Archive for the ‘His Story’ Category

DP <3 NY...

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

ogys

Some of y’all might think I always h8’d on the Yankees by the drops that hit this site in recent years but the truth is that I love my city. And that means sometimes you have to embrace the Evil Empire.

Back in the 1990’s when I was on my big brother grind try’na teach the truth to the youth the Yanks were winners and they had a squad filled with old Mets that Steinbrenner had picked up off the trash heap.

So I stanned for the Yankees for a few years and here are the pics to prove it. Still and all, the OG Yankee Stadium >>> new Yankee Stadium or Steinbrenner Field or whatever they are calling it.

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Fathers To My Style…

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

dp throwup

RAB CAC was a graff artist that was killing my area of Queens and the rest of the city for that matter, when I was going thru my graff phase. It was funny and special to meet him as a student when I went to Brooklyn Technical high school. Do you know how much work this dude put it when he was still in high school?

When I was in 8th grade I used to travel the entire city sneaking in tags on the last cars of the subway. The X-Men were all city and more popular to me than the comicbook from which they swiped their namesake. I kept a subway map in my bedroom with all the layups and yards marked off with pushpins. I really thought I was gonna bomb the system one day.

RAB is still on the scene but no longer writing on the subways or bombing on the streets. He is viewed as a legitimate graphic illustrator and he does shows, galleries and books. One of his gallery projects, along with a dozen or so other artists was to go in on a museum paper print of an R-42 train.

Peep the gallery here

One day soon watch and see if the MTA doesn’t have a nostalgic day where they allow artists the chance to put up burners on their out of service railcars.

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rab cac

Happy Birthday Hip-Hop…

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

melle mel

Melle Mel‘s bornday is today.

George Carlin’s was this week too.

Taurian nature is forceful and direct.

It gives us profoundly poignant poetry.

My people at Cornerstone put together a nice little evening to celebrate the culture and broadcast the re-launch of the of the Sedgwick & Cedar brand.

It was a nice little night to reminisce over you Hip-Hop…

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Melle Mel, Grandmaster Caz, Busy Bee, Grandwizard Theodore, Joe Conzo, Koe Rodriguez, Jay Smooth, of and course, Kool Herc.

Happy Birthday to you Hip-Hop, and many more to come…

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tees available thru Sedgwick & Cedar

Happy New Year Mingus…

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

mingus

Editor’s note: I always tell people Happy New Year on their birthdays because that is what it really is to them. Since being birthed again would be problematic for our mother’s wombs. Here’s a drop from a good friend of ours shouting out the great Charles Mingus…

“You haven’t been told before that you’re phonies,” said bassist, composer, and activist CHARLES MINGUS (1922-1979) from the stage one night. “You’re dilettantes of style. A blind man can go to an exhibition of Picasso and Kline, and not even see their works, and comment behind dark glasses, ‘Wow! They’re the swingingest paintings ever, crazy!’ Well, so can you. You’ve got your dark glasses and clogged-up ears.” Mingus, a large, voluble, candid, sensitive, contradictory and impulsive man, made these provocations out of love, particularly for Duke Ellington (from whose band he’d been fired after chasing trombonist Juan Tizol with a fire axe) and Charlie Parker, whom Mingus honored with the greatest of his many uniquely evocative song titles: “Gunslinging Bird, or If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger, There’d Be a Whole Lot of Dead Copycats.” A Los Angeles native who grew up in sight of Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers, Mingus was himself inimitable: a virtuosic musician of vast emotional nuance and a man who’d press hard for his sense of justice, whether critical, economic, or racial. Sometimes Mingus’ ambitious reach exceeded his grasp — his short-lived record label, Debut (co-owned with Max Roach); his decades-in-the-making semi-autobiography, Beneath The Underdog (1972) — but the work he did still astonishes. Not everybody appreciated such truculence. While he lived, Mingus won but a single Grammy, and that for liner notes: “Let my children have music! Let them hear live music. Not noise. My children! You do what you want with your own!”

via HiLoBrow.com

Who’s Gonna Take The Weight?

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

gangstarr

‘Just To Get A Rep’


‘Check The Technique’


‘Who’s Gonna Take The Weight?’

All you need to know about Guru from Gangstarr is that one night at Mars nightclub during a TRIP party a brawl breaks out in the rap room and Guru grabbed the mic to settle people down. He had an unmistakable voice that was raspy and rough. He instantly garnered the respect of an OG with his voice and his rhymes. The fact that his rhymes were about the truth is why he is a legend.

Gangstarr is iconic Hip-Hop because they represent the powerful sounds of the voice and the drum. Just like the Roots are at the essence of everything simply Black Thought and ?uestlove, Gangstarr was Guru and Premier.

God bless Guru’s soul and give peace to his Gangstarr family.

Everytime I hear this song I will have to spit Guru’s verse.


Gangstarr featuring Nice & Smooth – ‘DWYCK’

via Slang Rap Democracy: Guru + Gang Starr Videos