Thursday, September 30, 2010

Quarterly Rap Up: Q3 2010


Like we always do about this time...

25. Black Milk - Deadly Medley (feat. Royce Da 5'9 & eLZhi)

The first single from Black Milk's Album of the Year finds three of Detroit's finest playing three card molly over a hypnotic banger. The trio's flows mesh well together, leading me to imagine a scenario in which Royce ditches the Slaughterhouse ship and keeps it local with his fellow Motown emcees.

24. Mark Ronson - Lose It (In the End) (feat. Ghostface Killah)

Since the moment when Ghostface erroneously shouted out "Mark Bronson" on "Ooh Wee", I figured we'd witness an interesting rapport continue to form between these two. Together, Ghost and Ronson have released some soulful and enjoyable cuts, and "Lost It (In the End)" is no exception. It's a bit of a stretch for a hip hop track, but Mr. Starks, chameleon of this rap shit, pulls it off effectively.

23. Kanye West - Power (Remix) (feat. Jay-Z & Swizz Beatz)

Remember when I suggested that Just Blaze should bring back "The Power" by Snap!? Well, it seems like Swizzy and Yeezy were paying attention... or not. In any regards, as much of a throwaway track as this remix is, I can't deny the greatness of a Jay-Z/Kanye collabo. Honestly, the portion of the song that stuck with me is Jay's lyrics which include: "To be continued.../ We on that Norman Mailer shit/..." That's a literary reference, alluding to Mailer's longest and arguably greatest novel, Harlot's Ghost.

22. Raekwon - Rockstars (feat. Inspectah Deck & GZA)

This is my favorite track from Rae's throwaway, er, I mean bonus joints from the Only Built 4 Cuban Linx...II re-release/gold edition. The beat is mellow and jazzy with gleaming instrumentation. The heft of this track though is the lyrical content, as is often the case with the Clan. Rae, Deck and the Genius provide three different narratives, interweaved by nothing at all. It's like a Simpsons Treehouse of Horror episode. Rae and GZA offer two cautionary tales (GZA's is my favorite) while the Rebel INS will surprise you with his effective double-speed flow.

21. Rick Ross - Free Mason (feat. Jay-Z & John Legend)

Not nearly as "controversial" as I'd expected it to be, "Free Mason" is hardly different from Ross' typical arsenal of rags to riches boasts and chants. It's one of the better ones though. Jay-Z provides a symbolism-fueled verse worth multiple listens and the overall atmosphere provided by The Inkredibles and John Legend's crooning is simply marvelous. Ross and Legend are two for two thus far.

20. Xzibit - Highest Form of Understanding (H.F.O.U.) (feat. Trick Trick)

Xzibit is an emcee that I've been rooting for for many years. I'm a fan. After dropping the ball in '08 (he previously maintained a habit of dropping an album every year ending with an even number since '96), the door's almost closing for him to serve up MMX in 2010. On "H.F.O.U." he sounds hungry and focused, waxing nostalgic with a forceful delivery. I'm hoping he can wrap that album up once and for all.

19. Bun B - Let 'Em Know

Premier and Bun B were bound to hit the booth one of these days. After all, they both hail from Houston, Texas and have both earned a reputation all across the map, heralded as rap veterans. It's regrettable that they had to collab under these conditions though. Pimp C passed away in 2007, as did Guru just a few months ago, leaving Bun B and Premier as the flag bearers for two of hip hop's best duos. Is a possible UGK/Gang Starr remaining members union in the stars? Tracks like "Let 'Em Know" are appropriately titled for us to keep wondering.

18. Joell Ortiz - Sing Like Bilal

Funk Flex originally premiered this banger, finding Joell going in on a Premo heat rock. It's absolute fire, on some late 90s quality shit. Joell continues to impress with his durable flow.

17. MED - Classic (feat. Talib Kweli)

Producer Karriem Riggins' soulful sound bed fits Medaphoar and Kweli's back pack bars like a glove. The guitar pluckings and ethereal vocal loops are hypnotizing.

