC rappers' best moments come when they spin hard-edged vignettes of their home state's dark side on tracks like
"South Carolina Struggle," "Michael Nobody aka Poetic Death," and
"Capital City Streetz," while
A Fist in the Thought's best moments come when the mike gets passed to more capable rhyme-spitters like
Sean Price,
Reef the Lost Cauze, and
Viro the Virus. ~ Matt Rinaldi