Boy In Da Corner - Dizzee Rascal
Metascore
92 out of 100

Universal acclaim - based on 28 Critics

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 28 out of 28
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 28
  3. Negative: 0 out of 28
  1. 100
    Corner's gutter low ends, amphetamine drum programming, and Dizzee's cockney slang-spitting place this record among rap's paradigmatic moments.
  2. 100
    Brilliantly original. [Aug 2003, p.106]
  3. 100
    The best rapper this country's ever produced, period.... Next to Dizzee Rascal everybody looks pale, uninteresting and irrelevant. [Sep 2003, p.98]
  4. The most original and exciting artist to emerge from dance music in a decade.
  5. It is an album that can be loved as both an achievement and an experience, a document and a revelation; it is simultaneously a problem to be solved and a spectacle to simply witness.
  6. Most of Boy in Da Corner's most compelling moments come from this uneasy interaction between irrational youth and ultra-rational mechanized society.
  7. Dizzee's despairing wail, focused anger, and cutting sonics places him on the front lines in the battle against a stultifying Britain, just as Pete Townshend, Johnny Rotten, and Morrissey have been in the past.
  8. His adolescent gulps and yowls are street-Brit with a Jamaican liquidity, as lean, eccentric, and arresting as the beats.
  9. It's as gripping as N.W.A.'s groundbreaking Straight Outta Compton.
  10. 91
    The flow is straight-up alien: chilled-out and frantic at the same time, slightly breathless. [Feb 2004, p.95]
  11. One of the most assured debut albums of the last five years.
  12. Startling, tirelessly powerful, and full of unlimited dimensions.
  13. Boy in da Corner defies genre in a defiant manner, refusing to be defined, refusing, even, to be dismissed.
  14. If Boy In Da Corner marks the beginning of distinctly British hip-hop, the genre's standards are already impressively high.
  15. It all makes for a bleak spread, but Rascal rises up as a singular musical presence too brimming and perceptive to let the coarse world around him pass by untouched.
  16. When Dizzee thinks very deeply--worrying about growing up, about those around him who won't grow up, about dying before he grows up--he sounds like, what else can we call it, the real thing.
  17. A dance syncretism made of menacing beats skittering from dark dancehall to mashed-up jungle, super-warped bass frequencies, stark anti-hooks, and a voice that is the most authentic to emerge in years. [18 Jan 2004]
  18. One of the most refreshing hip-hop records in quite some time.
  19. Delivering his lyrics in a breathless barrage, 'Boy In Da Corner' packs the energy flash of London MCing into its grooves and for that alone it deserves attention.
  20. He hasn’t made a great album, but even Tupac never managed that; the bombed-out landscape of Boy In Da Corner burns instead with all the anger, confusion and messed-up desperation of youth.
  21. 80
    His hard-edged, dance-inflected debut makes East London sound like the new Dirty South. [Jan 2004, p.108]
  22. On a level of pure listening enjoyment, Boy In Da Corner isn't quite an Original Pirate Material; but it does succeed in establishing that Dizzee Rascal deserves a place right at the forefront of the UK Urban movement.
  23. If you want a vision of the future of hip-hop and techno, get this record.
  24. Adventurous listeners are in for a treat.
  25. One of the strangest, bumpiest musical journeys we're likely to experience on record this year. [16 Jan 2004, p.68]
  26. Not much here is too likely to blow up on the airwaves... it's too dirty, too ugly, too hard, and too Real.
  27. 70
    Dizzee's production style is impressive.... His flow is urgent and coherent. [Mar 2004, p.109]
  28. [A] strikingly stark and innovative debut. [Sep 2003, p.102]
User Score

Universal acclaim- based on 136 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 98 out of 106
  2. Negative: 7 out of 106
  1. GiovanniO
    2
    I tried hard to like this album. I don't give a puck if he is from Mars, or Europe for this case: he sounds too silly for me and I have heard 100X better beats in Fruity Loops. Believe me this is whack. Full Review »
  2. MattP
    5
    May be the most refreshing debut album of the new millenium.
  3. The best album i have ever heard. Tells many different stories which rappers seem to lack. The sound is just great and would recommend to any rap fan especially UK rap fans. Full Review »