Wednesday, December 17, 2008

PropsOverHere Presents Best of 2008: Top 10 Albums

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I think this is the second straight year I've put Statik's album as my #10, but then again it sort of makes sense seeing as they are both kinda similar. If anything, I'd say that this years' album was worse because it didn't have AZ, Cormega, G. Rap, etc. It did have a great roster though and some decent production by Statik Selektah.

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I was excited for the eMC album on the strength of Masta Ace's work in recent years which includes two great albums and a couple classic songs. However, Ace only played a moderate role in what was a disappointing album for me. There were a couple good tracks like "Traffic" with Little brother, but this album was sort of boring in general.


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This was the first Heltah Skeltah album in a decade and I can't say that I was disappointed. There seemed to be a good stretch of songs kind of in the middle that were pretty low-budget musically but there was some really good shit on here. Even after a decade, Rock and Ruck are still one of, if not the, most entertaining duos on the mic.


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After the classic Soul Survivor was followed by the lackluster sequel, I wasn't sure what to expect from this album which didn't carry the title, but was the same idea as the Soul Survivor series. Overall, this was a quality album although many of the songs were pretty old and the production fell short of what I've come to expect from Pete Rock.

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Even though I'm not one of those guys who hates on mainstream rap and whatnot I've never been able to get into Ludacris's music. That was until this album came out, which was less Southern sounding than some of his other albums with beats by DJ Premier and 9th Wonder among others. Ludacris isn't a mind blowing lyricist but he is a funny and talented rapper, and I think with the right beats and concepts that he could make even better albums than this.

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Black Milk has come a long way since his first couple albums, both in regards to his beats and rhymes. I really wasn't sold on him as a producer until this year, when he dropped this and did the beat for GZA's "7 Pounds" plus probably some other stuff. Also, I never took him to be much of a rapper until this dropped and he went toe to toe with Royce da 5'9" and a bunch of other veteran rappers. This album had two of the years best tracks but was pretty inconsistent, with only 4-5 legitimately good songs which is why I could only give it 3.5 props.

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I gotta admit, I thought this was gonna suck ass. I mean Q-Tip kind of lost me when he tried to become a sex symbol and made that lousy Amplified album, and when I heard he was making another album at age 40 something I thought it would be terrible. Luckily, I was wrong. Tip's production wouldn't have sounded out of place on one of those Dilla helmed Tribe albums from the mid-90's, which in 2008 is a very good thing. Plus, his raps are still on some trippy, abstract shit. My only knock on this album is that it sometimes borders on gay and alternative when he ventures away from the boom bap sounding stuff.

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Although there were some questionable moments on this album, there is too much to like to drop it much further down. Game isn't the greatest rapper but he is generally very good at picking beats for his albums. Even without Dr. Dre, his albums have very solid production, including this one. All three singles off of this have genuinely good beats which is hard to find in mainstream releases, let alone mainstream rap of this ilk (not the Kanye or Lupe brand). You've got to like Nas, Raekwon, Luda,  Common, and Ice Cube guest rapping, too.

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Termanology has some weaknesses as a rapper but its easy to overlook them when he's cosigned by some of the games best producers. The production credits for this reads like an all time best producers list with beats from Premo, Alchemist, Pete Rock, Easy Mo Bee, Havoc, and Nottz. Replace Term with a better rapper and you'd have a classic, but you won't see me complaining. 

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Before this album, I knew Jake One as the guy who did some of the best tracks on De La Soul's "The Grind Date" plus some G-Unit stuff. Point is, I knew the guy could make beats, but I was pretty blown away by his work on this his first album. Like most good producer-albums, this had an impressive roster of MCs including M.O.P., Freeway, Young Buck, Posdnous, Prodigy, MF Doom, and many more. While some of his beats are sort of lacking in rhythm (I'm not sure how else to say this, maybe he just straight loops stuff too much), they all have a raw, dirty quality which gives him sort of a signature sound. His work with drums and samples throughout the album is excellent and he is even able to craft some of these beats without samples which is perhaps even more impressive.  Lyrically, this album has a lot to offer as well. I already told you about "Glow" with Royce and Ezhi, but I was also impressed with Freeway's rapping on this. Watch out for Free and Jake One in the future for sure. Between the authentic production and emceeing to complement it, no other 2008 album was this good.





