OBIE TRICE-Special Reserve

Posted on January 20th, 2010 by ekko

I’ve often thought of doing a list of the most under-appreciated albums of the 2000-09 decade, and if I did, Obie Trice’s “Cheers” would be on it.  Cheers was slaughtered because it came out at the same time as “Get Rich or Die Trying.”

Unlike D12, which are basically Eminem’s backup band, Obie Trice has leading-man charisma, the ability to speed and slow his flow to match mood and attititude, and an understanding of the mechanisms of grammar, cadence, and vocabulary.  All the skills of a master.  And like a rap master, he’s released a posthumous album of new material.  He also knew enough to break away from his master when Em’s skills began to fade, and dude became a paranoid recluse–rap’s JD Salinger.  I don’t care what MTV says, Eminem’s 2009 releases sucked.  There was nothing worth hearing on them.  Nothing.  Even Dre’s beats were faded and drab.

“Special Reserve” is a collection of Obie material that he recorded pre-2000 with Canada’s DJ Moss, who learned at the knee of DJ Premier, and is distributed on iTunes by Moss’s own vanity label.  Yet it doesn’t sound like old demos.  It’s cutting edge, lyrically and musically, and shows why this MC, and not 50 Cent, should have been the man to notice in 2003. Even before Obie got a shot to the dome, he was hardcore, underground and muscular.  The albums shows remarkable versatility from such a young novice.  Cuts worth special mention include “Got Hungry,” an autobio track, “On and On,” a club banger with tremendous beats, and the gangsta old-school track, “4 Stories.”  But overall there are only a few tracks I felt like skipping.  This is a terrific collection of songs from one of Detroit’s best.

Special Reserve is on 139th and Broadway, so it is independent, even if Trice’s upcoming 2010 release won’t be.

Got Hungry

THE TOP 15 HIP HOP ALBUMS OF THE DECADE (INDEPENDENT ONLY)

Posted on November 20th, 2009 by ekko

I’m almost afraid to publish this, since I know I’ll get all kinds of grief about it. Before you comment on what a dope I am for omitting Graduation/Fishscale/Speakerboxxx/etc., please read the title of this post again. Only independent releases were considered. But this did include street albums and mixtapes.

Another point: I debated whether to segregate out rap records, and decided to do so only because I haven’t seen too many bloggers writing decade-rap lists, so I thought this might help fill a void.

Okay, now you can tell me how little I know about rap and what a hater I am and blah blah blah. You bore me. Of all the rap albums that came out between 2000 and now, these 15 moved me the most.

Period.

THE TOP 15 INDIE HIP HOP ALBUMS OF 2000-2009

15 (tie). D.J. Cinema and D.J. Mello-The Commission (a.k.a.-B.I.G. and Jay-Z, The Album that Never Was) (2005-Mixtape) and Bobb Deep-Queensbridge (200?-DJ Swindle). These are both “blends,” but they’re the two best blend tapes I’ve ever heard. You can still get Bobb Deep for free here, and I’m sure if you dig around datpiff you’ll find The Commission, too.

14. Dangermouse and Jemini-Ghetto Pop Life (2004-Lex). Find better beats. I dare you.

13. DJ Muggs and GZA-Grandmasters (2005-Angeles). Tough and rugged, this is RZA and Muggs at their finest. And they didn’t need a major label to do it!

12. The Coup-Pick a Bigger Weapon (2006-Epitaph). A duo that is consistently challenging, raw, conscious and hilarious. The Public Enemy for 2000s underground rap.

11. Brother Ali-The Undisputed Truth (2007-Rhymesayers). It breaks my heart that this one didn’t make it into the top ten, especially since I voted it best rap album of the year in 2007, but I had to be honest and Ortiz edged Ali out. But just barely. A rare example of an intelligent, challenging rap album that also has great beats and flow.

10. Joell Ortiz-The Brick: Bodega Chronicles (2007-Koch). Big Pun lives!

9. Masta Ace-A Long Hot Summer (2004-Yosumi). Was Ace done by the end of the 1990s? No f-in’ way. He also gets my vote as one of the most important rappers of the entire decade. Just sayin’.

