Saturday, September 6, 2008

My 100th Post

Madden 09= More hip hop than Lil' Bow Wow.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Album Review: "L.A.X."- The Game

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While Game's legions of haters may not see past the negatives, I feel that they are outweighed by his positives, as he is perhaps the most talented and, dare I say, "realest" of all the young rappers with his degree of relavence and popularity. This his third album has featured some very good singles, but will it deliver overall? (This is the clean version by the way which I'm hoping won't screw up this review any.)

1. Intro (Feat. DMX)

DMX found time in between court dates to kick a prayer for the intro.

2. L.A.X. Files

The Game spends no time getting into the name dropping; this is even a bit much for a Game song. I guess this beat isn't totally awful, but the hook and the majority of Game's raps are. A poor start.

3. State Of Emergency (Feat. Ice Cube)

Much better. A gully Cali anthem, kind of like "Compton" from the last album, over a J.R. Rothem banger. Ice Cube only lends the chorus on this which is kind of a shame I guess.

4. Bulletproof Diaries (Feat. Raekwon)

This beat is all over the place but it's crazy. Raekwon's guest raps are pretty dissapointing but Game's last verse is just sick.

5. My Life (Feat. Lil' Wayne)

I'm sure you've all heard this plenty at this point. I, for one, really like it. I think Wayne is bearable on the hook, and while the verses are nothing special, the beat is Cool & Dre's best in some time.

6. Money

A synth-led ode to paper makin. If you're asking, yes it is as unoriginal as it sounds. It's also bad.

7. Cali Sunshine (Feat. Bilal)

This is actually a pretty good idea and I think this beat will grow on me. What is that a banjo?

8. Ya Heard (Feat. Ludacris)

I kind of wonder what Nottz was thinking when he made this beat. You kind of have to hear it, but its just a real mess. Ludacris' verse was actually the bright spot to me I found it pretty funny.

9. Hard Liquor (Interlude)

Game goes to a club playing that old track he did with Dre. Is this supposed to be funny?

10. House Of Pain

This is fuckin gangsta, the first DJ Toomp beat I've liked since "What You Know". Game kind of goes in on this track too. This album is really heavy on the California/Compton tracks which I guess is the point of it.

11. Gentleman's Affair (Feat. Ne-Yo)

The most questionable track yet. Ne-Yo sings the chrous about sex appeal and does a whole verse by himself. These are really not the kind of songs Game was meant to do.

12. Let Us Live (Feat. Chrisette Michelle)

This is the least obnoxious Storch beat I've heard but its just aight. I kind of like the last verse about his beefs and stuff but most of the lyrics on this are pretty bad. Too much singing on this track too.

13. Touchdown (Feat. Raheem DeVaughn)

I would say this is Game going Curtis on us but I guess this is classier than, for instance, "I Like The Way She Do It". I never thought I'd hear this much singing on a Game album.

14. Angel (Feat. Common)

You wouldn't know this was a Kanye track with what sounds like a Parliament sample or something. Game doing a "I Used To Love H.E.R." tribute thing on a track with Common=weak.

15. Never Can Say Goodbye (Feat. LaToya Williams)

The Game actually raps from the perspective of 2Pac, Biggie, and Eazy E. I guess this was the logical next step after referencing them in every other line. He kind of pulls off Biggie's flow which makes me wonder if he was going for that with each rapper.

16. Dope Boys (Feat. Travis Barker)

I've been playing this non stop since it leaked. Again, nothing great lyrically, but this is just a banger and the "Roc Boys" reference is pretty clever in my opinion.

17. Game's Pain (Feat. Keyshia Cole)

A tasteful and heartfelt tribute to hip hop. The last of the singles to appear on the album

18. Letter To The King (Feat. Nas)

A tribute to Martin Luther King Jr. over one of Hi-Tek's better beats in a while. I find it strange that Nas makes a track called "Louis Farrakhan" and now is spitting MLK tribute raps but maybe I'm looking too much into it.

19. Outro (Feat. DMX)

Another prayer thing.


Overall: The album of the year without question. This could have (and should have) been so much better if they would have just toned it down with the vocalists, but there is too much good stuff on here to overlook. Right now I'd have to say it's about as good as "Doctor's Advocate" though I think I'd need to hear the real, dirty version on a decent stereo first.