Tuesday, December 16, 2008

PropsOverHere Presents Best of 2008: Top 25 Songs

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2008 was just aight in terms of hip hop but, like every year, it had its moments. Here are the 25 best moments according to me, so probably to you as well.

25.  Reks- Say Goodnight

Reks' "Grey Hairs" got a little love from the backpacker, purist types but was sort of bland. Don't get me wrong, it wasn't a bad album at all, but most of the beats were just ok and Reks doesn't offer anything special lyrically. This track, produced by DJ Premier, was the real standout to me.





24. Kidz in the Hall- Drivin' Down the Block

This borders between pure genius and something the Cool Kids would do for which reason I could only put this at #24. I mean an 808 beat with the chopped and screwed chorus in 2008 is normally a disaster but the ode to Masta Ace is clever  and the the Outkast "ATLiens" part was entertaining as well. Great music video too.



23. Busta Rhymes- Arab Money

This is hardly up to standards musically (did you know Ron Browz produced "Ether"?), but otherwise this is just great. The concept and the auto-tuned Arabic chorus are pretty brilliant, but the dance is one of the greatest things to happen to hip hop since ever. 



22. Prodigy- Veterans Memorial, Pt.2

I always liked these kind of Alchemist beats better than the synth-led ones he always does. Everyone knows Prodigy's lyrics are retarded nowadays, but I still enjoy a good amount of his music. The part about robbing a jewelry store with his dad was at least entertaining if not lyrically special.

21. Kidz in the Hall (Feat. Sean Price & Buckshot)- The Pledge

The Kidz take a break from their hipster (or whatever) style and do a more traditional cut with their new labelmates at Duck Down, Buckshot and Sean P. This is my favorite beat and overall song on the album, which I wasn't too big on.

20. Big Boi (Feat. Andre 3000 & Raekwon)- Royal Flush

This was the lead single for a new Big Boi album which I haven't heard much about since. This was dope to me because its like Outkast circa '95 or something but I'm not sure who told Big Boi it was a good idea to have a lead single with Raekwon on it.

19. Fat Joe- That White

This Premo beat took a few listens to warm up to, but overall this is a pretty good song. I acknowledge that Fat Joe is horrible but its hard to knock the D.I.T.C. shouts and rapping about crack.

18. Q-Tip- Believe

The smoothest cut on an album full of them. This is basically the beat for Large Professor's "For My People" with some Q-Tip-isms and D'Angelo, but jacking old, unreleased beats= a pretty good idea. Like Lupe Fiasco's "London, Tokyo" was a shelved World Renown song from the early '90's.

17. Pete Rock (Feat. Jim Jones & Max B.)- We Roll

Speaking of smooth cuts, this is butter. Jim Jones and Max B. are shitty but if that keeps you from enjoying this then I hate you.

16. Nas (Feat. Joell Ortiz)- Ghetto (Remix)

I made a post a while back about how good Joell's verse was on this. I'm not sure if it takes verse of the year anymore, but it kind of gave me a new perspective of him as an artist. Nas' verse is nice too, and the Green Lantern beat (who knew) is quality. I like how he incorporates the Rakim song in there.

15. Saigon (Feat. Red 5ive)- Believe It

January 1 will mark yet another year without the Saigon album I was promised. I guess if they just leak out one Saigon/Just Blaze track every year for like the next 15 years it wouldn't be so bad. Red 5ive is Just Blaze when he's using the autotune for heads who didnt already know.

14. Ludacris (Feat. Nas & Jay-Z)- I Do it for Hip Hop

I gotta admit I like the idea of this song more than the product itself, but its still good. Jay-Z's verse is beyond retarded though.

