Friday, April 30, 2010

Public Enemy's It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back by Christopher R. Weingarten | Book Review

Public Enemy's
It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back
by Christopher R. Weingarten
(Continuum Books; Spring, 2010)


Ideal for readers who are suckers for palm-sized books (like me), the 33⅓ series is written for music addicts, by music addicts. The latest volume in this great series – 71st total, 5th amongst titles covering hip hop LPs – takes an all-encompassing look at Public Enemy’s second (and best) album, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back. Author Christopher R. Weingarten (Rolling Stone, Village Voice, Idolator, Spin …) weaves a web of history-rich anecdotes and music trivia as convoluted as the sample-heavy sonics of the album itself. With flair, Weingarten wraps up all of the “noise” into a thoroughly researched, enthrallingly informative read.

Hip hop in the mid-to-late ‘80s wasn’t the commercialized custerfluck it is today. Rap artists were battling for supremacy in an era when a DJ or music critic’s opinion was the gospel, the end-all be-all to critical acclaim or absolute ostracization. Even after dropping their debut album on the biggest rap label on the planet, Public Enemy still wasn’t turning heads like they’d expected. Critics panned them and DJs – most notably Mr. Magic, which Weingarten touches on – refused to play their records. It was at that point at which PE front man Chuck D, upon hearing Eric B. & Rakim’s “I Know You Got Soul”, knew he had to double up for the group’s sophomore effort – or “turn it up”, if you will.

Weingarten portrays the group’s creative efforts and direction, fused by Chuck D’s hard as nails steadfastness and the Shocklee brothers’ unique sonic structuring, accompanied of course by Flavor Flav’s spunk and the militant imagery of the S1Ws and Professor Griff. In describing the Bomb Squad’s chaotic soundscapes – a stark contrast to Marley Marl’s fine-pointed production – Weingarten cleverly compares these varied approaches to the dissimilarities between Stax and Motown (as well as Def Jam co-founders Rick Rubin and Russell Simmons). With a keen appreciation for the samples that made this album what it was, the author delves deep into the life and music of The Godfather – the late, great James Brown. Weingarten also covers oft-overlooked narratives of Bootsy Collins as a JB, Bobby Byrd as the original hype man, and Clyde Stubblefield, responsible for arguably the most sampled break of all time – “Funky Drummer”.

Providing a great history lesson that branches out into the realms of funk and soul as much as it does to rap, Weingarten offers a commendable balance of both research and unique insight. For instance, he compares the bizarre occurrence of organ transplant recipients adopting the traits of their donors(!) to the art of sampling and the resurrection of old sounds – reanimating the past, taking on a new life. Similarly intriguing, the author dissects Chuck D’s infamous line “bass, how low can you go” and its lyrical significance, being re-flipped nine tracks later on Nation’s “Night of the Living Baseheads”: Turning “bass” to “base”, and giving “how low can you go” a whole new meaning.

Much like the untold number of samples fit tightly into It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, Weingarten’s contribution to the 33⅓ series amasses a great wealth of musical history into an item you can fit in your pocket. Articulately and efficiently capturing the frenzied history (and pre-history) of Public Enemy’s second LP into a mini-anthology of sorts, Christopher R. Weingarten has given us a reason once more to believe the hype about one of rap’s greatest and most influential albums.



Wednesday, April 28, 2010

MF Borat - The Mask and the Moustache


I liiiiiiiiiiiiiike:
In 2006, during a stint out west to promote his then new movie, Sacha Cohen, (aka Borat) met Daniel Dumile, better known as Zev Love X, or MF DOOM. Their blazing freestyle ciphers and mutual love of Purple Kush led to an impromptu recording of Doom’s ‘My Favorite Ladies’ verses (see Herbalisers’ Something Wicked…album) over a beat Borat had made back in ’05 with Kulki Boolchek, a Khazak producer. Later that year Doom ventured east, and recorded three more gems with Cohen at the castle of Rudolf II in Prague, renowned for its stone acoustics. DigDug bought the master off a based-out gypsy in East Oakland and the rest is history! **Please FREELY DOWNLOAD THESE GEMS**, as they have been labeled ‘Degenerate Music’ by the Putin administration and the whole album is banned in the greater East. Censorship will never extinguish true heat!

