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Author Topic: The Official Rap Thread  (Read 671650 times)

Offline thatonezombie

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #760 on: April 14, 2009, 01:06:03 AM »
OH HELL YES! THANKS A BUNCH
I vote for TOZ as the most gangsta~  :otomerika:
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Visit TOZ's House of Hits http://forum.jphip.com/index.php?topic=23639.0

Offline Masa

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #761 on: April 14, 2009, 07:24:01 AM »
Aight, time to pimp one of my all-time favorite verses :theking

Jedi Mind Tricks- Uncommon Valor (A Vietnam Story)

Quote from:  R.A. The Rugged Man
Call me Thorburn, John H., Staff Sergeant, Marksman
Skill in killing, illing, I'm able and willing
Kill a village elephant, rape and pillage your village
Illegitimate killers, US military guerrillas
This ain't no real war. Vietnam?
Shit, World War II, that's a war
This is just a military conflict
Soothing, drug-abusing, Vietnamese women screwing
Sex, gambling and boozing, all this shit is amusing
Bitches and guns, this is every man's dream
I don't want to go home, where I'm just a ordinary human being
Special OP, Huey chopper gun shit, run shit
gook run when the mini-gun spit, won't miss, kill shit.
Spit four-thousand bullets a minute.
Victor Charlie, hit trigger, hit it, I'm in it to win it, get it.
The lieutenant hinted the villain, I've ended up killing
I did it, cripple, did it, pictures I painted is vivid, live it,
A wizard with weapons, a secret mission we about to begin it
Government funded, behind enemy lines bullets is spraying.
It's heating up, a hundred degrees
The enemy's the North Vietnamese, bitch please
Ain't no sweat, I'm told "be at ease"
Until I see the pilot got hit, and we about to hit some trees
Tail rotor broke, crash land, American man
Cambodia, right in the enemy hand
Take a swig of the whiskey to calm us
Them yellow men wearing black pajamas, they want to harm us
They all up on us.
Bang, bang, bullet hit my chest, feel no pain.
To my left, the captain caught a bullet right in his brain.
Body parts flying, loss of limbs, explosions
Bad intentions, I see my best friend's intestines
Pray to the one above, It's raining, I'm covered in mud
I think I'm dying, I feel dizzy, I'm losing blood
I see my childhood, I'm back in the arms of my mother
I see my whole life, I see Christ, I see bright lights
I see Israelites, Muslims and Christians at peace, no fights
Blacks, Whites, Asians, people of all types
I must have died, then I woke up, surprised I'm alive
I'm in a hospital bed, they rescued me, I survived
I escaped the war, came back
But ain't escape Agent Orange, two of my kids born handicapped
Spastic, quadriplegic, microcephalic
Cerebral palsy, cortical blindness, name it they had it
My son died he ain't live, but I still try to think positive
Cause in life, God take, God give
If that ain't one of the illest verses EVER then I don't know what is :shocked: :shocked: :shocked:

Jedi Mind Tricks - Uncommon Valor: A Vietnam Story feat R.A. The Rugged Man
http://sharebee.com/4ff05da6

And here's the story behind R.A. The Rugged Man's amazing verse:
Quote
Uncommon Valor: The Story of Staff Sergeant John A. Thorburn and RA The Rugged Man

On March 14th, 1970, during a Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol mission in the Duc Lap area of the Quang Duc Province of South Viet Nam, a UH-1P helicopter carrying Capt. Dana A. Dilley, Capt. Marvin R. Loper, SSgt John A. Thorburn, and A1c David A. Carpenter was shot down by enemy ground fire. Staff Sergeant Thorburn, along with fellow gunner A1C Carpenter, suffered serious injuries. Captain Dilley lost his life in the crash, and Captain Loper sustained broken bones in one of his feet. An Army helicopter on the same operation was able to rescue the surviving crew and bring them to Cam Ranh Bay, where they received treatment for their injuries. Upon receiving treatment, they were brought back to the U.S. Despite being badly injured, Thorburn ultimately survived the incident.

Thirty-six years later, in a verse that would win him a “Hip-Hop Quotable” in the October 2006 issue of The Source, Thorburn’s son, RA The Rugged Man, would retell what took place on that fateful March night in the Jedi Mind Tricks’ song “Uncommon Valor: A Vietnam Story”. The song was featured on Jedi Mind’s most recent album, Servants in Heaven, Kings in Hell. Spanning fourty-four bars and nearly two minutes, RA’s rapid fire, monotone masterpiece of a verse left people breathless as he dropped lines like “Tail rotor broke, crash land, American man, Cambodia, right in the enemy hand” over superproducer Stoupe’s haunting production. His vivid storytelling ability and insight into his father’s emotional state during the helicopter crash made the song an instant classic.

