Thursday, May 25, 2006

Yo Gotti and Suga Free

So Yo Gotti's album dropped and its basically what you'd expect: really good though not paradigm-shifting, post-Let's Get It g-rap from a charismatic dude who's more attitude than lyrics, whose voice can carry intensely heavy hustling tracks like "Full Time" as well as the subdued nostalgic joy of "Gangsta Party" or the tortured claustrophobia of "25 To Life," the deceptively hopeful light in the darkness of "We Gonna Be Alright," the Curtis-style blues of "A Part of Thugs," the range and breadth you want from a dude spitting G rap at this point: perspective, an understanding of consequences and the ramifications of the way the world has dealt the cards. Someone wants to know what gangsta was like in '06, this is as good a representative as you're gonna find. The beats are pretty good, low-key and serviceable, and the random big-budget Storch beat doesn't really sound out of place among the rest.

Suga Free is like Devin the Dude: his sound is sort of tangential to the mainstream of rap in the 00s, quirky, funny, easily identifiable rapping that relies on a sort of sad humor. Where Devin goes for regular-dude sad, self-deprecating humor of the little stoner in a big world, Suga Free's is the tragedy of the world's oldest profession from the exploiter's perspective - although it is important to remember that the pimp is merely a link in the chain, exploited on his own, a role just above the bottom rung that will be filled past our expiration dates that media glamorization won't change. SF's take on pimping isn't one-dimensional any more than Gotti's take on dealing - not to say either is flawless or in any way morally righteous, but they're willing to engage with the reality of the shit. SF's humor never really seems to undercut his ideas, and that melancholic undercurrent from "Dip Da" (reflective track about his abusive father off his debut) still runs through much of his work, style and humor in the face of struggle. Suga Free is also like Devin in that his third and most recent album is probably his worst, another permutation of the same formula (basically, if you heard the last two, you know what yr getting into). The weakness on this one is basically in beats - I guess it was recorded before Suga Free and Quik were cool again, so all the beats are like imitation DJ Quik. That works sometimes, but for the most part they all have this unfinished feel, good ideas without Quik's experienced tenderloveingcare, incomplete. Still its a good album, even if the fact that dude is a pimp rapper will keep him from being embraced by the same crowd that have taken up Devin's cause.

Friday, May 19, 2006

this is the time to fall in love


A little late in the season but fuck it. Classic.
daaance daaaance daaance.

Young Carter, hotter then them other boys



Weezy is My Homeboy shirt
Available in Maroon ONLY.
Sizes: S, M, L, XL, XXL.
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click here for old shirts

This is gonna be that work right hurr:


Wednesday, May 17, 2006

J Knowledge

Came across this gem of a mix over on soulstrut. It's the latest podcast from the BuhBomp crew which consists of JD, Lil Tiger, Empanadamn, Elz, Cashless and who ever they get to lace a mix. They are about three mixes deep so far with J Knowledge of Houston doing the latest titled "Hate It Or Love It." I suggest you download this shit because it will make your life suck less. The mix has all kinds of rap, some older stuff with some new stuff. Shit how many other mixes are you going to find with Trick Daddy and fucking Das Efx on the tracklisting. Get to clicking.

Hate It Or Love It

tracklisting:
01. intro - runaways
02. express yourself - nwa/bleek/j-kwon
03. tipsy - j-kwon/ll cool j
04. hate it or love it - game/50/juvenile
05. back that azz up - juvenile/usher
06. choice is yours - black sheep/usher/clipse
07. when was the last time - clipse/lil jon
08. get low - lil jon/jay-z
09. hustler - jay-z/clipse
10. grindin - clipse/50/game
11. how we do - 50/game/??
12. old man - masta killa/rza/odb/scott storch
13. danger - mystikal/beatnuts
14. get down - craig mack/beatnuts
15. they want efx - das efx/bdp
16. all for one - grand puba/collossus
17. throw your hands eigthtball and mjg/outkast
18. 2000 freestyle - shyne
19. jam on it - newcleus/trick daddy
20. in da wind - trick daddy/trina/jazzy pha
21. 1, 2 step - ciara/tupac
22. changes - tupac/strafe
23. set it off - strafr/ghastface/dangermouse
24. crazy - gnarls barkley
25. smile - aim/day
26. gone bad - dj day
27. still tippin - slim thug/mike jones/paul wall/timbaland/david banner
28. cadillacs on 22s - david banner/bone crusher
29. 3 kings - slim thug/bun b/quantic
30. stay fly - 3-6 mafia/ugk remix
31. keep pushin - bun b/scarface/young jeezy
32. kryptonite - rock d/trick daddy
33. shut up - trick daddy/david banner
34. like a pimp - lil flip/t.i.
35. what you know - t.i./3-6
36. poppin my collar - 3-6 mafia

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Rap in Ghana

Here and here.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Fucking Coolio

Not to get all radio disney on you but at on point in my life I was a Coolio fan. Shit I didn't know this dude who was down with madd circle would end up becoming some ridiculous caricature whose hair gets him gigs on hollywood squares. I just knew I mildly liked fantastic voyage which got an old girlfriend to buy me the It Takes A Thief tape and then it just kind of grew on me. I'd be lying if I didn't admit to learning all the words to the Ghetto Cartoon, no matter how corny the song was. But shit if I'd learn the words to 187 proof, cereal killer, and gangsta's fairytale then ghetto cartoon wasn't that much of a stretch. I'm still trying to figure out why I listened to this tape so much cause none of it was that memorable but whatever here are some shitty mp3s that remind me days when I was dumber than I am now.

