Archive for the ‘Billy Sunday @ XXL’ Category

Best I Ever Handicapped…

Friday, June 12th, 2009

drakes

DP goes in at XXL and picks the Belmont Stakes of this cRap shit.

I have sucked ass at picking the ponies anytime I visited the track. The main reason I go though is to rock this Ralph Lauren seersucker suit and bowtie that I have. Chicks love dandy motherfuckers. Why else does Bentley Fonzworth get to sidle up next to Zoe Kravitz? It can’t be because of the album he has coming out next Nevuary. Plus, the horseraces are hell’a rigged. The horses are given all kinds of drugs to make them act some kind of way and then we gather in the grandstand to wish a winner on our ticket.

I feel like I could pick the winners and losers in cRap music way easier than I could the ponies and rap music is just as rigged as the horseraces. Why some artists have multiple songs spinning throughout the day on terrestrial radio stations while other more accomplished, vastly more talented artists never are heard on these same stations is part of the cheat. Consider Clear Channel to be the steroids that turns a colt into a thoroughbred. And just like in horseracing, when a pony breaks its ankle and can no longer race it is brought into the barn and shot in the head.

Just don’t ask me to explain why Rick Ro$$ is still making albums.

If 2009 has been anything of a revelation it has been the year that the old men in rap music re-emerged. I think this is great for the culture. The older artists become a bridge for the younger talent to emulate and surpass artistically. I wish that artists were financially compensated for their contributions and their influence but that has nothing to do with art. Commercial viability is what gives up the money. The artists that create memes that can distract the sheep and render us mentally and emotionall impoverished are typically the ones that end up the richest.

We’ll worry about those people on a later drop. Today we will rejoice in some of the older horses that are still in the race…

DOOM – ‘Born Like This’
My favorite album of 2009 so far. Bugged the fuck out rhymes and space age boom bap apocalyptic beats.

Eminem – ‘Relapse’
I don’t have to tell anyone that this album is sick. Although it isn’t his most groundbreaking work Eminem still shows he has the gift for rhyming and being provacative. This album and his career suffers some loss in points for Em agreeing to be teabagged as a movie stunt. Would Rakim, Biggie, NaS, Jay-Z or even Ice Cube have co-signed that stunt? Eminem is dropped from top5 consideration for that.

Method Man & Redman – ‘Blackout 2’
The greatest rap duo in the game right now picks up from where they left off. Blunted rhymes and banging beats. ‘Blackout 2’ is one of the two most slept on albums released this year.

Mos Def – ‘The Ecstatic’
This album is critically acclaimed and tragically slept on by the so-called rap fans. Mos Def is consistently the best ambassador we have had for Hip-Hop culture. I’m not buying two copies of this album but I copping one from Amazon.

Jadakiss – ‘The Last Kiss’
I didn’t listen to this album in its entirety because I almost drowned from the watered down R-n-B tracks. I’m glad that Jada has been doing more traditional rap music remixes. Def Jam made him switch up his underground steez in order to appeal to a younger audience and Jada was able to comply without sacrificing too much of his classic content. I just wasn’t able to connect to this album. I’m glad he is still on the scene though.

Cam’Ron – ‘Crime Pays’
Cam’s album was another joint that I just couldn’t relate to. I admit that I am still stuck in the DipSet era Cam standom. These dudes were one trillion when they rapped together and bupkus as solo projects. Free Max B. Bring Stack Bundles back from the dead. Unkidnap the Heatmakers. Do something!

For the second half of the year I am looking at these horses to run away with the roses…

Jay-Z – ‘Blueprint 3’
Leading the oldman rap resurgence is none another than the Jiggaman. He’s been dropping singles once every four months. The last two, ‘Brooklyn Go Hard’ and ‘D.O.A.’ have been lauded by the internets. Rap’s foremost critic and greatest blogger alive Eskay says that Jay-Z is back. Eskay = E.F. Hutton. When he talks, everybody listens.

Black Thought – ‘(Title Unknown)’
The best emcee alive will launch a solo project this autumn. If I were you I would make sure that the rewind button on my tape deck is working properly.

Raekwon – ‘Only Built 4 Cuban Links 2’
We have waited too long for this record. The expectations that are bubbling inside of us will be unfair to judging this album on 2009 merits. Still and all it is good to see the chef still hungry for the crown.

