605 lines
30 KiB
Plaintext
605 lines
30 KiB
Plaintext
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Section 1 -- One
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HardC.O.R.E. Vol. 1, Issue 8 9/18/93
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Table of Contents
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Section Contents Author
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---- -------- ------
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1 Contents
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2 Da 411 -
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3 Article - S.S.F.T.I. mc78+@andrew.cmu.edu
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4 Article - The Atlanta Scene gt7214b@prism.gatech.edu
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5 Article - Yo! MTV Raps juonsteve@bvc.edu
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6 Article - Rolling Stone mc78+@andrew.cmu.edu
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7 Review - The Alkaholiks dwarner@ucs.indiana.edu
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8 Review - Fat Joe IN%"U14864%UICVM@UIC.EDU"
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9 Lyrics - I Got it Bad Y'all King Tee & Tha Alkaholiks
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10 Editor - My .25 cents...
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Section 2 -- Two
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The C.O.R.E. creed
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We at C.O.R.E. support underground hip-hop (none of that crossover
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bullshucks). That means we also support the 1st Amendment and the
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right to uncensored music.
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"I got more rhymes than Madonna gets dick"
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- KRS-One, "I Get Wrecked"
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...from Flash
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Section 3 - Three
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Some Shots from the Industry.
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Relayed by Mike C
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Public Enemy just finished a trip to the motherland. Along with
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singer/actor Isaac Hayes, Public Enemy was warmly welcomed by Brother
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Akbar Muhammed in Ghana. The Ghana representative of the Nation of
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Islam, Brother Akbar also represented the government and thge Pan
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African Historical Theater Festival. In an eight day program, PE and
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Hayes traveled to the Cape Coast Slave Dungeons and put on a show for a
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packed house at the University of Ghana, and privately performed for the
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President before their grand finaly in front of 60,000.
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Nikki D is finishing up her second album. Eric Sadler, Showbiz, and Sid
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Reynolds are all helping her out on the production tip. She's got a cut
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on it with Apache.
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Nice and Smooth are rounding out their new album as well in LA. It'll
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be self-produced and, surprisingly, Bobby Brown is helping out. Teddy
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Riley could appear in the credits on this one. I can't imagine that
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these brothers'll go soft, but seeing B.Brown and Teddy in the same
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paragraph as Gregg Nice and Smooth Bee isn't exactly encouraging.
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Terminator X, as you may have heard, is hooking up some new artists who
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will appear on his new joint. Juicehead, Punk Barbarians, Godfathers of
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Threat, 8-Ball, and Life will be on it. If I didn't know better, I'd
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think Terminator was working on a new death-metal/hip hop album.
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Slick Rick has finished his new album called "Behind Bars." 9 tracks
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will appear on this LP, as well as a bonus cut. Pete Rock, Marley
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Marl, Easy Mo Bee, Large Professor, Epitome of Scratch, and Mic Profesah
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will set him up with the beats on his second album since he was
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incarcerated.
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Father MC will be dropping the "MC" from his name for his forthcoming
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alubm _69_ which is set to drop November 10. The title song is produced
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by Teddy Riley. Other producer's on this project will include Eddie F.,
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Clark Kent, Pete Rock, and Ski from Original Flavor.
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Daddy O's new solo effort entitled _You can be a Daddy, but Never a
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Daddy-O_ will be written lyrically by him, but the production duties
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will be left to others in the industry. The first single is "Brooklyn
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Bounce" and the album will drop October 5.
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The first artist from Parrish Smith's "PMD Records" is Top Quality,
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whose first cut, to be released in a month or so, is titled "Magnum
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Opus." Tammy "Sunkist" Greer, the promo rep for his label has been
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hanging out with Masta Ace and the Alkaholiks on the recent tour that
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just finished up at the end of August. According to Greer, every show
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slammed, and she had a "great" time.
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Elektra representatives claim that the year delay of the new Leaders of
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the New School album is because of "clearing samples." The first track
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has had a limited 12" release for major radio stations, and is entitled
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"What's Next."
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New Del the Funkee Homosapien 12" will be released on the Elektra label
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as well in early October, although one should take into account the
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"Elektra Factor," and should add on 6 months to a year to compensate for
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this mysterious syndrome.