16. Redman - Fly

This track's gotten its fair share of hate and dismissal, but #iFuxwitit heavy. When Reggie kicked some auto-tune on "City Lights" last year, I noticed some grunts and groans from critics. Personally, my problem with auto-tune has never been the sound itself. It's been the fact that I despise a talentless person using a vocoder to compensate for shitty vocals. That's not the case here as Redman is more than capable to spit any which way he so chooses, this time opting for an exuberant flow. The auto-tune suits him on this production and he handles it well. Most importantly, it doesn't sound forced. He holds his own. And boy does it knock ridiculously with a booming sound system.

15. Black Milk - Black & Brown (feat. Danny Brown)

Nearly every blogger I know of has vouched for Danny Brown in some shape, form or fashion. I'm still not sold. His lyrics are dope - especially on this track - but I'm not feeling his voice or unpolished flow. Maybe it'll grow on me. That said, this track is vicious and easily my favorite from Album of the Year.

14. Kool G. Rap - Sad

This song makes me happy. Word to Haylie Duff. Produced by Supa Dave, "Sad" is the first single from G. Rap's upcoming LP Riches Royalty Respect. Coming soon...

13. Big K.R.I.T. - Hometown Hero (Remix) (feat. Yelawolf)

Adele's "Hometown Glory" has been chopped up more than the French ruling class in the late 1700s, but Big K.R.I.T.'s rendition may be the nicest of them all. Originally released on his K.R.I.T. Wuz Here mixtape (which I slept on when it originally dropped), this version features "small town boy" Yelawolf, showing love to his home of Alabama.

12. Kanye West - So Appalled (feat. RZA, Jay-Z, Pusha T, Swizz Beatz & CyHi Da Prynce)

There are so many problems with this G.O.O.D. Friday release, I'll just name a few: 1) Swizz Beatz intro portion is poorly mixed, as you'll notice at around the 00:16 mark, 2) RZA's contribution was lackluster, 3) "ri-dick-a-liss" is re-taw-dead. But the sheer magnitude of the track itself supersedes any minor qualms. The beat is simultaneously gorgeous and haunting - powerful in spades. Unsurprisingly, Jay-Z towers above all.

11. DJ Muggs vs. Ill Bill - Chase Manhattan (feat. Raekwon)

Bill and Rae have proven great partners in the past. Back again, they spit mastermind heist bars on some "not fucking around crew" type steez, word to The Town (go see that shit). Providing a frenetic theme song-like beat, Muggs has gotta be the crew's reliable getaway driver.

10. Z-Ro - These Days

Tupac ranked pretty high in hip hop's unscientific "realness" scale. 'Face is up there too, and Z-Ro continues to prove that he isn't too far away either. "These Days" finds Z-Ro dropping gangsta rap scriptures from the pulpit. Fuck Eddie Long, nhjic.

9. Hell Razah - Cinematic

From Ant of Atmosphere to Proof to posthumous Biggie Smalls, add Hell Razah to the list of emcees who spit over this classic "Black Bach" sample by Lamont Dozier. The touching instrumental is the perfect backdrop for Hell Razah's intricate storytelling, which is peppered with a bevy of Blaxploitation film title references.

8. Paul Wall - Live It (feat. Yelawolf, Raekwon & Jay Electronica)

Though his album bricked harder than a mic to the grill (shots!), "Live It" was a surprisingly pleasant effort off Paul Wall's Heart of a Champion LP. The features list reads like a who's who of rap blog royalty, with each emcee providing a solid contribution. An ensemble cast that works well together, finally.

7. John Legend & The Roots - Our Generation (J.Period Remix) (feat. Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth)

Providing their own rendition of this Ernie Hines classic, John Legend and The Roots wisely enlisted Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth to revisit their 1992 joint from the duo's brilliant Mecca and Soul Brother LP. Man, I wish these brothers would cut the bullshit and head back into the 'udio once and for all.

6. Nas - Power, Paper & Pussy (a.k.a. Last Real Nigga Alive, Pt. 2)

With The Lost Tapes: Part 2 somewhere along the pipeline and tracks like these popping up every once in a blue moon, I continue to have hope in Nas, my favorite living emcee. I can listen to this track on repeat for a half hour, no problem - and admittedly, I have.