8. Atmosphere-Lucy Ford:The Atmosphere EPs (2001-Rhymesayers). My favorite Atmosphere release, hands down. Slug is a champ.

7. Joe Budden-Mood Muzik 2: Can It Get Any Worse? (2002-DJ On Point). Joey! It’s . . . It’s . . . It’s that on top MU-zik!

6. Lil’ Wayne-Dedication 2 (2006-DJ Drama). Not a huge fan of Weezy, but this mixtape is undeniable.

5. MF DOOM-Operation Doomsday (2008-Metal Face). Dumile is on the list twice, and both in the top 5. You got a problem with that?

4. Clipse-We It 4 Cheap Vol. 2 (2005-Mixunit). In Volume 1, Clipse released a world of anger about issues with their label, but in Volume 2 they hit a groove I’ve never heard them hit before or since. They took over great beats and made them their own. Check out “Hate It Or Love It,” “The Corner,” and “Daytona 500,” and tell me the Clipse versions aren’t as good as the originals.

3. Lupe Fiasco-Fahrenheit 1:15 Vol. 2, Revenge of the Nerds (2006-Mixtape). I’m picking this one, but really any of his pre-official-release mixtapes are great. I loved his first album, published on a major label, but his second one, “The Cool,” left me cold. Fastest burnout in hip hop history.

2. 50 Cent-Power of the Dollar (2000-Mixtape). It’s trendy to hate on Fiddy these days—and with good reason. He hasn’t done anything worth listening to in years. But the power of his first street album is undeniable. It was so good, it got Columbia records to sign him and then force him to change everything about himself that made this album so good in the first place.


1. Madvillain-Madvillainy (2004-Stones Throw). MF DOOM also got my vote for most important rapper of the decade, based on the consistent quality and groundbreaking nature of all of his official releases and collaborations. He seems never content to do the same thing twice. As for Madvillainy, even some of my rap-hating friends dig it.

THE TOP TEN MOST OVERRATED RAPPERS

Posted on September 13th, 2009 by ekko

The best posts on this site are the ones that piss people off.  At least those are the ones that I find the most interesting, and that tend to have longevity in terms of drawing readers and comments.  Like my “Best Indie Albums Ever” post that still pisses off hundreds of readers a week.  That post was a poll–I asked you all to vote and published the results.  This post is not, but I’d love to read your comments.  I’m sure many people will say Jay-Z is overrated, but i just can’t agree.  Dude has mad variety in flow and lyrical content, is able to mix college-level political theory with street-level slang, and has sustained a career for decades.  The criteria for an overrated rapper have to be that the guy is famous, respected (i.e., people put him on top 10 lists, etc.), has been around for more than a few years, and has a tight following.  In other words, they have to actually be rated well.  This means that the artists on this list do have skill–I’m not throwing artists like Nelly up here because all they did was make pop for a few years and then fade away.  None of these folks should be ashamed of who they are.

They’re all very talented.

They’re just not as talented as everyone says they are.

They’re just not as good as everyone says.

Why do I make these excuses?  Because I asked about a dozen rap bloggers to contribute to this post, and most were too scared sign on.  Only two agreed, and their contributions are included below.

Dig in.

10.  Timbaland/Akon.

The bottom rung of this ladder is occupied by two producers.  Is that a copout?  Maybe a little.  But these producers are collectively responsible for about 75% of the irresponsibly saccharine hip hop that has diluted the art form and changed it from a refuge for street poets into an echo chamber.  Or, even worse, a sideshow.  Pussycat Dolls, Nelly Furtado, Tweet, Brandy, Stefani, Timberlake . . . All projects that used rap as little more than a way to give the featured artists some sort of credibility.   Timbaland is a master at selling the hip hop art form for far less than its true value, just to make another dollar he probably doesn’t even need.  And if any of you have heard the leaked Jay-Z tracks from his coming album, you’re probably as worried as I am that Timba found a way to slay Hova.  The beats are weak as hell.  As for Akon, his latest album merged hip hop with pop to completely rape both genres, taking only their most stereotypical, cypher-like qualities.  It was too offensive for the 12-year-olds it was marketed to, and too infantile for anyone with more than a grade school education.  I’m not a t00-serious humbug or a killjoy, either.  Any regular reader of this blog knows I dig lighthearted pop, and I’m not easily offended.  But an art form should make up its mind what it wants to say–it should have a message and a meaning.   And although they’ve worked well with rappers in the past (Timba’s Missy Elliott work is brilliant), Timba was also responsible for “Ayo Technology”–possibly the worst 50 Cent hit in history.  And Akon’s “Smack That” marks the precise point in time when Eminem completely fell off.  Timbaland and Akon, whether working solo or with other artists, are pure formula: This worked before, so we’ll do the same damn thing again, without any thought or consideration about what a particular artist might need.  A good producer is willing to hang in the back and let the artist shine–but to Timba and Akon, the artist is irrelevant.  And both started strong, too. Akon’s first album, written while he was in prison, was a great example of how rap and R&B can merge effectively, cohesively, and create a powerful work of art.  Timbaland’s early work with Missy E is nothing short of stupendous, because he let her do what nobody but her has been able to do with him since: Take center stage and rock the mic.  He’s never been that good again.

