Showing posts with label mf doom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mf doom. Show all posts

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Mos Def & MF DOOMsday Disaster

I wasn't able to make it to the Mos Def & MF Doom show last weekend, so I had my boy Marvin write a review. This is just a heads up warning to anybody else that is planning on attending one of their shows.

--dirt_dog



"I have had bad experiences with concerts at the Congress Theater before. I once paid 30 bucks to see the Wu-Tang Clan – back when I was in high school & when $30 represented a lot more than it does to me today. When I counted only 7 actual members (there had to be like 30 folks on stage), and I noticed that Method Man was rapping Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s parts, I was, um, disappointed to say the least. So when I saw that Mos Def and MF Doom were coming to the Congress, I was apprehensive. After the concert got rescheduled, I was even more apprehensive. But a bunch of my friends were going, and I didn’t want to be the odd man out. So I paid $30 once again, hoping that the Congress would redeem itself.

I would have been more entertained if I stayed home and watched the NBA’s sorry dunk contest.

First of all, doors opened at 7pm. I know better than to show up right when the doors open because normally acts don’t hit the stage until 2 to 3 hrs afterwards. But, due to having to wait on a late friend, I didn’t arrive until after 11pm, fully expecting to walk in on the performance. Nope. I arrived to see an empty stage with a lone DJ playing old songs. My friends had been there for hours and had only seen 2 opening acts. An hour after I arrived, the crowd started to get a little antsy; I can’t say I blame them. People started booing and throwin’ things on stage. Finally, after the stage got saturated in empty drink cups and water bottles, Mos Def appears. This calmed folks down for a while, though occasionally a water bottle would fly up on stage. You can tell the crowd really wanted to get into Mos; we didn’t pay $30 to see a shady MF Doom. Sadly, Mos DEFinitely disappointed. He performed about 25 minutes worth of his new album (
Ecstatic) mixed with a few cuts from Black on Both Sides. Then “MF Doom” emerged to join the stage with him. At this point I am thinking to myself “great – now we can have a real hip-hop show,” thinking that they would take this time to perform together. Nope. Mos left the stage, and what was left were 2 hype men, one of whom we were supposed to believe was MF Doom. It was a lip-synching imposter.

Now, you would think the crowd would have gone crazy tearing the place apart at this point. But instead, just a general disappointment settled in. I think many people were, like me, a little sad also. We expected more from Mos; we paid $30 hoping to see a performance that would rival those of his former counterpart, Talib Kweli, who is known for giving riveting performances. What we got was a very unprofessional, un-motivated performance from an aging artist who may be more interested in acting than rapping right now (
Note to Mos Def: Do not give shout outs to Brooklyn while in other cities. Especially in Chicago. You’re lucky you didn’t get hit with a bottle to the face for that). We knew there was a chance that “DOOM” wouldn’t show as he's notorious for that. But we had hoped that Mos Def would make up for any disappointment DOOM might bring. Nope…"



Additional articles from The BoomBox and FakeShoreDrive.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Babbletron - Mechanical Royalty

Babbletron is a group from New York, consisting of three members, Cool Calm Pete, Jaymanila and DJ Pre.

I don't know exactly if this is their first official album, cause i've seen they released a vinyl named Ramblers Anonymous in 2002, but there is full length album circulating over the internet, named Ramble At A Discount, so i don't know what's the real story behind that, is it official release or not.

Production was handled by DJ Pre, except three tracks, #3 (RJD2), #6 (DOOM) & #7 (Ese).


Babbletron - Mechanical Royalty (2003)

01. I Need To Be
02. Special FX
03. The Clock Song
04. Interlude 1
05. Birds
06. Space Tech Banana Clip
07. Chop!!!
08. One Shot
09. The Hit Man Sonnet Feat. Jungle Mike
10. Interlude 2
11. A.C.W.A.L.L.
12. Broke Down
13. Dope / Crumby

Preview:


DOWNLOAD

-- Markshot

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Mapping Out The Stretch And Bobbito Show (Demos: Juggaknots, Kool Keith, etc..)