5. Lupe Fiasco - Go to Sleep

What's to come of Lupe Fiasco's eagerly anticipated upcoming album? Is it gonna be called Lasers or Food & Liquor 2 or something else? Will we get a fan-approved LP or Atlantic Records' faulty vision of a commercially viable product? I can only judge from what I hear, and with "Go to Sleep", I give Wasalu two thumbs way up. 1500 or Nothin's production is brilliant, but it's Lupe's lyrics that steal the show. With his use of double entendres, it's clear he graduated with flying colors from S. Carter Academy. Do the right thing, Atlantic!

4. Kanye West - Runaway (Noise Vocal Sample Edit) (feat. Pusha T)

Kanye West's singing skills may be a sacrilege to humanity, but he's arguably second to none when it comes to unique and honest artistry and production creativity. The moment you first heard those oscillating piano keys at the VMAs you knew you were witnessing a "moment", right? I don't approve of douchebags and assholes, but "Runaway" is alright with me. My skepticism barometer will be in full swing when 'Ye's new album drops, but that doesn't mean I'm not anxiously awaiting its arrival.

3. Freddie Gibbs - National Anthem (Fuck The World)

Gangsta Gibbs does it again! "National Anthem", the best song on the Str8 Killa EP, further solidifies Freddie Gibbs' 'Pac pedigree on the mic with his "fuck the world" attitude. Now, when's that LP dropping? Ha!

2. Bishop Lamont - Hollow Eyes (feat. Anjulie)

Label frustrations are a motherfucker. Bishop Lamont's seen it all, after having been dicked around by Aftermath Records for years with little to show for all his waiting (rumors indicate he's recorded approximately 700 songs during this time). On "Hollow Eyes", he unloads on the 'math and other facets of the industry with little regard. Bishop's reflective barbs hit home effectively alongside the company of Anjulie and her sultry lilts, combined with Soul Nana's sentimental backdrop. This is divine music (music, music...). The Shawshank Redemption/Angola 3 is coming soon.

1. Cee-Lo - Fuck You! (Smu Mix) (feat. 50 Cent & Joell Ortiz)

In all honesty, I've only included 50 and Joell's tacked-on vocals as an excuse for having this song fill up my #1 spot. "Fuck You" was gonna be here anyways, but I didn't want any of you complaining that the #1 hip hop song of quarter three isn't technically a hip hop song. So there's my excuse. Props to DJ Smu! I've easily played this song over seventy times already and it doesn't get old. The one thing I'm tired of, though, is people calling this a viral hit. Why? 'Cause most people first heard/saw it on YouTube? This ain't a J.J. Abrams film trailer. Good music is good music, and that's all. The Lady Killer can't come sooner enough if the whole record is packed with enjoyable ditties like this.

25 More:

26. 1982 - Goin Back (feat. Cassidy & Xzibit)
27. Slum Village - Where Do We Go from Here (feat. Little Brother)
28. Atmosphere - Freefallin'
29. J. Cole - Villematic
30. Dirty Money - Loving You No More (feat. Drake)
31. Justin Bieber - Baby (El-P Death Mix)
32. Capone-N-Noreaga - With Me (feat. Nas)
33. Kanye West - Lord Lord Lord (feat. Mos Def, Swizz Beatz, Raekwon & Charlie Wilson)
34. Sean Price - Let Me Tell You
35. Game - Street Riders (feat. Akon & Nas)
36. Chaundon - Y'all Don't Want It (feat. Carlitta Durand)
37. Apollo Brown - Balance (feat. Kenn Starr & John Robinson)
38. Game - Cold Blood (feat. Busta Rhymes & Dre)
39. Freddie Gibbs - Something New (feat. YP)
40. Kanye West - Monster (feat. Bon Iver, Jay-Z, Rick Ross & Nicki Minaj)
41. Big K.R.I.T. - If I Should Die
42. Cam'ron - Wanna Get
43. Trae - The Radio Won't Play This
44. Lil Cease - Outsiderz (feat. Sheek Louch, Styles P, Raekwon & Papoose)
45. Amanda Diva - Brand New
46. Ice Cube - Nothing Like L.A.
47. Gangrene (The Alchemist & Oh No) - Chain Swinging
48. Von Pea - The Yorker
49. Crooked I - Mass Appeal
50. J. Cole - Blow Up