SlaughterHouse – ‘Slaughterhouse’
I can’t call these dudes old man rappers since they are all between the ages of 34 and 29 but they all have over 10 years in the rap game individually so that makes them veterans. This has been the Hip-Hop album with the greatest buzz on the internets. There are rappers who might be more popular than SlaughterHouse but I don’t consider those artists to be Hip-Hop. They are more like Hip-Pop. SlaughterHouse is that boom-bap from way back when you held your headphones together with scotch tape. SlaughterHouse is that cassette tape in the outside pocket of your Jansport backpack. SlaughterHouse is when you used your allowance to buy a bootleg tape, a nickle bag and a Garcia y Vega. SlaughterHouse is that…

Winner.

Working Hard x Play Harder [ll] = Slaughter…

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

slaughterhouse

SlaughterHouse Studio Sessions on videotape.

Shouts to MIKE HERON and Koch Entertainment.

Real talk from Joe Budden, Royce da’ 5-9, Joell Ortiz and Crooked I…

What is refreshing about Slaughterhouse is their candor even in a room filled with people that they hardly know. Most people feed you the generic brand answers or they clam up altogether. These dudes act like you have been there all along.

Stay tuned because more soon come from this group.

Black Superheroes FTW…

Monday, June 8th, 2009

roots picnic

^ His uzi weighs a ton!

Public Enemy is one of the biggest influences on me when I think of the musical soundscape that shaped my life. Ever since I heard that crazy Korg keyboard sample from P.E. #1, I have been a hardbody stan of their sonic superpowers. ‘Fear Of A Black Planet’ is my G.O.A.T. album in front of ‘Only Built For Cuban Links’, ‘By All Means Necessary’ and ‘Illmatic’ respectively.

There will never be another rap group that will have the influence on listeners, lawyers and litigators the way that Public Enemy did. They changed the music industry with their use of samples and soundbytes.

roots picnic

Public Enemy’s set at the Roots picnic was as epic as you might could have imagined. Chuck D, Flavor Flav, the S1W’s being held down by Black Thought and the Roots plus Antibalas. I nearly lost my frakkin’ mind. TERRENCE nearly lost his too. I’m glad we ended up deciding not to film anything at the concert. You can’t stan out 100 if you are working. This was the type of high energy set that you had to sing every word to. It’s strange and even somewhat poignant that the lyrics Chuck D spit over twenty years ago resonate today regarding those same issues.

roots picnic

P.E. was performing the entire album ‘It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back’ with some added tracks like ‘Fight The Power’ for emphasis. They tore shit down. It wasn’t just the remarkable energy that Chuck D and Flavor brought with them to the stage but their clarity and showmanship. Nothing was more incredible than watching Flavor bound across the stage while reciting his track ‘Cold Lampin’ and NOT missing a verse. Flavor Flav is the greatest hypeman of all time. I would call him a weedcarrier but we all know that weed isn’t what gets Flav hyped.

roots picnic

Watching Chuck D and Black Thought on the same stage was literally symbolic in that the legendary hard rhymer was now passing the microphone to the legendary hard worker. Hip-Hop has never been more alive than at that moment. Everything else I experienced that entire day at the Roots picnic pales in comparison to the Public Enemy set featuring the Roots and Antibalas. I’m not sure if these bands will ever join forces again to present their omnipotent artistry, but if they do you had better be in the building.

Black superheroes unite!

roots picnic

The Philadelphia Experiment…

Friday, June 5th, 2009

illadelph

The entire DallasPenn.com staff is in the city of brotherly love this weekend for the Roots picnic. The staff would be Chocolate Snowflake and myself. I was granted press access to the picnic and a few art gallery invites through the city so check out some of the sights and scenes that I upload this weekend as I go a little deeper into the legendary city.

Philadelphia is an interesting town. It’s definitely a metropolis, but it still has a quaintness type quality. Like it didn’t want to get too big for its britches, or conversely, its bridges. There’s definitely a southern flavor to Philadelphia. Maybe it was the politeness of folks that heard me ask for directions and quickly offered their expertise. I like Philly for that.

What really attracts me to Philadelphia though is that it moves like a working class city. New York was like this too, but now with all the tourists and the movie sets I don’t even recognize my home sometimes. Mostly I can’t afford my home. Do you know how rich I have to be just to be POOR in NYC? Makes me wanna holler sometimes.

truck

I also came out to Philly to do some work. To peep out the the scene and get up with some of the folks that represent the blue collar ethos that has come to symbolize Philly’s grind. Truck North from the Roots collective got at me and invited me to come to his studio office and preview some of the new tracks he was working on. Truck North just released the Truck Jewels mixtape through OKayPlayer and he is steady working on his next project.

