The Dopp will be back stateside in time for the SxSW festival in Austin.
‘Beats For Brothels‘ is a slept on classic. Look out for the Dopp in 2012.
The Dopp will be back stateside in time for the SxSW festival in Austin.
‘Beats For Brothels‘ is a slept on classic. Look out for the Dopp in 2012.
Internets it will never, ever stop.
When one door closes, another one opens up.
On this episode of The Combat Jack Show, the legendary rap duo EPMD sits in the booth.
Press play to find out who “Jane” really is. Press play to learn what it’s like to be in the music industry when you’re a trendsetting teenager. Press play if you fux with The Combat Jack Show featuring Dallas Penn.
I’ve been sitting on this heat rock for a minute…
Fresh off of the success of last year’s album “Machete Vision” (with producer Kno of CunninLynguists,) MarQ Spekt (School Of Sharks) is coming back for more with another raw project entitled “Persona Non Grata,” due out this Spring with all production handled by the DMV vet DJ J-Scrilla of Inner Loop Records (formerly of the production team Guns-N-Butter.) “Cut It Out” is the second free release to get the masses hip to the raw, gutter sound the Philadelphia veteran brings. MarQ’s been running around the country as of late with the CunninLynguists and you can catch him this year in Austin, TX rocking a few notable shows down in SXSW.
MarQ Spekt – ‘Cut It Out’
The closing of Brooklyn’s venerable Southpaw wasn’t anything like the funeral some of y’all might have imagined. It wasn’t about being sorrowful that this establishment which has been so instrumental (you see what I just did?) in bringing MySpace music acts to a real stage was going away. The Southpaw finale was a celebration in fact. That after all this time, we are STILL here.
Hip-Hop music was a fad thirty some odd years ago. Graffiti was simply people scribbling their names on a wall. The ways and means that poor people expressed themselves were always marginalized and discounted. This was even the case when Southpaw first opened their doors after the tragedy of September 11th. There was no way a spot in Brooklyn would survive booking independent and underground music acts. Southpaw did survive tho’. Southpaw thrived actually.
As the music consumer changed the constant was that there still needed to be a place which could present the up and coming acts still refining their craft. This was Southpaw’s mission. They were very much like CBGB in this regard because the Southpaw space had no design of being better than the people. This was music democracy if that ever existed. Everything happened in Southpaw’s building. Every type of music. Every type of party. Everything.
So when Combat Jack asked me to be a part of this historic event I thought it should be a celebration of the great times I’ve had in this building. Hip-Hop has been thru a whole lot these thirty-plus years and it is still alive and thriving because of the people who believe in its value and its ability to give a voice to the voiceless and disenfranchised. Hip-Hop will surely miss Southpaw, but Hip-Hop will survive and thrive as long as someone out there believes. Are you a true believer?
Peep The Great Zee pics from the event
Peace to Jah C and Chino BYI
Southpaw R.I.P.