We've finally decided to give this a go. It will be tough, no doubt. But if everybody who has any little bit of knowledge at all about the WKCR legacy, would add on and build with us, it is possible that we can map out the show's entire history.
We've got people who are willing to rip your tapes to mp3 and mail them back to you. The Big Sleep has set up a "Stretch And Bobbito" blog to archive and keep the list of shows, dates, and guests, all together in one place.

Here's a few treats that have surfaced since we started this mission:

Juggaknots - Genuine (demo?)

MF Doom - Gas Drawls (demo)

Rampage - Mad Niggas (demo)

LL Cool J - ?? Unreleased Unknown demo

Organized Konfusion - Why (OG Buckwild demo version)

Showtime - I Walk The Line (demo)

Aiello Wilson - 80 Proof (demo)

Kool Keith - Time Is Now (unreleased demo)[best quality on the internet]

Nas - The Life We Chose (DJ Eli Remix)


This is only a sampler of all the freshness that has surfaced so far.

Peace and thanks to everyone who has helped contribute so far, I hope I'm not forgetting anyone. Leave a comment if I forgot you:
The Big Sleep, aleph, Digital Stimulation, Andyman187, dj step one, RELM, jamo609, Howfresh, dirtywaters, serch4beatz, recogthereal, boogs, sen, sloppyseconds, Skeptic, Ho1ogramz, djkingflow, Dat_Triflin_Ass_Dude, megafresh, dubs, tuttsifruttsi, Kwestionmark, pradadon, Duddy, Roy Johnson

Most of those links are to really good cassette rip blogs you might want to check out.

Peace to Stretch and Bobbito.
Stretch may be coming through with a full, almost completely accurate, list of all the show dates and guests, soon. Hopefully some show rips, too. Stay tuned.

--Verge

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Sounds Like The 90s (Best Of) Vol. 12

I can't believe it but this marks the 12th edition of Sounds Like The 90s. Instead of bringing you new music this month we're bringing you a recap of sorts. Below is a double disc compiled of the best of Sounds Like The 90s throughout this year. And to close things out it was only right we brought back Blake and Tal for the artwork.

Many of you will remember the De La Buhloone Mindstate ad featured in various Hip-hop mags in '93. The image below is actually the real ad taken from URB when it was still a Cali-only free newspaper. The image was scanned straight from the paper and left in its current condition. Its not Sounds Like The 90s, this shit IS from the 90s.

So here is to another month of music and a nice way to close out 2009. A special thanks goes out to all the artists who have contributed, graphic designers and of course you for supporting. We'll be continuing the SLT9s series in 2010 but for now enjoy this double fix. --Philaflava


Sounds Like The 90s (Best Of) Vol. 12

1. Prince Paul Intro
2. Cormega - Fresh feat. DJ Red Alert, PMD, Grand Puba, KRS-One & Big Daddy Kane
3. Kurious - Benneton feat. MC Serch & DOOM
4. DOOM - Gazzillion Ear
5. Raekwon - Criminology 2 feat. Ghostface Killah
6. Marco Polo & Torae - Hold Up feat. Masta Ace & Sean Price
7. Statik Selektah - Critically Acclaimed feat. Lil Fame, Saigon & Sean Price
8. Brother Ali - Best At It feat. Freeway & Joell Ortiz
9. Shawn Jackson - Feelin' Jack
10. Open Mike Eagle - iRock
11. Musab - Get Life
12. Murs - The Science
13. Jay Electronica - Exhibit A
14. Praverb - The King
15. Superstar Quamallah - You Need Knowledge
16. Focus - Homage To Premier feat. Royce Da 5'9, Phonte & Stat Quo
17. Focus - Homage To Pete Rock feat. Rapper Pooh, Shha Stimuli & Kurupt
18. Juice Crew All-Stars - Mr. Magic Tribute