The Tape Deck '10: The Best of Q3



Quarterly Rap Up: Q3 2010






Friday, September 24, 2010

Rap Round Table, Week Ending 9/24/2010


"Pelikan M200 Fountain Pen on Moleskine - My first real Bird!" by biffybeans

Music Analysis & Reporting:

Combat Jack Presents: True Stories Behind 25 Rap Classics by Combat Jack

Fat Beats: The End of a Hip-Hop Era by Corey Takahashi

The Last Call For Jay Electronica by John Gotty

The Source Rebooted: Is the Hip-Hop Bible’s Digital Strategy Worth Five Mics? by Sherri L. Smith

MC Shan Vs. Duke Ellington Werner von Wallenrod

The 5 Worst Sequels In Hip Hop by J-23

The 5 Best Sequels In Hip Hop by J-23

El P Goes Chin Chopping With Chin Chin by Jeff Weiss

Why won’t Wale dis Kid Cudi? by Byron Crawford

The Story Behind “Scenario” by Jaap van der Doelen

ATCQ Albums Ranked by Brendan P.

Low End Theory: How One Tribe Changed a Nation by Barbie Bardot

Midterm Grades: 2010 XXL Freshman Class by David D.

Translating Dipset by HL

Just when we needed them least by Byron Crawford

Straight Outta LoCash by Danj!

The Best and Worst Collaborative Rap Albums by Brendan P.

The Real Michael Jordan of the Rap Recordings… by Dallas Penn

How Kanye West’s Online Triumphs Have Eclipsed Kanye West by Nick Sylvester

Internets Celebrities – Somebody Say Chea! by Robbie

Murs Scores a Knockout by Joey

Feeling like a champion: Hip-hop's chemical romance with Ecstasy by Chris Lee

Flying Lotus releases 'Pattern + Grid World' EP Tuesday, streams two tracks by Jeff Weiss

What’s the Best Album You Forgot Existed? by Jesse Gissen

10 Cam’ron Tracks With Killa Soul by Jesse Gissen

Sipping Cups and Camping With Shlohmo by Jeff Weiss

Album Reviews:

Atmosphere - To All My Friends, Blood Makes the Blade Holy by Tom Breihan

Ski Beatz - 24 Hour Karate School by Max

DJ Muggs vs. Ill Bill - Kill Devil Hills by Paul Christiansen

John Legend & The Roots - Wake Up! by Todd Martens

Black Milk - Album of the Year by TC

Ice Cube - I Am the West by Mobb Deen

Young Buck - The Rehab by Raj

Flying Lotus - Pattern + Grid World EP by Larry Fitzmaurice

Das Racist - Sit Down, Man by Ian Cohen

Gucci Mane - The Appeal by Mobb Deen

J57 - Digital Society by Fred Castano

Bilal - Airtight's Revenge by Luke Gibson

Mavis Staples - You Are Not Alone by Stephen M. Deusner

Chromeo - Business Casual by Larry Fitzmaurice

The Black Angels - Phosphene Dream by Aaron Leitko

The Niceguys - The Show by Edwin Ortiz

Ciara - The Princess Is Here by Marc Hogan

Trey Songz - Passion, Pain & Pleasure by Amanda Bassa

AUTOMatic - Transistor by Nicholas Candiotto

Laetitia Sadier - The Trip by Brandon Bussolini

J. Tillman - Singing Ax by Jayson Greene

Blonde Redhead - Penny Sparkle by Arika Dean

Lazerbeak - Legend Recognize Legend by Ali Elabbady

Profiles & Interviews:

Big Daddy Kane: Rap Like No Equal by Paul Edwards

Question in the Form of An Answer: Danny Brown by Jeff Weiss

Detroit rapper Danny Brown on 'Hawaiian Snow,' potentially signing to G-Unit, and what it means to be a mutant by Jeff Weiss