Over a year after its release, the verse stands as one of RA’s finest moments as an MC. His verse is so good that The Crew’s DJ Sorce-1 decided to talk to RA about what went into making the song. TSS is proud to present an in depth look at the genesis of “Uncommon Valor: A Vietnam Story”.

TSS: Whose idea was it to make the song? I know that your father is a Vietnam veteran and that your verse was based on his experiences. Did you come up with the songs concept or did Jedi Mind Tricks approach you about it?

RA: Paz had approached me to do a song about Vietnam because I always have the veteran’s hat and green jackets on and I’m all on that Nam shit. When he first came up with the idea I didn’t think, “Whoa, amazing idea”, I was just like, “Uh, ok.” When I started writing to the first Stoupe beat I was writing some Rambo shit about grenades and blowing shit up. I didn’t think to do my verse about my father. But then I started to think about doing the verse differently because it felt corny.

When I got the second beat I said, “Eh, trash those other rhymes. That’s some Rambo cartoon shit.” So when I got the beat we used for the song I said, “You know what, fuck it. Let me tell me father’s story. Who got a better story than him?” I called him up and talked to him for an hour or two and took notes. I knew most of the stories by heart, but I didn’t know the names of everything. I didn’t know the name of his gun or the names of specific locations. He also said things that I used in the song like the stuff about black pajamas. So that was just me talking to my father for two hours. I took a little time on that song too. The 44 bars took me a week to write. Usually you go into the studio and just write some shit. But that particular verse, I tried to make it really accurate and took my time on it.

TSS: Was it difficult for your father to talk to you about his experience in depth and was he uncomfortable that his story was being made into a song?

RA: No, he loved the idea. When he heard it he was blown away. He couldn’t believe it. He was blown the fuck away, like, “Holy shit, it’s like you were there.” It brought some of his friends to tears. They were really happy and impressed with it. As far as talking about his experience, he was ok with it. He told me all the stories in the past. But there is one part of his story that he doesn’t talk about. My dad’s gun shot 4,000 bullets a minute. He was shooting 30,000 bullets a day sometimes. When I say, “Hey pops, how many people did you kill while you were there?” he’ll say, “Oh son, I didn’t kill nobody. I didn’t take lives I saved lives.” He looks at it like he wasn’t killing; he was saving the lives of his people. So he’ll never tell me how many lives he took. But the rest of it he’s totally open about.

TSS: How much input did you and Vinnie Paz have on Stoupe’s production for the song?

RA: Well, Stoupe originally hit us with different beat. I started writing some shit to the first beat he hit us with. Stoupe is neurotic, and after I started writing to the first beat he said, “Oh, I hate the beat. I don’t like the beat.” I told him, “Just give me the fucking beat that we’re really using.” Paz sent me over the next beat that Stoupe had, and I just started writing to it. Neither of us really had any influence. Vinnie just accepted it and I said, “No doubt, we’ll do it.”

TSS: The buildups in the production fit the lyrics so well; I thought you guys might have had some input.

RA: Yeah, well if you’re a writer you reinvent the beat. That’s part of your job, to reinvent the beat and give it a new world.

TSS: When I first heard your verse I was trying to tell if you did it all in one take. It sounds like you did, but I wasn’t sure because of the length of it.

RA: I could do that whole verse in one take. The only problem is with memorizing it. When I read it off a paper I can do it in one take. That particular time when we recorded it in the studio I didn’t. The length of the verse is 44 bars, I didn’t know the rhyme very well, and I was reading it off of a piece of paper. So it took a couple punches here and there. But our reason for using multiple takes wasn’t because I couldn’t do it in one take. If you want to test me, I’ll grab a sheet of paper and read the whole thing to the beat without missing beat.

TSS: Is it difficult to do breath control and hold it together when you’re rhyming for that long?

RA: Yeah, that’s difficult, but the most difficult part is memorizing all them fucking syllables for forty-four bars. Even today when they want me to do that song I don’t really know it by heart yet. I gotta sit down on the subway one day, grab the lyrics, and just read em and read em for a week straight. There are a few songs like that on my album, like “Black and White” with Timbo King. He’s hit me up and said, “Hey, let’s perform that song together at a show.” And I don’t know the rhyme by heart yet. There’s a song “The Renaissance” with Razor and Tragedy Khadafi and that took me god damn weeks on the train to memorize. There are so many different fucking syllables. It’s not a typical verse where there are like ten syllables in a sentence. Sometimes I’m spitting forty syllables in a two or three bar thing. It’s crazy.