9.  Wale. Wale has been called the greatest rapper since Jay-Z, but I have yet to hear understand what all the hubub is about.  The guy has a decent flow the first few times you hear him, until you realize that that’s all he can do.  His rhymes aren’t  creative or interesting, and the Seinfeld gimmick “Mixtape About Nothing” was aptly named.  It was thin and boring.  Every other artist on this list has proven himself to me on more than one occasion, but Wale has yet to bring it.  I think people really want him to be a big underground success story, and he’s riding the crest of a wave of expectation, but if he can’t put a single album together, and he hasn’t yet, then I have to ask: What’s the big deal about Wale?  Oh, and just who is it that called him the greatest since Hova?  That unparalleled hip hop tastemaker, GQ Magazine.  I rest my case.

8.  Method Man. Here’s another one I just don’t get.  Method Man crossed over into bad movies and bad T.V., but what has he done since 1993?  In fact, what has he done since he did his best work, which was also his first real work?  Was anything on “Tical” anywhere near as good as M.E.T.H.O.D. Man off of  “Enter the Wu: 36 chambers?”  And was Method Man even the best part of Wu?  Like Nas, Method Man is still riding off his initial brilliance, never since showing improved skills, versatility or breaking new ground.  And MM’s inability to live up to his legend is made all the more obvious when you compare his post-36 Chambers work to that of so many other Wu Tangers who went on to make amazing solo album and who continued, for years or even decades, to move hip hop forward: Ghostface (Supreme Clientele, Fishscale), RZA (producing every good Wu solo album from the 1990s) ,GZA (liquid swords), Raekwon (Cuban Links) . . . even ODB continued to grow creatively.  Method Man even took a pretty skilled artist, Redman, teamed up with him, and basically ruined him.  I defy any of you to listen to “Blackout” straight through.  Method man is waaaaay overrated.  In fact, if more people respected him, he’d be a lot higher on this list.  As it is, too many people revere him.  I wonder if they ever actually listened to any of his albums more than once.

7.  Buck 65 and Aesop Rock. Buck and Aesop don’t suck, but once you’ve heard one of their albums, you never need to listen to another one.  There are better white rappers out there (Beasties, Eminem, MC Serch).  There are even better underground white rappers out there (Slug, Eyedea, El-P).  There are even better Canadian rappers out there (K-Os, Abdominal, Kardinal Offishall).  Aesop is intelligent and crafty, but he doesn’t move the crowd, and that goes double for Buck 65 who is more of a beat poet than a rapper.  I get that they’ve both made some good singles and Aesop even made a couple pretty good albums, but do they really belong in discussions about the best rappers around today?  No, they don’t.  And yet, I frequently find them the subjects of such discussions.  They are overrated.

