Monday, November 26, 2007

PropsOverHere's Top 5 Most Anticipated for December



As you probably don't remember, I made a similar post like this five months ago in anticipation for the second half of '07. Out of that top five, only one album actually dropped, (Havoc's The Kush which was #5 on the list, go figure) and the other four will not be coming out this year or ever. Will these albums repair my shattered hopes?

5. J Dilla & Busta Rhymes- Dillagence
This isn't even an album really its a Mick Boogie mixtape but its Dilla instrumentals (which i probably haven't heard) and new Busta verses. Here is the song that leaked a few days ago called Step Up which sounds kind of like a Greg Nice tribute over an Ice Cream truck but who's complaining?

4. Wu Tang Clan- 8 Diagrams
This leaked a few days ago and most of the interenets think it sucks but I'll reserve my judgment until 12/11 or until I get bored and review a bootleg whichever comes first.

3. Roc-A-Fella Records- R.O.C. Stars
I know, another mixtape, but at least this one will have the best song of ever, Dead Presidents 3 hopefully in its entirety without stupid talking. Also Jay's "This Shit Right Here" is supposed to be good.

2. Hi-Tek- Hi-Teknology 3
I really like the first Hi-Teknology and sort of like the second so I guess this can't be that bad even though he hasn't made much worthwhile in the past few years. That "Piano" track is good anyway.

1. Ghostface Killah- Big Doe Rehab
All I know about this is that Ghostface can still rap and this shit is fire.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

New Wu-Tang Clan & Nas

Listen/ Download

These tracks were debuted on some Wake Up Show a couple days ago and this is a rip of the audio. These are some of the best tracks I've heard so far off of 8 Diagrams but I see where Rae is coming from with the Rza/Hip Hop Hippie thing theres as much singing and shit as rapping basically.






Download "What It Is" Snippet

I'm about as big of a Nas stan as you're gonna find and I think this is shit. Jazze Pha could make better beats than this in his sleep for fucks sake.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Album Battlegrounds: The Results

















So after a week and six votes (yes that's 6 votes), the results of the head to head poll between Nas' classic Stillmatic and Jay-Z's masterpiece The Blueprint were tied, making this project completely unsuccessful. Anyway, those six votes, as they speak for the populus at large, show that both albums are equally great.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

New Hi-Tek! "The Piano" Feat. Ghostface & Raekwon


Download


Straight fiyah. New Wu-Tang AND Hi-Tek on 11/11 thats wassup.

Album Review: "Spell My Name Right" - Statik Selektah

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Here is another "producer album" which has become a trend in '07 much to my liking. This one is by Statik Selektah, who is known more as a mixtape DJ (Nas, Saigon, Royce Da 5'9", etc.) than a producer. Regardless, the tracks I've heard are pretty good, and the guest roster is ridiculous, but how's the album?

1. Spell My Name Right (Intro) (Feat. DJ Premier & Termanology)

A brief dialogue by Prem about how hip hop Statik Selektah is and then Termonology drops the names of all the rappers on the album and where they rep, not unlike that old Fat Joe song. The beat actually sounds like something Premier would do, which in this and most cases is a good thing.

2. Stop, Look, & Listen (Feat. Styles P, Termanology, & Q-Tip)

This beat is surprisingly good considering its like a kazoo and a flute. Styles P raps the best.

3. Express Yourself '08 (Feat. Termanology, Talib Kweli, & Consequence)

So basically a remake of the N.W.A. classic by three guys who are the exact opposite of N.W.A. Ok for what it is i guess.

4. 6 In The Morning (Feat. Joell Ortiz, Kool G. Rap, & Sheek Louch)

A song about getting up at 6 and selling crack or something with a pretty irritating beat. None of the rappers are particularly impressive on this either.

5. What Would You Do? (Feat. Freeway & Cassidy)

This beat is tight and Freeway provides a lot of energy and then Cassidy ruins it with his cornball flow. Honestly, who wants to hear the guy best known for "I'm a Hustla" enunciate and rap about chess?

6. Make A Movie (Interlude) (Feat. DJ Khaled)

Irrelevent

7. Bam Bam (Feat. Red Cafe, Termanology, & MIMS)

A remake of "Just Hangin' Out" or that one Guerilla Black song but with really heavy bass and weird sound effects. Red Cafe might be the worst rap name I've ever heard. What does that even mean?

8. G-Shit (Showoff Mix) (Feat. Uncle Murda, Sev-One, Termanology, & Jadakiss)

This beat is smooth a fuck, maybe the best yet. I'd say that Murda's 3rd person raps are probably the best on this which isn't saying a whole lot.

