Archive for Hip Hop

Video Of The Week: Prince Po & Oh No – Smash ft. Pharoahe Monch, O.C.

Smash. Prince Po and Pharoahe Monch back together on a track! Damn, I miss them together. Organized Konfusion’s Stress: Extinction Agenda is hands down one of the most important albums to me, of all time, of all genres. I wish there was some of their rapid fire back and forth interaction on here but nonetheless they kill it. And I haven’t even mentioned D.I.T.C. alum O.C. yet, one of the most consistent emcees for decades. He makes the reunion complete, as he was also the featured rhymer on O.K.’s first single “Fudge Pudge” from ’91. I suppose I should also mention Madlib’s brother Oh No, a ridiculous producer in his own right, is on the track. Smash.

Check out Princo Po and Oh No’s new full length Animal Serum and Pharoahe Monch’s new album P.T.S.D. – Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

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Tuesday Forecast

Yea. Tuesday Forecast been missing for a minute. Next subject (head lowered in shame).

No cover for Blueprint’s new download? Janky. But there’s new Wye Oak and Damon Albarn (Gorillaz, Blur), yea a couple of artists I didn’t think would be so good until I got schooled. I also hesitated with the Styles P release, I was hoping to get something more than what I expected but pretty much sticks to his safe territory of busting caps and repping his hood harder than you. Oh well. To balance it out with a before unheard of future underground emcee Fel Sweetenberg. Rapper Big Pooh (Little Brother) and Roc C kind of bridge the gap between the two with their gutter indie rap.

And of course, gotta round out the forecast with some chill jazz, beats, and ethereal instrumentation. Fresh for 2014…suckaz. Peace.

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Words Of Wisdom: ?uestlove

Last week ?uestlove kicked off a 6 part series of essays on Vulture.com called When the People Cheer: How Hip-Hop Failed Black America that takes a look “at hip-hop’s recent past, thinking about its distant past, and wondering about the possibility of a future.”

You know it’s good when when he start’s off with quotes from John Bradford, Einstein, and Ice Cube (from his N.W.A days). And though the title focuses on Black America it’s really all about how hip hop rose from a black culture and has morphed into a mass culture dominating the mainstream with music and style. Along with that integration into the mainstream a lot of the fury and counterculture hip hop was built on has been diluted and turned back on itself, using it’s own power to ultimately subjugate itself.

Granted, the argument isn’t that easy or cut and dry. Being so accessible to mass culture has diluted the original invigorating elements but that’s still mostly only in the hip hop you’re going to ultimately find in pop culture. If you dig, it’s still there, there’s just more crap you have to dig through. I digress.

So far the first essay is incredible and even if I have arguments with some of the things ?uestlove says he puts things in a masterful way that lends themselves to debate and give and take as opposed to an all determinate I am right, you are wrong. ?uestlove, enigmatic drummer and hustler of culture.

Read NOW…

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This Post Nearly Didn’t Happen

Nice Peter – Vader Vs Hitler
The Filthy Holes – World of Strangers
Jess & Jessica
Lonely chairs at CERN
Rob MacInnis photography – also check out older work
Build a self-sufficient homestead
Check out this sick Grave Digger freestyle from St. Louis Monster Jam
Dudebro Magazine

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Free Download of the Day – De La Soul Mix Tape

De La Soul remixed some of their songs over JDilla beats and you can download them for free, legally.
De La Soul and the late great J. Dilla present “Smell The Da.I.S.Y.” the mixtape

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Tuesday Forecast 03.11.2014

Well, change isn’t always good. We love supporting artists and giving you a direct link to buy their music at Amazon (which also gives us a little kick back to put towards our web hosting costs) but they have recently changed their embedding code and it’s all sorts of messed up. So until the formatting quirks get ironed out things are going to be a bit visually janky. But please, still check out the music, there is same great stuff coming out.

Aloe Blacc-  The Grouch & Eli-

Nick Waterhouse-  Alsarah & The Nubatones-

Ozomatli-  Dena-  Metronomy-

Ekoplekz-  Lack of Afro-  Kitsune-

Joan as Police Woman-  Ambrose Akinmusire-

Major Lazer-  Tensnake-  Colo-

Banda Westfalica Remixes-  Fenster-

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