The Best of Lakers/Thunder Game 5 - In .GIF Form!


Sorry, I just had to scoop this one up from YouTube. Here's the context: On a fast-break play, Ron Artest -- who damn-near puts a Latrell Sprewell-style stranglehold on OKC's Thabo Sefolosha* -- dishes to Bynum, who effectively throws it down. Maintaining his "get out of my house" game face, Bynum gets congratulated by Pau Gasol in the form of a bump on the shoulder. For a moment there, Bynum doesn't know why he's being pushed aside. As soon as he notices that it's Pau, his teammate, he bursts out laughing. Jack Nicholson heartily approves. Lakers win. Haters, sit down.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Western Conference Round 1: Lakers vs. Thunder, Game 5 Recap

I invite you and your [Thunder] to try/
To feel the wrath of the unruly awakening of a sleeping giant/
Very defiant, once I give you the pressure and then I apply it/
And then your breathing is stopped and totally quiet/

- Busta Rhymes; "What's Happenin'" (w/Method Man)
I'm writing this at 9:45 P.M. The Lakers haven't won yet. But the 3rd quarter is over and we're up by 28. So yeah, I'm calling it. I even updated the sidebar with the 3/16 .gif file. The Jell-O's been jiggling for a while now. Let's just end this series already.

The Lakers came into this game with the mentality they've needed all along. Defense, participation and the total execution of each player's talent and versatility, the Lakers are simply running the gamut on the Thunder. I don't even know what else to say ('cause I'm still watching the game). Even though the game ain't over yet, I'm still calling this post a recap. The refrigerator is closed for the night.

Eminem Is "Despicable"


Seems like Eminem's back to doing what he does best - kicking ass in the morning and taking names in the evening.

Download: Eminem - Despicable

Norman Finkelstein Keeps It One Hunnid



[via Bol, the philo-Semite (ha!)]

Monday, April 26, 2010

Killa Sha - Ackowledge the Vet (Mixed by J-Love)


It's been a while since I've heard a new J-Love mixtape. His drops are a bit excessive for my taste, but he gets props in my book for always keeping it 100% New Yitty gritty. For this go-round, he serves up a solid playlist of cuts by the late, great QB vet Killa Sha. Head your ass on over to Robbie's home for some history lessons on the god and enjoy the music:
01 Acknowledge the Vet (Intro)
02 Never Gonna Stop Me
03 300 (Feat. J-Love & Meyhem Lauren)
04 Black Rain
05 A Tune of Life
06 There's A Thing Called Love
07 Interlude
08 Fed Up (Feat. J-Love & Meyhem Lauren)
09 Macia Livin (Feat. Large Professor)
10 Three's Company
11 Clash of the Titans
12 Black Dracula
13 Come On
14 Night Runz
15 Fully Equipped
16 Iron Hand
17 Unbroken
18 The Captain (Feat. Tragedy Khadafi)
19 Foul & Fold (Feat. Foul Monday)
20 World War 3 (Feat. Tragedy Khadafi, RZA & Camron)
21 Bust Yah Shit (Feat.J-Love & Meyhem Lauren)
22 Do My Thing
23 Stand & Cheer
24 School
25 Work the Plan (Feat. Havoc)
26 Analyze
27 Doe in Advance (Feat. J-Love, Action Bronson & Take it)


Sunday, April 25, 2010

Gang Starr - Royalty | Insomniacs Club



...and it's like that.

Jay-Z & Ritchcraft - The Big Band Blueprint


Jazz heads and Jigga fans unite! Nova Scotian beatmaker Ritchcraft has brought together the best of both worlds in this jazz-hop blends tape titled The Big Band Blueprint, taking Jay-Z acapellas and laying them over big band jazz-sampling beats. Hov has never sounded so hep. Check it:
Halifax producer Ritchcraft, has recently compiled a mixtape featuring the smooth jazz samples from the big band era accompanied by the infectious flow from Jay-Z’ rap classic The Blueprint. The mixtape is titled The Big Band Blueprint, is hosted by Nico Roth, 4 Plae, and Fresh Kut Ave and features 13 tracks, including revamped classics like H to the Izzo & Heart of the City.

