Archive for From The Underground

Black ELement – (Oh Shit We Goin…) Down!?!? [Missing ELements #4].

I’ve been internet free for a minute so I missed the chance to post the last two Missing ELements track from ML fav Black ELement. But I’ve got the latest one right here and I’m including the two tracks I missed as well.

Black provides this explanation for his latest:

You ever wonder what your last moments would be like on a crashing plane? What or who would you do?

Download: Black ELement – (Oh Shit We Goin…) Down!?!?

Missing ELements #2 and #3:

Black ELement – Confirmation (prod. 6th Sense)
Black ELement – Loose Change (prod. Rami Afuni)

If you slept :

Black ELement – Ride It Out (prod.Rami Afuni) [Missing ELements #1]

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Smiley The Ghetto Child – The Wake Up Call, Video

Excuse the extended absence, folks. This is off Smiley’s Money Machine mixtape. DJ Premier behind the boards. Cameos from Guru, Buckwild and Billy Danze of MOP. This track is actually from 2003, and I’m guessing the video is too, since Premier and Guru wouldn’t appear in the same video today. You can stream more tracks off the tape on Smiley’s MySpace.

I was just listening to Livin’ Proof yesterday, so there’s no better time to post this:

Download: Group Home – Tha Realness (ft.Smiley the Ghetto Child and Jack The Ripper)
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What Would Have Been Jae Hood’s Album.

Remember Jae Hood (aka J-Hood/Jay Hood, they never really could decide)? He was that guy who was signed to D-Block and appeared on just about every mixtape that came out for a couple of years. He eventually got frustrated that his album hadn’t come out and left D-Block. In doing so, he made sure to disrespect the guys that gave him everything he had with an obnoxious little video of him dragging his D-Block chain on the sidewalk. 50 Cent, who at the time was riding the beef train at full steam, brought Jae on stage at a concert along with Remy Ma who had recently split with Fat Joe. Jae’s loudmouth, attention-whore tactics resulted in his being ostracized from the hip-hop community and nobody’s heard from him since despite repeated apologies. And I’m pretty sure all he got from 50 was a crate of Tony Yayo CDs.

But was Jae Hood justified in his frustration? Were Jadakiss, Sheek Louch and Styles P holding him back? Here’s an advance copy of his album. You decide.

Download: Jay Hood Album Advance

On second thought, I’ll save you some time. This album is really bad and not just because it’s unfinished. Jae couldn’t write a hook if his life depended on it, his punchlines are lame, his guntalk is tired and the beats are awful. But this begs the question, why all the fuss about some rapper who was friendly with the LOX a long time ago?

Back when mixtapes (the screaming DJ kind) were still relevant, Jae Hood was a regular and had some of the best freestyles around. I was always checking for him and hoping he would put together a killer album. This is one of the only Big Mike mixtapes I’ve kept through the years and has Jae working a tight, aggressive flow, showing definite potential. Bums me out that he fell off so hard.

Download: Big Mike & J-Hood – The Countdown 2
Bonus: LOX Feat. J-Hood – That’s My Nigga
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Black ELement – Ride It Out [Missing ELements #1].

Black ELement has been prepping his album, A Major Minority, for its September 18th release for a while now. While he works on it, he’s got a new project, Missing ELements, that’s he’s putting out. Keep your dial tuned to ML over the next few weeks to pick up the new BE tracks as they drop.

Check out the first track of Missing ELements, “Ride It Out”, below.

Read Black’s explanation of the track below:

Whenever an animal is backed into a corner or it’s life is threatened, we have the instinct to fight back. The instinct is to survive and with war plaguing  our nation over the last 40+’s years with pointless conflicts we as a people finally begin to seek for change. From generation to generation, though the technology of the weapons has changed the result and heartache stays the same. Families having loved ones fighting for a guy whose a million miles away, just so his son’s trust fund can get a little bigger. War no matter the time, it effects us the same way until we can’t take it anymore, until we ride out!