TSS: Yeah, you’re verse is so rapid fire; it adds to add a whole new level of difficulty.

RA: Yeah. So breath control ain’t really the issue, it’s just the memorization of all that shit.

TSS: “Uncommon Valor” has probably brought a lot of people to tears that were affected by the war. It’s so intense, you almost feel like you’re experiencing it in some parts.

RA: I work hard to make sure I portray things realistically. On some corny RA shit, sometimes I listen to my own songs and certain things touch me for a second. I don’t cry, I never cried at my own shit, but all of a sudden I get chocked up or teary eyed. Then I have to go, “Whoa, whoa, RA calm down. It’s a song.” One time it happened to me at one of my shows. I was doing my song “Lessons” and my sister was in the crowd. I said the line, “I’ve seen disease take the life of my sister’s kid. Six months on the earth, that’s all he had to live.” It was a simple lyric, and it had never hit me. But when my sister was right in the crowd, nobody noticed but me, but I almost came out my face with it. I got chocked up. I had to go, “Oh shit, chill RA.”

TSS: Did your sister notice?

RA: Nah. The first time I played the song for her I saw that she got a little choked up. But she’s like me; she controlled it. A lot of people hit me up and said “Uncommon Valor” had them in tears. A lot of people said, “We were crying.” When people tell me stuff like that, I just think, “Wow, I was just telling a story.”

TSS: I can believe it. I tell people who haven’t heard “Uncommon Valor” that in my opinion, your verse is one of the top five verses ever. EVER. I put it up there with all the great ones. The first time I heard the song, it completely blew me away.

RA: That’s our job, to try to advance. When Melle Mel was painting pictures with songs and just verbally destroying shit back in the day, you wouldn’t think that 20 years later the average rapper on the radio would be worse than him. We’re supposed to take that storytelling shit from the G Rap’s and Melle Mel’s and the flows from the Puba’s and the Kane’s and keep building on what we learned and saw from them, rather than get worse than them. If I’m a top five verse for you, it’s because I had great influences. I didn’t bite nobody’s shit, it’s my own shit, my own style, and I did it myself. But I was able to build off of the greats of the past. It’s like filmmaking. You look at all the greats and you can learn to do things because they’ve done it already. I wish that in five years I wouldn’t be in your top five no more because all these rappers would have verses that kill mine in “Uncommon Valor.” But it doesn’t seem to be the trend to have ill verses no more.

TSS: Agreed. Out of all the songs you’ve ever been involved in, would you say the song is the most important song of your career?

RA: No, it’s not the most important song of my career. But it’s a real personal one that I really like a lot. It’s top notch RA, it’s me on my top game. But it’s like when a fighter has an incredible knockout. Everyone says, “That’s the best fight of his career.” But they were saying the same shit nine years ago when he knocked someone else out. At this particular moment, “Uncommon Valor” is a high mark because it’s new. It’s a close, personal record, and I’m really glad it’s out there. My father drives around and listens to it all the time. That’s a real good thing. I’m glad I’m a part of it and I’m glad it exists, but a year from now when I’m done with my new album, I hope to have a couple of songs that blow “Uncommon Valor” out of the water.

TSS: You don’t want to settle with one song and say it’s your pinnacle…

RA: Yeah. I think I have a few instances in my career when I put something out that made people say, “Wow, that’s some shit.” There are a couple of songs on my first demo that the label said was my pinnacle. A couple of my demo songs in 1992 got me nine record deals. Everybody wanted to sign me. They all said, “That was the pinnacle, you had it. The first songs you ever made for us that you shopped, those were the best songs of your career.” Everybody has their opinions about what your best material is.

TSS: Your lyrics on “Uncommon Valor” get very religious. I was wondering if you yourself are a religious person, or if the religious tone is supposed to be more from your father’s point of view.

RA: It’s both of our points of view. I pray more than once a day. I believe in god. We were raised Protestant, but I’m not sure what particular religion I completely believe. I know that there is a higher power, and I believe in him. My father had me saying my prayers since I could talk. He was a wild man, a ladies man and a brawler. But he always had that religious element for us. He would always tell us to say our prayers.

My father went nuts a couple times. He was in and out of a couple institutions after he came home. One time, he paid for one of those things in the back of a tabloid magazine where they make you a reverend. He became a reverend through one of those magazines and went around trying to marry people and started selling bibles door to door. (Laughs) He called himself the black angel and the white angel. He had two personalities.