B-Real: Pay It Forward by Alvin Aqua Blanco

Underground Report: Aloe Blacc & Exile by Andres Vasquez

Bilal on Making a Comeback by Jozen Cummings

Literature:

How "Howl" Changed the World by Fred Kaplan

Sports:

A Season on the Brink: The 2010-11 New York Knicks by Joey

Politics:

Socialism, masturbation, and Christine O'Donnell by William Saletan

Democrats Are Just Absolutely Awful at Everything by Joey

Sample Set #161



A bit of advice from A Tribe Called Quest: when stating your objective, let it out at the offset. Q-Tip did just that on "Excursions", the intro to their sophomore (and possibly greatest) LP The Low End Theory:
Back in the days when I was a teenager/
Before I had status and before I had a pager/
You could find the Abstract listening to hip hop/
My pops used to say it reminded him of bebop/
I said well daddy don't you know that things go in cycles/
A Tribe Called Quest certainly weren't the first artists to intertwine jazz with hip hop. Gil Scott-Heron and The Last Poets can be credited for being the fore/godfathers of this genial fusion of genres. But Tribe, along with Gang Starr and a few others, certainly elevated jazz rap to a level of high acclaim and mainstream appeal. In the looming presence - and dominance - of gangsta rap, albums like The Low End Theory led to the development of not just the "jazz rap" subgenre, but also the notion of "alternative hip hop" as an autonomous entity within the greater hip hop culture. Ironically, Q-Tip has stated that The Low End Theory was directly influenced by N.W.A.'s Straight Outta Compton, gangsta rap's notorious poster child - an album just about as diametrically opposed in every way possible to Tribe and jazz rap's perception and disposition. Adding to this paradox, Dr. Dre was greatly inspired by The Low End Theory. The result was his solo debut, 1992's The Chronic. You see? United we stand, divided we fall. Indeed, "things go in cycles."

Compiling this sample set was something of an "excursion" in and of itself, as I gathered a bunch of great (and often obscure) jazz and funk records by the likes of music legends and lesser known artists alike. The result is something you'd only expect to see/hear from Tribe (with Pete Rock being a possible exception; more on that later!). Thirty-seven tracks deep, this one's another keeper. In fact Ms. Nana thinks it may be my greatest yet, but you be the judge of that! As always... enjoy... and turn it up!!

Side note: I've had a Tumblr account for a few years now but have only actively been updating it for the past two months or so. If you're a fan of this blog, odds are you'll love my spot over there too. I call it Brilliant Corners and I like to think it lives up to the name. It's got some of my off-topic/non-hip hop interests as well as bonus HHIR content you won't find anywhere else. So yeah, this is my first formal invitation for you to check that out. For this sample set in particular, I've got a few posts you may enjoy:

"Buggin' Out" and The Low End Theory: A Mini-Review
Diggin’ in the Crates… The records that made The Low End Theory, slide show #1
Diggin’ in the Crates… The records that made The Low End Theory, slide show #2
The Songs That Didn't Make My Tribe Sample Set

One.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Rap Round Table, Week Ending 9/17/2010


Context is important.

Music Analysis & Reporting:

The Ghost of Jay Electronica by Jeff Weiss

Complex Presents: Hip-Hop’s 50 Greatest Album Covers by Noz

The Soulja Boy Syndrome by Justin Boland

Pac Marks #2: Hypothetical, Political, Lyrical (In That Order) by Noz

2Pac vs. BIG: The Story by realniggatumlbr(?)

The Odd Couple: Tupac and Tabitha Soren by Fresh

2Pac: Do people still give a shit? by Byron Crawford

Supporters > Fans - What Will Be My Legacy? The Grind! by Mike Bigga a.k.a. Killer Mike

Kanye West, media cyborg by Robin Sloan

Diggin' in the Digital Crates: Rage Against the Machine – RATM by Sach O

Danny Brown & Tony Yayo f/ Lil B - “Trap Ball” (G-Unit, 2010) by Noz

New York Hip-Hop Institution Fat Beats Closes by Alexandra Phanor-Faury

The Greatest Rapper Alive: Jay-Z vs. Eminem by Amos Barshad

Rap Legacy: “Hometown Glory” by David D.

