I know its been overstated but ever since Pac and Big died rap has gone to shit. There are still many holdin it down but will never hear on the radio and as a result of the kids today don't know a damn thing and are ignorant to the facts. Record labels need to be held accountable for the bullshit they only play and any cat with something to say gets no play cause does not play into the stereotypes. Rap today is like the crack in the 70s and 80s!
the nazarenes
- music is life
- music can change the rate at which your axioms fire. we as a people need to be held accountable for releasing crappy music, it is a crime on our subconscious.
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
tv rap
half the people who performed tonight were sub-par rappers. why didn't T.I. perform?
where was scarface's performance. Ultimately, it was an enjoyable show.
where was scarface's performance. Ultimately, it was an enjoyable show.
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Wu was the shit back in the day, rza had to producing ability and mad tracks, gza and rae had the intelligent verses, ghost and deck had the flow, meth and odb had the rawness, made for some mad as tracks
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yo i was mad bored n u kno how gza say "caught him at d red light on putnam avenue n franklin" yo i streetviewd d corner, google maps type 128 putnam new york, dey got d illest odb tribute next to a liqour store on d corner, its his 1st album cover
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FOR WHAT IT'S WORTH...THE ONLY REASON EVERYBODY RUNNING AROUND "SHOOK" AS HELL..IS BECAUSE WE HAVE NO IDEA WHEN JESUS COMING BACK..OOOOH..WE IN TROUBLE!!!
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I honestly dont understand how someone could not like this song.
habshuet39 23 hours ago
damn right its better than that bullshit u here 2 day,MOST of these rappers 2 day could'nt compete with this
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yo '97 mentality 2010 reality these rappers today baffle me rhyming with no talent climbin with no ladder todays rap can only get sadder locked in a glass jar bout to get shattered if it was up to me I'd bring everybody back from the 90's fuck lil wayne but New Orleans is where you can find me
Monday, December 20, 2010
montana mountain
I recently came across an artist on one of these internet self promote music sites. You know the ones, which promise you fame and freedom as long as you use their press kits and widgets.
Yeah, anyways. So this guy's name is Pablo Montana (don't know if it's real or a stage name) and the music that he creates is refreshingly enjoyable. He's listed as a blues musician, but it's more like blues-rap. Infusions of wu-tang clan and pink floyd run rampant all throughout his tracks, and as far as "rap" goes, his lyrics are fairly clean (though he says the "n" word again and again).
One of his songs has the ditty title of "the assassination of Michael Jackson" rips the beat from "beat it" and let's face it, who hasn't? I must say that Montana's version works. It's crisply mixed with just a little bit of Michael-quincy style magic.
There's also a cover of a system of a down song which sounds like it was done completely a'Capella.
And my favorite is a song called "mommy" which is the closest thing to real jazz, it's a sad tale told through the instrument of the mind of Montana.
Nowadays, when the subject matter of most rap that you hear on the radio makes you question how hip-hop has survived so long on a steady diet of crap, Pablo Montana is a refreshing look at what urban music can and should be, peace.
here's his link, check it out and listen to what I'm talking about.http://reverbnation.com/pablomontana
Yeah, anyways. So this guy's name is Pablo Montana (don't know if it's real or a stage name) and the music that he creates is refreshingly enjoyable. He's listed as a blues musician, but it's more like blues-rap. Infusions of wu-tang clan and pink floyd run rampant all throughout his tracks, and as far as "rap" goes, his lyrics are fairly clean (though he says the "n" word again and again).
One of his songs has the ditty title of "the assassination of Michael Jackson" rips the beat from "beat it" and let's face it, who hasn't? I must say that Montana's version works. It's crisply mixed with just a little bit of Michael-quincy style magic.
There's also a cover of a system of a down song which sounds like it was done completely a'Capella.
And my favorite is a song called "mommy" which is the closest thing to real jazz, it's a sad tale told through the instrument of the mind of Montana.
Nowadays, when the subject matter of most rap that you hear on the radio makes you question how hip-hop has survived so long on a steady diet of crap, Pablo Montana is a refreshing look at what urban music can and should be, peace.
here's his link, check it out and listen to what I'm talking about.http://reverbnation.com/pablomontana
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