Ritchcraft has been involved in the East Coast music scene for close to 5 years. His production credits include working with local MC’s Quake & Kayo, along with a handful of others. His skill lies in his ability to create genre-bending tracks that separate him from his competition. Ritchcraft’s musical influences range from funk to disco to classic rock, there isn’t a style of music that this producer does not borrow from.

The tape is a combination of production genius and hip-hop history, Jay-Z’ vocals float over the elegant sounds & swing of the early 1930’s. Ritchcraft does a great job of capturing the essence of the big band, all while adding his own flair. This tape is a must have for anyone who claims to be a Jay-Z fan.
<a href="http://ritchcraft.bandcamp.com/album/the-big-band-blueprint-2">Intro (Feat. Sylvia Usher) by Ritchcraft</a>

Ritchcraft @ Twitter

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Western Conference Round 1: Lakers vs. Thunder, Game 4 Recap



Old school, new school, need to learn though...

Word to Biggie Smalls, we just got burned like disco inferno. This game gave me flashbacks of the Finals in 2004 when the Pistons steamrolled the Lakers in what's been dubbed the "5 game sweep." They beat us so bad the series might as well be 2-3 right now. Before this series, the talking heads were saying the Thunder were too young to match up with the veteran Lakers. Now the question is can the old Lakers keep up with these young whippersnappers? They most certainly can, but only on one condition. Like Guru said: "Who's gonna take the weight?"

The Tape Deck '10: Volume #32


Friday, April 23, 2010

It's the Soliloquy of Chaos


Haters took this shit too far, son...

This morning I woke up, checked my e-mail, checked Google Reader, and noticed a long comment posted on my O Blogger, Where Art Thou? piece. The comment was written by none other than Nah Right's Eskay. It's no surprise that he took offense to my words. After all, my post did call him out on what I felt was some ol' bullshit. What did surprise me was that A) he actually read it, and B) he actually responded. The way he responded, in particular, led me to believe that I may have dropped the straw that broke the camel's back. (The irony in that line is that in my subsequent Twitter responses, I drew a parallel of sorts, dubbing Eskay the Jay-Z of rap blogs.)

A barrage of tweets were soon fired back and forth between myself and Eskay. Soon enough, the Super Friends rap blog elite stepped in to fan the flames and/or drop their two cents: Dart Adams, Bol, Miss Info, Rafi, Ian, Combat Jack, G, Noz, Robbie and Jay Smooth. The conclusion? More talk. Look, this isn't "beef", nor was it ever intended to be. There's a difference between hating and critiquing/criticizing. The funny thing about this shit is that it really just boiled down to someone taking offence to my use of the word "sack". Really. Take out that "suave palming" sentence from the O Blogger, Where Art Thou? write-up and it's all squeaky clean, no lines to be interpreted as offensive shots fired - or so I would hope.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Cypress Hill - Latin Lingo (Prince Paul Mix) | Insomniacs Club


Prior to Guru's passing and the subsequent Gang Starr binge I've been murdering my eardrums with, I'd been playing some new and old Cypress Hill. Their new album, Rise Up, is pretty damn good in case you haven't heard it yet (check out TDD #17 and #27 for some preview tracks). The track above is a remix to one of my favorite cuts off their self-titled 1991 debut album. You can check out this Prince Paul mix, as well as others by Q-Tip, Diamond D and more on Unreleased & Revamped, released in '96. Dig it... and turn it up!!

Western Conference Round 1: Lakers vs. Thunder, Game 3 Recap


The Lakers started the game with a 10-0 bulldozer. They were running on all cylinders, playing some of the cleanest ball I've seen in a long, long time. And then, like they always do, they let a great lead just blow away in the mind. One of TNT's slogans is "we know drama." Nuh-uh. Nobody knows drama like the Lakers and the city they claim. Like a movie, we show our force from the start, show signs of weakness to give our enemies an incentive to pounce in the last twenty minutes of the flick (I mean game), only to be saved by a last-minute hallelujah play by King Kobe (sit down, James). We're Hollywood - we know drama. Tonight coulda been one of those nights. But it wasn't.

I Don't Think That Story Is Genuine...



LOL

O Blogger, Where Art Thou?


