De La Soul have long been the kings of hip-hop playfulness. Fun and mischief-making have been at the core of the trio’s operation since the days they had fans counting the feathers on a Perdue chicken’s ass. It was baked into their early beats, sonic Jenga towers constructed by Prince Paul and the trio themselves, stacked with dozens of samples from Schoolhouse Rock to Otis Redding and Funkadelic. Even at their most aggrieved, thumbing their noses at critics and wack MCs or reluctantly shaking hands with music industry devils, they planted their tongues deeply in cheek and had airhorns ready to blare. Their perpetual thesis always returns to how whatever issues they’ve faced—as Afrocentric outsiders unafraid to get buck, as abstract lyricists attempting to grow while caught in a 34-year bout of sample-clearance hell—could be spun into a roller-skateable hip-hop wonderland.
On Cabin in the Sky, their 10th album and first in nearly a decade, they attempt to jump their most difficult hurdle yet. “Cabin Talk” opens the album with a skit in typical fashion: Actor Giancarlo Esposito plays the host of a conference exploring “perceptions of life and the hereafter” who does a role call for every featured producer and vocalist on the album, ending with the DayGlo trio. Naturally, Posdnuos and DJ Maseo sound off, but Esposito lingers on Dave, the one missing voice in the room. Dave, formerly known as Trugoy the Dove, passed away in 2023, weeks before the trio’s first four albums were made available on streaming services after decades of rights issues and, it seems, in the early stages of this album’s creation; out of its 20 tracks, he has only six rapped verses. Cabin has plenty of tears to shed and grown-man reflection to undergo, but unlike 2016’s And the Anonymous Nobody…, which generally skewed gloomy and portentous, this full-length tribute to Dave doubles as a Real Hip-Hop repast as colorful and weightless as the cloud-faced deities striding across its cover.
