B R ¥ T B Ü R K Σ N

Entries tagged as ‘new york’

Rakim The GOD, the timeless MC

November 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I have not listened to the new Rakim, except Holy Are You and the song with Maino. Pretty good. Nothing that grabbed me, though.

Is he still hungry? Is he playing with words like he used to? Is he in the same zone? Does he still write his rhymes backwards?

Time caught up with him. It doesn’t seem to bug him too much. Whatever, he has done more than his part. To this day rappers are unable to outspit him. Go back to 1988, the title track of Follow The Leader. Put any up and coming, ribs-are-showing-hungry MC beside that and they’ll break like glass. Besides Tupac Shakur, and maybe Big Pun on a strictly technical level, nobody has managed to update his formula.

On one hand time has been unkind to this great concrete poet. On the other hand his works are timeless, to a much higher degree than other rappers. Comparing him to other greats of his era is not fair. BDP, Big Daddy Kane, NWA, Kool G Rap, LL Cool J and Ice-T all sound dated, unlike Rakim. He towers above them on a plane with other innovative spirits like Miles Davis and Jimi Hendrix. There is an eternal freshness and coolness to their music that is unleashed everytime it’s played. He has the experimentalism of Davis and the iconic expressiveness of Hendrix. “He came on stage with lazers in his eyes“. In the words of Dallas Penn:

Performance is personal style and attracts people that can relate. Seeing Rakim at Latin Quarters in 1987 you can best believe that heads were in awe of the way he presented himself. Rappers that had any rhymes during that time had to jump and flail about. Rakim stood in one place and gripped that mic like he was choking that shit. Fools were getting knocked the fux out that night on the Deuce and in the Quarters. Best show evar for me.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , ,

Tragedy Khadafi In The Studio With Dj Krush

November 9, 2009 · Leave a Comment



One of my favorite rappers in the studio recording one of his best songs…

(via Grandgood)

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , ,

Finally the remedy for Mat-Tina and that crap

October 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Sean Price is right…

Kimbo Price och Mic Tyson är något att lyssn in sig på… låt det marinera…

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , ,

Born & Raised is out today!

October 20, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , ,

Ill Bill recording album with DJ Muggs

October 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment


This is great news, Ill Bill being one of my favorite rappers, and Muggs one of my favorite producers. The album he did with GZA was pretty good, the one with Sick Jacken had some of the rawest rap tracks from recent times (Land Of Shadows was perhaps the best song of that year) on it, so I’m thinking this should be nothing short of epic.

The project with Sean Price (Pill?) should be very interesting as well. Two unique, hardcore Brooklyn vets sharing the mic; that’s a dream combo. Let Necro handle the production.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , , ,

Cormega LIVE (from Lyme Lyte DVD)

October 13, 2009 · Leave a Comment

classic!

NEW ALBUM OCTOBER 20!

Even though I doubt we’ll see another Tha Realness (aka the best record of this decade), judging from what I’ve heard so far it’ll be at least as good as The True Meaning.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , , ,

Trife Diesel – Better Late Than Never

July 22, 2009 · Leave a Comment

He’s been working so hard for so long, his release is properly titled Better Late Than Never. The music on this project is exactly what people have been waiting to hear from a qualified and gifted artist such as Trife. Fans that have been waiting for this album since 2000 will not be let down. Trife has crafted a classic album both for old and new fans of Hip Hop.

This is good News. Trife Diesel (former Trife Da God) is my favourite rapper without a solo album. Been waiting years for a full length.

The tracklisting seems to be once again plagued by way too many features. If Put It On The Line and that Theodore Unit album would have had less filler rappers, they’d been classics. And much of it would have been thanks to Trife. The track with Royce sounds hard, though, so let’s hope for the best.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , ,

RAW FOREVER #2: Never Personal

July 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

CormegaTheTestament

Out of all the vicious beef tracks ever recorded, Never Personal hits me the hardest. When Mega Montana is going for the throat – it’s over. The competition can go home. His combination of advanced microphone mathematics and undilluted street venom makes him unbeatable. Especially when it’s over what sounds like a leftover from The Infamous-sessions. And there’s an open, honest quality to it that makes it even more powerful. Contrary to the title, this time it seems to have been personal.

Cormega – Never Personal (Fuck Nas and Nature)

This was recorded after his fall-out with Nas, following industry problems related to their work with The Firm. (An older Cormega gives his side of the situation here). The beef is squashed, but these tracks stand as testament to Cory’s status as one of the most ferocious rhyme spitters ever.