Download: Black ELement – Ride It Out (prod.Rami Afuni)

Check out Black ELement’s MySpace too.

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Metallungies Hollers @ Termanology, Interview.

Termanology drops his debut album Politics as Usual on September 30th. In this interview, he talks about his myriad of collaborations and his experiences as an up-and-comer. He also gives the most boring answer ever to our signature question.  Nice, humble guy.

ML: How’s the press day going?

Term: I’m chillin’ man, kickin’ it man, smokin’ a blunt, man I feel so good right now.

ML: Anybody ask you any dumb shit yet?

Term: Yeah, some crazy shit, but I like the press days man, they help you out.

ML: If somebody’s been sleeping on Termanology so far, what songs do you think they should check out?

Term: I think the best thing to do is just go to iTunes and buy Hood Politics IV and V and get to really see who I am as a person and if you’re into my stuff then you go and cop the Politics as Usual. Those are like the lead up albums to the official album.

ML: You said you wanted to get the producers that did Illmatic, Reasonable Doubt and Ready to Die, right?

Term: Yeah, definitely. That was crazy man, because that was a vision I had and I didn’t know if I was gonna be able to make it happen, but I did. A lot of people tried to stop me from doing that, so I kept it moving and did my dream and shit and it ended up coming out crazy.

ML: What are your favorite tracks on each album?

Term: Oh man, that’s a hard one. Probably “Unbelievable” on Ready to Die. That and “Warning”. Those two are crazy, I mean everything on that shit’s crazy. Reasonable Doubt, probably “D’Evils”.  I love “D’Evils”. That’s like the craziest. Jay and Premo went so hard and “Can’t Knock the Hustle” I love too. On Illmatic, my favorite shit is “NY State of Mind”. That’s like the definition of real hip-hop right there. That’s the shit.

ML: How come Statik isn’t on the album?

Term: Well the thing was, I did this album with all like platinum fresh legendary producers. This is like an elite group I hand picked. Statik is my brother, we work together a lot and do a lot of shit, but he understood that this dream and this goal was bigger than myself and himself. This was like a big picture type thing. He fell back from the beats, but he A&R’ed the project and helped put it together because these guys are legends and he looks up to them also. It was our dream to make it happen. So we did it.

ML: You’re going to be on his new album, right?

Term: Yeah, I was on Statik’s first album, seven records I did on there and on this one I got three. Yeah, Statik is my brother and you’re going to hear a lot of music from us in the future.

ML: How did you connect with DJ Premier?

Term: Met him in ’03. My man brought me to a video shoot Gang Starr was doing and then I gave him my demo, I spit for him and Guru and yeah, that was cool. I kept doing my thing for a couple years and then in late ’05, early ’06, Statik became really really good friends with Premo and they called me on the phone and played me “Watch How It Go Down” and asked me if I liked it. I fuckin’ loved that shit so I took it and I smashed it. Ever since then, it’s all love. Premo like fam now. I got  a whole bunch of records with him and there’s more to come.

ML: That’s a good guy to have in your corner. Premo is pretty good, I’d say.

Term: Yeah, he’s the man, dog and I owe him a lot. After I did my first song with Premier, my stock went up. I started getting paid and it was no more free shows and free t-shirts. So I owe a lot to Premier, he’s the one with the new record with Bun B. He just keeps helping me up my stock.

ML: Everybody who records with Dre says the same thing: he’s a perfectionist, he makes them record the track like ten times. What’s it like working with Premier?

Term: It’s the same thing, man. He’s a perfectionist too. He’ll make me do a take like fifty times sometimes, but I respect his word. I always try to see his vision. I stick to my guns, but the only cat I pretty much let get in the driver’s seat and I just lean back is Premo. The rest of my music, I pretty much do on my own with my man Bob Nash. I grab the beat from a producer and I go up to Walker Sound, that’s my studio, my man Bob Nash runs that. He just leans back and let’s me do what I wanna do. All the rest of the tracks, I pretty much did on my own, but the Premo ones, Premo was really the one. Like, “rap faster right here, rap slow, go hard right here”. He’s a coach, he’s good.

ML: Who was your favorite producer on this album to be in the studio with?

Term:  Oh, Premo was the shit. Pete Rock’s shit was great.  I was in Bassline Studio with Young Guru. Young Guru recorded some legendary albums. Blueprint and all that shit. That was great and Pete Rock gave the hook to me and adlibbed the whole track, so it was really really love. Buckwild is my man, that’s my brother. I recorded like four or five songs with Buckwild and used one of those on the album. He’s going to executive produce the St. Squad album coming up soon too, my group. So Buck’s always fam. The rest of the cats gave me beat tapes which was fine too, ’cause we gotta get it done and as long as we get it done it’s on.

ML: It seems like you know a lot of legendary guys. Do they tell good stories?

Term: Aw man, they all got stories, the best stories you ever heard. That’s the thing, I’m a big hip-hop fan so I’m obsessed with the origin of hip-hop and how it started and everything that happened since it started. One minute I’m with Premo and he’s telling me about Biggie and Pac and all these cats and Easy Mo Bee has mad stories about Pac and BI and shit. They passin’ it down to me and we just keep it movin’ like that and keep the culture alive.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Invincible – Sledgehammer, Video.

Heat courtesy of the Lab Techs and Invincible.

ShapeShifters is one of the best albums to come out in 2008. Cop this shit.

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L.E.G.A.C.Y. – 14 Grams

(L.E.G.A.C.Y. on the bottom right, for those not in the know)

Produced by Khrysis, who keeps getting better as a producer. Props to Khal.

Download: L.E.G.A.C.Y. – 14 Grams

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Large Professor Main Source Cover Art + Tracklisting

Via 2dopeboyz

1. The Entrance
2. Hot: Sizzling, Scorching, Torching, Blazing
3. ‘Maica Living’ feat. Killa Sha and Guardian Leep
4. Pump Ya Fist feat. Mikey D Lotto
5. Party Time
6. In The Ghetto
7. Hardcore Hip Hop
8. Frantic Barz
9. Sewin’ Love
10. Ru Dope feat. Jeru Tha Damaja
11. Dap feat. Lil Dap
12. Noyd feat. Big Noyd
13. Classic Emergency
14. Rockin’ Hip Hop
15. Large Pro Says
16. To The Meadows
17. The Hardest feat. AZ & Styles P

Drops September 30th, the same day as Termanology’s album. I recommend copping both. I can’t wait to hear this.

Some thoughts on the track listing:

-I like that he got Jeru, Killa Sha & Noyd on here. Dope NY emcees from the golden era deserve more shine.

-Lil Dap? Really? Maybe it’s just an interlude.

-“The Hardest” already appeared on both AZ & Styles P’s albums. It’s a dope track, but did it really need to appear here?

-Like Extra P’s solo debut, The LP, this album suffers from awful song title syndrome (nothing here is as bad as “Funky 2 Listen 2”, fortunately)

Let me leave you with the ridiculously dope intro track, “The Entrance.”

Download: Large Professor – The Entrance

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From The Underground: Animal Farm.

A dope single from Portland and Oregon based group Animal Farm, featuring KRS-One. Off their album The Unknown. Between these cats and Blue Scholars, I’m definitely checking for more cats from the Northwest.

These guys kinda remind me a bit of The Camp but more socially conscious. Go support quality hip-hop and cop that.

Download: Animal Farm – Peace ft.KRS-One

Also watch this great live performance of “Ragtime Girl”. On some 1920s shit, I really dig the concept and beat.

Animal Farm’s MySpace

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Joell Ortiz – Memories

The first single off Free Agent. Produced by Salaam Remi. Shouts to the homey Mike Heron.

Also: Did I mention I write for Joell’s new blog?

DOWNLOAD : Joell Ortiz – Memories

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