Oct 042012
 

The same year that ASAP Mob – the new hype and hope of New York rap – served us two surprisingly atrocious songs with their idols Jim Jones and Raekwon, a Bay Area veteran did more or less the opposite. On The Sentence we find two historically important and close-to-classic records featuring N.Y. legends.

The Jacka does not receive the attention that he deserves. His pen writes both hits and introspective scriptures, infectious hooks over throbbing club music, as well as pain verbalized over very distinctive, etheral, left field production (yes, seeking out them really different sounding slaps is a speciality of his).

Why is he not more widely recognized?

Maybe because he, in a sense, already is a finished product. He knows his market. He knows his art. He’s rich from shows and selling tapes all over the west coast and the midwest. He doesn’t need the industry. They can’t control him like an artist lacking in either the streets or the music side of things. And they know that he knows that they know this, you know.

The Jacka has a way of bringing out the best out of otherwise unknown artists, as well as Bay Area favorites both old (like Too Short and E-40) and new (like J. Stalin and Lil Rue). But even then the collabos on his latest album – The Sentence slipped under my radar at first, since web promotion is neglected and record stores ’round my parts never keep his albums on display, not that I ever visit record stores – stand out.

With Havoc and Prodigy beefing, and continuing to disappoint as solo acts, M.O.B. is a breath of fresh air. It might be the last Mobb Deep song we will ever get, and surely the last good one. How did they end up here? How did the song turn out so organic?

Beat-wise it’s a logical continuation from Murda Muzik, before their sound took a turn for the worse. It’s energetic and electronic, but with a distinctive New York feel. And it fits perfectly with the rest of The Jacka’s catalog.

As if snatching up the last pre-beef verses from the iconic Queensbridge duo wasn’t enough, through some miracle The Jacka also got Max B out of prison, flew him over to the Bay Area, made him lay down some bars in the studio, and then flew him back to the East Coast and back to prison.

That’s what it sounds like at least. I know someone is on the twitter trying to sell verses from Bigavelli, but Look Into My Eyes really sounds like a song where both rappers were present in the studio. It’s not just new rhymes from the Wavy One himself, we get two whole verses from him over an incredible, Jeffro-sounding instrumental.

Sep 172012
 

Älskar att det fortfarande finns folk som lägger ner lite omsorg på sina omslag som om det fortfarande vore 1995.

Blaq Poet – E.B.K.: EveryBody Killa

01. Intro
02. EBK (EveryBodyKilla)
03. Fuck You
04. Ways Of War (f. Ruste Juxx / Shabaam Sahdeeq)
05. Get Down Or Lay Down (f. Shabaam Sahdeeq / Red Eye)
06. Q.B. Murderer
07. No Joke
08. Front Street
09. Let’s Get High
10. Too Many Nights
11. Movie Villains (Remix) (feat. Reef the Lost Cauze / Sha Stimuli)
12. It’s Over Now (feat. Montener the Menace / Punchline (EMC))
13. Nuts And Screws (feat. Nutso / Kyron)
14. Welcome Back Screwball (feat. KL / Ty Nitty / Scrape Scrilla)

OK, detta verkar sakna konstigheter och trams. Bra titlar, bra gäster! Och Poet brukar alltid välja bra produktioner…

Den 25:e denna månad ser vi alltså fram emot ännu en skiva fylld med den musikaliska motsvarigheten till ett baseballträ mot ditt kranium.

Aug 082012
 

I love the fact that Raekwon and CNN have collaborated quite a few times during the last years, even if the resulting songs have been so-so.

This one, though, that I missed last year, is that shit; grimy, project hallway, back-and-forth rhyming, dope game folklore that we’ve learned to love and expect from these artists.

a legend never seen like a Chupacabra

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