His reverend phase changed him. Ever since I was a kid; my father taught me how to fight. He was like, “If you gotta fight, fight. Learn to protect yourself.” He was a straight soldier. Green Beret; all that shit. In third grade, if someone fucked with me, I’d put em in a headlock or punch em in the face. I was always brawling as a kid. And then about fourth grade he said, “The real man with the courage knows how to keep his hands in his pockets. Walk away from fights.” This was when he was the black angel. So after that a kid came up to me and started talking shit. I said, “The man with courage walks away’ and I walked away from the fight. People thought I was a pussy for like two months. Then my dad snapped out of it, and I was like, “Cool, I’m allowed to fight again.” But for a minute I was trying to listen to my father, the black angel preacher.

TSS: It sounds like that didn’t last too long.

RA: It didn’t last that long. I had a couple scuffles over him selling bibles later in life. In junior high a couple kids were like, “Yeah, RA’s father is gonna come to my house and sell us a bible” and mocked him. I said, “Ok, after class you’re getting punched in the face now.” I had to go in the back and punch some people out.

TSS: On the last line of the song when you say, “God take, god give”, was that something your father said to you, or did you come up with it on your own?

RA: That was my rhyme. My dad spent a lot of years in pain mentally. He spent a lot of years angry and miserable. Later in life he became so fun and such a good hearted, happy person. The worse things got, he always managed to have a positive outlook. Since “Uncommon Valor” was made, my family lost my sister in March. Somehow my father just maintained a positive outlook through everything. So I was trying to be like him with my rhyme.

You can hear how much more angry my music used to be. It was more hateful. I think I changed that up a little bit when I got older. I learned to accept things a little better, instead of saying, “I’ll fucking kill someone, I’ll break something over someone’s head.” I learned to accept that life’s tough for everybody. I think the ending of the verse is a little bit of both me and my father. My father didn’t say “God take, god give” but it’s something that he would say.

TSS: My condolences. I’m so sorry for your family’s loss.

RA: “God take, god give….” you know?

TSS: It’s amazing that you guys have been able to stay positive through everything you’ve been through. That one line helps end such a powerful verse on a positive note.

RA: Yeah.

TSS: Your flow on “Uncommon Valor” is almost monotone, and really rapid fire. Was that an intentional contrast to the intense emotions you rhymed about in the song?

RA: When I first started rhyming, all I did was rapid fire. A little bit before we started making “Uncommon Valor” I had listened to some of my old tapes when I was 15 and 16, and they were all crazy fast, all in one take, off the paper. I was like, “How the fuck did I memorize that shit enough to spit it back in the day?” When I first went to the labels in the early 1990’s, there was some complaining that I was more about flow than being lyrical. Like an idiot I went, “Oh, maybe I gotta dumb it down a little. I can only flow fast here and there, and give them a little flow.” I would keep the flow simpler, and do a little rapid flow for a bar or two, and then spit simpler and slower again. I was getting in the habit of that just so the dumb assholes could go, “Yo, he’s a dope lyricist.”

I didn’t want to be considered a rapper who was only voice and flow, so I tried to go the more lyrical route. On my last album, I had a song called “Chains” with Killah Priest and Masta Killa. I did an all out rapid flow like my old school shit. Everyone went nuts over it, and I was like “Really? I thought that you guys thought that shit was too much.” So I said, “Fuck it, let’s bring it on. I’ll do this flow like a motherfucker all over the place.”

Now I give em a lot more of that rapid fire flow. Pretty soon people will probably go, “Well, we like when he raps simple better.” Who the fuck knows? They all got something to say. In my old age I’ve kind of realized, just do whatever the fuck you want and don’t listen to nobody. Now I’m just doing whatever the fuck I want.
http://smokingsection.uproxx.com/TSS/2007/12/uncommon-valor-the-story-of-staff-sergeant-john-a-thorburn-and-ra-the-rugged-man


Gotta say I'm not the biggest Hip-Hop fan in the world, but the megamix is very impressive. And it's good to see the tracklist, I know by listening to it that there's a number of tracks I'm gonna chase up and try to get. Some old-school tracks in there that sound pretty funky.
Props! If you need anything just holla at me. I have a lot of those tracks :pimp:

Anyways that tracklist shows perfectly the evolution of hip hop (1985-1996) and the decline which started in the late 90s. Years 1987-1997 contain nothing but classics while some of the recent years are fucking horrible (2002, 2003, 2005 etc.). Aight, I might as well pimp this week's HHH. If you guys enjoyed the 90s portion of that set then y'all better tune in this Sunday cause we will have another 90s special. We gonna play nuthin' but classics! :yep:

np. Jaguar Skills x Kid Potential - 30 Years Of Hip-Hop In 60 Minutes

Awwww shit! The 90s set is so beautiful it almost brought me to tears XD
« Last Edit: April 14, 2009, 07:29:16 AM by Masa »

Offline daigong

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #762 on: April 15, 2009, 10:01:48 AM »
From Raekwon's myspace!!

