doPE’s Debut LP “no country for old men” Provides Social Commentary Whilst Impressively Mixing a Number of Styles (Album Review)

doPE is a superduo consisting of Los Angeles, California musician, songwriter, author & actor John Densmore alongside Hempstead, New York emcee, songwriter & producer Chuck D. The latter of whom gained notoriety for being the frontman of the seminal political hip hop outfit Public Enemy & the other broke out as the drummer for one of rock music’s most celebrated bands: The Doors. Both members announced their formation a few months earlier & are dropping a debut album under SpitSLAM Records.
“every tick tick tick” begins with a funky rap rock intro where Chuck’s talking about ageism, sexism & racism being in the way of people living their daily lives whereas the title track discusses elders being the roof that shelters the youth. “doomsay” returns to a rap rock sound for a gritty description of the apocalypse & after a recitation of “The Bone of my Father” by Etheridge Knight, we have “i love that i don’t love” soulfully ending the 1st half speaking of The Rhyme Animal’s relevancy.
As for “people are strangers”, we have doPE suggesting not to even try at being friends with them if you only know of them while “breakthru” spends 115 seconds talking about the rise of technology over the course of their lives. “ops3ssion” does it’s job masterfully fusing Public Enemy’s politically charged lyrics with 70s rock instrumentation while “everyone dies” following a reading of “Djali II” by Kamau Daáood concludes no country for old men by providing 1 last crucial message for the younger generations listening.
Originally released as a Record Store Day exclusive last month, doPE’s full-length studio debut finally arrives streaming services a month later & would say no country for old men joins Radio Armageddon & Black Sky Over the Projects: Apartment 2025 in terms of the run Chuck D has musically been on for the past 12 months. The production impressively mixes hip hop with funk & rock, sprinkling hints of spoken word along the way to provide some social commentary many need to hear.
Score: 8/10