Cormega f. Foxxxy Brown – Never Personal Part 2

Cormega – Live In The Spot

Part 2 is more of the same. Foxxxy Brown goes in against Nasir, showing the world who’s the best female who done it (next to Rah Digga and The Lady Of Rage, naturally). I took these two from the J-Love tape along with a live clip of Mega dissing Nas using his own song titles. It’s pretty clever, if you ask me. And yes – sorry about the sound quality.


Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , ,

“Screwball went to war with Giuliani…”

July 7, 2009 · Leave a Comment

“… I’m pure New York, got train tracks inside me…

Blaq Poet Don’t Give A Fuccc!”

The hardest track out this year. While half of New York is busy trying to sound like the South, the other half is trying to emulate the mid-nineties. But while they are looking to the past, Poet is doing what he always does. He is bringing the hardcore with renewed energy. I missed this kind of aggressiveness in rap music today.

Not the most innovative album ever, The Blaqprint still hits you as hard as anything from the golden era of harcore New York. Apart from some filler guest raps, it is packed with Primo-produced bangers like the one posted above. Some posters claim that the production is subpar, that DJ Premier has fallen off, that he needs to update his drums. That is not true. S.O.S. and U Phucc’d Up and Never Goodbye and Hood Crazy and especially the chilling Voices shows you why.

It is a shame and a testament to the sad state of music that you will not hear anything from this played on the radio or in the club. It is not even fair, I mean, Blaq Poet went out of his way, I mean really stretched his format to make a hot club track. Perhaps he shouldn’t have named it Stretch Marks & Cigarette Burns.

blaq_poet-street_phixr

“You aint heard this type shit in a very long time…”

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , ,

RAW FOREVER #1: Straight Outta QB

June 24, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Let us start with the beat. Before Dr. Dre invented g-funk, he had the last say on that superhard, James Brown-based b-boy boom bap that New York producers like Marley Marl, Kurtis Mantronik, Paul C and The 45 King had defined earlier. This was what the world first knew Dr. Dre for. He took that style to a new level. When you listen to the groundbreaking, funk-as-punk masterpiece Straight Outta Compton, the snares hit your cranium harder, the bass slaps heavier in your chest, and the loops come out cleaner, funkier. As RZA once put it in an interview: nobody fills up your whole car like Dr. Dre. The title track might be the hardest beat ever cooked up (even if the doctor made serious attempts to top himself with Deep Cover, Pump Pump, Natural Born Killaz – imagine if he gave something in that weight class to Tupac Shakur), and the man responsible for it is better known for introducing laidback orchestrations and Nate Dogg’s smooth crooning to the game, or helping with the musical backdrop for The Eminem Show, than for the production that brought N.W.A. to the attention of the F.B.I.

I rep the streets, ’til I rest in peace! If you wanna bring your west and heat, my projects be the last place you ever see!

Raised in the crack wars of New York, just out of jail (where he had been the boxing champ), Mega Montana was now set against friends turned foes and a record industry most eager to fuck him over. Before he recorded Tha Realness – one of the most heartfelt and powerful albums ever recorded – Cormega was spitting with a whole other kind of ferocity. If you compare his early freestyles with the Cormega from The True Meaning and Legal Hustle you can see that his delivery is rawer, straight aggression, as if he had beef with every person in the room. The animal, reptile, killer instinct is in every bar. It was only right for him to make Straight Outta QB.

Some recordings from this era displays a certain sloppiness, a syllable out of place here and there. This is typical for rappers not so comfortable in the studio. After all, Cormega had spent his last years administrating drug wars and going through the prison system, more busy with surviving than with perfecting his flow. However, that nervousness cannot be found on this track. His mic presence is magnetic, the delivery impeccable, the flow without weaknesses. Every syllable is in its exact place, laid down hard like the bricks that make a prison wall. Brute force. Raw power, stomping your enemies into the ground. Adrenaline. Aggression. I will kill you. I will survive.

It is easy to criticize violent music. At the same time, the critic has probably never “felt the power of invisibility, clutching a gun like, fuck it – it’s him or me“. The rapper did not choose the concrete jungle, crack, hand cannons; he was born there. If from a nicer area, other, more socially well adjusted topics would have been dealt with. To his favor, Cormega only relates things that he has experienced, that he has seen up close in the flesh (“I possess the ghetto essence of that which I portray“), and does it with a passion for his craft, never giving in to gimmicks, poses, trends, empty bragging, always choosing his words carefully, as a means to paint pictures, passing on life lessons, and trying to uplift his listeners. Still, we sure miss the incomparable anger and energy that we hear in his old freestyles.

Cormega – Straight Outta QB

Cormega – Freestyle over Deep Cover

cormega-01-2400x3000

My tounge’ll leave a razor sliced on mics

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , , ,