Hip-Hop - breaking news, gossip, slander, lies etc

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gumdrops

Well-known member
is this allowed? hopefully it is. i thought we might as well start a hip hop thread rather than let all the other topical threads about hip hop get derailed. so anyway, ill start this thread with some audio links. heres the remix to three 6 mafias popping my collar featuring a past his prime, but still okay dmx. the audio link here isnt as good as it could be but the beat sounds like one of juicy j and dj pauls best.
http://xxlmag.com/online/?p=483
 

mistersloane

heavy heavy monster sound
Bad Boy Busta

hiphopgame just talked about Busta busting up Dave Mays ex-Source with a champagne bottle. must be time from a new album from Busta with all the press he's had lately. Good new track from him up on there n all. I can give or take what he does, but the beat rocks.
 

Cornflake

Well-known member
mannnn the god!!! seriously he needs to be on some dipset...im just dying for some new rakim for years....the aftermath stuff wasnt doin it for me at all....
 

Freakaholic

not just an addiction
Remember the West Coast sound? Im pretty naive about much of hip hop, but for some reason, my high school liking of Dre, Snoop, Westside Connection etc has never gone away.

So my question is, was this sound based on anything coming out of the underground at the time? If not, what was it? Was Hip hop too small to have a burgeoning underground at the time with its own sound and feel, distinct from main stream? I doubt this is the case, and was wondering if there were people doing things with this style, including the cheesey keyboard lines.

thanks.
 

baboon2004

Darned cockwombles.
Wouldn't be able to tell you about the lineage of the sound, other than that the beats on 'The Chronic' sounds like a great leap forward from the more 'classic' hip-hop production on the D.O.C.'s Dre-helmed LP the year before.

For more of this high-pitched synth goodness, check out some of E-40's 90s work, and quite possily other Bay Area stars' recordings.
 

hint

party record with a siren
Freakaholic said:
So my question is, was this sound based on anything coming out of the underground at the time? If not, what was it? Was Hip hop too small to have a burgeoning underground at the time with its own sound and feel, distinct from main stream? I doubt this is the case, and was wondering if there were people doing things with this style, including the cheesey keyboard lines.

For starters:

Check out "Funky Worm" by The Ohio Players

Check out This episode of Yacht Rock
 
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borderpolice

Well-known member
Freakaholic said:
Remember the West Coast sound? Im pretty naive about much of hip hop, but for some reason, my high school liking of Dre, Snoop, Westside Connection etc has never gone away.

So my question is, was this sound based on anything coming out of the underground at the time? If not, what was it? Was Hip hop too small to have a burgeoning underground at the time with its own sound and feel, distinct from main stream? I doubt this is the case, and was wondering if there were people doing things with this style, including the cheesey keyboard lines.

thanks.

I always attributed the big early 90s change in hiphop, away from the "Shouter" type of fairly monotonous rapping and funk sample to Dre and Snoop. Dre's an amazing producer! and snoop flows like few others. on top of that, they are cool and look good. irresistible combination.

so my vote goes for them to be the first.
 

DavidD

can't be stopped
Of course there was a huge west coast underground - dude, "G-funk." Dre was sort've a definitive blueprint for the sound but there are tons of artists, literally bargain bins full of artists who followed in his wake, ever since the first NWA album. And there are dudes like Rick Rock, DJ Quik and Ant Banks who did their own west coast sound...
 
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gumdrops

Well-known member
the new TI album is pretty good. it starts off really great, but then has a few too many sappy songs that suck the energy away. still, that just blaze produced song is fucking amazing. TI sounds vicious. front back with bun b is great as well, but bun is kinda repeating himself at this point.
 
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petergunn

plywood violin
gumdrops said:
the new TI album is pretty good. it starts off really great, but then has a few too many sappy songs that suck the energy away. still, that just blaze produced song is fucking amazing. TI sounds vicious. front back with bun b is great as well, but bun is kinda repeating himself at this point.


i was wondering about it... the single is just fucking amazing... but, i'm not really a fan of T.I. as a rapper, so don't know if he could hold my attention for a whole LP...

re: bun b (links on the XXL site...)




Southerners quit yer bitchin’

New rule: Southern rap fans are no longer allowed to pretend as if they’re being discriminated against.

Posted In: Columnists, Bol's Saturday Night Workout by Byron Crawford

Pseudo intelligent music critics, who make their living patronizing certain elements in the black community, like to claim that backpackers are the most annoying group of fans in hip-hop. I’m going to go out on a limb here and suggest that the true most annoying group of fans in hip-hop (other than, of course, women) are fans of southern hip-hop.

The knock against backpackers seems to be that they’re boring and negative. They spend too much time telling you what they’re against rather than actually telling you what they’re for. Many of them even have the sheer balls to suggest hip-hop is not nearly as good as it used to be.

For business purposes, hip-hop can’t appear any better or worse during any given year, at least until the TIs find something to replace it. Reggaeton, perhaps?

Southern rap fans, meanwhile, make it a point to draw no distinction between the best and the worst their particular segment of the hip-hop community has to offer. They may not actually pretend to like “Laffy Taffy,” but they’ll be quick to call your ass a bigot if you suggest that it’s arguably history’s greatest abortion in musical form.