I would’ve gone in on this issue a couple of days ago, but Guru’s passing put things into perspective for the time being. Byron Crawford had a great post on it, but lemme recap if you’ve been out of the loop:

Shyne called up Elliott Wilson. Wilson apparently dismissed the call and penned a write-up on Shyne. Shyne called up Eskay. Eskay heard him out and penned a write-up on Shyne. Both of these big time blog owners discussed Shyne’s post-prison music and his stubborn refusal to switch up his flow (for the better). Wilson’s article – which I enjoyed – is filled with skepticism and questions unanswered. But Eskay’s article is even more telling, not just for the content itself but rather the words that can be read in between the lines.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Gang Starr - For the DJs: Clean Cuts Only



Original Artwork Here

Anybody who calls themselves a hip hop DJ must be spinning some Gang Starr right now and in the next few days (and weeks, months, years). To help out, I've compiled my personal collection of clean edit tracks by the legendary duo: 40 in total. Many of these songs are hit singles, some are b-sides, all of them are must-haves. The great thing about clean, Premo-produced tracks is that many of the scratched edits are entertaining in and of themselves. You'll hear what I'm saying soon enough. All songs are sorted by the year they were first released (either as singles or album cuts). Bottom line: I hope these tracks will be played to carry on the tradition and memory of Keith Elam, a.k.a. Guru. Make me proud, DJs. Turn it up!!

#FuckSolar a.k.a. Take It Personal


What do Guru and the French existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre have in common? In the twilight of Jean-Paul Sartre’s life, a man named Benny LĂ©vy bonded with the philosopher, serving as his personal secretary. During this period and up until his death, Sartre was said to have abandoned his existentialist, atheistic, Marxist utopian outlooks on life, instead opting towards a newfound embrace of messianic Judaism. LĂ©vy was accused by French left-wing intellectuals for having exploited Sartre, manipulating him in his old age, debilitated by a deteriorated physical condition and blindness. Shortly before his death, it is said that Sartre confirmed his change of heart, but skepticism on the matter is still alive and well to this very day.

Enter 2010 and we’ve got a similar situation, far less debatable if you ask me. The man who calls himself a “Super Producer”, Solar, has been all but unanimously given the boot by the hip hop community. For quite some time I’d been highly confident that Solar was inauthentic, and my doubts were laid to rest on March 4th when a couple of tweets brought some clarity to the picture. Look at the two tweets below and ask yourself this question: “Do they look like they were typed by the same person?”
My Brother, sister and Niece visited me last week. My brother stayed with @Solar_7Grand for 3 days. Truth!!

The hospital records will show that Guru's Brother, sister and Niece visited him last week , Fact !!
Notice how the first letters of “Brother” and “Niece” are capitalized. That’s an odd coincidence, right? How about the fact that the last word of each tweet is followed by not one, but two exclamation points. These messages were tweeted out on two different accounts: Guru’s and Solar’s, respectively. They were tweeted on the same day, sixteen minutes apart from each other. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out what’s going on here, something we’d been aware of all along: Solar is not to be trusted. Anyone who doubts that Solar wrote Guru’s alleged deathbed letter is a fool.

There are so many reasons why I’d like to see this bitch-made, poor excuse for a human being’s head on a pike. Here are a few:

Solar cut off Guru’s own family throughout his illness. Solar used the excuse of a deathbed letter to drive the “rift” between Guru and DJ Premier even further. Solar wants to keep Guru from us, even after his passing.

Fuck that. As Mister Cee said during his great tribute mix, “Guru belongs to hip hop and hip hop belongs to Guru.” Rest in Peace, Guru. Long Live Gang Starr. Hold your head, Premo. We’ll see you when we see you, Solar. You’ll get yours.

I never thought that you would crab me/
Undermine me, and backstab me/
But I can see clearly now the rain is gone/
The pain is gone but what you did was still wrong/
There was a few times I needed your support/
But you tried to play me like an indoor sport/
Like racquetball, tennis, fool, whatever/
All I know is that you attempted to be clever/
Nevertheless, cleverness can't impress/
'Cause now you've been exposed like a person undressed/
And I can see through you, 'cause I'm the Guru/
And what you gonna do when I start to step to you/
'Cause when I pay you back I'll be hurting you/
And this ain't no threat, so take it personal/

- Gang Starr; "Take It Personal" (Daily Operation, 1992)

Joell Ortiz - Yaowa Mixtape Trailer | Video


"Joell Ortiz explains Yaowa to the uninformed."