Quote
OB4CL2 - Exclusive live performance by Raekwon!


Offline Masa

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #763 on: April 17, 2009, 03:32:54 PM »
Quote
Raekwon: Only Built 4 Cuban Linx 2 Press Release

The Wu-Tang Clan Rapper Signs Deal With EMI Label Services To Release Follow-Up To 1995 Hip-Hop Classic This Summer in US, Canada

Only Built 4 Cuban Linx 2 Features The RZA, Dr. Dre, J Dilla, Others

(NEW YORK – April 15, 2009) – Ready to give his worldwide following what they’ve been waiting for, the Wu-Tang Clan’s rhyme slinger extraordinaire Raekwon is set to return this summer with Only Built 4 Cuban Linx 2.

Raekwon, whose 1995 platinum classic Only Built 4 Cuban Linx was universally hailed as a rap classic and has sold more than 1.1 million units in the US, according to Nielsen Soundscan, has signed a distribution deal with EMI Label Services for his ICEH20 Records label to release Only Built 4 Cuban Linx 2 in the US and Canada later this summer. EMI Label Services will also provide Raekwon with additional radio promotion support and licensing and synchronization services.

“The wait is finally over,” Raekwon says. “Words cannot describe how extremely happy I am to work with EMI Music to put out my album.”

Only Built 4 Cuban Linx 2 buzz single and video “The New Wu” features fellow Wu-Tang Clan members Method Man and Ghostface Killah and is getting mixshow airplay at radio stations across the country, including Hot 97 in New York. The album features a spectacular line-up of guest appearances and producers: The RZA, Dr. Dre, J Dilla, The Wu-Tang Clan, Jadakiss, Busta Rhymes, Bun B and The Game, among others.

“We are thrilled to have a chance to work with the legendary Raekwon,” said Dominic Pandiscia, Senior Vice President and General Manager, EMI Label Services. “He has had a massive impact on the history of Hip Hop and Urban music overall. Everyone at EMI is excited to be working on this record and continuing his legacy.”

Rap fans were mesmerized by Raekwon’s distinctive brand of street slanguistics when he emerged as a member of the Wu-Tang Clan. The Staten Island, New York rap group’s debut album, 1993’s Enter The Wu-Tang Clan (36 Chambers), was a landmark collection that introduced the group’s signature blend of kung-fu inspired reality rap. Raekwon established himself as a solo star in 1995 with the release of Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. The mafia minded album, which peaked at No. 2 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Album chart, unfolded like a cinematic crime caper, with such imaginative songs as “Criminology,” “Incarcerated Scarfaces” and “Ice Cream” propelling the album to platinum status.

Raekwon’s second album, 1999’s Immobilarity, was certified gold. To date, Raekwon has career sales of more than 1.6 million units in the US, according to Nielsen Soundscan.

Now, with the impending release of Only Built 4 Cuban Linx 2, Raekwon is ready to release his second masterpiece. “It’s been a long time coming,” he says, “and I’ve put my blood, sweat and tears into making this classic album for my fans.”
http://www.thisis50.com/profiles/blogs/raekwon-only-built-4-cuban

Offline daigong

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #764 on: April 18, 2009, 10:36:09 PM »
SHIIITT Wu-Tang dropping albums like it was 1995!!!

BlackOut 2 In Stores 5/19/09 ... I like the City of Lights cut, click the pic to listen on myspace:

      
A-YO!

