Monday, February 13, 2012
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Killer Mike - Big Beast feat. T.I. & Bun B (produced by EL-P)

El-P fucking murdered this beat, the energy is crazy… this is going on my workout playlist immediately. Bun-B’s verse is meh, T.I was dope, and Mike wasn’t on his lyrical tip but I’m feeling the energy. 

Rebellious African People Music dropping on May 15th

Saturday, January 7, 2012

DJ PREMIER’S TOP 25 ALBUMS OF 2011

I judge my list based on dope beats, dope rhymes, scratchin’ and cutting, creativity, uniqueness, originality, and overall packaging of the product’s integrity. I don’t care if you sold a million copies, that does not make it dope. I went through more than 60 LP’s released in ’09 on major and indie labels over and over to get it as close as i possible could to being satisfied with the list so here it is along with the list.”

Rank:

25. Large Professor & Neek The Exotic – Still On The Hustle
24. Edo G – A Face In The Crowd
23. Ill Bill & Vinnie Paz – Heavy Metal Kings
22. Greneberg – Greneberg
21. Action Bronson & Statik Selektah – Well Done

20. Apathy – Honkey Kong
19. The Away Team – Scars And Stripes
18. Kanye West & Jay-Z – Watch The Throne
17. Torae – For The Record
16. Bumpy Knuckles & Statik Selektah – Lyrical Workout
15. Common – The Dreamer, The Believer
14. Maffew Ragazino Sr. – Rhyme Pays
13. Bad Meets Evil – Hell: The Sequel
12. Drake – Take Care
11. Statik Selektah – Population Control

10. Random Axe – Random Axe
09. Malcolm And Martin – Life Doesn’t Frighten Me
08. Royce da 5’9″ – Success Is Certain
07. Phonte – Charity Starts At Home
06. 50 Cent – The Big 10
05. Reks – R.E.K.S.
04. M.O.P. & Snowgoons – Sparta
03. Evidence – Cats & Dogs
02. 9th Wonder – The Wonder Years
01. Game – The R.E.D. Album

Honorable Mentioning: Fresh Vetz “Fresh 2 Def”, Pharoahe Monch “W.A.R.”, Raekwon “Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang”, Rasheed Chappell “”Future Before Nostalgia”, Sadat X “No Features”, Showbiz & KRS-One “Godsville”, Skyzoo “The Great Debater”, The Regiment “The Panic Button”, The Roots “Undun”.

http://www.djpremierblog.com/2012/01/07/dj-premier%E2%80%99s-top-25-albums-of-2011/

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Skip to the 1:15 mark

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Racial Coding in ‘The Muppets’

nathanfisher:

Since I can safely assume that very few people other than myself are interested in decoding the racialism in The Muppets, I’ll keep this very to the point.

As I posted before, the above is a picture of the villains in the new Muppets film.

These characters are only the most blatantly racist exponents of the racially-coded rural-urban dichotomy that props up the film’s structure.

Jason Segel and Amy Adams, the whitest people alive, are from Smalltown, USA.

Smalltown is a loving embrace of quaint, fifties-style Americana. It is described as the best possible place to live.

After beginning their quest to reunite the Muppets, Segal, Adams and Walter (his puppet brother) must journey into the city of Reno. Reno is a far cry from the kitsch of Smalltown, USA, and they find Fozzie in the unenviable position of fronting a cover band called ‘The Moopets,’ which is composed of those pictured above. There’s a pivotal scene here in terms of racial symbolism, when our heroes are outside in an alleyway talking with ‘Miss Poogy,’ the Miss Piggy substitute. During a conversation expressing disbelief that Fozzie could ever end up in such a terrible place, the sound of gunshots is heard. Later, Miss Poogy is seen sharpening knives, presumably for sheer pleasure or criminal intent.

Underpinning this entire drama is the juxtaposition of the clean, safe, neighborly Smalltown with the dirty, violent and hostile urban city. To say that this dichotomy has historically been predicated on the nostalgia for all-white rural homogeneity is not exactly a quantum leap. The sentimentality that surrounds fifties-style community is often expressed through a fear of the urban, which transposes quite naturally into (and is often meant as nothing but a coded expression of) a fear of non-white minorities.

Before the accusation comes that we are reading too much into this, the depiction of ‘The Moopets,’ and the positioning of them as greedy, violent villains says otherwise. The Moopets are entirely composed of Muppets that were darker-toned to begin with or are conspicuously darkened versions of light-toned ones. In the case of dress, clearly the Moopet versions of Fozzie, Miss Piggy and Janice are so overtly racialized as ‘thugs’ as to make the point clear.

Last, but certainly not least, comes the fact that these characters align themselves with Chris Cooper, the primary antagonistic in the film, who, in his one musical number, delivers a parody rap called ‘Let’s Talk About Me.