Ciara - Ride (feat. Ludacris) | Music Video


She keeps saying "ride the beat", but all I'm thinking is "ride the meat." Sorry.

Oh yeah, (Lil) Bow Wow lost.

Related: Ciara: HQ Pictures from the Nude Vibe Magazine Shoot :D

Money-B's Goin Way Back Show #73 with Kool Moe Dee


Money-B's Podcast:

Money-B offers a crucial hip hop history lesson with guest Kool Moe Dee. The legends speaks on Spoonie G being an original member of The Treacherous Three and his infamous battle with Busy Bee. Check it:

The Tape Deck '10: Volume #31


Tuesday, April 20, 2010

They Reminisce Over You... Keith Elam, a.k.a. Guru



Gang Starr: The Candles & Crates Re-Up


Gang Starr - 2 Deep (UK Promo CDM) (1992)
Gang Starr - Brooklyn (VLS) (1999)
Gang Starr - Bust a Move Boy b/w To Be a Champion and Believe Dat (VLS) (1987)
Gang Starr - Capture (Militia Part 3) (CDS) (2003)
Gang Starr - Code of the Streets (CDS) (1994)
Gang Starr - DJ Promo VLS (2003)
Gang Starr - Jazz Thing (VLS) (1990)
Gang Starr - Ladies and Gentlemen (Promo Single) (2001)
Gang Starr - Live (2003)
Gang Starr - Live at Splash (2003)
Gang Starr - Live in Amsterdam (1998)
Gang Starr - Live in Warsaw (Bootleg) (2003)
Gang Starr - Manifest (Promo CDM) (1989)
Gang Starr - Nice Girl Wrong Place (VLS) (2003)
Gang Starr - Playtawin (Promo VLS) (2003)
Gang Starr - Positivity (Ltd. Ed. VLS) (1989)
Gang Starr - Right Where You Stand (Promo CDS) (2003)
Gang Starr - Rite Where U Stand (CDM) (2003)
Gang Starr - Royalty (Promo CDS) (1998)
Gang Starr - Skills (Promo CDS) (2003)
Gang Starr - So What's Up (Bootleg VLS) (2000)
Gang Starr b/w Mobb Deep - Doe In Advance (Whitelabel VLS) (1997)
Gang Starr Foundation - Ahead of the Game (CD EP) (2005)
Gang Starr & M.O.P. - 1/2 and 1/2 (VLS) (1998)
Gang Starr & Jadakiss - Right Where You Stand (VLS) (2003)


Gang Starr - 2 Deep (CDS) (1992)
Gang Starr - Capture (Vinyl) (2003)
Gang Starr - Code to the Streets (EP) (Promo VLS) (1994)
Gang Starr - Ex Girl to Next Girl (CDS) (2001)
Gang Starr - Gotta Get Over b/w Flip the Script (VLS) (1992)
Gang Starr - Here's the Proof (12 Inch) (1989)
Gang Starr - Just to Get a Rep (VLS) (1991)
Gang Starr - Lovesick (7 Inch) (1991)
Gang Starr - Riot Akt (Vinyl) (2003)
Gang Starr - Sabotage (Vinyl) (2003)
Gang Starr - Skills (VLS) (2002)
Gang Starr - Step In the Arena b/w Check the Technique (VLS) (1991)
Gang Starr - Soul Single (2000)
Gang Starr - Take It Personal (VLS) (1992)
Gang Starr - The Militia (CDS) (1998)
Gang Starr - The Militia (Promo VLS) (1999)
Gang Starr - The Ownerz (12 Inch) (2003)
Gang Starr - The Revolutionist (Vinyl Bootleg) (2000)
Gang Starr - The Revolutionist (VLS) (2000)
Gang Starr - Tongue of Terror (VLS) (1999)
Gang Starr - Words I Manifest (VLS) (1999)
Gang Starr - Work b/w Royalty (Promo VLS) (1998)
Gang Starr - Work (Whitelabel VLS) (2003)
Gang Starr - You Know My Steez (Promo CDS) (1997)
Gang Starr, B.I.G & 2Pac - Ownerz (Remix) (Promo CDS) (2003)


