Category Archives: hip-hop

Pete Rock and CL Smooth: They Reminisce Over You (demo mix)

never_coming_out

In the early to mid ’90s, buying the hip-hop I loved in any format – vinyl, cassette, CD, whatever – was a bit of an obsession … and an expensive one, at that. Still, all these years later, I’m pretty proud of the collection I’ve amassed, from cassingles to imports and everything in between.

I spent plenty of time and money at Swell Records back in the day, hoarding anything I could with those fancy dreams of being a DJ (haha … yeah, right). One vinyl gem I plucked – marked down to $10 from $18.99 (the price tag is still on it) – is a 1994 promo import from Pete Rock and CL Smooth, the Never Coming Out EP (1994).

It must have come out after the release of The Main Ingredient because it features one of the tracks from that album (In the House) and a remix of another (Take You There). Even better, it features a demo mix of the classic joint, They Reminisce Over You, from the 1992 debut Mecca and the Soul Brother.

Inspired by The Main Ingredient cafe/ale house in Phoenix, I finally got around to converting the EP to digital files. So check out the T.R.O.Y. demo mix below, and then head over to the Matador Records blog to hear a new Pete Rock remix of Yo La Tengo’s Here to Fall.

Guilty Simpson and Madlib: Cali Hills

guiltysimpson

A Stones Throw collaboration between Detroit emcee Guilty Simpson and Los Angeles-based producer Madlib seemed only destined for greatness, and now a freshly minted 8.0 rating from Pitchfork for the OJ Simpson LP helps validate it.

In my hunt for the first great hip-hop album of 2010 (what am I missing?), I’ll be spending some time with this one today.

Check out Cali Hills, an ode to the late J Dilla (via Stones Throw).

Toki Wright: By the Time I Get to Arizona 2010

tokiwright

With the call for protest songs to Senate Bill 1070 in full effect, it seemed like only a matter of time before someone – if it wasn’t Chuck D. himself – updated Public Enemy’s blistering 1991 MLK statement, By the Time I Get to Arizona.

Rhymesayers rapper Toki Wright did just that, writing new verses over the original track. Wright wrote a letter detailing how his version came about, paying due to the cadence and composition of the original while making an entirely new statement for our time.

Public Enemy: By the Time I Get to Arizona

Sadly, almost 20 years later, this song is as relevant today as it was in 1991, when Arizona officials rejected a federal MLK holiday in this state. Now Arizona is back in the political spotlight for all the wrong reasons after the governor signed a bill that all but welcomes racial profiling under the guise of tough immigration reform.

I’m not one to take much of a public political stance, but this is shameful and embarrassing. I can only imagine what people who have never been to Arizona must think of it. Perhaps something like Chuck D. envisioned in 1991 …

I Used to Love H.E.R.: Sarah Barthel (Phantogram)

The 45th installment of I Used to Love H.E.R., a series in which artists/bloggers/writers discuss their most essential or favorite hip-hop albums and songs, comes from Sarah Barthel, keyboardist and singer of electronic-pop duo Phantogram, whose debut LP, Eyelid Movies, was released in February on Barsuk.

Barthel and bandmate Josh Carter just this week released a video for the great track, Mouthful of Diamonds.

I recently became aware of Barthel’s interest in hip-hop, and here she tells us what drew her to the genre and then dishes on one of her favorite hip-hop albums.

In college was where I discovered my love for Hip-Hop. I spent a lot of my time downloading it off of the internet. It was fascinating to me how easy it was to find new music and I had to get as much of it as I could. When I wasn’t working, I spent a lot of my time searching for old underground hip-hop music. Since I was unable to get full albums, I would download any song I could find. My library was filled with crappy versions of songs with confusing titles like {_.mp3_track03*~~Fl4yp}}>. In translation, this one track I found was a golden egg of delightfulness. It was A Tribe Called Quest song. Specifically, Electric Relaxation off of Midnight Marauders. I didn’t know this at the time because of the squirrelly title, but the one thing I knew was that it was the coolest song I had ever heard. I can’t say I lived under a rock before this moment, but it seemed like it at the time. After all, Greenwich, NY, didn’t have the most diverse music scene going on. After discovering this song, I had a mission – collect Q-Tip’s and A Tribe Called Quest’s entire discography. I managed to get my hands on a few – Midnight Marauders, The Anthology and Q-Tip’s Amplified. The tracks on these records changed the way I looked at music and to this day they instantly excite me. I was unaware at the time, but one of our favorite beat makers (J Dilla) produced a lot of the tracks.

elzhi - the prefaceElzhi, The Preface (prod. by Black Milk)
(Fat Beats, 2008)

This album blows my mind! I love the raw, lo-fi, dirty Detroit-influenced swagger and production on this record. It’s extremely captivating and inspiring. It’s hard to be able to combine all of these elements together without it sounding messy and confusing, but The Preface pulls it off perfectly. Although the record incorporates a lot of chopped-up old soul samples, the beats and arrangements also sound fresh and futuristic. The juxtaposition between the two elements is what I love most about this record. Tracks like Guessing Game, The Leak and Colors will definitely go down as being my favorite tracks from the past decade.

New Murs and 9th Wonder: The Problem Is

Murs and 9th Wonder - Fornever

As a member of the Living Legends collective and a longtime solo artist, Murs is as prolific as any rapper out there – sometimes to a fault (I’m afraid he’s showing some Ryan Adams-like tendencies). But for my money, some of his best work has come in the company of producer 9th Wonder, who played just a small part on Murs’ major-label debut Murs for President in 2008.

Now the duo is back with Fornever, their third collaborative proper album (due out March 30), following up the 2006 favorite Murray’s Revenge and 2004’s Murs 3:16: The 9th Edition. (Hopefully, you also grabbed the free Sweet Lord mixtape when you had the chance two years ago.)

Check out the first single, The Problem Is, and a making-of look at the soon-to-be-released video.

RELATED:
Felt (Murs + Slug): Protagonists
Murs on KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic
Murs: Can It Be (video)
Murs and 9th Wonder: Sweet Lord

Pete Rock and C.L. Smooth inspire Phoenix eatery

Pete Rock and C.L. Smooth - The Main Ingredient

This post is dedicated to the good folks at The Main Ingredient, a new-ish cafe/ale house in downtown Phoenix.

It’s no coincidence the eatery – owned by Matt and Courtney Diamond – shares the same name as second (and final) full-length by influential hip-hop duo Pete Rock and C.L. Smooth. It crossed my mind when I first heard the name of the place, but I didn’t connect the dots until I saw Matt Diamond wearing a Pete Rock and C.L. Smooth T-shirt when I ate there a few weeks ago. My compliment on the shirt earned me a drink on the house. (Apparently, I was only the second person – the other being a friend of his – to identify the inspiration behind the restaurant’s name. Countless years of hip-hop listening finally pay off!)

Clearly, Diamond is a hip-hop fan and it’s evident in the house music – an endless stream of songs from hip-hop’s golden age. But I really had to give it up to him when I heard a song by Supermarket, a Tempe-based group from the ’90s that I blogged about almost five years ago. That one took me back.

And about the only thing better than the music is the reasonably priced food (PDF of the menu), some of which even has a hip-hop theme, like the Charli 2na sandwich, and a bar that features an impressive wine and beer list (eight microbrews on tap). My wife and I split the The Red Goat salad and the RB & C sandwich.

Looking forward to the eats – and beats – of my second trip. In the meantime, here’s the titular song from the 1994 album that inspired the restaurant’s namesake.

Guru of Gang Starr reportedly in coma

Guru, one-half of the highly influential hip-hop duo Gang Starr and a man who possesses one of the most recognizable voices in the game, is reportedly in a coma after suffering cardiac arrest. Roots drummer ?uestlove tweeted that Guru’s partner, DJ Premier, confirmed the reports on Sirius on Sunday night. Guru is scheduled to undergo surgery on Monday.

Here’s hoping for a full and speedy recovery. Think positive thoughts for a true hip-hop icon.

Video for the classic Gang Starr track Mass Appeal is below:

Meanest Man Contest: Partially Smart (video)

I knew it would be a daunting task to catch up on e-mails/music/etc. after our two-week trip to Thailand (which was amazing, of course). But I certainly didn’t expect the process to be delayed by surgery for gallbladder removal (had a stone stuck in there) over the weekend, which started with curiously excruciating abdominal pain on Friday evening and ended with me leaving the hospital on Sunday afternoon with one less organ.

I’m on the mend now and have a shaved stomach with four incisions, a sore right shoulder (“referred” pain) and a prescription for Oxycodone for my troubles. That’s not to mention our poor little cat Otis, who had to have a piece of foam he chewed/swallowed removed from his intestine on Monday. Good times!

Anyway, it’s all left me napping multiple times throughout the day and laying around with the laptop as I try to catch up (finished Season 1 of Mad Men and got a good start on James Swanson’s Manhunt). One of the first orders of business in posting is to get this new Meanest Man Contest video in front of your eyes.

This track, Partially Smart, has been around for a couple years as part of an EP by the same name on RCRD LBL, but the video is a tie-in to a web comedy series called Txt M3 B1tch, created by the director of the video (John Irwin).

Like most endeavors MMC undertakes – whether it’s curating a book soundtrack or, just recently, creating a mix of country classics in other languages – Eric Steuer (aka Eriksolo) and Noah Blumberg (aka Quarterbar) again prove themselves to be culturally relevant and refined in this humorous send-up/dis of the scenester lifestyle we all love to hate.

RJD2: Let There Be Horns (video)

For anyone who didn’t take to RJD2’s attempts at singing on The Third Hand (and many people didn’t), you’ll probably be relieved to hear the vocals-free Let There Be Horns, a cut that recalls some of the better tracks from RJ’s beat-heavy debut Deadringer.

Not to mention, the video for the song follows a day in the life of a cubicle-bound, chemically imbalanced minotaur, who’s having a bit of a rough day.

Pick up RJ’s new album The Colossus on Jan. 19 and don’t forget he’ll be at Rhythm Room on April 4 with Busdriver and Happy Chichester. (Buy tickets.)

RELATED:
RJD2 (feat. Blueprint): Wherever
New/old RJD2: Find You Out
I Used to Love H.E.R.: RJD2

ALSO: I’m leaving for Thailand for 16 days with my wife and her parents, who are from there. Other than the 15-hour flight between L.A. and Taipei (and the ensuing three-hour layover and three-hour flight to Bangkok), I’m beyond excited. The thought of boarding a plane for 15 hours seems surreal to me at this point, but I figure it’s great training for The Amazing Race. Anyway, Frequent contributor and all-around awesome guy Jason Woodbury will keep the blog fresh in my stead.