Archive for the ‘Grown Man Rap’ Category

Respect The Architects…

Saturday, March 23rd, 2013

Chinua Achebe THINGS FALL APART

Rest In Prophetic Prose to Chinua Achebe.

I read this book in the 6th grade and my teacher went back to my parents and told them I might be turning into a revolutionary. Ha, never that.

Revolution is the act of revolving in a circle. Time lapses and you return to the position you were previously in. I am the high evolutionary. Forever moving upward. Onward.

Chinua Achebe was an author who understood the difficult compromises Africans must make living thru Western culture while trying to maintain their traditions and values. Unfortunately, things fall apart.

Peace to Okonkwo.

Torae: Admission Of Guilt…

Saturday, March 23rd, 2013

torae

My big homey Torae gave me the the link to his latest project titled ‘Admission Of Guilt‘ which he released for FREE thru his own label. I have to credit Torae for being a student of music and the business of making music.

It is a courageous endeavor to spend your life working on art then to make your project available for consumption and criticism with little investment from the listener other than time. Hopefully the laws of physics apply to Torae’s project like they do to the rest of the universe.

Time = Work
Work = Power
Power = +Movement

Limitless (with outro from Combat Jack Show)

Ask Me Why? (featuring Bun B)

P-Money: The Professional

Monday, March 18th, 2013

pmoney2

Leave it to P-Money production (along with Roc Marciano rhymes) to wash the taste of wack rap from my aural palate.

The Professional featuring Roc Marciano is taken from the forthcoming P-Money album ‘Gratitude’.

50 Shots Of Kimani Gray…

Sunday, March 17th, 2013

KIMANI-GRAY

NYC’s latest display of state sponsored terrorism against young Black males is the murder of 16yr old Kimani Gray in Brooklyn’s East Flatbush neighborhood. The police claim, as they approached several youth, that Gray displayed a firearm and pointed it at them, causing them to discharge their weapons at him.

This story has been repeated ad nauseam during my 42 years of life. A gun, a wallet, a package of Skittles and a can Arizona Iced Tea. Kimani Gray chose to run from the police that evening because being arrested was something he couldn’t bring home to his mother. For little girls in the ghetto it’s coming home pregnant. For little ghetto boys it’s getting arrested. These are the burdens they are ashamed to transfer to their parents.

I’m not here to tell people that Kimani Gray was some angelic child. He was a 16yr old, like all children who are 16yrs old. They are silly, childish and mostly hormonal. Growing up in a city without a permanent male role model is difficult for most young boys. The images of males in the streets and the media all point to an alpha male hyper-masculinity. There isn’t any space to be 16yrs old and vulnerable.

This drop isn’t about police brutality. Of course the police are brutal. They are cowards trained to fear these young boys, as well as to be the first line of defense when someone DOES have a gun and the intentions to do ill. The people in poor communities aren’t allowed to have their relationship with the police both ways. The only way they will have it is with police using their triggers indiscriminately. There will be no security without the sacrifice of their young. This is the prevailing theme.

But this drop isn’t about the police. We already know what their role is in this bullshit. This post is for all the 16yr old Black males still alive at the time this drop goes live on this site, or the moment your eyes find this page. All the Black boys in places like Chicago, St.Louis and Camden, still clinging to whatever life we will allow them to eke out after we have taken all their essence from them. After we have taken all of their style, slang, swagger and soul and put it into the capitalistic blender to create a Harlem Shake.

After we have taken everything beautiful and prideful from them, what will these Black boys have left?

Like the Central Park Five, all the Black boys will have left is this AmeriKKKan hell. Unless WE demand more for them.

In my prayers Kimani Gray may at least have gone to Heaven.

YELE >>> Y.O.L.O.

Monday, March 11th, 2013

cjs_wyclef

This might be my favorite Combat Jack Show of all time. Okay, the Redman ep is still my favorite since I smoked kush with the god, but this work here with Wyclef rivals that since a few nights later I sat in the studio with ‘Clef and listened to parts of his next project.

Wyclef inspires me because he has never abandoned his roots no matter where his journey has taken him. He remained a conduit for people from the ghetto to have their voices heard, and not in a pandering, victimized POV, but a resilient, triumphant yell. Don’t say shit to me about Yele unless you know what it takes to quell the violence in Haiti long enough to let people come inside of that country to administer relief.

Wyclef will eventually get his due from the people he wants it from the most. Us. I’m already saluting this general, as should you. YELE >>> Y.O.L.O.