Snap Judgment: Kanye West – “Runaway” by Black Barbie & Sketch the Journalist

Possible proof T.I. is not a snitch by Byron Crawford

It’s too late to ‘pologize by Byron Crawford

Free Zombie by Jeff Weiss

Are Albums Dead? Not In Hip-Hop by Zoe Chace

Grime / Dubstep by Martin Clark

Trina is the Most Consistent Female Rapper of All-Time by Anslem Samuel

They Wanna Talk to Samson: Rappers Shill for Their Favorite Medical Marijuana Dispensaries by Chris Martins

Fiona Apple Reportedly Preps New Record by Kevin O'Donnell

Album Reviews:

Black Milk - Album of the Year by Nate Patrin

Black Milk - Album of the Year by Patrick Masterson

Black Milk - Album of the Year by Edwin Ortiz

Black Milk - Album of the Year by Curt Busch

Rah Digga - Classic by A.L. Dre

Atmosphere - To All My Friends, Blood Makes The Blade Holy by J-23

MF DOOM - Expektoration Live by Nate Patrin

Cymarshall Law & The Beatnikz - Freedom Express Line by D.L. Chandler

Dorrough - Get Big by Kevin S. Gary

Bilal - Airtight’s Revenge by Francisco McCurry

Black Mountain - Wilderness Heart by Daniel Levin Becker

Dibia$e - Machines Hate Me by Justin Boland

Weezer - Hurley by Ian Cohen

Sufjan Stevens - All Delighted People EP by Brian Hodge

Collective Efforts - Freezing World by Ali Elabbady

Mavis Staples - You Are Not Alone by Jennifer Kelly

Sadistik & Kid Called Computer - The Art of Dying by Marcus Moore

Profiles & Interviews:

Kid Cudi: Mad Man On The Moon by Joe La Puma

Bizzy Bone: The Marrow by Adisa Banjoko

Black Thought, Making Another Masterpiece by Aliya Ewing

Kid Cudi: How He Made It in America by Sean Fennessey

TSS Presents Fifteen Minutes With Bilal by LC Weber

Krizz Kaliko: Running The Gamut by Michael Sheehan

Literature:

Howl's Echoes by John Tytell

Politics:

Gingrich and the closet Kenyan by Eugene Robinson

¿Viva la Revolución? How has Cuba's socialist economy weathered the recession? by Brian Palmer



Isn't It Ironic © Drake



...that anti-masturbation crusader Christine O'Donnell
undoubtedly compels conservative men to rub one out to her?

Gotta love those tea-baggers!

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Matador Records at 21: Hip Hop Highlights


In celebration of their 21st anniversary, Matador Records will be releasing a special box set, prepped to hit record stores (huh?) on September 28th. The six-CD set will feature remastered tracks from the label's catalog, as well as a full disc of unreleased live recordings. Why is this important? Well, for starters, Matador has been home to some of my favorite independent/alternative/[insert pseudo-sub-genre here] artists like Cat Power (a.k.a. wifey), Pavement, Belle & Sebastian, Interpol, and a handful of others. But little did you know, Matador has also released its fair share of hip hop LPs and singles as well. Matador at 21 features a tiny sampling from their rap catalog, but I thought I'd dig deeper into their crates on my rap nerd steez to reveal some overlooked gems. Here's what I found:

TeV95 - Crime Loops


As I told TeV95 via e-mail, he had me at Brittany Murphy (r.i.p.) on the cover. See? Really doe, this is an interesting little beat tape here. I'm particularly fond of track four 'cause it's colder than Chris Martin guitarin' © Lupe Fiasco. :D

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Nine Years Ago Today...