Gang Starr - Rarities Volume A (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume B (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume C (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume D (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume E (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume F (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume G (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume H (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume I (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume J (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume K (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume L (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume M (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume N (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume O (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume P (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume Q (2003)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume R (2004)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume S (2004)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume T (2004)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume U (2004)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume V (2004)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume W (2004)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume X (2004)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume Y (2005)
Gang Starr - Rarities Volume Z (2005)



Take Two and Pass

The Tape Deck '10: Volume #30


Monday, April 19, 2010

The Tape Deck '10: Volume #29


I Blog My Hate


Hate that I’ve got to do this, but I must. Hate how crude it’ll seem, but so be it. Hate that YN types like robot Patton Oswalt, but ROFL!

Elliott Wilson just published a widely-read post titled “I Hate My Job”. (You and me both, big homie!) He offers an empathetic and endearing outlook on Moses Michael Leviy (a.k.a. Shyne), post-prison. Lots of people – myself included – have guffawed (to put it lightly) at Shyne’s musical output in recent weeks. As I noted on Twitter, “Shyne sounds like Rick Ross after he's been shot with tranquilizer darts for being mistaken for a rhinoceros.” It’s that bad.

Ke$ha, Alex Jones and the Laws of Robotics


At first glance, this post looks like nothing more than a surefire way to bait Byron Crawford into sharing it on Google Reader. But it’s more than that. For reals.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Send In the Clowns: Miracles and Magical Mysteries


Say what you will about Saturday Night Live being stale, but I think the show's been getting better and better - and tonight was no exception. This week they let loose on some edgy topics like contraceptive sponges and the shake weight - but their latest parody of Insane Clown Posse took the cake. ICP's recently released music video for the song "Miracles" has been making its rounds on the internets, leaving viewers in awe of its blatantly unapologetic futnuckery.

Friday, April 16, 2010

What Up Gangsta: Pondering (The) Game's Image



Let's make it big, Pharrell... [||]

Four years ago, The Game kicked these bars on "One Night", off The Doctor's Advocate: "Red bandana in my back pocket, I'm for real/ This ain't a pastel color khaki suit, and I ain't Pharrell/". Putting aside the obvious Jigga-baiting (who else rhymes Pharrell with "for real"?), Game's message was as direct as can be: I don't rock Bape hoodies and rainbow colored sneakers, I wear Dickies and Chuck Taylors and rap about blunts, bitches and drivebys. Game was reasserting his position as the face of the west coast's seemingly revamped gangsta rap scene. And I for one applauded the effort.

Shyheim - My White Roommate



Double You Tee Eff!?!?

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

B.o.B: In The Tape Deck


Since I started compiling my frequently-released Tape Decks, I realized that somewhere down the road, all of this music would take up a huge amount of space. But with memory and hard drives getting cheaper by the day, I can't complain too much. One of the benefits of spending so much hard drive space in archiving all of this music is that at any given moment I can hit CTRL+F, enter an emcee's name and, just like that, I've got a playlist of all of their significant (read: Tape Deck-worthy) tracks dating back to '08. One of those artists is the recently-mentioned emcee out of Atlanta: B.o.B. This ATLien has been featured on The Tape Deck over 30 times, first appearing on The Tape Deck '08 (our first year): Volume #5. Since that time, he was added to XXL's Hip Hop Class of '09, dropped a bunch of successful mixtapes, and is now prepping the April 27 release of his debut album, B.o.B Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray.

In case you still haven't caught up to B.o.B, I figured that I could help out: by compiling every Tape Deck track dating back to that first appearance on Volume #5, zipped up and ready to go ("like we always do about this time"). Think of it as a primer or late introduction to B.o.B's music. I plan on doing this for other fresh faces like Freddie Gibbs, Jay Rock and more... In the mean time, enjoy this jawn and make sure to turn it up!!






Special Ed - Neva Go Back | Insomniacs Club



Same Isaac Hayes sample as "Can I Live".

Monday, April 12, 2010

B.o.B Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray | First Peek



B.o.B. Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray
by
B.o.B


Release Date: April 27, 2010
Label: Grand Hustle/Atlantic