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And remember, don't sleep on the Troubleneck Brothers.
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.........................................................
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Section 4 -- Four
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Martin Kelley
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*The Atlanta Scene*
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Yo, this was a crazy couple of weeks. First, let me say
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congratultions to Fourtie for makin' the unsigned hype in The
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Source. I predicted good stuff in my last edition and like the
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Last Dragon "SHO' NUFF" it went down. Also, I shoulda included
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this little tidbit in my last edition but it slipped my mind...
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C.O.D. is comin "Straight From the Underground" on Select Records.
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I saw the video and it's a good quality one, so you will probably
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see it at least on Rap City or the Box. They used to work with
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Easy Lee (Kool Moe Dee's former DJ) and they may still. I have
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just forgotten about C.O.D. lately since they've ben on the DL ever
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since they signed with Select a while back.
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The only news this edition is JACK THE RAPPER. For those who don't
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know, Jack the Rapper is a music industry conference that is geared
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to urban radio stations and they (the record companies) showcase
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their artists in hopes of collecting aadds to the playlists across
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the country. I've attended the convention for the past three years
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now and it's always interesting to say the least. It seems to be
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more geared toward rap music these days as there are two nights of
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Marathon rap showcases known as "Rappin' in the Ayem" (they usually
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don't start till at least midnight). Let me take you through the
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weekend in as best a chronological order as I can.
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Thursday: I had to work so I didn't get down to the Marriot until
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about midnight, which I don't think mattered all that much as
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everyone was still just arriving. The first person I saw was Lin
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Que and I was goin to approac her to ask her about working with
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Lyte on Duke Da Moon management, and if Lyte was around cuz' I had
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met Lyte two years ago at JTR and hung out a little wit her. I
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hadn't seen her since then, and Lyte was/is crazy cool, one of the
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nicer people with deals that I've met in the industry. However,
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she got lost in the crowd that was headed into one of the Marquis
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ballrooms, and I didn't see her again for the whole weekend, or
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Lyte. I ran into LeShaun but I don't like her stuff and saw no
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real reason to talk to her cuz' she stirked me as someone who would
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think I'm tryin' to sweat her if I just struck up a casual
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conversation. I was just coolin' and enjoyin' the showcase... the
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highlight performances were Poor Righteous Teachers, the
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Alkaholiks, and 2Pac. Nemesis and some others were also on, but I
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don't really remember the rest as this was the shorter showcase. I
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went over to the area where they were playin' videos cuz' there
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were some new ones that I hadn't seen and some other promotional
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clips. I saw clips from Digital Underground (cool), Pharcyde's
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"other fish" (alright), K7 (hey I liked the video although the song
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is trying to go hot 100), C.O.D. (I thought the video was good
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visually but that's all I can say without doggin' a local crew),
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and some others, but the best clip was from L.O.N.S., "What's
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Next?", probably just cuz' I was glad to see them back. Anyway, I
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was gettin' into the video and all, and me and the two guys on my
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left were mad bobbin' our heads so I looked over to see the fellas
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who were gettin into it as much as me, and it was B-Real and Dicno,
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all smiles like me. After the video I just said what's up and they
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broke out somewhere together. Then I sw my man Subtle T who does
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"the Beatbox" on Thursday nights, 9-11 P.M., on my school's radio
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station WREK 91.1 (Georgia Tech) and we just kicked it for a
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while. Then I met DawgCatcher from C.O.D. and congratulated him on
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his release from Select. Then as always my man Hafez Harris found
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me (he's always in the place and he always sneaks up on me), and of
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course he was tryin' to collect contacts for his house music.
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Finally, before I broke out I saw Logic from Y'all So Stupid and I
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had to talk with him and let him know that I thought their album
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was nice adn to keep it up, so we talked for a little bit about
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some old shows, and then I had to break.