Thought You Knew ft Billy Boy and PS

Coolio and two dudes from the worthless 40 Thieves project that he tried to launch. I don't know if it's nostalgia or the beat but I'll still bump this shit no matter how stupid people think I am.

You Know Who ft WC
Here is the song with wc and coolio rapping about shooting you up or some shit that disney would never approve of.


this post was brought to you courtesy of winamp's random setting.

Monday, May 08, 2006

made a thousand songs that made you move yr ass


This has been out a minute now but its got some legs; as with M.O.P.'s "I'll Whip Your Head Boy," the vets are killing it this year. Almost makes you forget about that new Mobb Deep record.

My favorite $hort record is Get In Where You Fit In, maybe because it is the perfect mid-period Short Dog LP, his rapping style already fully established but with beats that wouldn't have sounded dated or out of place on B.I.G.'s second album 4 years later when Easy Mo Bee went Cali bounce. $hort's always been able to drop a hot single whatever the era, whether yr thinking of classic late 80s "Freaky Tales" or early millenial "Burn Rubber." But to me GIWYFI is where he hit his stride, album number 8, around the time of Ant Banks' first solo record, halfway between the Life Is... platinum breakthrough and Gettin' It, the first record where the beats start to sound dated and $hort sounds a bit weary, his 'retirement' release. Not that you can blame him, ten albums deep; everyone started fucking up in '96, the year where rap across the spectrum seemed to stumble and grope for a new direction.

Back to Get In Where You Fit In: yes "Blowjob Betty" is classic - can't believe it took this long for someone to turn his sittin'-on-the-sink line into a hook, and the comedy-grotesque finale is something to behold - but really it's all about "Just Another Day," an epic 8 minute bass-heavy groove that feels far too brief, the kind of track you could let ride for 20 minutes plus without getting tired, just listening to $hort spit the same effortless cross-country celebration lyrics, the anthem that launched 1,000 parties, pristine summer barbecue music that soundtracks hazy 80-degree daylight through breezy sunset dusk.

"Blow the Whistle" is good too, and it's cool to hear Lil Jon's still got it; I thought $hort's mixtape Pimpin Incorporated from earlier this year was alright, although he sounded a little tired. I couldn't force myself through that Gangsters and Strippers comp but I've been rocking this single since it dropped and it's still in the rotation. Alongside the ridic new Shondrae-produced Kelis track I'm definitely gonna check for Up All Nite when it drops, if it drops soon, and you should too.

Thursday, May 04, 2006

Spice 1 videos

Murder Squad

I've been listening to early-mid 90s Cali rap a lot lately, from Quik's records with II to None and the Penthouse Players clique to other Eazy-E-derived shit like Above the Law, never mind Cali OGs like Spice 1, MC Eiht, and C-Bo. Its started to get to me, like my vision of oppressive hot dusty LA weather: its a depressing existence, murder after murder, bodies piling up, 70s/80s funk subverted into the soundtrack for killings and drug deals gone wrong. When it isn't reckless violence, its heartbreaking remorse and sadness, reality projected through the prisms of the people who sound like they've lived it. This isn't Snoop and Dre party shit. So before I burn out entirely, I figured I'd throw up some shit about the South Central Cartel and the Murder Squad.

No Mobb Deep here; by some stratospheric coincidence, two 90s Cali gangsta rappers were christened Havoc and Prodeje, and they made up a group called the South Central Cartel. In '95 Havoc's label GWK Records put out SCC Presents Murder Squad, and its one of the better cali g rap albums from that era. SCC dropped some serious Cali-G classics on their own, like 1997's All Day Everyday and the almost-as-hot 1994 LP N-Gatz We Trust (check the crazy posse cut "Gangsta Team" with 2pac, Ice T, MC Eiht and Spice 1). But of all the mid-90s Cali g-rap I've been checking lately, '95's Murder Squad Nationwide is the one I keep coming back to.

Speaking of posse cuts, this video is for "No Peace" and it features Ice T, Spice 1, Ant Banks, Boss and, of all people, Treach, who appears in the video draped with customary lock and chain.

