Category Archives: hip-hop

Too $hort: This My One

(EDIT: This post belongs to friend/co-worker J.J., whom I have asked to contribute as his time permits. J.J., who has written music for the New Times chain, owns a vast music/pop culture knowledge so I’m pumped for regular – or even semi-regular – posts from him. That said, I’ve added code so you can see who has written what post. OK. Cool.)

The historic road through the hip hop game is littered with one-hit wonders (Tag Team!) and two-trick Pony fans who dwell in the discount bin after their sophomore efforts.

Then there’s Too $hort, who, can claim rap’s longevity title with a career that spans more than 20 years with just as many albums. He’s the George Foreman of heavyweight rappers, complete with tomato can challengers (see: Yukmouth) and plenty o’ grillz.

$hort Dog’s recipe for success is deceptively easy: his laid-back Oaktown drawl sprawled over simple beats with rhymes about the ins and outs of pimpin’.

He’s also remarkably consistent, but rarely spectacular. $hort’s latest single, “This My One,” would fit as perfectly on 1988s “Life Is..” as it would on 2006s “Blow the Whistle”. It doesn’t stray far from $hort’s standard game plan, save for a couple cameos (including E-40), which is what makes it a fitting holiday jam.

It’s comfortable, like a Christmas sweater, but, with lines like, “Ask your mother and your aunties/ smile in my face/ I’ll burn rubber in your panties” not quite cozy enough to share with the entire family.

When $hort Dog’s in the house, you’ve still gotta lock up your daughters.

DJ Soul: Shade 45 mixtape

While I form some thoughts on the fantastic Travis show we saw Sunday night, I direct your attention to the Hype Beast blogs for a mix with nostalgia written all over it.

DJ Soul put together ’90s hip-hop mix for Sirius Radio’s Shade 45, the hip-hop channel created by Slim Shady himself. One look at the tracklist for the two-part mix, and the memories are sure to come rushing back.

Download Part I here and Part II here.

On the topic of mixes for Thanksgiving, the Gray Kid is still offering the one he put together last year dubbed The Pilgrimage.

Meanest Man Contest: Partially Smart

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If you missed the last time I posted on Meanest Man Contest, well, then, I’ll forgive you. Just this once.

But, seriously, MMC is part of the lineup over at the newly created Rcrd Lbl, a company formed by Downtown Records and Peter Rojas, founder of Gizmodo and Engadget. (I won’t get into all the details; you can read a story in Wall Street Journal here.) In short, Rcrd Lbl is offering free downloads and costs are covered by sponsors/advertisers. You can read what blogger types are saying about it here.

I’m not really too concerned with the politics of it. For now, I’m happy Meanest Man Contest has a new track available for download called Partially Smart. According to Sneak Move, MMC will release one song per month for four months through Rcrd Lbl.

That’s cool by me. Partially Smart follows what I loved about MMC’s Throwing Away Broken Electronics – where avant-garde studio experimenting meets bottom-line hip-hop beats.

Rcrd Lbl asks not to rehost downloads, and I couldn’t quite figure out how to embed the damn widget. So follow the link below to download Partially Smart. It’s worth it.

ALSO: MMC and Gold Robot Records are having a remix contest for MMC’s They Do. Get the details and a capella version of the track at Gold Robot.

edIT: Artsy remix (feat. The Grouch)

The Grouch.

Thanks to Noz at Cocaine Blunts for posting this remix of Artsy, one of my favorite tracks by any Living Legends member.

Artsy is a dis track of a different sort. Smackin’ MCs must be old. The Grouch calls out the “pseudo-elitist, old-school sap.” Or, as Noz says: “Grouch disses his fanbase. There’s something sort of beautiful about the layers of sarcasm and self loathing. It’s a lot like the blogosphere.”

“You ain’t artsier than me…
cuz you only read books, don’t watch TV.

You ain’t artsier than me…
cuz you shop at Whole Foods in open-toed shoes

You ain’t artsier than me…
cuz you speak real soft and drink chai tea”

LA producer edIT gives Artsy the knob-tweaking treatment for his latest, Certified Air Raid Material. I’ll still take the original, but I’m happy if this song gets a more exposure because of this mix.

  • The Grouch | Artsy
  • edIT | Artsy remix (feat. The Grouch)

(Also pick up the title track of edIT’s album at the KEXP blog.)

Speaking of the Living Legends, Murs has a new single out (Better Than the Best) in advance of his Warner Bros. debut Murs for President. WB sent out streams to post. I asked for an mp3. Their compromise?: They could give me a 30-second clip with a link to buy the single.