...these albums were released. Never forget.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Rap Round Table, Week Ending 9/10/2010


"write" by the trial

Music Analysis & Reporting:

A Feature About Nothing: The 1990s in Lists by Pitchfork Staff

Juggernaut, Wolverine, Rogue and Colossus by Danny Brown

Where Da Ladies At? by Dart Adams

The Passing of a Record Store by Hua Hsu

1520 Sedgwick Avenue, the 'birthplace of hip-hop,' saved by government loan by Jeff Weiss

The world’s saddest love triangle by Byron Crawford

Hip-Hop’s Medium for Choice Words by Jon Caramanica

Bloggerhouse presents Return Of The Shelved Albums: Sir Menelik “Cyclops 4000″, Kool G Rap “The Giancana Story” & Rah Digga “Everything Is A Story” by Dart Adams

3 Jewish Stereotypes in Rap That Are Played Out by Adam Fleischer

Music is the New Movie by Maurice Garland

Royalty by Danj!

O.C. Demos Restored and Released by Werner von Wallenrod

Hype > Lyrics by C-Dub

Producers – Why Are You Rapping? by Robbie

Kool G Rap's “Sad” Is Sirloin Hip Hop/Rap, Not Ground Chuck by Amir Said

Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Weed Carrying But Were Afraid To Ask by Robbie

Rap’s Worst Weed Carriers by Robbie

T.I. Needs a Weed Carrier by C-Dub

Why Albums Are Released On Tuesdays In The U.S. by Frannie Kelley

Album Reviews:

What’s New In Dart’s iPod #21 AKA The Labor Day Weekend Edition by Dart Adams

Roc Marciano - Marcberg by Jon Dempsey

Black Milk - Album of the Year by Jeff Weiss

Celph Titled & Buckwild - Nineteen Ninety Now by Robbie

Q-Unique - Between Heaven & Hell by Amanda Bassa

Bun B - Trill O.G. by Nicholas Candiotto

Rah Digga - Classic by Henry Adaso

KRS-One & True Master - Meta-Historical by Luke Gibson

Playboy Tre - The Last Call by Tom Breihan

Eternia & MoSS - At Last by Ryan J.

Miles Davis - Bitches Brew (Legacy Edition) by Mark Richardson

Jenny and Johnny - I'm Having Fun Now by Rebecca Raber

The Clientele - Minotaur by Jess Harvell

Magic Kids - Memphis by Arika Dean

Menomena - Mines by Jennifer Kelly

Lloyd Miller & The Heliocentrics – (ost) by Marcus Moore

Three Mile Pilot - The Inevitable Past Is The Future Forgotten by Arika Dean

!!! - Strange Weather, Isn’t It? by Brian Hodge

Profiles & Interviews:

Don Cornelius and the 'Soul Train' still grooving 40 years later by Jeff Weiss

Group Home: Up Against The Wall by Chris Thomas

Producer's Corner: Black Milk by William E. Ketchum III

Word to Shiny Suit Man: An Interview With Black EL & Durkin by Zach Cole

Lupe Fiasco Talks “Lasers” Delay, Japanese Cartoon, and “Food & Liquor II” by Insanul “Incilin” Ahmed

Politics:

Is Sean Penn really on cocaine? by Byron Crawford



Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Rabbi Po



No comment.

Happy new year, Shyne!

Monday, September 6, 2010

DJ Airius Presents: Nastradoormus 2012 - Hip Rock Is Dead



I'm not much of a Doors fan. Quite frankly, I think Jim Morrison is overrated. That may be a blasphemous statement coming from an Angeleno, but so be it. But I gotta give it up to DJ Airius for blending on through to the other genre, mashing the Doors with QB's poet laureate, Nasir Jones. Lemme just say this: it works. And it's good! Real good. Take it as it comes... and turn it up!!

Tracklisting + (Hotfile) Download Link Below:
1. DJ Airius - Hip Rock Is Dead (Intro) (1:45)
2. DJ Airius - Ain't Hard to Be Wild (3:39)
3. DJ Airius - New York River (4:57)
4. DJ Airius - Breaking Through Life (3:27)
5. DJ Airius - Doctor Backdoor (2:57)
6. DJ Airius - T-O-U-C-H-I-N-G (3:52)
7. DJ Airius - Rewind Feast (2:08)
8. DJ Airius - Crystal Love (5:08)
9. DJ Airius - Hang on to Ruling the World (5:32)
10. DJ Airius - End of Hip Rock (4:07)