In this, the racial coding finally becomes crystal clear: the villains rap, the heroes sing. But, even beyond that, we have the extra racism that is inherent in what these days passes as hip-hop parody. As something of an enthusiast for calling out every white person who thinks parody raps are funny, I am the first to assert that this is no different whatsoever. Instead, The Muppets is just another iteration of a beloved cultural trend, as seen in The Lonely Island, Taylor Swift and T-Pain’s “Thug Life,” endless commercials and Youtube videos, and God knows everywhere else. That trend is the absolutely giddy enthusiasm of white people to seize every opportunity to do that which they are not supposed to do: namely, rap, or, better put, act black. As I’ve said before, all of these jokes have the same punchline: this is not how white people are supposed to behave; and therefore, all of these jokes establish a hierarchy by telling a racial joke that cannot be told in reverse. The underlying premise is that the performers of these ‘parody raps’ are temporarily inhabiting these archetypes; that when the joke is done, they can leave and return to acting regularly—a privilege not afforded to the blacks they mimic.

That last point is what extends this argument even to white rappers who are attempting to be taken seriously, not ironically. As a white rapper, you are afforded the privilege, as Greg Tate sez about Eminem, to be ‘not burdened with representing the ‘hood and black sex to hiphop’s prime real estate, the vanilla suburbs.’ This is why I think people like the Emerson-canonized George Watsky are pricks; hip-hop isn’t all about verbal linguistics, or, in Watsky’s case, ‘rapping fast.’ The fact that you not only think it is, but can actually achieve some sort of fame from it, is nothing but an indication of privilege. After all, a Youtube video called ‘black kid raps fast,’ would never go viral. It would not be seen as exemplary, merely expected; it would not be seen as talent, merely inclination. Only when a white person excels at something that is normally associated with blackness do we care to take note, do we care to designate that skill as bonafide ability, and do we exert all necessary effort in showing not only can these white kids do it, they can do it better. What is missing from this is the baggage that white culture forces black hip-hop artists to carry: the crucible of ‘authenticity’ on which black artists must prove themselves but which white slam poets can simply bypass.

Paul Mooney puts it bluntly when he calls white hip-hop ‘blackface without the make-up.’ Harry Allen puts it even more bluntly when he sez ‘from a certain angle, there’s just a shade of difference between white people rapping and white people telling nigger jokes.’

In other words, if you’re white and you think rapping is funny, here’s some advice: it’s fucking not.

Or, is there any compelling difference between Chris Cooper’s performance in the Muppets and in vogue ‘ghetto parties’ like this?

I contend that there is not.

Brilliant post.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

tumblinerb:

Mannie Fresh Lecture @ Red Bull Music Academy, Madrid 2011

This is a must watch for hip hop nerds interested in southern music. Mannie talking about his roots in bounce music, the history of Cash Money Records, and tons of little cool anecdotes from the industry. It’s 2hrs long so I doubt anyone’s gonna listen to it on Thanksgiving like I did, but bookmark that shit for later. 

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

sugarfreesweetness:

Ludacris - Bada Boom

nota bene : this is a Drake & Big Sean diss

This video is fucking EXCELLENT. A perfect homage to The Fifth Element mixed with the history of hip-hop battle rapping. Luda said it perfectly with the “don’t make me get back on my Stomp shit” line…. they really don’t want it with him right now.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Ludacris - Bada Boom 

Going in on Drake for talking slick about him earlier this year.

I don’t want to offend somebody…I hate that rappers picked that flow up. I wish they had left that for people that know how to use it. [They go like] “It’s a parade! MACY’S!” - Drake via AllHipHop

Friday, November 11, 2011
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

DJ Quik - Mr. Big Stuff (Heavy D Tribute)

(via Hip Hop DX)

Saturday, October 29, 2011
The greatest hip-hop album of all time came out 20 years ago today. You shouldn’t just listen to it, you should study this album. 
Death Certificate (Wikipedia)
“In 1992, as a result of the album’s controversy, the state of Oregon declared any display of Ice Cube’s image in retail stores throughout the state illegal.”

The greatest hip-hop album of all time came out 20 years ago today. You shouldn’t just listen to it, you should study this album. 

Death Certificate (Wikipedia)

In 1992, as a result of the album’s controversy, the state of Oregon declared any display of Ice Cube’s image in retail stores throughout the state illegal.”

Friday, April 1, 2011

When asked if he had anything to say to the judge before he was sentenced in a 1994 rape trial. 2pac looked the judge in the eye and said the following:

“Your honor, throughout this court case, you haven’t looked me or my attorney in the eye once, its obvious you’re not here in search of justice, so theres no point in asking for a lighter sentence, I dont care what you do because you’re not respecting us, this is not a court of law as far as im concerned, no justice is being served here, and you still can’t look me in the eye, so i say do whatever you wanna do, give me whatever time you want, im not in your hands, im in Gods hands”“

#RealestNiggaEver