B-Side:

1 Cormega - Who Am I feat. AZ & Nature
2 Wu-Tang Clan - Radiant Jewels feat. Cormega & Sean Price
3 Mos Def - Auditorium feat. Slick Rick
4 Jay Electronica - Suckas
5 Nut-Ragous - NYC To LA feat. Jay Rock
6 DJ JS-1 - Ridiculous feat. OC & Pharohe Monch
7 Insight - Strategy feat. AG & EDO. G
8 Cormega - Define Yourself feat. Tragedy Khadafi & Havoc
9 BK-One - Here I Am feat. Phonte, Brother Ali & The Grouch
10 Drake - Think Good Thoughts feat. Phonte & Elzhi
11 Fashawn - Samsonite Man feat. Blu
12 Godamus Rhyme - Passin Me By 2009 feat. Stik Figa
13 Tha Connection - Take It Higher
14 Nero - Alive & Vibrant
15 Bobby Creekwater - Junkie
16 Notes To Self - Yellow & Grey (Remix) feat. Dilated Peoples
17 Finale - Heat
18 Fresh Daily - Supaspectacular!
19. Jay Electronica - Exhibit C
(Bonus Track)


Download Vol. 12

Download all 12 volumes here.

Props to Strategy for the tagged version, Blake Reznik and Tal Danan for yet another sick cover.

Friday, August 14, 2009

CM Famalam Freestyles 1998-2002 (400 MB)





Today, we're presenting you with 400 MB worth of freestyles from Bobbito's CM Famalam Radio Show (1998-2002). Most of the individual mp3s are lengthy sessions. Highlights include segments from J-Live, Atmosphere, Sir Menelik, Guru, MF Doom, Camp Lo, All Natural, Juggaknots, Non Phixion, Necro, Yak Ballz, Common Sense, etc. I acquired this stuff in a trade back in 2003.



Volume 1

Volume 2

Volume 3

Volume 4



All tracks are untitled. It wasn't worth the time for me to do playlists because I'm honestly not feeling the vast majority of these freestyle sessions, but I know that a lot of people love this stuff.



Preview:



J-Live





All Natural





Nes of Dirty Waters fame also posted a collection of CM Famalam highlights from 2001



--Roy Johnson

Monday, June 15, 2009

S.O.U.L. Samples



S.O.U.L. is an obscure early 70s funk group that released some of the absolute dopest tracks from that era. They recorded two albums in between the years of 1971 and 1973: "What Is It" and "Can You Feel It". From what I can gather, they disbanded shortly after the release of their second album, so unfortunately, their entire catalog contains less than 20 tracks. Producers that have sampled S.O.U.L. include Pete Rock, Marley Marl, The Large Professor, The Jungle Brothers, MF Doom, etc.

S.O.U.L. - Samples
1. S.O.U.L. - Burning Spear
2. Organized Konfusion - Releasing Hypnotical Gases
3. Pete Rock & CL Smooth - Go With The Flow
4. S.O.U.L. - Soul
5. Slick Rick - A Letter
6. Jungle Brothers - In Dayz 2 Come
7. Main Source - Fakin' The Funk
8. S.O.U.L. - Piece Of Mind
9. Craig G - What You're Used To
10. Main Source - Peace Is Not The Word To Play
11. S.O.U.L. - Message From A Black Man
12. MF Doom - Sarsaparilla (Instrumental)
http://www.mediafire.com/?ztt5nmzzj31

Preview:

S.O.U.L. - Burning Spear


S.O.U.L. - Soul


S.O.U.L. - Piece Of Mind


S.O.U.L. - Message From A Black Man


--Roy Johnson

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Galt MacDermot - Samples



Galt MacDermot is easily one of my favorite soul-jazz pianists/organists of all time. After discovering "Duffer" on a breaks compilation about a decade back, I decided to snatch up whatever I could find. Fortunately, a good portion of his late 60s/early 70s albums and soundtracks had been repressed: "Woman Is Sweeter", "Shapes Of Rhythm", "Cotton Comes To Harlem", etc. Also, Galt released the amazing "Up From The Basement" compilations in early 2000, and both volumes were entirely composed of unreleased tracks, including an alternate version of "Duffer"!

Unfortunately, I had a difficult time tracking down his 1971 masterpiece "The Nucleus". The Chicago-based record store "Dusty Groove Records" was purchasing 'em from Galt's dead stock at a rate of ten per order, and I was always late on the draw. What made it worse is that Dusty Groove wouldn't let you reserve a copy in advance! I'd search ebay and see it going for upwards of $100 (most likely from sellers who purchased numerous copies from Dusty Groove). Eventually, I got fed up with the BS and decided to contact Galt himself. I was able to snatch up three copies of "The Nucleus" at $25 a piece, as well as two copies of his classic "Hair Cuts" LP from 1969 (instrumental renditions). I also purchased a gang of others, including "Ghetto Suite", "Isabel's A Jezebel", "Two Gentlemen Of Verona", "The Karl Marx Play", etc. Suffice to say, I was a very happy man.

Galt's late 60s/early 70s catalog remains largely untapped in terms of sampling potential. Here's a good portion of what's been utilized up to this point (although my cut-off period for all things hip hop related is right around 2001/2002, so you'll have to excuse me for not being familiar with artists that have sampled Galt in recent years).

Galt MacDermot - Samples
1. Galt MacDermot - Golden Apples Part II
2. K-Def - Galt Is Loose (Instrumental)
3. Jay Dee - Mash (Instrumental)
4. Galt MacDermot - Cathedral
5. MF Doom - Pennyroyal (Instrumental)
6. Galt MacDermot - Bedroom
7. Beatnuts - Uncivilized (Instrumental)
8. Galt MacDermot - Stockyard
9. Quasimoto - Return Of The Loop Digga
10. Galt MacDermot - Harlem Medley Pt. I
11. Quasimoto - Discipline 99
12. Galt MacDermot - Coffee Cold
13. J-Live - The Truth
14. Gangstarr - Werdz From The Ghetto Child (Instrumental)
15. Galt MacDermot - Space
16. Busta Rhymes - Woo-Hah (Instrumental
17. Busta Rhymes - Woo-Hah (Worldwide Remix Instrumental)
18. MF Doom - Cinquefoil (Instrumental)
19. Galt MacDermot - Ripped Open By Metal Explosions
20. Artifacts - C'Mon Wit Da Git Down
21. Galt MacDermot - Duffer
22. Galt MacDermot - If Our Love Is Real
http://www.mediafire.com/?kzn1zmemvom

Preview:

Galt MacDermot - Golden Apples Part II


Galt MacDermot - Cathedral


Galt MacDermot - Bedroom


Galt MacDermot - Stockyard


Galt MacDermot - Harlem Medley Pt. I


Galt MacDermot - Coffee Cold


Galt MacDermot - Space


Galt MacDermot - Ripped Open By Metal Explosions


Galt MacDermot - Duffer (Bonus Track)


Galt MacDermot - If Our Love Is Real
(Bonus Track)


As a bonus, here is the amazing "Hair Cuts" LP that I purchased from Galt himself back in 2001. I remastered it with click repair.



Galt MacDermot - Hair Cuts (1969)
1. Aquarius
2. Sodomy
3. Donna-Hashish
4. Easy To Be Hard
5. Where Do I Go
6. Don't Put It Down
7. Hare Krishna
8. Good Morning Starshine
9. Let The Sunshine In
http://www.mediafire.com/?fmctmryysxm


Obviously, hit up google for out-of-print Galt records like "The Nucleus", etc. Also, make sure to purchase everything that has been repressed over the past decade. If you're a fan, then you owe it to the man. Hell, I've probably contributed at least $300 to his cause!

--Roy Johnson

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Rhinestone Cowboy - The Long Awaited Sample


After months and months of digging and speculating, interacting on different forums and with different people, it finally surfaces. Much to the chagrin of another producer who used the same sample for an unused instrumental, a kid who rarely posts at Philaflava dropped the name of the record just a little while ago. The poster fittingly goes by the name of Midnight Marauder and tonight he truly marauded for our ears and I would just like to extend a thorough thank you to the man who we don't know much about.

Now, for the last few months, this subject has brought about a bit of controversy. The main argument being about producers unveiling their sample sources. Of course, this phenomena goes way back to the late 70's, early 80's, when DJ's used to use different means to hide the names of records they spun. It was usually to make sure another DJ didn't bite and use the same record or to just stay being the only DJ with that record, rendering his material exclusive. Understandable, completely. 

But nowadays, things done changed. The internet is a wonderful thing. You got blogs like Kevin Nottingham and Hip Hop Is Read releasing entire album sample sets. You got people over at The-Breaks listing samples for your favorite songs every day, in an easily navigable presentation. You got guys like myself and Roy Johnson doing their own unique sample sets, breakdowns, and challenges. It's a new world. Bask in it! You never know when things can change for the worse.

Some might say that asking what someone sampled is lazy and wack and against what this culture used to represent. Some people say that sharing and building on the information can only lead to good things. The one thing I can add here is that insulting and trying to belittle someone for requesting sample information is an uncalled for, wack move.

There really is no reason for me to get into the argument, I mean, to each his own. If someone doesn't want to give up a sample source, they don't have to. Especially if they are a pretty big name, they can face litigation. And if your name is recognized on a much, much smaller scale, you still don't owe anybody a sample source revelation. But it might help your career out by getting your name out there a little more. In these days, fans want that interactivity with artists.

There's nothing to debate. The credit goes to the writers, performers, producers, musicians, and engineers of the original record. Credit also goes to the hip hop producers for doing that magic that they do so well at turning a little old sample into a beautiful new hip hop joint.

Preview:



Thanks to leftright and everyone else from The-Breaks and Philaflava message boards. All you guys are some diggin'
fanatics. And your non stop work on uncovering this was and is appreciated.

--Verge

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Space Is The Place w/ Kool Keith, DJ Qbert, Mixmaster Mike, etc



When I set out to make a space-related compilation, I knew that it was gonna be some crazy shit by default, but this may very well be one of the dopest compilations that I've ever put together. It took me months to research, accumulate, and isolate all of the audio for this project. I tried to limit this to 100MB, but I accumulated close to 250 MB worth of space-related tracks, so I'll probably make a second volume at some point. If you have any recommendations, please drop me a line in the comments section.

Space Is The Place Volume 1
1. Mf Doom - Arabic Gum Intro (Instrumental)
2. Ultramagnetic MCs - Kool Keith Model Android #406
3. DJ Qbert - Destination Quasar 16.33.45.78
4. DJ Z-Trip - Black Hole
5. Mixmaster Mike - Solar Panel: Audio Mass
6. Kool Keith - Bitin' My Space Shit (Interlude)
7. Kool Keith & DJ Spooky - Object Unknown (Remix)
8. MF Doom - Star Anis (Instrumental)
9. DJ Qbert - Inner Space Dental Commander
10. EL-P - Iron Galaxy (Instrumental)
11. Akbar - Space Odyssey
12. DJ Qbert - Cosmic Assassins
13. Mixmaster Mike - Cosmic Rays
14. D-Styles & D-Flare - Who Killed Two Pac!
15. Sir Menelik & Kool Keith - Space Cadillac
16. DJ Qbert - Invaders From The Planet Scratch
17. D-Styles & D-Flare - Spacecamp Massacre
18. Mixmaster Mike - Astronaut
19. Quasimoto - Astronaut
20. D-Styles & DJ Qbert - Return To Planetary Deterioration
21. EL-P - Deep Space 9mm (Instrumental)
22. Chief Xcel - Fully Charged Outro (Instrumental)
23. Hidden Track
http://www.mediafire.com/?otiydni5zfo

Preview:

DJ Qbert - Destination Quasar 16.33.45.78


DJ Z-Trip - Black Hole


Kool Keith & DJ Spooky - Object Unknown (Remix)


DJ Qbert - Inner Space Dental Commander


EL-P - Iron Galaxy (Instrumental)


Akbar - Space Odyssey


Mixmaster Mike - Cosmic Rays


D-Styles & D-Flare - Spacecamp Massacre


Quasimoto - Astronaut


Chief Xcel - Fully Charged Instrumental Outro


--Roy Johnson

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Repartee: Apache, De La Soul, Positive K, Viktor Vaughn


Positive K ft. MC Lyte "I'm Not Havin' It"


De La Soul "Bitties In The BK Lounge"


Apache ft. Nikki D "Who Freaked Who?"


Viktor Vaughn ft. Apani "Let Me Watch"



It is a rare occurrence when a "battle-of-the-sexes" back and forth dialogue is acted out in a rap song. I wish it happened more frequently. In spite of the anti-rap fervor that such songs have the potential to generate they are oftentimes quite engrossing. Surface skimming listeners who vigilantly and strategically denounce any rap song that leans in the direction of misogyny may balk at some of the lyrics contained in today's selection. The fact remains that three of the songs features female emcees who are widely praised for their skills, and all of today's selections contain moments in which male bragodocio is effectively foiled.

This is not to suggest that the existence of these songs somehow cancels out the genre's sexism. Or that all of these rhyming exchanges are models of equitable exchange. Or that the intrinsic entertainment value of these selections invalidates attempts to scrutinize the function and position of the female voice and perspective. On the contrary, these songs have the potential to spark constructive debates about these issues. Even within this small sample the male-female repartee is approached in several different ways with decidedly different outcomes and implications. All I'm saying is that these tracks are a welcome relief from the endless parade of songs that unilaterally bash women, or even the songs that feature a counter-argument ventriloquized by a man (think Slick Rick "Mona Lisa").

MC Lyte rebuffs Positive K's playalistic advances so calmly that "I'm Not Havin' It" could almost be confused for an emcee battle between the two. I stress "almost" because the song is quite revealing for a contest of wits that reenacts the kind of humorously belligerent exchange one might see in Brooklyn at any given moment. The normally self-possessed MC Lyte sneaks shows brief signs of insecurities developed during past failed relationships. Positive K's pimp profile appears little more than a psychological defense mechanism against society's marginalization of the broke and bummy. There's no clear winner here, except for the listener, as Lyte and Positive are two of the most charismatic rappers in history.

Apache's probably unintentional self-effacement on the much bawdier and even more combative "Who Freaked Who" is somehow less compelling. The song is still a gem, if only for the train-wreck scenario of witnessing a highly mediocre, infamously chauvinistic rapper put up the fight of his life against the wittier Nikki D. The banter here approaches comedic genius, and Nikki is noticeably more comfortable in this mode than her "Daddy's Little Girl" routine. I'll leave you the listener to decide exactly who freaked who, but it's not looking good for the genius behind "Gangsta Bitch."

The first half of "Bitties In the BK Lounge" is typically sardonic De La commentary on the pettiness of celebrity worship (a female cashier changes her attitude from surly to sunny when Trugoy removes his hat and reveals his trademark dreads) but the ensuing war of words in the second half is downright hilarious. After a complete beat flip, we have Posdnous as a Burger King cashier forced to spar with a sassy customer unimpressed by his lowly station. If the entire song is taken as male versus female verbal scrimmage, Maseo's outro ad-libs secure the last word for the fellas, but this is more than likely a draw.

"Let Me Watch" is probably the most sophisticated -- and perverse -- of today's offerings. In cinematic fashion, the listener is granted omniscient access to exchanges between MF Doom's alter ego and his lust interest voiced by Apani, as well as their interior monologues. The mounting conflict of interest culminates in a cleverly inconclusive and slightly disturbing ending. The wannabe Lothario gets dissed for sure, but if the narrative's punchline is a stand-in for an all-encompassing self-deprecating boast (plausible given Doom's penchant for such multiple entendre). Those seeking a satisfying resolution to rap's gender wars will remain unfulfilled for now, but at least they have some great tunes to bump in the meantime.

-- Thun



Friday, November 7, 2008

Metal Faces

1. Alpha (Ft. Count Bass-D) 0:37
2. Time and Space 2:54
3. Life and Death 4:25
4. Freedom 3:11
5. Foolish (Ft. Megalon & MF DOOM) 3:20
6. Together 2:00
7. Break Em Off (Intermission) 4:10
8. Rain Blood (Ft. Megalon) 4:02
9. Voices Pt. 0 2:00
10. Voices Pt. 1 (Ft. MF DOOM) 1:56
11. Yes You Are (It's Only A Movie) 2:28
12. I.B.'s 3:56
13. To All My Comrades 2:09
14. Howl 2:33
15. Words 3:26
16. Teach the Babies 2:32
17. Omega 0:56

Download

1. Intro 0:29
2. All Y'all 3:55
3. Stable 5:17
4. Dr. Death 4:18
5. The Deal Is Done (Monte Smith) 2:00
6. Go Back 3:25
7. Dancin' (produced by J-Zone) 2:38
8. Enemy At Home (by Monte Smith) 2:26
9. Black Helicopter (Feat. Jihad) 5:59
10. Straight Babylon No Chaser (by Monte Smith) 2:29
11. Digital Tears 5:15
12. Ying & Yang (Ft. Agu Aka Mr. Voodoo, Su-Ann Ortiz) 4:54
13. The Way 3:15
14. Taken 2:42
15. Love Jones (Feat. Jihad) 4:53
16. Rotten 4:47
17. Voices (The Final Chapter) 5:24
18. Happy 2:21
19. Superstar J.J. (Feat. Su-Ann Ortiz) 5:22
20. Static 3:55
21. Outro 0:39

Download


1. Grandmaster Interview 0:53
2. Take 'Em To War [original version] 3:31
3. Manhattan Interview 0:46
4. King Of New York 3:43
5. Get Down (with DJ Ekim) 3:24
6. Hip-Hop Interview 0:28
7. So Watcha Want? 4:33
8. Getting Shot Interview 1:52
9. Bloody Love Letter 4:18
10. Comrade Interview 0:39
11. Scars & Memories 6:18
12. Percy Carey Interview 0:34
13. Crumb Snatchers 5:42
14. In The End (with Yves) 4:24
15. AIDS (with Kool G. Rap, Akinyele, C.J. Moore, Big Chuck) 3:24
16. MF Grimm Interview 1:12
17. The Original 3:58
18. Wack Emcees (with Nomad, Yves, Wayne-O) 3:40
19. Do It For The Kids 4:26
20. Emotions (with B-One) 4:24
21. Dedicated (with Squeeze On Intro) 4:04

Download


1. Doomsday Remix 3:11
2. No Snakes Alive ft. King Ghidra 3:34
3. Impostas 3:36
4. The Original Remix 3:31
5. Break'em Off 4:09
6. Dedicated 3:27
7. The Original 4:00
8. Doomsday (Remix Instrumental) 3:07
9. No Snakes Alive (Instrumental) 3:35
10. Impostas (Instrumental) 4:01
11. The Original (Remix instrumental) 3:29
12. Break'em Off (Instrumental) 3:45
13. Dedicated (Instrumental) 3:27
14. The Original (Instrumental) 3:57

Download

Props to
kimani for the drop.