Offline thatonezombie

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #765 on: April 19, 2009, 04:21:57 AM »
FUCK YEAH BLACKOUT 2! That is a dope cover IMO. Also really diggin A-Yo. Meth ever since 8 Diagrams sounds revitalized, and some of the tracks up prove that
I vote for TOZ as the most gangsta~  :otomerika:
[01:35] <shirenu> if it ain't zomb, it ain't bomb
Visit TOZ's House of Hits http://forum.jphip.com/index.php?topic=23639.0

Offline Masa

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #766 on: April 21, 2009, 08:26:03 PM »
Asher Roth - Y.O.U. feat. Slick Rick (UK bonus track)
http://sharebee.com/0e3acfa0

Offline thatonezombie

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #767 on: April 23, 2009, 02:52:45 AM »
http://www.missiong.com/show/Blokhedz

Its an animated show about a dude named Youngblak (VOICED BY THE BKMC TALIB KWELI) and uses the power of hip hop to conquer evil. (Or at least that is what I read)
I vote for TOZ as the most gangsta~  :otomerika:
[01:35] <shirenu> if it ain't zomb, it ain't bomb
Visit TOZ's House of Hits http://forum.jphip.com/index.php?topic=23639.0

Offline daigong

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #768 on: April 23, 2009, 11:16:37 AM »
Rap Cartoons are always dope. Anyone watch Hammer? XD

Y'all still wanted to "IRC Viewing Party" this Raekwon Concert?? Ya gotta pay:

PURCHASE CONCERT
APRIL 23 | 7PM PST
Built 4 Cuban Linx II
Ticket Price: $3.99 US

http://www.myhdtvclub.com/raekwon.html

Offline Masa

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #769 on: April 23, 2009, 02:53:48 PM »
Quote
Nas speaks on upcoming album with Marley

Nas and Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley recorded one excellent single together, “Road to Zion,” in 2005. As much as I enjoyed hearing the N.Y. rap legend and the reggae scion play off each other’s styles on that track, though, I never guessed that they would be following it up four years later with a full collaborative album, Distant Relatives, tentatively set for release this June. Turns out, neither did they.

“I didn’t really plan this,” Nas told me when I reached him by phone recently. “It just feels right.” In a separate conversation, Marley explained that the idea for Distant Relatives originated last year with his management: “The idea was for us to do an EP based on Africa, using one or two tracks that didn’t make my album, likewise one or two tracks that didn’t make his album. Once we started working on the music, though, everyone was so excited that we decided to make this a full-out album.” Click through to the jump for more details on how Distant Relatives is shaping up.

The duo has spent about three months so far recording on and off in L.A. and Miami, splitting vocal duties while Marley handles the bulk of the production. “Damian is an incredible producer, man,” Nas says. “He’s conducting trumpet players, bass players, piano players, drums, background vocals, everything, putting beats together. He’s getting his Quincy Jones thing happening!” Marley laughs heartily when he hears of this last comparison: “I didn’t know [Nas] felt that way, big up. We’ve done so much work in L.A., where there’s a lot of things available — so I’m really making use of the fact that I can get live strings or great keyboard players.” Damian’s older brother Stephen Marley has also done production work for Distant Relatives, and Nas mentions the possibility of getting beats from rap producers like Large Professor, the Alchemist, J.R. Rotem, and DJ Khalil. They’d also like to draft a handful of marquee-name guests — “everyone from Stevie Wonder to Young Jeezy,” Nas says.

There are currently a dozen or so tracks under consideration for Distant Relatives, many of them revolving around the concept of Africa. “We’ve tried to maintain that theme, whether it be using African samples or speaking about Africa,” says Marley. Both he and Nas hope the resulting material will transcend listeners’ expectations of them as artists. “I hate to say this phrase, but to me it feels like world music,” Nas says. “It doesn’t feel like hip-hop. It doesn’t feel like dancehall [reggae]. It feels like the world.”

Shortly after putting the final touches on Distant Relatives, Nas and Marley will hit the road as the headlining act on this year’s Rock the Bells touring festival, and they’re both looking forward to continuing to work with each other. “Nas is an artist who I respect,” Marley says, “so to be in the studio and witness someone who I’ve been listening to for years actually do his thing live is like an intimate concert. It’s been a lot of fun.” Nas agrees: “It’s going really good, man. I don’t want it to end. When we finish this [album], I want do do another one!”
http://www.suprememag.com/2009/?p=1825

Offline Masa

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #770 on: April 23, 2009, 07:22:04 PM »
Quote
KRS-ONE & BUCKSHOT unveil the first song off their highly anticipated album "SURVIVAL SKILLS" in stores August 25th on Duck Down Records.

ROBOT, produced by Havoc of Mobb Deep, is a hard-hitting track that showcases KRS-ONE & BUCKSHOT in true form, highlighting the current auto-tune trend in Hip-Hop and exposing the copy-cat mentality that has rappers hiding behind "the program." Stepping outside the factory that Hip Hop has become, the duo lead the charge in the battle for originality.

The video for ROBOT is being filmed this week by Todd Angkasuwan in Brooklyn, New York with BET providing exclusive behind-the-scenes coverage.