6.  M.I.A. Okay, Paper Planes and Galang are hot as fire, but is M.I.A. really to blame for that?  The beats are hot as fuck.  I think Bob Dylan could read the phone book over those beats and still have a hit.  And can anyone with a penis listen to an entire M.I.A. album without gagging?  This is hip hop for chicks.  Which isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but it also doesn’t make it good.  It also doesn’t make M.I.A. a rap star.  There’s lots of talented female MCs out there, and M.I.A. doesn’t even come close.  BET named her the best femal rapper of 2009?  Please.  Lauryn Hill’s lame cheese from the “Surf’s Up” soundtrack was more hip hop than Kala.  Not to mention Remy Ma, Rah Digga, Jean Grae . . . M.I.A. is a pop star who has managed to convince everyone that she’s a rapper.  As a pop star, she’s great.  (But arguably not as great as Santigold.)  As a rap star, she’s, say it with me now, overrated!  (And Santigold is a better rapper, too.)

5.  Lil’ Wayne. First off, I give props to Weezy’s work ethic and his wilingness to release tons of shit for free.  Mad props for that.  But if you have better-than-average skills (which he does) and an offbeat imagination (ditto), and you throw enough crap at a microphone, you’re bound to strike gold sometimes.  But can any of you name a solid Lil’ Wayne solo album?   You can’t, can you?  (And don’t say Carter III, you’ll only expose yourself as an ignoramus.)  Lil’ Wayne makes singels, but outperforms his own studio work with his own mixtapes.  And overexposes himself to boot.  While I appreciate free music on mixtapes, and I enjoy me a good “Prostitute Flange” now and then, I recognize that he’s not nearly as good as many other artists out there who control their output and only release a record when they’ve really got something to say.  Wayne talks too much.  He should lay off the sizzurp and get some focus.

4.  Snoop Doggy Dogg. Snoop’s creeping, sneaky, brimming-with-danger delivery is a major reason why The Chronic is one of the greatest albums of all time, and why Doggystyle is probably in the top 50 as well.  Not to mention Snoop’s debut track, Deep Cover, which may be one of my top ten all-time favorite rap singles.

But since then, he has had absolutely nothing on his mind except smoking weed and making money, and that’s commercialism, not art.  He’s not a great rapper, he’s a great product.  Dre found Calvin when he got out of prison, wearing a backpack and blue jeans, and Dr. Dre turned the lanky pothead into a superstar.  To paraphrase Jay-Z, he’s not a businessman, he’s a business, man!  With 20-something records under his belt, he averages one or two good songs per album (even less, lately).  That just does not make him a great rapper.  His stuff is weak, lazy, and formulaic.  Plus, he’s responsible for The Eastsidaz AND the Dogg Pound.  Shame on you, Snoop!  You’ve been around as long as just about anyone who is recording today, and you have a grand total of one good album.  The rest of them all suck, every one.  There may be a few decent club bangers here and there, but not a single good album.  You are vastly overrated.

And I’m not the only one who feels this way.  One of the two rappers brave enough to take a stand in this post says . . .

“As much as I love snoop for his personality and song ideas- as a rapper’s rapper– I don’t need to hear more rhymes about Lincoln Continentals.”

Haldan of Palms Out.

3.  Gucci Mane. I’m gonna let my buddy Jeff do the talking here:

“Let’s be clear: I don’t hate Gucci Mane. In small doses, Radric Davis is perfectly tolerable, even occasionally enjoyable. Gucci Mane stretched over an entire mixtape or album? It’s the aural equivalent of trying to eat pizza three meals a day. At first, it’s awesome but by the 22nd time, you feel bloated, indolent and suspect that you might be too old for these sort of harebrained schemes.

The defense is that the streets want Gucci. That’s fine–the streets also want Coldplay, Kings of Leon, and Nickelback. It just depends what street you’re on. Don’t try to tell me that he’s a thesaurus wizard because he compared a jewel to a tomato. That doesn’t mean he’s a genius, it means he walked into a supermarket. Here are several other similes that you could compare a jewel to: a radish, a red hot, Satan’s ass. See, it’s really not that hard. It’s fine if you like Gucci–more power to you–but trying to turn him into the second coming of Nas is absurd. I say we compromise: Gucci is a poor man’s Juvenile. Ha.”

Jeff of Passion of the Weiss.