--Philaflava

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Pete Nice & Daddy Rich - 3 C's


Corny, cool and contrived--that's the most accurate way of describing Dust To Dust in 2008. While the many who'll have heard this for the first time today may not appreciate the album, it's those (like myself) who invested in Dust To Dust back in '93 that'll rediscover the album's greatness. You might think it's impossible to be both corny and cool, but I assure you it's not. Pete Nice was the closest thing white people had to Big Daddy Kane in the rap world. I don't mean that lyrically, rather stylistically. Pete Nice was always the "cool" one out the crew while MC Serch was always that goofy self-hating poseur that could have made Kamron (Young Black Teenagers) look like Asher Roth.


Dust To Dust is a great album for the same reasons it can be considered corny. The rhymin' is elementary at best and sometimes flat out predictable. The album dropped at a time when rhyming wasn't always sophisticated. Complexity didn't exactly sell and I don't think any of us would ever mistake groups like 3rd Bass or The Beatnuts for wordsmiths, but it didn't matter because they were beyond witty, had an infectious swagger and most importantly dope production.


A year after the breakup of 3rd Bass and the debut album of former member Serch, Pete Nice got the co-sign by Russell Simmons to go dolo. Some might even remember seeing Russell in the "Kick The Bobo" video that sported a Serch lookalike getting beat down with a bat. Dust To Dust came and went with the quickness. Many people had already dismissed 3rd Bass as a gimmick and while Serch receive some attention from his ill-collabo "Back To The Grill" featuring Red Hot Lover Tone, Chubb Rock and Nasty Nas, it was Pete Nice who delivered the better album. It's true that as much as Serch had help, Pete Nice did as well, enlisting friends K.M.D, Sam Sever and The Beatnuts for production. Psycho Les and Kurious both have guest spots and Cage debuts (1993) for the first time on "Rick Bring 'Em Back."

If you enjoyed Kurious' "A Constipated Monkey" then there is no reason you won't enjoy this. They're practically identical albums. This one is just the "white" version.

Personal favorites:
Rat Bastard
Kick The Bobo
The Lumberjack
The Rapsody
Outta My Way Baby

Download Dust To Dust here!
Cop Dust To Dust for $0.75 here!

--Philaflava

Kick The Bobo

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Jeru The Damaja - Non-Album Tracks



Jeru The Damaja - Non-Album Tracks

1. Speak Ya Clout w/ Gangstarr & Lil' Dap
2. I'm The Man w/ Gangstarr & Lil' Dap
3. You Can't Stop The Prophet (Pete Rock Remix)
4. Come Clean (Scratch Remix)
5. Ya Playin' Yaself (Spinbad Blend)
6. Me Or The Papes (DJ Premier Remix)
7. Return Of The Crooklyn Dodgers w/ Chubb Rock & O.C.
8. 1, 2 Pass It
9. 1, 2 Pass It (Remix)
10. Ya Playin' Yaself (MF Doom Blend)
11. 5 Deadly Venoms Freestyle
12. Tony Touch Freestyle
13. Freestyle w/ Afu Ra
14. Graffiti w/ Digable Planets
15. Suicide Or Murder w/ Bounty Killer
16. When I Flow w/ Walkin' Large
17. Me Or The Papes (Rae & Christian Remix)
18. Ya Playin' Yaself (Vinyl Reanimators Remix)
19. Flip The Mic
20. Friend Or Foe

http://www.mediafire.com/?dtr2ybjrxdn

--Roy Johnson

Sunday, October 5, 2008

The Fondle 'Em Collection




1. FE001:
Godfather Don & Kool Keith, The Cenubites EP
19. FE009: Scienz of Life, “Powers of Nine Ether/The Anthem”
22. FEMF2: MF Grimm, “Landslide Remix/Tick Tick”
23. FEMF3: MF Grimm, “WWIII/Scars & Memories”

Props to all contributors that made this happen at Philaflava.com:
sen,godmc,LyricalGymnastics,DaPublisher,CharlieManson,Mark563,thebigK,bossman,StressIzHim,sajr
nobs,ScholarWenis,drug,Jaz,tapemaniak,drizzle,kimani

--Verge