"Survival Skills" has confirmed features from Mary J Blige, Slug, of Atmosphere, Immortal Technique, K'NAAN, Talib Kweli, Sean Price, Naledge of Kidz In The Hall, Smif N Wessun, Rock of Heltah Skeltah and Geo of Blue Scholars.

Production on the album includes tracks from Havoc, of Mobb Deep, 9th Wonder, Black Milk, Marco Polo, Moss, Coptic, KHRYSIS! and Ill Mind

KRS-One & Buckshot - Robot (Prod. By Havoc)
http://sharebee.com/42e98bdf

It's about time somebody called out all these robot wannabe autotune ass motherfuckers :yep:

Offline thatonezombie

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #771 on: April 24, 2009, 12:02:20 AM »
Damn, gotta pay for the online Rae concert, lets go look for a live free stream lol

Finally some KRS & Buckshot tracks!

Check this video, Meth is a Vegan!? But he still likes pizza

And new Reflection Eternal Video

Watch that in HD!
I vote for TOZ as the most gangsta~  :otomerika:
[01:35] <shirenu> if it ain't zomb, it ain't bomb
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Offline thatonezombie

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #772 on: April 24, 2009, 12:43:00 AM »
DOUBLE POST FTW!

I fucking forgot about Will Roush and his dope animated series that goes hand and hand with his mixtape. He goes through and...... actually, just watch that shit

Episode 1 Will Roush Meets Biggie

Episode 2 Will Roush Calls Biggie For Help

I vote for TOZ as the most gangsta~  :otomerika:
[01:35] <shirenu> if it ain't zomb, it ain't bomb
Visit TOZ's House of Hits http://forum.jphip.com/index.php?topic=23639.0

Offline Masa

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #773 on: April 24, 2009, 08:37:54 AM »
Eminem - 3 AM (Prod. By Dr. Dre)
http://sharebee.com/53c51d49

:thumbdown: :thumbdown:

Kanye West, Malik Yusef, Common & John Legend - Magic Man
http://sharebee.com/b6de9129

Raekwon & The Game - Flashback Memories
http://sharebee.com/bd5dcf99

Kurious - Benneton ft MC Serch & MF DOOM :: Amalgam Digital
« Last Edit: April 24, 2009, 09:19:02 AM by Masa »

Offline thatonezombie

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #774 on: April 25, 2009, 12:08:43 AM »
^ The 3PM hook is so stupid, but I actually liked that track
But its time for for....

ROSS VS. ROTH

FYI: I went and bought me both Asleep In the Bread Aisle & UGK 4 Life. UGK 4 Life I liked, Asleep was also good, but could have been better, but still worth the money
I vote for TOZ as the most gangsta~  :otomerika:
[01:35] <shirenu> if it ain't zomb, it ain't bomb
Visit TOZ's House of Hits http://forum.jphip.com/index.php?topic=23639.0

Offline Masa

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #775 on: April 25, 2009, 12:11:21 AM »
Quote

01. Duel of the Iron Mics
02. C.R.E.A.M.
03. Mystery of Chessboxin’
04. Can it All Be So Simple
05. Uzi (Pinky Ring)
06. Interlude
07. Glaciers of Ice
08. Cherchez La Ghost
09. Criminology
10. Heaven and Hell
11. Bring Da Ruckus
12. Protect Ya Neck
13. Incarcerated Scarface
14. Shimmy Shimmy Ya
15. Outro
DOWNLOAD


PURE DOPENESS! :shocked: :shocked: :shocked:

Quote
Press Release: The world moves faster than ever these days, and even in the digital age, things can always be counted on to go in cycles. Despite all of the advances in computer recording technology, home studios, and electronic instruments, there is a flourishing interest in analog recording techniques and in recreating the mood and sound of vintage soul records. With one foot in the past but their eyes firmly set on the future, El Michels Affair are among the leaders of a resurgent funk & soul movement from New York City that’s sweeping both the music community and the charts.

Led by saxophonist/organist Leon Michels and producer/engineer Jeff Silverman, El Michels Affair began as a loose collaboration of session musicians (including members of top-selling acts Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings, The Budos Band, and Antibalas) that looked to blend some of the vibrant quality of soundtrack records with the recording aesthetic of early reggae, and the rawness of 60’s rock–they called it ‘Cinematic Soul.’ This delicate balance was evident on their 2005 debut album Sounding Out the City, which earned critical acclaim and acted as the inaugural full-length release for Michels and Silverman’s burgeoning label Truth & Soul (also the moniker for the duo as a production team).