Truck and his ace producer Bear-1 are coming with that classic soul filled boom bap that I almost think is dead sometimes until I hear it again. I am going to start making formal petitions to see if I can get Truck North and Sean Price to do a song together. I think their styles complement each other well. I made some video while in the studio with these dudes as well and I will try to roll that out before I leave Philly. In the meantime listen to this track Bear-1 produced titled ‘Never Ending Flip’ off the Truck Jewels mxtape.

bear

Truck North is clearly a descendant of the Philadelphia rhymesayers that have preceded him. His flow is complex but it isn’t too wordy either. I like this track ‘Never Ending Flip’ because it the type of rap that describes real life on the daily in every hood. That guitar sample is hardrock shit too. Rap music is blues at its core. It’s about your reality and how you cope with the shit you see around you everyday. These are the stories that Truck North wants to tell. Inside the studio a bassline by Bear-1 shakes the walls like thunder. This is the perfect place to craft those griot tales.

Their studio office is just like my lab back in Freeport. Records, CD’s and other sampled resources are stacked all over the place. I don’t know what is in which pile but I’m sure Bear-1 knows where everything is. The studio is located in the back of a record store across the street from Temple. Sandwiched in between a barber shop, chinese food spot, a pizza joint and a pawn store. If that ain’t a working class ‘hood strip then I don’t know what is. While outside the record an impromptu cipher sparked up and some dude tried to sell us a bottle of laundry detergent.

I remember this strip well. This is where we used to post up back in the day after the Greek picnic at Fairmont park. The strip isn’t totally the hood any longer thanks to the money that Temple University has invested in the surrounding buildings, but the best part of Philly that I have always loved is how you only need to cross the street to be on the wrong corner.

illadelph

Truck North – “The Never Ending Flip” from Monsee' on Vimeo.

Does Anyone Make Real Shit Anymore?

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

drake

“Drake is faker than those bootleg Grape 5’s on his feet”
NikeTalk commenter

So supposedly there is a multi-million dollar bidding war for the Canadian rapper Drake. This is part of the brand new day in the urban music record offices based here in New York City. You would think that these clowns never heard any good music ever in their life. Sure, they listen to G.O.O.D. music which can be pretty good, but certainly you would need more than that to have a complete sonic diet.

I’ll never forget how people uncovered the Daft Punk sample from the ‘Graduation’ album but didn’t take the time to go deeper and listen to the song that Daft Punk stole to make their track. Peep Edwin Birdsong’s ‘Cola Bottle Baby’ when you are stealing your music off the internets. That track is some funky crack right there.

I find it hard to believe in some respects that the industry is so enamored with Drake. Sure, he’s lightskint with good jig hair and he has no mustache so that makes him more, eh, versatile. Ha. But what label has that kind of money to piss away on an internets celebrity? I am an internets celebrity and that shit has yet to get me a free meal. Let alone a Ghetto Big Mac.

This is not 1995 when you could give a deal to Nelly type dude who at least was moving CD’s on the bootleg scene. Drake is moving downloads and selling out hole in the wall spoken word venues. You don’t give $2millies to someone who isn’t stadium status. The record industry is no longer into the A & R develop an artist for the long haul shit. If you sign your deal in the morning they want their money back this afternoon.

There have been dudes that have debuted and I have recognized that they are going to be monster artists because they were bringing something very new or missing from the music business. Drake reminds me of a Britney Spears – Justin Timberlake type of industry construct. Someone that can act and lipsync really well like a modern day matinee idol, but without the substance to move the level of music up. Maybe that is what the labels are paying for in the first place?

These new 360 recording deals mean that labels even own the deuce you left in the hotel toilet. I imagine that Drake can be used to sell all kinds of other shit other than CD’s so that will help bolster the bottom line of the label that signs him. Bol said that jig haircare products are saving the jig magazine industrial complex. How about some Drake wave cream and du-rags? Eminem would def buy those. I can even see Drake acting in the after school movie, ‘The young Obama years’.

This dude Drake certainly does have a bright future in front of him.

I just don’t know how much of that future will be in making music that I want to listen to.