Just go stream it at Murs’ MySpace or XXLmag.com. The track was produced by Nottz, who also produced Barry Bonds off Kanye’s Graduation. I think I’m the only person who likes that song.

Anyway, you can still get Murs’ Dreadlocks (previous post) at his management company’s Web site, too. Right damn here.

Atban Klann: Grass Roots (repost, Part II)

Here is the rest of the Grass Roots record by Atban Klann (now better known as Black Eyed Peas). You can grab the first eight tracks here. No telling how long I’ll keep these up; it’s a drag on the ol’ server space. And server space doesn’t grow on trees, ya know.

This batch has a few of my favorites (No Sequel, Focus On You and Puddles of H2O) and a couple of snippets that I’ve decided to title “interlude.”

Again, these are posted in order of how I have them on my copy. So these would be tracks 9-19. The first post is 1-8.

Hope you enjoy.

  • Atban Klann | No Sequel
  • Atban Klann | Rain On Me
  • Atban Klann | Dedicated
  • Atban Klann | interlude
  • Atban Klann | Focus On You
  • Atban Klann | Puddles of H2O
  • Atban Klann | interlude
  • Atban Klann | Duet
  • Atban Klann | Strolling
  • Atban Klann | Yougohdah
  • Atban Klann | La Borio Woman Beater

Atban Klann: Grass Roots (repost, Part I)

In my two-plus years of writing this blog, I don’t think I’ve ever made a wholesale rerun of a block of tracks from a previous post. And I usually keep mp3s up for about a month (or more if I’m lazy). That means I get some requests to repost tracks. More than any post(s) I’ve done, my digital conversion of a dubbed cassette of Atban Klann’s shelved Grass Roots album has, no doubt, been requested for repost the most. (I split it into four parts: Here, here, here and here.)

Quick summary: Atban Klann was Black Eyed Peas before they were Black Eyed Peas. Here’s what I wrote in that first post back in September 2005:

“Formed in Los Angeles in the early 1990s, Atban (A Tribe Beyond A Nation) brought current BEPs Apl.de.ap and Will.I.Am together to produce some cuts that might surprise you. It might surprise you also to know that Atban Klann was signed to Ruthless Records, run by none other than Eazy-E. Unfortunately, the album, Grass Roots, was shelved and never found its way to the public. Story has it that Ruthless was unsure how to market a group whose positive vibes ran contrary to Ruthless’ gangsta image.”

One of my more prized (if not slightly warped) pieces of my vinyl collection is a 12-inch single for Puddles of H2O (b/w Let Me Get Down), which, I’m presuming, would have been the lead single.

Anyway, as I also said in that original post, my copy of the album (on a Maxell UR cassette) is probably a copy of a copy. Still, you get the idea. One note: The order I’m posting the tracks is the order I have them on my copy, so I’m not sure if that would have been the official sequence on the final product.

  • Atban Klann | Open Your Mind
  • Atban Klann | Going for a Ride
  • Atban Klann | Adidas
  • Atban Klann | Lord of the Flies
  • Atban Klann | Quid Pro Quo
  • Atban Klann | Jugglin’ My Nuts (interlude … not sure if that’s the title.)
  • Atban Klann | Mountain Top
  • Atban Klann | World’s Gone Mad

Part II coming in the next day or so.

The Ghostface Doll

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All I want for Christmas … is the Ghostface Doll.

For a mere $499, the Ghostface Doll comes equipped with poseable hat, 14K gold eagle wristband, 14K gold pendant/chain and velvety robe. It comes “enclosed in a box that has remnants of Fine Louis XIII cognac” and is accompanied with an exclusive mixtape CD of 36 Ghostface songs mixed by DJ Rhettmatic.

Did I mention it talks? Oh, it talks. The doll says such pleasant lines as: “Remember when I long dicked you and broke your ovary?” Just imagine how much fun that would be to open on Christmas morning with the family!

Judging by the “Adventures of Little Ghost” (pics sorta NSFW), this is kinda like Lil’ Penny, only, you know, way cooler.

So, seriously, who’s buying this thing for me?

D-Nice Presents: Black Sheep

I’ve discussed D-Nice once or twice around here. (Maybe even three times.)

Well, the former Boogie Down Productions member and solo rap artist (now a photographer) is branching out with a YouTube series called D-Nice Presents: True Hip-Hop Stories. The latest installment of the relatively new series features a short sit-down interview with Dres of Black Sheep, who talks about the making of the classic joint The Choice Is Yours and how the ever-present third verse (“Engine, engine number 9”) came about. I mean, how classic is this song? Consider the lyric: “And, pass the paper, cross the fader / Black Sheep getting played, like a Sony in a beta.”

Check out the interview: