Jam Baxter’s 7th Album “Fetch the Poison” Retains His Storytelling Style After Sobering Up (Album Review)

Here we have the 7th studio LP from London, England, United Kingdom emcee Jam Baxter of the Dead Players & Contact Play. Initially signed to High Focus Records, his 2010 solo debut Rinse Out Friday / Spack Out Monday was received positively & the sophomore effort The Gruesome Features would see a lot more critical acclaim. …So We Ate Them Whole in 2014 remains amongst High Focus’ most celebrated releases ever, fulfilling his obligations with the Hove, East Sussex imprint with Mansion 38 as well as Touching Scenes & Off Piste respectively. Obscure Liqueurs marked his official Blah Records debut & has been looking to Fetch the Poison since.
“Bright & Shiny Things” makes a meticulously spooky intro produced by Telemachus talking about craving another crown & waking up to find an earthquake shaking the ground whereas “Ulidjani Minajali Manze” asks for his candour to be excused since he won’t be able to flatter anyone’s problems with their grandeur. “Blink Twice for Yes” talks about every one of us being meant to eventually burst & after the spoken word “Mama Cuishe” interlude, “Cherry Red Paint Job” pleads for everyone to keep their hands off the precious materials.
As for “Go On”, we have Jam talking about thieves around us stealing souls from people & being told what to do by them just before “Every Pool of Stagnant Water” confesses to feeling like someone woke him up from this strange dream he’s been having leaving plastic body-doubles standing on every corner. “Stand Back Little Timmy” hops over a Wundrop beat talking about being here to watch the stars burn out without blinking & consume alcohol while “All Sprawled Out in the City” boasts of him stepping out of the offices grinning.
“Flickers on the 4th Floor” continues the 2nd half of Fetch the Poison going for a boom bap direction instrumentally hogging up all the high ground to himself & after “The Infamous Gatwick Meltdown of 2026” vividly tells the story of someone who’s been banned from the London Gatwick Airport out in West Sussex after leaving their minds at a drug dealer’s place out in South London, were treated to the 2nd & final spoken word interlude “I Belong Elsewhere” looking to take his business somewhere else.
The song “Sundown Sundown” featuring Black Alien, Black Josh, Jehst, Nog & Xamã brings the sextet together on top of this trap instrumental from Ghosttown for a bilingual crossover between English & Portuguese while the title track talks about needing the 3 CCs. The lead single “Blood Red Cheese Wire” ends the album with him making it clear that he doesn’t need anyone’s hollow thoughts or pocket change.
Conceived during a state-wide alcohol ban in Mexico, the inaugural full-length to be created after Jam Baxter became sober makes its comfortable behind Touching Scenes & …So We Ate Them Whole amongst the top 3 entries in his solo discography. He retains the abstractly hallucinatory style of storytelling we’ve all come to know him for & the production mostly handled by Telemachus ditches Obscure Liqueurs’ industrial elements in favor of balancing both the boom bap & trap subgenres of hip hop.
Score: 9/10



