Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

Talk about just about anything else that is non-gaming here, but keep it clean
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noiseredux
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

Post by noiseredux »

Ack wrote: Wu-Tang Clan - Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)
Public Enemy - Yo! Bum Rush the Show
adding to the pile!
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stickem
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

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You could make a drinking game from how many times lynch says mossberg. Definitely a classic. If you're getting that, and you mentioned checking out some horrorcore, get ganksta nip's psychotic genius for a compare and contrast.
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

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Speaking of the doc, glad someone is playing him in the straight outa compton movie coming out soon. He was a big part of nwa.
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noiseredux
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

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stickem wrote:Speaking of the doc, glad someone is playing him in the straight outa compton movie coming out soon. He was a big part of nwa.
yeah I was thinking the same. I think a lot of people forgot those early NWA singles, and how DOC and Arabian Prince were early members. Personally, I really love that NWA & The Posse compilation of that early stuff. The original version of "Boyz N The Hood" is amazing.
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Ack
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

Post by Ack »

stickem wrote:You could make a drinking game from how many times lynch says mossberg.
I'd say try it when he says "human meat," but we'd probably die of alcohol poisoning before getting halfway through a single album.

And I'm checking out Ganksta NIP now, and man, The South Park Psycho sounds awesome.
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

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Also checking out Ganksta NIP, this ish hot.
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stickem
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

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noiseredux wrote:
stickem wrote:Speaking of the doc, glad someone is playing him in the straight outa compton movie coming out soon. He was a big part of nwa.
yeah I was thinking the same. I think a lot of people forgot those early NWA singles, and how DOC and Arabian Prince were early members. Personally, I really love that NWA & The Posse compilation of that early stuff. The original version of "Boyz N The Hood" is amazing.
Only songs i liked from that album are the ones they remixed. And i think it was a good choice cutting the prince lol.
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noiseredux
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

Post by noiseredux »

thanks to Frag for making me dig this one out...

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Outkast
Aquemini
1998, LaFace
Outkast's third album takes the best parts of their first two, and then sheds all of their inhibitions allowing the group to explore the craziest experiments they can concoct. The result is nothing short of an absolute epic. Much like The Roots and their Soulquarians collective who would release Things Fall Apart a year later, Outkast and their Dungeon Family crew and extended fam would opt to create this record organically. Rather than write a bunch of songs and bring them into a studio to record, these songs all emerged out of jam sessions involving a rotating-door stance on guests. They also decided to abandon all preconceptions of what makes a hip hop album, opening up their sound to not only the electro-funk they had dabbled with on ATLiens but also embracing folk, jazz, blues and reggae. However what sounds like a mess on paper is a completely cohesive experience where not a note is wasted. A brief instrumental intro gives way to "Return Of The G," an insane rap track that hits hard and would have felt just as at home on their debut. Here the group lashes out at all nay-sayers who might see them as going in a soft hippy direction. The centerpiece of the album (or what would have closed out side A on the cassette) is "West Savannah," a track that was actually supposedly a leftover from Southernplayalistic while the album closer is "Chonkyfire" a hard hitting electro-rap piece with scorching guitars. These three pieces spread out to form a tripod for the record to stand on, and it's all the remaining songs that truly delve into the weirdness and genius of Outkast. The single "Rosa Parks" of course features a harmonica breakdown. "Synthesizer" features, well synthesizers and George Clinton. The two-parter "Da Art Of Storytellin'" begins with a tragic story of a soul lost to drugs and the hardship of life, while the second feels the armageddon. "Spottieottiedopaliscious" is a seven minute dub-reggae piece with barely more than spoken word to vocalize. "Nathaniel" is but a minute-long acapella piece performed over the phone. "Liberation" is a full on jazz-trio piece with improvisation and guest vocals from Cee-Lo and Erykah Badu. And having pointed to all these sight-seeing highlights, I haven't even mentioned the lyrics, all of which are just as crucial. This is a record that is sprawling, but never feels long. That's left-field, but never feels exclusionary. It is a complete and utter masterpiece that gets better with each and every listen as new revelations come through. The tricky thing about Outkast is that all of their albums could be your favorite. And this one... could be my favorite.



sidenote, a couple of samples I picked up listening closely (3 times) to this record were the G. Moroder sample in "Return Of The G" was later used on Doom's "Gazillionaire" and the Mancini sample in "Skew It On The Bar-B" was used in Masta Killa's "No Said Date" - coincidentally as fellow Wu member Raekwon is on that Outkast track.
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TSTR
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

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I knew it would hit you once you cranked it in the car, lol.
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Re: Hip Hop/Rap Fanatics Unite!

Post by oxymoron »

G-Eazy - Endless Summer
Logic - Young, Broke and Infamous

Both are free downloads
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