2. 50 Cent. Fiddy rose on the strength of one song: How to Rob an Industry Nigga.  It was pure genius, and it was coldly calculated to move units.  In it, he namedropped every pop and hip hop star in the top 40, the diss record equivalent of a gonzo porn film: All cum shots and blow jobs.  After that, he took beats that Dr. Dre was too lazy to use for himself and Eminem didn’t need, and used them to augment fairly weak lyrics on a hit album.  And then, after that, he got worse with every release.  There’s one thing 50 does great: Hooks and banter.  “Go shorty, it’s your birthday!”  “G-g-g-gee Unit!”  “I’m a muthafuckin’ P-I-M-P!”  All cool as shit.  But what about the lyrics: “She dances for dollas.  She got a thing for that Gucci, that Fendi, that Prada.”  “This town’s one big pussy, waitin’ to get fucked.”  It’s all crude and obvious lines.  50 makes hooks, not songs, and he makes singles, not albums.  On top of that, the only things he can rap about are getting drunk, getting rich, and robbing people.  Is that really all that’s on his mind?  Doesn’t he love his children?  Has he ever regretted anything?  Can he just drop one honest bar?  Just one, I’m not greedy.  Rap is supposed to have elements of self-revelation and exploration–all the best do it: Jay-Z has his “Song Cry,” Nas mixes in politics and empowerment, and Eminem skins himself alive every time he hits the mic (except on his last album).  I’m not trying to discount the volume of sales 50 Cent has generated: The man is a monster, no doubt.  But there’s no way he deserves to be considered a great rapper.  He’s a caricature.  An action figure.  A corporate shill.  There’s more to good rap than a chorus.

1.  Tupac. Makiavelli is a brilliant record, from start to end, and “2pacalypse Now” doesn’t suck, either.  And the man knew how to make rap hits–real rap, too, not crap watered down for the radio.  Plus, to be fair, after he died they released every rough draft, piece of shit, and phlegmy cough the man ever did on mic, making him the only person dead or alive who is more prolific than Lil’ Weezy.  But even if we limit this to an examination of his five official albums, he just doesn’t measure up to the title of “Greatest of All Time,” which he is so often given.  Other than Don Killuminati, there are at least a half dozen better records that came out at the same time each of his studio platters dropped. Take 2Pacalypse now, for example.  That same year, 1991, also brought us the nothing-short-of-brilliant Ice Cube album, Death Certificate, and his cousin Del’s ingenious I Wish My Brother George Was Here, as well as Step Into the Arena, Effil4Zaggin, De La Soul is Dead, Ice T’s magnum opus O.G., Cypress Hill and Naughty By Nature’s eponymous debuts, and Apocalypse ’91.  All better records.  Of course, 1991 was a watershed year for hip hop.  So let’s check out 1993, when Pac brought Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z.  Can that record, track for track, even compete with Midnight Marauders, Enter the Wu Tang, Doggystyle, Enta Da Stage, Masta Ace’s Slaughtahouse, or even Ice Cube’s Lethal Injection?  If you were a fan of 1995′s Me Against the World, you should have been listening to Liquid Swords, Only Built 4 Cuban Linx, The Infamous, or Da Shining.  And even if Pac wins the 1995 contest, and I admit that one is close, his 1996 All Eyez on Me pales in comparison to The Fugees’ debut album, Hova’s Reasonable Doubt, and OutKast’s ATLiens, not to mention the competition from Ironman, Here to Save You All (by the vastly underrated Chino XL), It Was Written, Illadelph Halflife . . . Tupac was a very good rapper, but he was an even better folk hero.  Let’s not let the legend overeclipse his talent.  If Pac hadn’t been shot, most folks wouldn’t put him in their top 10s.  Top 20, maybe, because he had such a dynamic personality, but he’s outclassed in flow by Jay-Z, Eminem, Chuck D., Bun-B, Biggie, Q-Tip, and even Obie Trice and Project Pat.  He’s outclassed lyrically by KRS-One, Masta Ace, Biggie (again), Talib, Mos Def, Eminem (again), and MF Doom.  And he’s outclassed as a gangsta storyteller by Vinnie Paz, Mobb Deep, Nas, Slick Rick, Ice Cube, and Jay-Z.  And those are just the folks I can name off the top of my head.

Pac was good, but the greatest of all time?  No.  As a rapper, he was, that’s right, overrated.  And given the legendary status he’s managed to attain, he is inarguably the most overrated rapper of all time.

