All Caps by MF DOOM produced by Madlib reminds us to use "ALL CAPS when spelling the man's name." Altogether the song feels like old-timey cartoons a juxtaposition to MF DOOMS influence of Doctor Doom from the Marvel comics. Featuring a jazzy piano riff looped over a drumbeat, gives a vintage feeling by Madlib, and Doom's deeper voice layers dissonance over the consonance of the beat. The Song is fast but not too fast where you feel lost all to get given a smooth feeling like ice cream. Of course, the cherry on top are MF DOOMS bars which are layered with rhyme schemes only a villain could plan.
One Beer by MF DOOM is quick to grab your attention with the assonance of MF DOOMS singing. The song is a mix of a sample of Cortex’s "Huit Octobre 1971" and a drum beat. The song in itself is a reflection of indulgence mixed with DOOMS ability to combine rap with humor. At the end of the song DOOM samples a cartoon which makes the song all the more interesting and adds to the story telling.
Fazers is rapped from the perspective of King Geedorah a 3 headed dragon from space. DOOM ties this sci-feel into the beat with an orchestral sample. DOOM starts the song with a man on an intercom talking once again adding to its spacy feel. Being the into song to DOOMS album Fazers sets the tone aided by its grandiose orchestra to critique the current state of hip hop which at the time he thought was overly exaggerated.
Accordion by MF DOOM and Madlib is full of DOOM's best rhyme schemes which complexly flow throughout the song. DOOM uses impressive lyricism addressing identity, expectations, and personal struggles in terms of material wealth, masculinity, and street credibility that ruled the early rap game. The song uses an accordion loop that is waltzy and keeps the listener hooked and on their toes.
Crosshairs from a collaboration album with Danger Mouse is minimalistic but dense allowing MF DOOM's raps to play center stage. This song feels introspective DOOM’s monotone delivery gives the song a sense of laid-back vigilance. This song feels slower than most of his other discovery but is a track worth remembering.