To me Ice T is the most memorable, but its a fucking avalanche of all star appearances, up there with NWA's appearances on DOC and ATL's debut records.
Ice T:
"I been waitin in town a longtimelongcrimelongendslongcash yr talkin bout miiiine kid.
You did a bid and you came home cockY, yr 23 homie and yr talkin bout O.G.?
HUH I'm 34, I use gats to score, gaggin, tyin hoes in the backs of jewelry stores
G-rides I'm talkin about two, thought you knew
One to work, and one to ride on to the crew
But nowadays brothers wanna flip, and set trip
it ain't even bloods, just straight crips killin' crips."

The opening track even features the Chi-Lites, weirdly enough helping Murder Squad cover a Brothers Johnson classic. Mid-album cut "Gunsmoke" calls on everyone to 'listen to the gunsmoke.' Shit burns.

So after nerding out on all this Cali g-rap everything in my life seems to take on a depressed, hazy sheen, like all of the ghetto paranoia and claustrophobia washed in dusty orange west coast heat goes right to my brain, leaving me hollow; in many ways this is just too much, and I don't just mean the onslaught of violence and hopelessness; the whole aesthetic of 90s gangsta, the conflicted personas of the terrorized terrorizing and even the most exceptional shit starts to run together after awhile, grimey dirt-sienna aural oil paints smeared across my brain until I'm forced to listen to Papoose or some other lyrical New York cat. No song does this better than the Havoc feature "Ghetto Got Me Shadey," a Havoc feature that ends admitting honestly "I'd rather be a punk O.G. than a dead O.G., doin' all that time in county," and repping the west coast to the end. Not to sound corny but these records are full of choices most of us should be glad we don't have to make.

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Trap or Die Jr.


In the wake of Trap or Die Drama's role is more concrete than ever before; he's establishing most-promising MVP rappers, laying the groundwork for the major label debut with a single tape. And so aside from weird, pleasant and boring offshoots like Little Brother's Gangsta Grillz, you've got a bunch of Trap or Die Jr. releases, same anthemic introductions, similar beats. Yo Gotti's album won't do Let's Get It-numbers, but its gonna sell well, thanks to Drama's heightened profile and the formulaic similarity to Jeezy's grassroots build.

Not that this biting is all bad. Yo Gotti and Young Dro just dropped 2 mixtapes, and along with Buck's post-prison Drama disc, they're some of the better rap releases to drop this year. Gotti's will grab yr attention immediately, his muscular flow and rounded syllables fighting every second through his syrupy drawl for yr attention, personality-dominated trap raps rending the serviceably generic southern beats to the background. Although Gotti reps Memphis, this all sounds as much Atlanta as it does Tennessee, with the same thin trebly-yet-bass-heavy abrasive gangsta thump.

Memphis in '06 is nothing like millenial Memphis, with 3-6 Mafia slipping from a movement to a trio, Al Kapone dropping the worst tracks on E-40's album, the new Ball & G single sounding more like Outkast than Puffy (If the 18-year-old-me heard me say that shit...) I'm sure Memphis is still one of the livest cities for rap, but the cream rises and nothing's really risen in TN since the turn of the century - even Young Buck needed G-Unit to get put on. So when Yo Gotti says "King of Memphis" I don't even know who the dude is competing with. All the same, he's got the Jigga look down on the cover, and his posture looks like his voice sounds: heavy. The Shyne of Memphis tells 3-6 to fuck themselves and gets La Chat on "Drop It Off."

"Full Time" is still one of the best tracks, from its high-profile drop in Hustle&Flow to TVT mailouts to every rock critic in the country - just thumping 808s and guitar grinding behind a patois inflected hook that echoes Gotti's chorus. But the real reason "Full Time" works is Gotti's voice, electric with style, bending over backwards to spit syllables, his voice thick and serious. It isn't a particularly lyrical approach; he's more Jeezy than he is T.I., dripping weighted charisma as distinct lines of real talk alternate with egotistical braggadocious. And "Gangsta Party," as far as I'm concerned, is a classic straight up, spiritual descendent of Dre n Snoop classics even if it sounds objectively nothing like them.

Get Buck
Rapid-fire drawl spitting quick personal history over 80s electro, starting with 3-6, 8ball & MJG, and Project Pat breaking, getting on TVT, getting the call from Baby.

25 Years To Life
Fearful instructive concept track, the sad stark hopelessness and real implications of the aforementioned prison sentence: "25 years to life, 25 tears a night."

Although I've been listening to the Gotti mixtape all week, Young Dro is growing on me and I think I'm gonna end up riding with him in the long term - a more generic gruff gangsta drawl, but as a result he's more lyrically ambitious, revelling in dark g-cliche like its all he has to hold onto. More on that later, maybe.

Listen to Damage Control tonight for a Hawk tribute.

RIP Hawk

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

Yaaay Arrreeaaaa!

Posting this on behalf of my boy. If you're in the bay, check this shit out:





-e