YOUNG BUCK-”After the Unit”

Posted on August 24th, 2009 by ekko

Widely recognized as the best thing in G-Unit, and credited by many, including me, as having the best verse on the best 50 Cent song (“Hate It Or Love It”), spitting:

You know I’m still nice with my cook game
Look man, it’s a hood thang
That’s why I’m loved in Brook-lyn
I handle mine just like a real nigga should
If I do some time homey, I’m still all good
Let me show you what a thug got, born to die
I took the bullets outta 50 and put em in my .45
And I ain’t even got my feet wet yet
A seven figga nigga who ain’t seen award or check yet

But lo! how the mighty have fallen. And I’m not referring to Young Buck. 50 Cent’s latest mixtapes have been disasters, and none of the G-Unit solo projects have really been worth listening to . . . And The Game killed every single one of them in their longrunning beef. Young Buck finally broke free, releasing a consistently solid and occassionally excellent mixtape.  He’s on the Southern sound now, which I personally think there’s far too much of these days, but at least he has the decency to give spots to 8Ball & MJG, Bun B, and Hell Rell.  Not to mention Lil’ Wayne–don’t know if that means Weezy is taking sides in the war that’s erupted between Buck and his old crew.

Among the better bars here is this one from “Rock and Roll”: “My mama said I’m lucky (okay)/She scared to violate me (why?)/My P.O. wanna fuck me (ha ha)/And I think I’m cold/All my dope is sold/And I think they know/That I’m a walking bank roll.” Another great one here is “Bury Me Alive,” where he addresses 50 Cent straight on in a song that’s better than anything Fiddy has released in the last 5 years.

Recommended!

TRACKLIST:

1.Gotta Love It
2.MediaTakeout
3.Bury Me Alive
4.Ups & Downs (Feat. Lil Wayne)
5.Rock N Roll
6.All Star Money Maker (Feat. Allstar & Yo Gotti)
7.Without Me (Feat. 8Ball & MJG)
8.Overcharge Me (Feat. Hi-C & Lil Murda)
9.Letter To The Labels
10.To The Graveyard (Feat. Willy Northpole)
11.Cashville Solid
12.Down South Hustlaz (Feat. Willie D, Trae & Bun B)
13.Cant Catch Me
14.Let The Beat Rock
15.Pullin Me Back
16.Where Ya At (Feat. Hell Rell)
17.What Ever
18.Did You Miss Me
19.I’m Fine

GIT IT

THE NEXT FIDDY MIXTAPE . . .

Posted on July 5th, 2009 by ekko

I understand this is number 2 of 3 mixtapes 50 Cent will drop this year. Maybe he’s trying to get back into rap after his acting stuff–I dunno. The last one was pretty good, but not great. Dude needs to focus, hone his skills. Maybe he’s too old to be cutting edge again, but I think Jay-Z has proven that age doesn’t have to mean you’re out. Hova’s “Death of Autotune” cut is ferocious. Too bad Eminem didn’t bring the heat with his new release.

Mixtape link.

NEW WALE . . . WITH 9TH WONDER . . . AND NEW FIDDY!

Posted on June 20th, 2009 by ekko

D.C.’s Wale has been getting lots of hype now that he’s teamed up with Lady Ga Ga.  He’s got smooth flow and generally witty delivery, so I get it, but I can’t say I fell all over his “Mixtape About Nothing” that so many folks raved on.  I haven’t heard all of this new one yet, but what I have heard is some of his best work.  Probably because 9th Wonder knows how to break an MC. Oh, and because Jean Grae makes an appearance.  Best female MC in the game.

Rather Be With You (Vagina Is For Lovers) f. J Cole & Currensy (prod 9th Wonder)

Goodbye f. Jean Grae (prod 9th Wonder)

Full mixtape.

More surprising, though, is the quality on War Angel–50 Cent’s new mixtape.  I found his last two albums pretty weak–less mean, more filler–but this mixtape (he calls it an “LP” because of the sound and song quality) is promising.  And it’s way better than Em’s official release.

Talking in Codes

Better Come On Your A Game

Full mixtape.

Navigation

Copyright © 2009 Berkeley Place. Theme by THAT Agency but customised by Primitive. Powered by WordPress.