13. Termanology (Feat. Bun B)- How We Rock

Since "Watch How it Go Down" came out like 3 years ago and was on every last one of those Termanology mixtapes which preceded the album, I left it off and put this on here instead. This is far from Premo's best work but it still knocks. Bun B sounds surprisingly good over this beat too.



12. The Game (Feat. Lil Wayne)- My Life

This has to be Cool & Dre's best beat since "Hate it or Love it" right? I wasn't put off my Lil Wayne's autotune chorus, either. Not that I like Lil Wayne or the autotune, but I think it sounds pretty good, and at least he doesn't rap.



11. Jay-Z- Brooklyn We Go Hard

These are some of Jay-Z's best raps since The Blueprint 2. "I Jack, i rob, I sin", brilliant! It's too bad this is just for the movie soundtrack and not for Blueprint 3 since this is far superior to "Jockin' Jay-Z" though similar in ways.

10. Royce Da 5'9"- Shake This

Like Saigon and Just, that Royce and Premier album didn't come out this year, but at least we got one song. I like the "One Mic" dynamic on this where the strings come in and Royce gets all angry and loud.
9. Jay Electronica- Exhibit A

I wrote about how I thought Just Blaze's final cut of this was kinda gay but the song the way I downloaded it the first time is great. I've never understood the hype behind this guy until I heard this song which has got all kinds of random references and such.

8. The Roots (Feat. Mos Def & Styles P)- Rising Down

I wasn't a huge fan of that last Roots album but this track is downright filth. There's some good rapping on this too, even some by Mos Def.

7. Black Milk (Feat. Sean Price & Pharoahe Monch)- The Matrix

I guess a track with one of the best beat-makers in the game, two of the best rappers evar, and scratches by Premo should be #1 caliber but this is still nice. Pharoahe and Ruck both have memorable verses and Black Milk is able to hold his own which is impressive in its own right.

6. T.I. (Feat. Jay-Z, Kanye West, & Lil Wayne)- Swagga Like Us

This was another one that I think I like the idea more than the song but its still the most defining rap song of the year. As far as Kanye's new style of beats with the hard drums and vocal samples this is my favorite yet, and this will be the swagger anthem for years and years.

5. Bishop Lamont- Grow Up

I didn't feel that this ever got enough love (though I did hear it a few times on satellite radio). Who knows if Bishop will ever put anything out on Aftermath but this shows how good a Dre/Bishop project could be. This is also one of the very few rap songs with a clear and true message which I appreciate. Some of the lines on this are downright hilarious too. 

4. The Game (Feat. Common)- Angel

It took me a few listens to get used to this since its funky and busy for a Kanye beat but I couldn't get enough of this by the end of the summer. I also found it kind of funny how Common kicks the metaphorical rap about weed  then Game comes on and just does his usual name-dropping, hip hop appreciation raps.

3. Nas- Hero

I took a good deal of heat for disliking the untitled Nas album, but at least it had this one truly epic song. Nas's rhymes and Polow da Don's production make this just fuckin inspirational. 



2. Black Milk (Feat. Royce da 5'9")- Losing Out

Detroit's finest collab for this classic banger. This was kind of weird to me at first with the sped up vocal sample but the way Black and Royce compliment the beat with their verses is genius. Too quote someone from the always enlightening forums at ughh.com, this track is crackmuffins.

1. Jake One (Feat. Royce da 5'9" & Elzhi)- Glow

Speaking of Detroit, this track (along with "Motown 25", look it up) show where the real lyricists are at these days. First of all, Jake One comes with a banger with a great sample and bass line, but the highlight for me (which is unusual) is the rapping. both Royce and Elzhi just black out on this. The moment that sticks out to me are the first few bars of Elzhi's second verse "Create an illy scene/cause what I really mean/I make the whole city glow like the video from "Billie Jean"/Possess it/ I was destined to be fluorescent/ You less slick/I guess its just a finesse that you blessed with." It's not often in these days and times that rappers tear apart a track the way these two do here, which is why it is my choice for the best song of 2008.