And they all rallied around Pimp C as if he was Leonard Peltier or somebody, but come to find out he can hardly rap. Is everybody aware that he was locked up for pulling out a gun on a woman in a mall? Personally, I don’t find his release fair to all the rest of us men who have resisted the urge to commit an act of violence against a woman.

As far as I’m concerned, his ass should go back to jail. Where’s the hip-hop feminism community when you need them? Wait, does this constitute snitching, or would it have to be your sister or something? I generally advocate staying out of another couple’s business, even if it is in a public place such as a mall.

I can understand that this is the first time their communities have produced anything the critical establishment even pretended to like since the heyday of Blind Melon and Better than Ezra (UGK fans, do your homework), but I’m not going to sit here and pretend to like something I don’t really like, especially if I have no financial stake in the matter.

The truth of the matter is that the southern rap of today, both in its style of rappin’ and especially its beats, bears very little relation to the hip-hop most of us grew up listening to. In that sense, it’s not unlike disco was to rock music in the late ’70s. Interestingly enough, disco artists also tried to cry racism when rock fans burned disco albums on the field at Chicago’s Comiskey Park.

In 2006, southern rap is the style of rap music that the tall Israelis who run the music industry have decided to promote, to the detriment of all other styles of rap music. Therefore, not unlike the Mexicans who think they’re retaking America’s Southwest, fans of southern rap no longer have any legitimate claim that they’re being discriminated against.




And here's what Bun B said

Bun B Says:
April 4th, 2006 at 12:35 pm

Who the fuck are you to sit behind you safe little cubicle and criticize who we are and what we do? For more than 20 years. Southern Artists and fans have faithfully supported any and all hip hop that was offered. We accepetced everyone on their own merits, gave evryone a fair listen, and then spoke. In light of you comments and views, it occured to me that you haven’t given near as much open mindedness to our music as we have to yours. The reasons I say yours is that it doensn’t what type of music came out, we supported it, so we in no doubt supported whatever the fuck you listen to. To think that all we know is what we do, or that we may know nothing at all is preposterous.

If you’re a paying member of Soundscan, you can see that ALL MUSIC SELLS IN THE SOUTH! 5 percenter? Bought it. Backpackers? Bought it. Black power, Wu-Tang, horrorcore, need I say more? Meanwhile, after 25 years of unconditionally holdin down all forms of rap/hiphop music, as soon as we even try to join a club we bought and help build the clubhouse for, they wanna deny us access. Well guess what you Elks lodge habitatin, Masters in Augusta wanna-be, finger-pointin behind the bushes, throwin a rock and runnin ass nigga, I just thought I’d tell you to take whatever preconcieved notions you have built up in your air and watertight cranium AND STICK IT IN YO PUSSY! I guarentee you the TRUE FANS AND MAKERS OF HIP HOP JUST MIGHT DIFFER WITH YOU! I know this because I am friends with Cool Herc, Grandmaster Caz, Melle Mel, Big Daddy Kane, Kool G Rap and other extremely well known originators and creators of this artform. The problem now is the act of causing division and dissention amongst the fans by people whom are not in the know.

You see, YOU may not like Laffy Taffy or DFB or whoever, and you know what, that’s your GOD-given right. Hate all you want on the South, Southern rappers, or just Pimp C, since you brought him up. IT STILL WONT HELP WHOEVER YOU LIKE SELL SHIT! Talib Kweli: close friend of UGK. De La Soul: close friends of UGK. Kanye West, Common, Dead Prez, close firends of UGK. Jam Master Jay, 2 Pac, Biggie Smalls: ALL FUCKING FANS OF UGK, and I dont say this from second hand conversation. These people told me this from their own mouths, yet you would have people believe otherwise. They could learn to be openminded about the music the listened and the regions the music was popular in, so it should come at no surprise these people went further thatn the average artists. Whatever alterior motive you may have is trying to bring down the Southern rise, it won’t work. God kills hate with love.

Oh yeah, by the way, as far as your comments on my brother and his reason for incarceration, he pulled a gun on a group of people thrreatening him in a mall. Only the girl went back and told the police, that’s why it seems as if it was between only him and the girl. The problem is, misinformed people give misinformation and cause misfortune to the learing. I hate to call this the blind leading the blind, because by the look of your commment posts, they know what’s up. So instead of just going to New York, screaming and ranting in White Nigga’s office, I came to see you on your turf, because I’m no coward. I’m willing to come in your yard: care to come in mine? Right a rhyme, let;s see what you have the hip-hop community musically. Oh and make sure it’s Grammy-nominated when you do it, because mine was. And while you’re at it ask Nas, Jay-Z, Papoose, Camron,, Russell Simmons, 50 Cent, Fat Joe, Chino XL, Self Scientific, Cyrpess ill, Snoop Dogg, Ludacris or anybody else in this industry you like if Pimp C is wack. I bet they bark on you louder than I want to. God forbid you’re in the wrong place and the wrong time like Pimp and have to spend 4 years of your life behind bars. You’re a black man, so fuck how educated and well read you are. You’ll ride just like Pimp, and you’ll be sorry about it, just like Pimp. The only difference: nobody’s gonna wear a fuckin t-shirt with yo face on it.

Leave the South alone, becausse we’re just tryin to eat. Quit bloggin and write a book if you got more goin on besides gossip and shootin slugs. Because after blogging has come and gone, and XXL is no longer on stands or online(which I would hate to see), UGK and our musical legacy will survive. Will your triflin rants sustain?
 
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