Archive for the ‘T.O.N.Y.’ Category

Faded Off The Brown Like Nino, We Know…

Friday, October 9th, 2009

dp

What is the magical allure that Hennessy holds for Black folks? It is our glory and our downfall. You see what the Henroc did to our homey ‘Ye Tudda at the VMAs? And still we flock to the brown for our salvation.

When I have kids before I hold them up to the stars for my ancestors to view I will baptise them crumbsnatchers with some Henny on their foreheads.

The spirits were in full effect Wednesday night for this event called Hennessy Artistry curated by the Roots and Common. Hennessy is the slave song spiritual syrup. Do you understand now why they call liquor spirits?

white

I had to take a pic of white dudes at a Hennessy event. It’s like seeing brothers chilling at a Pabst Blue Ribbon party.

homegirl

Hennessy enabled homegirl to tie that bowtie… With her mouth.

roots

The legendary got down to business. I’ve declared previously that Black Thought is the number one emcee dead or alive. Thought moved the show along from performer to performer seamlessly creating hype and excitement as he set the stage for each unexpected guest.

Thanks to Hennessy the Roots actually performed in front of Black people for a change.

colin munroe

Gingerboy crooner Colin Munroe showed he got soul.

bilal

Bilal was taking the sisters to church. This brother better be careful too because one of the big girls up in that joint might could’a snatched his little narrow ass up and used him for a tampon.

On second thought, that’s prA’li all Bilal ever wanted.

q-tip

It was fun to see Tip do some ATCQ classics. Good thing Common and Black Thought were on the mics also to help Tip remember his rhymes

latifah

U.N.I.T.YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

The Queen of rap tore the house down. I haven’t seen Queen Latifah perform in a thousand years(Naughty era). She is totally what the game is missing and by that I mean her incredible talent on the mic.

Not so much to her Sapphic skills.

The spirits were flowing freely and the full cipher of Hip-Hop was represented at the Hennessy Artistry event. Even Hip-Hop curmudgeon Ernie P. can’t be mad at that. Then again, I’m sure that Ernie P. could hate on a childbirth.

Log on to www.Rule4080.com for more pics and video clips from this dope event.

iFux With Deez Nuts…

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

beats

Shouts to the homey iFux for giving me my new favorite internets word, that technically isn’t profanity.

I went to see the Beatnuts inspired off-off-OFFFFFF Broadway play called ‘Deez Nuts’ produced in conjunction with the 2009 Hip-Hop Theatre Festival. Give credit to ego trip’s Sacha Jenkins for blazing a trail with what I will call a musical memoir. The Beatnuts hail from my former home borough. As a matter of fact, I remember JuJu when he was still on the corner in front of the bodega on 37th Avenue. The street was dotted with several bodegas on the same block. Most weren’t really bodegas though.

Off The Books featuring Big Pun, Cuban Linx

The performance goes from narrative to personal reflection into music and back again. It’s as zany as you might expect something about the Beatnuts to be. They reminisce about the chance meeting that formed their friendship and their love for Hip-Hop music. I never really considered the fact that Les and Ju were latinos and how that made it difficult for them to come into the arena of rap from a commercial standpoint.

No Escapin’ This

Growing up in Corona Queens you were used to fuxing with Blacks, Latinos, Asians and even whites doing Hip-Hop shit. From breaking to writing to deejaying and rapping. It wasn’t until we got a little older and rap music became so popular that Hip-Hop was fractured along racial lines. I’m not saying that there were a glut of white rappers that have been lost or forgotten because there isn’t. The tradition that rap takes from the pastime called the dozens makes rap more familiar to people of color.

Watch Out Now

I think I have taken the Beatnuts for granted because we all grew up in the same neighborhood. These dudes were pioneering producers back in the late 1980’s and you can hear their sound in the beats of so many artists from Showbiz and A.G. to Fat Joe and the incomparable Big Pun. JuJu reflects on Big Pun is part of the play that is warm and touching [ll]. I have to also give credit to the producer Peter Oasis who managed to make a stage play everything but ghey.

Not that being ghey is a bad thing, its just not what you want to be when you are fux’n with Deez Nuts.

The 2009 Hip-Hop Theatre Festival continues. Logon to www.hhtf.org for the remaining schedule of shows and performances. Representado.

SNEAKER FIENDS UNITE!

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

premium pete

Premium Pete always makes sure that DP.com stays laced so we paid a visit to the store in SoHo for a look at what’s in stock and what’s next on deck.

Logon to www.premiumlacesny.com and take a look for yourself or come to the store and meet Pete in person. He promised me to lace anyone who comes through to copp provided they say this… “I Fux With Dallas Penn. Pause”

Now get in where you fit in.

Sneaker Fiends Unite! x Premium Laces (ReMix) from dallas penn on Vimeo.

MR. SOLO DOLO…

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

cudi

Bless1 what up?!?

Still on my Kid Cudi shit.

Don’t judge me.

Mr. Solo Dolo from dallas penn on Vimeo.

Watching ‘Deez Nuts’…

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

deez nuts

I am in here like svimvear.

Corona stand the eff up!

A workshop production in honor of the highly acclaimed underground rap duo the Beatnuts, written by long time music writer Sacha Jenkins, co-conceived with noted promoter Peter Oasis. Deez Nuts explores the rich musical legacy of the Beatnuts through the performance of their tunes by the maestros themselves.

Deez Nuts also canvases the sights, smells and characters of their native Corona, Queens. A fellow Queens-ite turned journalist, on a fact-finding mission, returns to the old neighborhood in order to meet group members Psycho Les and JuJu. This journey not only nets cultural nuggets about the Latino duo and their surroundings, but crucial observations about self and the state that created Hip-Hop.

The Hip-Hop Theater Festival presents DEEZ NUTS

Ohio Theater
66 Wooster Street
between Spring & Broome Streets

Tickets $25

October 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Starting at 9pm
*Post-show discussion with the artists*

For more info on other events and performances logon to…

HHTF.org or at www.facebook.com/hiphoptheaterfestival

deez nuts