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Friday: The craziest! I was just chillin' upstairs and watchin'
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all the people and talkin' to a few. A lot of hopeful artists were
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tryin' to give me their demos because I had the Mercury VIP pass in
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effect (props to Barry for that hook up), so I had to explain that
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I wasn't with Mercury but E.C.T. Entertainment and would be glad to
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take their demo, but politely suggested that if they had a limited
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number not to give them to me as the E.C.T. is still pretty small
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(right now). I said what's up to Shock G, Kid, and returned a hard
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look to Big Daddy Kane himself. I felt bad for Snoop Doggy Dogg
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because he couldn't get ten feet without brothers tryin' to give
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him tapes for Dre or gettin' their picture taken with him. Talib
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Shabazz from another local hip-hop radio show (actually two, Da
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Bomb, and Rhythm and Vibes, on WRAS 88.5 Saturday 8-10 P.M., and
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Sunday 10 P.M. - 2 A.M. respectively) came over where I was sittin
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and began talkin to Lord Digga from Masta Ase, Inc. I didn't even
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know I was sittin' by him so Talib did introductions, and then he
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asked me how things were going with the Natural (who E.C.T. is
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producing). After that, finally, B-right (my potnah who's the only
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one left in Tribal Science, but he'll come back his new shit is mad
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fly) came upstairs from watchin' Tony Tone Toni, and Royal T was
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with him to my surprise (Royal T is another artist down with East
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Coast Tribe but not on the compilation EP). B asked me if I had
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seen Trendz of Culture yet, 'cuz we were lookin' for them
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especially to talk to them about workin' with Nastee's Aunt, the
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NATURAL. As asoon as he asked me that I saw Grapevine and MO.L,
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and we talked to them for a while about the Natural and what they
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were up to. They said they were already done with their second
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album and about to start some more tracks. Next, Royal T suggested
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that we go up to the 40th floor to DJ Magic Mike's suite 'cuz there
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was a party. I was with that 'cuz I was hungry and I didn't wanna
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pay $2 for the corn dogs that the hotel people were selling with
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$1.75 cans of soda. However, we tried to get on the elevator and
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me an' B got left off the first one. There wasn't another elevator
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for at least fifteen minutes so we went downstairs with the
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intention of splittin' a plate of chicken fingers and fries, but
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when we got downstairs people started runnin' for the doors. Oh
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snap! What the Hell's goin' on? Things got calm for a minute, then
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again Mad People runnin' away from somethin'. When it calmed again
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I spotted this girl that I met a while back at a P.E. concert
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(Anastasia) and I was talkin' to her as things got crazy, then
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calmed, then crazy, and so on for about three more times (at one
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point she had me worried when she said that she thought she had
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heard shots). Anyway from what we could tell the commotion was
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that just before the Dogg Pound Showcase (yeah, Dr. Dre's whole
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crew), somebody knocked Luke's (yeah that one) hat off of his head
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and there was a bunch of people scufflin' with chairs and stuff,
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which we should have been able to see because we were less than 100
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feet away, but there was just too many people to see through. FOI
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was in the house and there didn't seem to be that much human
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damage... the only property damage was the hotel's food stand
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(which cancelled our dinner). This post-poned the showcase for an
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hour and a half. The showcase was great(!) though... it started at
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2 A.M. and B-right and I left the ballroom at 7 A.M. on the dot.
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Kool DJ Red Alert hosted the whole show. The lineup was 2Pac
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(again?), some crew whose name I didn't catch but they had a mad
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DJ, then the Pharcyde (dope and then some), some Flavor Unit group
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with "hey DJ" {editor's note this is Jhane, and the song is "Hey,
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Mr. DJ"}, Fat Joe, UltraMagnetic M.C.'s, Wu-Tang Clan, Whodini (oh
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yes! memories), Punk Barbarians, Black Moon (with new members...
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I'll keep it under my hat and let you be surprised, but they were
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kinda weak in terms of live performace), Mad Phlayva (not Dallas'
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Mad Flava) and the reason why mad heads stayed was the Kings,
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Run-D.M.C. They showed and proved why they are the best. It was
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truely one of the best nights of hip-hop that I have ever witnessed
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and I think that went for almost everybody.
