Monday, August 22, 2011

Album Review: Game- "The R.E.D. Album"

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A few weeks back, I forecasted on this site that The R.E.D. Album was going to be garbage. In the meantime, I've heard a few songs off of the album that strongly indicate otherwise. Is this the album I anticipated, full of R&B hooks about sipping Patron, or the new Documentary?

1. Dr. Dre Intro

Dr. Dre introduces Game and re-traces his gang affiliated bloodlines.

2. The City (Feat. Kendrick Lamar)

A dramatic entrance full of singers and choirs and loud percussion bangs like something from "Lion King". Game, in his angriest voice, raps about being the king and everything else while Lamar does the hook and "freestyles" after the beat stops. This goes on forever too.

3. Drug Test (Feat. Dr. Dre & Snoop Dogg)

I never thought I'd see the day when Dre monsters aren't even produced by Dr. Dre. The Game once rapped that he might "put out Detox myself", but DJ Khalil might actually be able to do that.

4. Martians Vs. Goblins (Feat. Lil Wayne & Tyler The Creator)

Besides this being a song titled "Martians Vs. Goblins", this is pretty sick. Tyler The Creator who I had kind of disregarded as just a wacky mofo, drops a memorable guest verse.

5. Red Nation (Feat. Lil Wayne)

Maybe it's because I'm partial to the "Zombie Nation" beat but I love this shit. Game spits some quality bars and even Weezy's chorus is great.

6. Dr. Dre 1

Another one of Dre's frightening interludes

7.  Good Girls Go Bad (Feat. Drake)

I was expecting this to be pillowy soft, because of the title, but this is a banger. Cool & Dre continue to bless Game with some quality soulful shit and Drake drops a decent verse on here. It has to be said though that a healthy majority of The Game's bars are gossip queen status.

8. Ricky

I remember Papoose did a mixtape joint where he just rapped over the "Boys In The Hood" beat, which is sort of what I thought Game was gonna do here. Instead, the movie samples transition into a dramatic banger that makes perfect use of the horns from the "Boys In The Hood" song. Game completes the track with sincere and triumphant lyrics in easily his best, hungriest performance on this album.

9. The Good, The Bad, The Ugly

The Game tells alibis in rap form in a way that's totally fucking brilliant. The beat compliments his stories perfectly too.

10. Heavy Artillery (Feat. Rick Ross & Beanie Sigel)

This is even gullier than it sounds. Cool & Dre kill it again plus Ricky and especially Beans' contributions were very welcome.

11. Paramedics (Feat. Young Jeezy)

On the other hand Young Jeezy's contribution, not so much. That said, it's not his fault this beat is just  loud and busy and hard to listen to. The rest is just what you'd expect from a Game and Jeezy song, full of raps about hustling and "shitting Benjamins" and what not.

12. Speakers On Blast (Feat. Big Boi & E-40)

Game brings in two rap legends on this one. This is pretty cool, but it don't love this beat. A Big Boi/E-40 feature shouldn't sound like a Jay Rock throwaway.

13. Hello (Feat. Lloyd)

Holy shit, this shit is Charmin ultra soft. It's like Game's version of "Fancy" over some really awful R&B music.

14. All The Way Gone (Feat. Mario & Wale)

Not as bad as that last song, but still...just...terrible.

15. Pot Of Gold (Feat. Chris Brown)

Maybe it's the acoustic guitar or Chris Brown singing like Jason Mraz or some shit, but this has to be the whitest Game song of all time.

16. Dr. Dre 2

Dre's tales of the hood don't sound appropriate right after that string of sweet-ass R&B tracks.

17. All I Know (Feat. Lu Breeze)

Another pop song. Apparently I wasn't totally misguided in my concerns about this album. On a somewhat related note, has anyone seen this new Patron TV spot where the president of the company talks about their corporate social responsibility and shit? If this is, as I suspect, a means of distancing the brand from it's current image of rappers' cocktail of choice at strip clubs, well that's just hilarious.

18. Born In The Trap

As I tweeted when this song leaked, this Premo-produced heater actually does "save the R.E.D. Album". I may be the biggest Premier stan around, but this song is fucking great. Game seems to be inspired by the Premier collab because he drops one of the best flows of his career on this.

19. Mama Knows (Feat. Nelly Furtado)

Speaking of incredible flows, Game goes crazy over what sounds like a beat from that most recent Q-Tip album. Not even Nelly Furtado's incomprehensible chorus could ruin this for me.

20. California Dream

The Game raps about the birth of his daughter and at one point there's even a reenactment of the scene of the birth. I can't imagine why Game would have thought anyone would enjoy listening to this.

21. Dr. Dre Outro


Dr. Dre ends with a moralistic message about how being a good guy and raising a family is what's really "gangsta". I might have to disagree with him on that one.

Comments: This album was hot and cold, but good overall. I'd compare it to Ryan Howard, who normally either hits the shit out of the baseball or swings and misses completely. Like Howard, The Game's hits on this album make up for the shittier moments.

Best Songs: "Born In The Trap", "Heavy Artillery", "Ricky"






Wednesday, August 17, 2011

PropsOverHere Investigates: Are Rap "Beefs" a Thing of the Past?


     A few years ago, "beef" was the most popular thing going in rap, at times even more so than the music itself. Of course such rap feuds were not a new trend. Ever since the days of "The Bridge Is Over", rappers have been going at each other on and off record to air out their differences or maybe just as a ploy for attention. However, rap beef seemed to hit its peak some time in the early to mid 2000's, thanks in part to the infamous Jay-Z and Nas diss tracks, and to the emergence of a new breed of contentious rappers like 50 Cent who sought out a different artist to insult with each recording session. At some point in time, rap music had basically become a giant web of beefs that had become so chaotic and tangled up that I doubt the rappers themselves could even keep track of everyone that they were beefing with and why. Then, all of the sudden, rap beefs were as played out as spinning rims. Jay-Z signed Nas to Def Jam, The Game hit the booth and apologized to Mobb Deep and M.O.P., Shady signed and made an album with Royce Da 5'9", and now I'm hearing that Jim Jones and Cam'Ron's Fly Boys album could be next. Not to mention, when was the last time a rapper got shot? Other than The Game's attention-whoring shots at Jay-Z and Beanie Sigel's salty jabs at, you guessed it, Jay-Z, rappers nowadays seem far more interested in deading their old beefs and moving on rather than seeking out new ones. While I would like to believe that this is because rappers realize how pointless and silly these feuds actually were, it probably has more to do with the fact that beefs are no longer able to drive album sales. Or maybe it's because today's rappers are too concerned with who they're wearing or which color Maybach is the prettiest to hate on each other. So did beef go out of style, or is it simply lying in wait until it makes its triumphant return?

Album Of The Day: Hi-Tek- "Hi-Teknology"

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    This was the first, and best, album by Reflection Eternal producer Hi-Tek. It features an elite guest list of MCs including Common, Mos Def, Cormega, Talib Kweli, Mood, and Buckshot over some of the Cincinnati native's finest work on the boards. One of the best albums of the Rawkus glory days. 

Monday, August 15, 2011

Album Of The Day: Elzhi- "Witness My Growth"

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    This mixtape contains a bunch of unreleased Elzhi material that was recorded between 1997 and 2004, hence the title. The large majority of these songs were simply Detroit underground joints, produced by fellow Motown artists like Young R.J., Waajeed, Kareem Riggins, and the late, great Dilla. His local MC status (which really hasn't changed since, with the lone exception of his verse on The Minstrel Show) combined with his almost unrivaled rapping ability has to make him, in my estimation, the most underrated rapper ever. 

Album Of The Day: 2Pac- "Thug Life"


    It's almost impossible to believe that a 2Pac album could be underrated, but this one is. Technically it's not a 2Pac solo it's really a group effort between him, his cousin, and his homies, but Pac clearly carries this album. It features some of the more timeless 2Pac classics like "Bury Me A G" and, possibly my favorite Pac song evar, "Pour Out A Little Liquor". Even though All Eyez On Me and Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory get more hype having been released in his post-NY shooting, post-prison, Death Row era, but I'd put Thug Life second only to Me Against The World as far as 2pac albums go.  

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Album Of The Day: All City- "Metropolis Gold"


I don't know shit about All City, but they were somehow able to recruit the likes of DJ Premier, Pete Rock, Rockwilder, and others to produce this 1998 release. The Brooklyn duo disbanded after this album, but at least they left us with this underground gem.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Album Review: Royce Da 5'9"- "Success Is Certain"

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Royce Da 5'9" has been sort of on a roll recently; joining Slaughterhouse, signing with Shady, and then dropping an album with Eminem that landed him some additional notoriety and radio airplay. I wasn't really able to get into Hell: The Sequel as was the case with all of Royce's solo albums to this point even though he is one of the best rappers around. Some of this may have to do with being on low-budget record labels, or maybe a shitty taste in beats that make his non Premo-produced material hard to listen to. Is this going to be the first Royce album that I like or just further affirmation that making a good album takes more than lyrical battle raps?

1. Legendary (Feat. Travis Barker)

A rock-inspired intro appropriately featuring Travis Barker, whose all over rap albums these days. Royce goes hard to match the energy of the track but his punch lines are very hit or miss.

2. Writer's Block (Feat. Eminem)

A high octane banger full of glitchy noises and choirs not unlike "H.A.M." but with Eminem on the hook. I assume that these are the two reasons why they made it a single.

3. Merry Go Round

The chorus on this is so incredibly corny it's a wonder that Royce Da 5'9" even let this be a part of his album. Unfortunately, it ruins a decent song otherwise with Royce reflecting on events that shaped his career path.

4. Where My Money

Royce raps about how he's going to rob hip-hop, or something, with a weak flow and lyrics that make little to no sense. Maybe being a poor, underground rapper has made him completely disillusioned with the music industry, or maybe he's just not very smart.

5. ER (Feat. Kid Vishis)

A concept track with Royce as a doctor operating on the rap game in the first verse then Kid Vishis rhyming as the game "revived" in the second. This might go back to him being a bitter underground rapper, but I don't know why Royce sounds so pissed off on every song. For the record, nothing takes the edge off of an angry verse quite like the word "Twitter".

6. On The Boulevard (Feat. Nottz & Adonis)

Nottz and Royce tell a story about the dangers of growing up in the ghetto through "Kenny", who aspired to be a track star but ends up selling crack. Or something like that.

7. I Ain't Coming Down

This one is more like it. I like this sample and Royce spits witty and occasionally heartfelt lyrics about his beefs and haters and all that good shit.

8. Security

Royce swaps his angry flow for a monotone delivery on this a dedication to Proof, like 4 years later. The first two verses about him and Proof were great but the amount of times he raps about making amends with Em and D12 on this album would make The Game blush.

9. Second Place

This isn't exactly a classic Premo record but it still thumps and it's still better than 98% of beats of out there. His tracks do tend to bring out the best in Royce, though at the end of the second verse he just starts giggling.

10. My Own Planet (Feat. Joe Budden)

I actually thought this was going to be a spoof record when I heard the synths kick in, but then I remembered what I said earlier about Royce's beat selection. Somehow this isn't totally awful, but Royce and Joe Budden just aren't meant to make shit like this.

11. I've Been Up I've Been Down

More emo babble from Royce over a Linkin Park beat to round out the album.

Comments: Royce is still without an album that I like, which I'm sure he cares a lot about. He is definitely a good rapper but he lacks the ability to pick beats and put songs together which results in mediocre albums such as this.

Best Songs: "Security", "Second Place"

Album Of The Day: 50 Cent- "Power Of The Dollar"


Before the money and the fame, 50 Cent was a no nonsense rapper from Queens with a Jay-Z flow, as exhibited on this unreleased album. Power Of The Dollar was recorded around 2000 when 50 was signed to Columbia Records, right before he famously caught nine shots and was subsequently dropped from the label. On this album, a young 50 Cent displays a creativity and hunger that is completely absent in his newer music, or really anything he's done since 2005. Between that and beats by Trackmasters, Ski, and others, I'd have to say i like this to anything else in Curtis' catalogue. 

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Album Of The Day: Murs- "Murray's Revenge"


I don't remember this album getting much critical acclaim and it probably went double cardboard, but it's another one of my personal favorites. Like it's predecessor, Murs 3:16, this album only goes ten songs deep, but each are crafted to near perfection thanks to Murs' charismatic storytelling and 9th Wonder's soulful production. A good example is the song "Dreamchaser", on which Murs weaves a  precautionary tale about growing up in his neighborhood over a Willie Hutch sample flip that is one of my favorite instrumentals of all time. If you are into that kind of shit, I recommend both this and 3:16 to the fullest extent.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Album Of The Day: Outkast- "Aquemini"


Maybe it's because it is Outkast's third best album, or even fourth depending on who you ask, but I don't feel as though Aquemini ever gets the credit it deserves. In addition to the awesomely funky single "Rosa Parks", this album features classic cuts such as "Aquemini", "Da Art Of Storytellin Pt.1", and "Skew It On The Bar-B". Thanks to the musical creativity of Andre and Big Boi and the beat-making genius of Organized Noise and Mr. DJ, this entire album has a sound that is incredibly unique but tasteful at the same time. A classic in my book.