Best Tracks: ""Bulletproof Diaries", "House Of Pain", "Dope Boys", "My Life"

Album Review: "Pro Tools"- GZA

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The GZA has always been one of, if not the most lyrical of the Wu-Tang. Unfortunately, his flow and delivery, which was never exactly hype to begin with, just borders on borng nowadays, maybe best proven by that album with DJ Muggs on which he sounds half asleep the whole time. Overall, other than the unbelievably good Liquid Swords, I've never been a fan of solo work from the Genius but some of the stuff I've heard off of this has sounded promising. So will this be the next Wu Banga or another snoozefest?


1. Intromental

An instrumental intro (see what he did there) which I guess is the source of the sample for Common's "Hungry".


2. Pencil (Feat. Masta Killa & RZA)

This Mathetmatics beat kind of sounds like something RZA would do if he could still make beats. RZA kicks a super long verse on this which isn't all that bad but I can only bear that flow in small doses.


3. Alphabets

This flow wouldn't sound out of place on Liquid Swords and the verses are pretty good themselves. This beat by True Master (where has this guy been?) is pretty good but kind of monotonous after a while. The chorus is the alphabet in 5% language or some shit.


4. Groundbreaking (Feat. Justice Kareem)

I think Bronze Nazareth tends to get overrated by those Wu-affiliate stans who roam the internets but this is good stuff. He lets his son finish his lines in the second verse which was just an all around bad idea. GZA should have just written him something.


5. 7 Pounds

This is one of the best Black Milk beats I've ever heard, though I haven't checked the new Elzhi yet. These verses aren't as good as others on here but aren't terrible though I do wish that the GZA rhymed with a little bit more energy to match the beat.


6. 0% Finance

One of those GZA tracks where he throws in a million references to something like "Labels" and the one about animals. This time it was with car terms (manufacturers, parts etc.) and its pretty cool but this beat is the worst yet.


7. Short Race (Feat. Roc Marcy)

The use of Chinese music here is pretty questionable. I like the Roc Marcy guest verse, though after all these GZA verses he sounds pretty lightweight lyrically.


8. Interlude

A guy details his encounter of somebody with a Wu Tang W tattooed on his face.


9. Paper Plate

I didn't know the two had beef but GZA takes shots at 50 Cent for wearing minks and gators and selling less than Kanye and a bunch of other stuff. This beat is the first by RZA on this album and it is boring as expected.


10. Columbian Ties (Feat. True Master)

This beat isn't seeing the first one Bronze Nazareth did but its pretty solid. GZA kicks some extra grimey shit about wars and stuff.


11. Firehouse (Feat. Ka)

Ka, a scratchy voiced rapper who isn't very good handles all the rhyming on this. I'll take this as an interlude of sorts.


12. Path of Destruction

A song about a kid who became a criminal at a young age and was killed selling drugs later in life. At least something like that. Jay Waxx Garfield provides a good beat and GZA's storytelling is on point.


13. Cinema (Feat. Justice Kareem)

GZA raps about being in a haunted house or something over a sort of cheesy, theatrical sounding beat. He also raps in a whisper like he's trying not to wake someone in the next room which doesn't really add to the spooky effect it just makes it kind of more gay.

14. Intermision (Drive In Movie)

Some '80's R&B interrupted by the tune of one of those Kung Fu movies sampled in an earlier Wu-Tang record.


15. Life Is A Movie (Feat. RZA & Khan Acito from Outlines)

A surprisingly good RZA beat which actually recalls "Swordsmen" from Liquid Swords except worse, naturally. The only thing I can say I don't like about this is the chrous which sounds like its jacked from some '60's rock which I guess is what the RZA is into these days.

16. Elastic Audio (Bonus Live Performance)

This is from a show he did I guess but to be honest I'm not sure I'd care to hear this one in CD quality.

Overall:

I was really surprised by how good this was. The production was sound and the lyrics were very good which makes this one of the best albums of the year so far. However, the downfall of this album is that, and don't kill me for saying this, it's kind of boring. While GZA is a great MC, he is still dull as anything on the mic and aside from one or two bangers, these beats, while not bad, are fairly monotonous and repetetive.

Best Songs: "Pencil", "7 Pounds", "Life Is Like A Movie"

Monday, August 4, 2008

PropsOverHere Presents: The 15 Gulliest Rap Songs Of All Time

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After a few minutes of intense shuffling through my iTunes, I'm proud to present what, in my humble opinion, are fifteen of the gulliest peices of music ever created. Feel free to criticize my choices or if you're in the constructive mood, offer alternatives.



15. Big L- Lifestylez ov the Poor and Dangerous

Big L was probably one of the gulliest rappers ever at least in his earlier, D.I.T.C. days, but lacks that one specifically badass anthem. This is the closest thing to it, as it is in my estimation the gulliest song off of the album of the same title.



14. M.O.P.- Handle Your Bizness (DJ Premier Remix)

M.O.P. personifies rap gulliness, but I had to be fair and allow some other people on here. Every M.O.P. song (at least from that era) was on that crazy, violent jumpoff but this is just one of the grimiest beats they ever spit on, and Premier ever made.



13. Gravediggaz- Blood Brothers

The Gravediggaz were gully on a whole other level when they brought that scary "horrorcore" type shit. This was the best example of that.



12. Smoothe Da Huster & Trigger Da Gambler- Broken Language

I wasn't going to include this because its more notable for the way its structured (or however you'd put it) but those guys were fuckin gully and so is this classic D.R. Period beat.



11. Snoop Dogg (Feat. RBX, The Dogg Pound, & The D.O.C.)- Serial Killa

Classic, west coast gangsta rap over a mean Dre beat, just textbook gully.



10. Xzibit- Eyes May Shine

It's too bad he's made weird faces at hoopties for a living because at one time Xzibit was a gully rapper and a damn good one. His mindstate on that whole album was fuckin serious and this was the toughest track.



9. Beanie Sigel- What Your Life Like


Beans is known to be the muscle of the Roc-A-Fella fam (or what is left of it these days), but this song stands out far above the rest. The beat is just a movie score or something (a gully one nonetheless) but after listening to this its hard imagining anything scarier than being on this guys bad side.

What Your Life Like - Beanie Sigel

8. Big Pun, Inspectah Deck, & Prodigy- Tres Leches (Triboro Trilogy)

Three all-time gully rappers and the RZA on top of his game makes for a well-crafted, gully masterpeice. The use of the Rakim sample is also incredibly gully.



7. Raekwon- Incarcerated Scarfaces

The gulliest song off of one of the gulliest albums is just about all I have to say for this one.



6. M.O.P.- Ante Up


The hype beat and lyrics about mugging people make this the gulliest of M.O.P. songs.



5. Mobb Deep- G.O.D. Pt. III

This beat is easily one of the all-time gulliest and this was back when P and Havoc dropped those classic, hardcore rhymes. Listen to this song and tell me you don't want to punch someone in the face.



4. Notorious B.I.G. & Eminem- Dead Wrong

This beat is kinda gully but BIG's lyrics are just plain wrong. A lot of dead guys on this list, which makes sense I guess.



3. Dr. Dre & Snoop Dogg- Deep Cover


The first (right?) of many gully collabs between these two and the gulliest. That beat remains the gulliest of Dre's career after like 20 years.

Deep Cover - Dr. Dre/Snoop Doggy Dogg

2. Mobb Deep- Shook Ones Pt. II

By now everyone knows that Mobb Deep were really not all that tough, but musically and lyrically this is quintessentially gully.



1. N.W.A.- Straight Outta Compton

As a song, "Shook Ones" may be gullier than this, but just the fact that this song actually fucking scared people makes this the winner. That is also not to take away from the gully nature of the song, which had stood the test of time. A timeless, gully masterpeice. Enjoy!

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Wait...Take That Back?


I may have spoken too soon about that Game being album of the year after seeing another tracklist. I'm not the biggest fan of Termanology, but this production lineup is absurd.

1. Its Time (Produced by Easy Mo Bee)
2. Watch How It Go Down (Produced by DJ Premier)
3. Respect My Walk (Produced by Buckwild)
4. Hood Shit f/ Prodigy of Mobb Deep (Produced by The Alchemist)
5. Float (Produced by Nottz)
6. Please Don’t Go (Produced by Nottz)
7. How We Rock f/ Bun B of UGK (Produced by DJ Premier)
8. Drugs Crime & Gorillaz f/ Sheek Louch & Freeway (Produced by Nottz)
9. In The Streets f/Lil Fame of M.O.P. (produced by Hi-Tek)
10. So Amazing (Produced by DJ Premier)
11. Sorry I Lied (Produced by Large Professor)
12. We Killin Ourselves (Produced by Pete Rock)
13. The Chosen (Resurrecting The Game) (Produced by Havoc)

Whoa. Other than "Watch How It Go Down" those Premo tracks are nothing special, but it's hard not to be optimistic with those names involved.

Early Tracklisting for the Album of the Year



According to Nahright/ OnSmash:

01. Intro (Feat. DMX)
02. LAX Files (Produced By ???)
03. State of Emergency (Feat. Ice Cube) (Produced By Jonathan “J.R.” Rothem)
04. Bulletproof Diaries (Feat. Raekwon) (Produced By Jelly Roll)
05. My Life (Feat. Lil Wayne) (Produced By Cool & Dre)
06. Money (Produced By ???)
07. Cali Sunshine (Feat. Bilal) (Produced By Nottz)
08. Ya Heard (Feat. Ludacris) (Produced By Nottz)
09. Hard Liquor (Interlude)
10. House Of Pain (Produced By DJ Toomp)
11. Gentleman’s Affair (Feat. Ne-Yo) (Produced By Jonathan “J.R.” Rothem)
12. Let Us Live (Feat. Chrisette Michelle) (Produced By Scott Storch)
13. Touchdown (Feat. Raheem DaVaughn) (Produced By Nottz)
14. Angel (Feat. Common) (Produced By Kanye West)
15. Never Can Say Goodbye (Feat. Latoiya Williams) (Produced By ???)
16. Dope Boys (Feat. Travis Barker) (Produced By 1500 or Nothin’)
17. Game’s Pain (Feat. Keyshia Cole) (Produced By Knobody)
18. Letter to the King (Feat. Nas) (Produced By Hi-Tek)
19. Outro (Feat. DMX)

Update: I made the corrections based on another tracklisting which is floating out there now. This one has Nas on it so I assume it's official or at least more so than the first. I assume where it says (Produced By ???), ??? is either Just Blaze or Timbaland.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Nas is Officially the Biggest Tease in Rap




After last week's preachy and underwhelming release, I announced that I would never get excited over a Nas album again. And then this:

"I want to do an all-Dr. Dre album," he told MTV News. "A whole thing with Dre and a whole thing with Premier, and drop 'em on the same day. That's the real thing. All right, I said it. That's what I really wanna do.""I'm doing my
dream," he continued. "If you could, wouldn't you do it? What else would you do?
Every time I do something, it's, 'Oh, he's doing it because this and that.'
Since my first album, everybody has an explanation of why. What am I supposed to
be doing here? So I wanna drop the Dre album and the Premier album on the same
day. That's what I'm thinking."


So it looks like I have no choice to look foward to this, though I know I'll be let down when it's a double disc joint venture between Salaam Remi and Stargate featuring The Bravehearts.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Album Battlegrounds 2: Black Moon's "Enta Da Stage" vs. Smif-N-Wessun's "Dah Shinin'"

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The other day I was listening to Black Moon's classic debut album "Enta Da Stage" and thought about the debates I've seen (on the internets of course) over which Boot Camp Clik album is the best ever. When bumping it I thought it was crazy that anyone would pick another album, but today when I popped in "Dah Shinin,", I was reminded immediately by the first snare on "Timz N Hood Chek" why this topic is so debatable.

Both albums greatly benefit from the grimey basslines, hard hitting drums, and amazing samples provided by Da Beatminerz. While Buckshot's presence in Black Moon gives them a lyrical advantage, the tag team, "P.N.C." element is unique to Smif-N-Wessun.

So which one was better? Obviously I can't decide so I'm interested in what my highly opinionated readership has to say of the matter. I've provided a few tracks and then a poll in which you can make your preference known.

Black Moon "Buck 'Em Down"


Smif-N-Wessun "Shinin'"


Black Moon "I Gotcha Opin"


Smif-N Wessun "Stand Strong"


Black Moon "Who Got Da Props?"


Smif-N-Wessun "Bucktown"




Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Notable New Hip Hop

Not much is going on in terms of albums recently except that Nas, but over the past couple days some interesting stuff has leaked out.


First is this new Jadakiss track "Don't Start Nothin'". I don't know if this is a Roc-A-Fella single, but it would make sense seeing as its produced by Sean C. & LV who handled most of Jay's last album.


Download

This next song comes from the legendary Mad Scientist, Large Professor. This is "The Intro" of his upcoming solo Main Source. This would be his first real (not instrumental) album since 2001's "1st Class" which I still bump regularly.




Download

Lastly its my second favorite duo who will never put out an album, Bishop Lamont and Dr. Dre with "Grow Up". This is supposed to be the first single off The Reformation, but I doubt it.


Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Album Review: Nas- Untitled

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Nas is my favorite rapper easily. It is my stance that he has the most impressive catalogue in the history of rap between his solo joints, guest features, unreleased material, mixtape shit etc. However, his solo albums have been spotty pretty much since It Was Written, and I thought that his last album, the critically acclaimed Hip Hop Is Dead, was only mediocre. This album has generated some buzz because it was going to be called the N word but it wasn't until I heard "Hero" that I realized that this may be a good album and not just Nas' latest attempt to stay contreversial. Is it though?

1. Queens Get The Money

So this album is obviously going to be full of contreversial, racial statements and whatnot so I'm just hoping for some good beats and concepts not just slavery references and name drops of Civil Rights activists. I wonder if Jay Electronica would have put drums on this had he never met Erykah Badu.

2. You Can't Stop Us Now (Feat. Eban Thomas)

Salaam Remi is only one of many to use this sample, but its worse in this instance because The RZA flipped it just this year and in the same exact way. I guess this is Nas' theory of how "N words" have evolved through history. It's anyone's guess really, not that its all that important anyway.

3. Breathe

This is that smooth shit I love to hear Nas over. This sounds more like The Hitmen than the mid 90's Trackmasters but I'll take what I can get. There's really not much rapping on this track or the last one necessarily which is worth pointing out.

4. Make The World Go Round (Feat. Chris Brown & The Game)

This beat is better suited for Nas' wife then the man himself. Kind of like a Chris Brown track featuring Nas and The Game. Very wack.

5. Hero (Feat. Keri Hilson)

Just some great verses over an epic banger from Polow Da Don. One of the best tracks in years.

6. America

This is basically the story of Nas' career recently. This beat is so boring and ametuerish and the hook is so god damn annoying that the greatest verse evar could be spit over it and the outcome would still be wack.

7. Sly Fox

Rock inspired hip hop songs usually are skipped but the metal guitar kind of fits the revolutionary tone of the song. Not that the beat is anything special though. This one's about Fox, as in the news network and their political agenda.

8. Testify

This is honestly one of the most boring peices of music I've heard in some time.

9. N.I.G.G.E.R. (The Slave And The Master)

This reminds me alot of the song Toomp did for Jay-Z on American Gangster in that the beat is technically good, but there are no drums to make it bang and maybe the sample isn't all that good for rappin over.

10. Louis Farrakhan

Nas compares himself to Louis Farrakhan as far as I can tell. Not a standout by any means.

11. Fried Chicken

It's kind of sad that the best producer on a Nas album is Mark Ronson but this beat is pretty good. Nas and Busta rap about how much they love fried chicken but I guess the message is that black people are unhealthy. Or maybe they just really love fried chicken.

12. Project Roach

Nas rhymes from the perspective of a roach over a another (pretty good) beat with no drums what the hell is that about.

13. Y'all My Ni***s

This beat is more interesting than most of the others but it still sorta sucks.

14. We're Not Alone

A certified snoozefest

15. Black President

Of all the songs from that Green Lantern mixtape this is probably the one I would have least preferred to make the album. It's not a terrible track but the beat is mediocre and the indie rock white guy on the chorus is nearing the AutoTune in the annoying fad department.

Overall:

This was just a huge letdown. I'm sure Nas is aware of the "wack beats" criticism he gets, yet, aside from Polow and Toomp who I guess are "hot" right now, he continues to reach out to the worst producers for the worst beats. I've stopped hoping for Premier and Large Professor, but least his last album had Kanye West and Dr. Dre, even if not on top of their games. He even left that heater from DJ Khalil ("What It Is" or "Esco Let's Go") off the album for no good reason. This is the last time I am getting excited for a Nas album.

Best Tracks: "Hero", "Breathe", "Fried Chicken"