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Saturday: Me and B-right got some breakfast, went to our
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apartments, showered, changed, went back to the Marriot, and took a
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small nap over in the lounge with the soft couches. We got up and
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met Prime (formerly of BET he was the original hip-hop
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advisor/informer) and a producer named Yahone, and we just sat
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around and talked smack about everybody who ever made a record with
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a couple of speechless breaks (at least from me) as we watched
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Madeline Woods from Video LP pass by where we were sittin' a couple
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times in this scandalous outfit. I said hello but she was talkin'
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with B-Real for a spell and later when I saw Sen and Mugg without
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B-Real in the same spot they had all been before, Heather Hunter
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came over to chat, and I though how nice it must be to have the
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number one album in the U.S. (know what I mean?). Anyway, Prime,
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B-right and I went to get some food downstairs, but the free food
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line was too long for me so we went downstairs to the trade
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displays and my man B-love from BMG hooked us up with crazy samples
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(however they weren't all that impressive upon a later listen). We
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saw Tip, Phife, Ali and Posdunoos from De La, and we asked when the
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new albums were due. Pos said the single end of August the album
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October, pretty much the same for Tribe's stuff but we got a flyer
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for that (I wasn't really payin' attention to the dates it was just
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an excuse to talk). We also saw Daddy-O from Stet at the trade
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displays. We went back upstairs and saw Too $hort, Jam Master Jay,
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and Hurby Luv Bug. We met Run and told him how fat his show was
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the night (really that morning) before. We saw Logic again and he
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seemed to be having a great time as we were meeting all the Big
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Shots. We left early because we were pretty tired and I always
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boycott the Famous Luke Party just as a personal protest to what
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Mr. Campbell stands for (I hear that Luke's party is the craziest
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and certainly the most popular even every year at JTR). So I left
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as everyone was askin' me if they'd see me later. No that's it for
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this year, but it was cool. Peace.
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Section 5 -- Five
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Steve Juon
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Well I hate to say it, but there is at least one good thing about
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MTV... Yo! MTV Raps on Friday nights (although I wish they'd go
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back to EVERY afternoon). And since I've been watching for the past
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two weeks, I thought I would post my opinion on some of the new
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music/videos.
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First of all, even though Illegal is way too much like Da Youngstaz
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(really no difference between the two), I liked the new video "We
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Getz Busy". Erick Sermon hooked the track up lovely and even has a
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funky cameo (too bad he didn't produce the whole LP). The setting is
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cool too... just three mean (boys, whatever) in the studio rocking
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the mic. The simplicity of the video and the slamming music, plus
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the (hate to say it but) above average lyrical flow make for a sure
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fire winner.
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The one y'all been waiting for, L.O.N.S. is back with a passion.
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"What's Next" is a typical L.O.N.S. video... hyper and colorful.
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As usual, Busta Rhymes lyrics are near incomprehensible (but damn
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funky despite that). The rest of the crew shine, and the track is
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NOT TO BE FUCKED WITH. If your head is not bobbin when you watch
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this video, have it examined PRONTO!
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And of course, you know De La Soul is in the house. "Breakadawn" is
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just the SMOOVEST of tracks I have heard in a long time, and as
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usual the De La flow like water. There is some interesting
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symbolism going on in the video, like De La being trapped at the
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bottom of a well/prison... I don't quite follow it but suffice it
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to say this is a unique video and a fat track.
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The only thing that made last nights "Yo!" worth my two hours of
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sleeplessness was George Clinton's "Paint the White House Black".
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In some ways it exceeded my expectations, in others it fell short.
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I expected jus a lil more funkiness in the track, considering
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Clinton is the king of funk. And Cube and Dre only have cameos,
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not full verses (although they are PHAT cameos). What was good was
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the verses from Breed (the original P.T.W.H.B. man), Yo-Yo, and a
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gang of others. Oh, and Flavor-Flav had a few cameos too...
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suffice it to say this was a very good video. The funniest part
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was when Dre is on the phone with Hillary Clinton... I won't spoil
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it see this SLAMMIN video for yourself.
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The newjack Dred Scott was in the house, but I wasn't very
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impressed. The song was called somethin' like "A Dred Scott Ain't
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Got Nuthin to Lose". It was average lyrical style, to an average
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beat, set to an average video. The funkiest part of the whole song
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was a breakdown between verses two and three which was in there.