9. Back Against The Wall (Feat. Royce Da 5'9", Cormega)

This one opens with these goofy horns but then the loop kicks in and its actually pretty tight. Royce and Cormega don't bring their best stuff.

10. Hardcore (So You Wanna Be) (Feat. Reks & Termanology)

I feel like if you're gonna use a Biggie voice sample its got to be a better track than this. The beat sounds like something off a T.I. album except Reks & Termanology are coherent.

11. No Mistakes Allowed (Feat. a shitload of DJs)

This I gather to be a nod to the 80's what with the repetitive loop and all the scratching. Kind of like an old posse cut or something. Not the best idea in my opinion.

12. Knockin' 'Em Out (Interlude) (Feat. Clinton Sparks)

An intro to...

13. Punch Out! (Feat. Big Shug)

This beat samples the theme from the old video game "Mike Tyson's Punch Out!" Not that this was the greatest idea to begin with, but Madlib did it already this year with some old school Atari game (and much better at that). At least he wasted it on Big Shug.

14. The Good Life (Give It Up) (Feat. Lil' Fame of M.O.P.)

So they gave Big Shug over 2 minutes to babble over some video game but Lil' Fame 1 minute with this smooth shit? A strong track but it's a shame it's just an interlude.

15. Big Dreamers (Feat. Reks)

This is probably Statik Selektah's best instrumental yet and it's pretty impressive. Reks raps about his pipe dreams of being a rap star ala every other rapper ever. Good shit.

16. No Holding Back (Feat. AZ & Cormega)

There's no holding back a stiffy listening to this shit. This alone makes the album worthwhile, but then again I'm kind of biased towards both MCs .

17. Got Me Goin' (Hip Hop) (Feat. Slum Village, & Granite State)

I don't even know who's in SV anymore nor what Granite State is at all but this is another smooth cut anyway.

18. Time To Say Goodbye (Feat. Evidence & The Alchemist)

Statik actually manages to form a pretty good beat with just drums, bass, and a voice sample kind of like 9th Wonder might do. Evidence & The Alchemist both rhyme like they always do.

19. It's Over Now (Feat. Termanology & A.G.)

This beat, unlike the past few, is actually too laid back. A.G. clearly has nothing left to say but Statik makes nice use of the Big L, "It's over now, leave the game." thing.

20. Talk To Me (Feat. Jon Hope, Reks, & Skyzoo)

This sounds like one of those Fort Minor songs that was popular for a while except with a Marvin Gaye (or at least Marvin Gaye-like) voice sample. This Reks guy is actually kinda tight, better than Termanology anyway.

21. Did What We Had To Do (Feat. KRS-One, L Da Headtoucha, Large Professor)

Another good beat from Statik to round things off. The rapping is solid overall except KRS-One is off-beat but what else is new.

Overall:

Wow. That was good! It started off sounding like some compilation mixtape what with the old school remakes but the end of the album was heat. Had the rapping been any good or had the beats lacked that sort of mixtape quality this would have contended for my album of the year.

Best Tracks: "G-Shit", "Big Dreamers", "No Holding Back"

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Wu-Tang Clan: "8 Diagrams" Update

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That's the badass cover for the new album. They also dropped (or will drop) a new mixtape with some tracks from 8 Diagrams and a few that they found in ODB's underwear drawer. Here are snippets from the mixtape that you can download at Loud.com but I think you need a subscription or something.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Album Battlegrounds 1: Jay-Z's "The Blueprint" vs. Nas' "Stillmatic"

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This debate has probably been beat to death. In fact, so has the head-to-head album premise but what the fuck. Nas vs. Jay-Z is a timeless debate, and these two albums are worthy for comparison as they came out at around the same time and they're both really fucking good. Listen to the songs of significance then vote in that cheap ass poll at the end. Next week I'll reveal the winner, and if nobody votes then I decide.

The Intro: "Stillmatic (The Intro)" vs. "The Ruler's Back"



The Anthem: "Izzo (H.O.V.A)" vs. "Got Ur Self A Gun"





The Diss: "Ether" vs. "The Takeover"



The Worst Song: "Jigga That Nigga" vs. "Destroy and Rebuild"



The Best Song: "You're Da Man" vs. "Heart of the City (Ain't No Love)"






Saturday, November 3, 2007

Jemini: "Ghetto Pop Life"


Before MF Doom and Cee-Lo, it was Brooklyn's Jemini (The Gifted One) who collaborated with Danger Mouse for a full LP. Jemini isn't the greatest rapper but he is pretty good and Danger Mouse gives the album great musical value. A very good listen.