The buzz generated from the album and a series of moderately successful 7” vinyl singles from Truth & Soul led to an invitation by Toyota’s Scion division for El Michels Affair to accompany the rapper Raekwon of Wu-Tang Clan for a promotional concert. As avid Wu-Tang fans, not only were the band leaders thrilled with the opportunity, but Michels found that the ‘Cinematic Soul’ sound was consistent with the moods of RZA’s gritty soundscapes on the classic Wu-Tang releases. The concert was such as success, El Michels Affair went on to play several more concerts nationwide backing Raekwon and other members of the Clan, and the shows led to the recording of two smash 7” singles featuring instrumental reinterpretations of the Wu-Tang classic songs “C.R.E.A.M.” and “Bring Da Ruckus.” The singles combined to sell an extraordinary amount of over 7,000 units worldwide, and their success led to a contract in 2007 with indie hip-hop powerhouse Fat Beats Records to record an entire album of Wu-Tang Clan interpolations entitled Enter the 37th Chamber.

Since the contract was inked, a worldwide explosion of retro soul led by Amy Winehouse, Mark Ronson, and Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings has transformed the pop music landscape, and the Truth & Soul production duo have been in strong demand, recording with everyone from breakthrough Grammy-winning artist Adele to punk rock innovator Iggy Pop. They’ve been commissioned for official remixes of Amy Winehouse and Dinah Washington (for the popular Verve Remixed series), and produced for Australian multi-platinum acts Jet and Gabriella Cilmi.

Despite the eclectic group of clients for the Truth & Soul production company, El Michels Affair continued to build an audience within the hip hop community. A track from Sounding out the City was sampled for Ghostface Killah’s 2007 track “Shakey Dog Lolita,” and a horn part written and performed by Michels (for Menahan Street Band) was famously lifted for Jay-Z’s smash single “Roc Boys.” Truth & Soul also worked in the studio on original productions with multi-platinum producer Just Blaze (T.I.’s “Live Your Life,” Jay-Z, Usher).

With their increasing presence behind the scenes in the industry, El Michels Affair looks to have their status as recording artists rise significantly in 2009. With the release of their finally-completed album Enter the 37th Chamber, they can finally step out of the shadows of the retro-soul trend and establish their status as one of the most exciting and versatile bands in modern recorded music.

Offline daigong

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #776 on: April 25, 2009, 05:31:15 AM »
^ SHIT!! Anything Wu-Tang touches is CLASSICS!!

Kardinal live in INDIA (Videos) ft. India's EMINEM   :twothumbs Reppin all over :canada:

India's Eminem
India's Eminem performs 'Patiently Waiting' w/ Kardinal

Paper Planes remix in Pune, India
[noembed]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acRAAlbc92o[/noembed]

Nina live in Pune, India
[noembed]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OlB7g2chkEs[/noembed]

Numba 1 (Tide is High) in Mumbai, India
Kardinal performing 'Numba 1 (Tide is High)' live in Mumbai, India

First Class Flight
Kardinal on his flight to Mumbai, India

Offline daigong

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #777 on: April 26, 2009, 07:27:13 AM »
WE MISS YOU LEFT EYE :(



Left Eye missing ya. WE lost her on this day April 25, 2002... 7 years ago. Fuck the CL and Lil Mama and all those female MC's owe they career to Left Eye. Will we ever see N.I.N.A. - New Identity Non Applicable her Death Row album?? I remember listening to Ain't 2 Proud 2 Beg in 1992 and BLAAA-OOW! the main hook of Left Eye's raps got me to "join the patty wagon." Man, I was a fan from the start. Can't believe it's been so long....




 :wub:

Offline thatonezombie

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #778 on: April 29, 2009, 12:25:20 AM »
Will Roush dropping Episode 3!
Episode 3: Will Roush Meets Jazzy Jeff

Am I the only one following this? It's fucking genius
I vote for TOZ as the most gangsta~  :otomerika:
[01:35] <shirenu> if it ain't zomb, it ain't bomb
Visit TOZ's House of Hits http://forum.jphip.com/index.php?topic=23639.0

Offline Masa

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Re: The Official Rap Thread
« Reply #779 on: April 29, 2009, 07:33:40 AM »
Raekwon - New Wu feat. Ghostface Killah & Method Man video


Method Man & Redman - 4 Minutes To Lockdown feat. Ghostface Killah & Raekwon
http://sharebee.com/a2ff7541
« Last Edit: April 29, 2009, 08:07:48 AM by Masa »

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