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Dred probably has potential but this video didn't highlight it very
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well.
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Dissapointments: No Snoop Dogg video, no UltraMagnetic M.C.'s
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video, no video from the Alkaholiks (I keep hearin that Make Room
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is PHAT), and basically a lack of new video material altogether
|
|||
|
(last week and this week were almost the same). But all in all I
|
|||
|
still want my Yo! MTV...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Asalaam alaikum from Flash
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Section 6 -- Six
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
copied without permission from the boards of Mike C.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rolling Stone Street News
|
|||
|
by Dimitri Ehrlich
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some things just can't be learned. Like a taste from rhubarb, the gene
|
|||
|
for muscular calves, or the ability to be a great rapper, you're either
|
|||
|
born with it or you're not. And while the slightly endomorphic Erick
|
|||
|
Sermon will probably never pose for Calvin Klein ads, he was born with
|
|||
|
an extra dose fo that elusive but essential B-boy trait: supremely ill
|
|||
|
rhyme skills. As a result, "No Pressure" (Def Jam/Sony). Sermon's first
|
|||
|
solo album since the breakup of EPMD, is the most straight up funkadelic
|
|||
|
rap album of the seasonb. In addition to recording "No Pressure," the
|
|||
|
lisping Long Islander has collaborated with TLC producer Dallas Austin
|
|||
|
on an upcoming project under the name Shades of Lingo.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Speaking of endomorphs, on August 31 the patron saint of healthy
|
|||
|
cabooses, Sir Mix-a-Lot, released a compilation entitled "Seattle...the
|
|||
|
Dark Side," a showcase for the nogrunge faction of Seattle that features
|
|||
|
a roster of rap and R&B artists signed to his Rhyme Cartel label.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Four days before Mix-a-Lot's album drops, Def American Recordings, which
|
|||
|
distributes Rhyme Cartel, will change its name to American Recordings.
|
|||
|
Label head Rick Rubin is holding a funeral for the word "def," which he
|
|||
|
believes is passe.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Seattle will be host to Ice-T in September, who will be filming
|
|||
|
"Surviving the Game" in the rainy yuppy paradise. As soon as that
|
|||
|
wraps, the Home Invader will be shooting another film, "Johnny
|
|||
|
Mnemonic," described by a spokesperson at Priority records as "a
|
|||
|
futuristic, 'Blade Runner' secret-agent type of thing." Ice's winter
|
|||
|
tour of Europe with Body Count will follow.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Earlier this summer, just as KMD had completed tracks for their upcoming
|
|||
|
album "Black Bastards"(Elektra), group member Subroc was fatally struck
|
|||
|
by a car on Long Island, NY. In a show of solidarity, Pete Nice,
|
|||
|
Leaders of the New School, Brand Nubian, A Tribe Called Quest, H2O and
|
|||
|
others will lip-sync the parts originally rapped by Subroc in the video
|
|||
|
for the album's first single, "What a Niggy No." The same artists will
|
|||
|
take part in a Manhattan benifit performance for Subroc's family,
|
|||
|
including his brother and partner in KMD, Zevlov X, to be held in late
|
|||
|
August.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Pete Nice's Hoppoh Recordings, a new Sony-distributed label, will be
|
|||
|
launching in September with the release of "Jorge of the Projects," by
|
|||
|
Kurious Jorge. Jorge, who used to be a foot messenger for Def Jam until
|
|||
|
he was discovered rapping, has a sleey-eyed style that makes his artful,
|
|||
|
unpretentious rhyming seem deceptively simple. And like Erick Sermon,
|
|||
|
he never seems to struggle, pretend, or break a sweat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Section 7 -- Seven
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THA ALKAHOLIKS, "21 & OVER
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Review by David J.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
With all the talk in rap music today about creating new
|
|||
|
styles and finding new subjects for rhymes, a lot of artists lose
|
|||
|
the things that made rap great -- funky beats and rhymes that just
|
|||
|
flow. Tha Alkaholiks have both of these.
|
|||
|
This album features ten songs from the group that first blew
|
|||
|
up on the scene on the King Tee single "I Got It Bad," where they
|
|||
|
established their style with the lines "It used to be about rhymes,
|
|||
|
all about rhymes... now rappers rearrangin', and changin' like
|
|||
|
times." It would seem at first that Tha 'Liks are all about rhymes,
|
|||
|
until you get a listen to their beats.
|
|||
|
E-swift takes care of most of the production, with a little
|
|||
|
help from King Tee on two tracks and The Loot Pack on a two
|
|||
|
others. From the basic bassline on "Only When I'm Drunk" to the
|
|||
|
phat uptempo jazz licks on "Turn Tha Party Out" and "Mary Jane"
|
|||
|
(both Loot Pack-produced) to the straight up jams on "Make Room"
|
|||
|
and "Last Call" (the tracks on their first single), the beats kick
|
|||
|
from start to finish, which makes the entire album worth playing.
|
|||
|
Of course, even with the phattest music, crews are nowhere
|
|||
|
without dope rhymes to recite on top of 'em. No problem. J-Ro and
|
|||
|
Tash say that crews talk about "back to the old school./Ya never
|
|||
|
should have left in the first place, fool," and they back it up by
|
|||
|
just flowing on each track and inviting their numerous guests (King
|
|||
|
Tee, The Loot Pack, Threat, Field Trip) to do the same. The 'Liks
|
|||
|
use so many braggadocious metaphors in every song that all you can
|
|||
|
do is just sit and listen and wish you could have written them.
|
|||
|
They extend the metaphor for "Mary Jane," a song which
|
|||
|
compares the average spliff to a real life girlfriend. "Some
|
|||
|
people don't approve of me being with ya, kiddo./They say you're
|
|||
|
bad for me, and my mama says ditto./ When I walk up witcha, my
|
|||
|
brothers wanna hit ya,/I know you been with others, but you know
|
|||
|
I'll never quit ya." It's a refreshing change from the rest of the
|
|||
|
basic blunt-smoking tracks in rap these days.
|
|||
|
As the group name indicates, though, J-Ro and Tash main
|
|||
|
subject in their tunes is booze. You can almost hear the entire
|
|||
|
keg party singing, "Last call for alcohol!" when the chorus pops
|
|||
|
in, and J-Ro sounds on the verge of vomiting on "Only When I'm
|
|||
|
Drunk." Tash has to pass the mic on that track because "Goddam I
|
|||
|
gotta piss..."
|
|||
|
The lone positive message on this album is simple -- don't
|
|||
|
drink and drive. J-Ro gives props to some friends who were killed
|
|||
|
in a car accident, and Tash tells the crowd on "Turn Tha Party
|
|||
|
Out", "If you're going home, ride home with someone sober." Beyond
|
|||
|
that little bit of seriousness, though, this album is just fun to
|
|||
|
listen to from start to finish. It's a little on the short side
|
|||
|
(about 35 minutes of music), but well worth it. Throw it in your
|
|||
|
stereo or car tape deck and play it as loud as you can.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rating: 5 (out of 6)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Section 8 -- Eight
|
|||
|
Tyrone Ellison-Minista of Rage
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The DITC crew represents once again with Fat Joe's debut album
|
|||
|
"Represent." Daimond D handles the majority of the production work, but
|
|||
|
phat joints hooked up by Lord Finesse, Showbiz, Chilly Dee and the
|
|||
|
Beatnuts make this package complete. Lyrically, Fat Joe demonstrates
|
|||
|
some skills, but there's nothing to make you want to rewind the tape.
|
|||
|
Trackwise, the standouts are Lord Finesse's "Living Fat", "This Shit Is
|
|||
|
Real" by the Beatnuts, "Another Wild Nigga from the Bronx" by Chilly Dee
|
|||
|
and Diamond's "You Must Be Out Of Your Fuckin' Mind."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Although Fat Joe's not exactly the most innovative MC, he does know how
|
|||
|
to flex, and he especially catches wreck on the album's two posse cuts
|
|||
|
"...Fuckin Mind", which features Kool G Rap and Apache, and "...the
|
|||
|
Bronx", which features Gismo, Kieth Kieth and King Sun. Apache seems to
|
|||
|
flow harder and more relentlessly on "...Fuckin Mind" than he did on his
|
|||
|
own album, but in my opinion, G Rap's performance left a little
|
|||
|
something to be desired. I have heard G Rap rip shit wickedly on other
|
|||
|
projects, but he fails to shine here. King Sun shows that he hasn't
|
|||
|
fallen off since his last outing on his portion of "...the Bronx", and
|
|||
|
Gismo and Kieth Kieth show promise and potential. Grand Puba also makes
|
|||
|
a guest appearance on "Watch the Sound", and he comes correct.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Overall, this was a decent debut... nothing WACK, but nothing really
|
|||
|
groundbreaking. This album shows that Fat Joe has a lot of potential to
|
|||
|
catch rek on future DITC projects. Speaking of which, whatever happened
|
|||
|
to Percee P? I guess I'll just have to wait.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rating (out of 5): 3 1/4.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Section 9 -- Nine
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Lyrics - "I Got It Bad," King Tee and Tha Alkaholiks
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Intro:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ladies and gentleman, that nigga King Tee and the al-cum-a-holiks
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Verse One: J-Ro
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Who bust play the rear cause I'm makin yapes
|
|||
|
The rhymes ain't no thicker than a, skittle grapes
|
|||
|
A lot of girls would like to thank me, for the hanky-panky
|
|||
|
On the mic I hold a belt, now I know no one could spank me
|
|||
|
It took a long time for the people, to hear my rhymes
|
|||
|
Seems like I been rappin since my birth in '69
|
|||
|
Sorry to keep you waitin, I run rhymes like Walter Payton
|
|||
|
I get a rhyme like spokes on a Dayton
|
|||
|
But I won't knock off, because I just rock off
|
|||
|
the beats to get funky, like when you take your sock off
|
|||
|
To all the white folks I would like to say howdy
|
|||
|
And to all my brothers I say peace quit actin rowdy
|
|||
|
Wack MCs in ninety-two, ew you need to take a rest
|
|||
|
the public don't you aim the best you're softer than a hookers chest
|
|||
|
raps, I make em, snaps, I make em
|
|||
|
For duties movin booties cause I shake shake shake em
|
|||
|
And I got rhymes, funky funky rhymes
|
|||
|
E-Swift hold the needle down with nickels and dimes
|
|||
|
I drink Olde English, St. Ide's and Mickeys
|
|||
|
When it's time to roll I throw on my black dickeys
|
|||
|
On the mic I get wicked, like Wilson Pickett
|
|||
|
I get the place jumpin like a cricket when I kick shit
|
|||
|
I'm from the West coast but don't sleep home-sniffy
|
|||
|
Even if I was a paperboy you still couldn't rip me
|
|||
|
I walk up and chalk up pairs like the Knicks
|
|||
|
I'm all in the mix like snares, and kicks
|
|||
|
When it comes to rhymes I get loose like belt buckles
|
|||
|
Those who chose to oppose this nose is felt knuckles
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Where you goin' to?) To the tip
|
|||
|
(And what cha bout to do?) Bout to rip
|
|||
|
Some people use the word funky too loosely
|
|||
|
And just how many rappers say they kick it like Bruce Lee
|
|||
|
(What's your favorite brew?) Olde E
|
|||
|
(And what it make you do?) Go pee
|
|||
|
It used to be about rhymes, all about rhymes
|
|||
|
Now rappers rearrangin, and changin like times
|
|||
|
I got it bad y'all, I got it bad y'all
|
|||
|
When it comes to the pen and the pad y'all
|
|||
|
I got it bad y'all, I got it bad y'all
|
|||
|
When it comes to the pen and the pad y'all
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Verse Two: E-Swift
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Back the fuck up, gimme room to breath
|
|||
|
Not too many niggaz can flip the rhymes like these
|
|||
|
I freak the technique as if it was a bitch
|
|||
|
Got more soul than the pit with a fifth
|
|||
|
Pitch the ball, so I can beat it with the bat
|
|||
|
Talk some shit, so I can smoke ya with my gat
|
|||
|
I'm feelin kind feelin kinda feelin kinda feelin kinda
|
|||
|
feelin kinda buzzed off a sack of chocolate tie
|
|||
|
My my my ho, I like to rip the shows up
|
|||
|
Smack the hoes that walk around with they nose up
|
|||
|
Run to the liquor store, before they close up
|
|||
|
Buy a few 40s, cause daily I get to' up
|
|||
|
Sit at the crib and write RIGGY RIGGY rhymes
|
|||
|
Line after line after LIGGY LIGGY line
|
|||
|
Yo I can get funky, buy my tape and bump me
|
|||
|
To the break of dawn I hit the bud and pass it on
|
|||
|
Hangin at the park, shootin craps on the weekend
|
|||
|
My brown bag is wet cause my tall can is leakin
|
|||
|
Starin at the cops, beatin up on Rodney
|
|||
|
While a pack of O.G.'s steppin to me tryin to rob me
|
|||
|
Just because I'm dope, niggaz wanna smoke me
|
|||
|
On the mic I get funky while you're doin the hokey-pokey
|
|||
|
Dance steps, I think that you should leave to Paula
|
|||
|
Alkaholiks is the shit, E-Swift's the smooth bawler
|
|||
|
Is slangin these rhymes like a rock
|
|||
|
Life ain't shit but money and a glock
|
|||
|
Don't punch a clock, but I cock a fat knock
|
|||
|
So I can smoke a lot of pot that I roll up with tops
|
|||
|
And ya ain't heard shit yet, I'm just gettin warm
|
|||
|
Like hot butter on, SAY WHAT?, THE POPCORN
|
|||
|
I'm headed to the top, please give me my props
|
|||
|
My beats are fat as fuck so bump my shit in your box
|
|||
|
I love to hit the skinz, but then again WHO DOESN'T
|
|||
|
I love to hit the herbs cause it leave me feelin buzzin
|
|||
|
I dedicate this chumpie to the poets who can wreck
|
|||
|
And to all the nottie dreads I gots to give them nuff respect
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Where you goin' to?) To the tip
|
|||
|
(And what cha bout to do?) Bout to rip
|
|||
|
Some people use the word funky too loosely
|
|||
|
And just how many niggaz say they kick it like Bruce Lee
|
|||
|
(What's your favorite brew?) Olde E
|
|||
|
(And what it make you do?) Go pee
|
|||
|
It used to be about rhymes, all about rhymes
|
|||
|
Now rappers rearrangin, and changin like times
|
|||
|
I got it bad y'all, I got it bad y'all
|
|||
|
When it comes to the pen and the pad y'all
|
|||
|
I got it bad y'all, I got it bad y'all
|
|||
|
When it comes to the pen and the pad y'all
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Verse Three: King Tee
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Up jumps the man with the loot
|
|||
|
Rockin like a troop with the Alkaholik group
|
|||
|
Everything is kosher, got a little taller
|
|||
|
Livin kinda phat cause King Tee's a bawler
|
|||
|
I just, irritate the wack, leave em so confused
|
|||
|
When I'm checkin on the mic with the ones and twos
|
|||
|
Sneak you a peek of the drunk technique
|
|||
|
Can't stand up, need to take a seat
|
|||
|
Baby baby baby it's the Alkaholiks
|
|||
|
But I can freak the mic no matter how ya call it
|
|||
|
Metaphors grand, and I'm the great man
|
|||
|
Drink a whole fifth YES I CAN YES I CAN CAN
|
|||
|
The girls call me dick-em-down
|
|||
|
Got that title rockin for the crown
|
|||
|
Catch y'all later, around next weekend
|
|||
|
I'm a Alkaholik and I'm late for my meeting
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Section 10 -- Ten
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As you can see, it's back to business as usual for C.O.R.E. We are
|
|||
|
taking this thang seriously and not wasting time with the punks and
|
|||
|
the marks (you know who they are). HardC.O.R.E. is not about a
|
|||
|
diss war... we shall continue to represent Rap EXCELLENCE, and not
|
|||
|
be dragged down by garbage or bullshit.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Asalaam alaikum from Flash
|
|||
|
|