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Hip Hop Underground artists, tight production and emcee battles |
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Nas - Hiphop is Dead ('06 release)
Daaaaaaaaaaaamn. What an ill album. Instant classic.
I know fnk seems to eat up the commercial bs type albums, so I dno how many of you will care.. but I'm sure there are lots of people who like Nas aka real music. There are so many stand out tracks on this album that are pure genious. Don't sleep on this! Password is www.rapgodfathers.com http://www.sendspace.com/file/n7hfwr Last edited by Goodfellow; Dec 09, 06 at 07:54 PM. |
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New Kweli Album just dropped too.. Blacksmith movement. Very fresh. Some mixtape shit on there too. no p/w for the d/l.
http://link-protector.com/125373/ |
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OOPS ! shit haha thanks for correctin there man |
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Hiphop is dead is a pretty slick tune, im on the third or so loop give it a couple more and I'll review. Some cool stuff on here.
Who killed it is prob my fave so far (tentative), paints me some black and white pinstripe new york rum runner image. Wicked stuff. |
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werd homie ^
Let there be light.. that track is startin to grow on me too. the thing I like about this album, is it reaches so many different styles so you don't get bored. listen to any of the crunk south rap shit and it's just the same style, beat after beat verse after verse. |
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I got the interpretations...
I got the various ways.. but it still hurts, to see the hip hop is dead... it does not sit right.. it jabs. .....I know of the below earth message...that the minds gotta dig for ....but still... Those words..spoken..written.. I find it unsettling... |
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The statement is meant to be hostile and egg people on; I get it. I just don't think he is really looking at the natural progression of hip-hop. Since artists like the Wu-Tang Clan emerged, it was clear that the hip-hop community had moved their focus from legitimate art to a more profitable market, which inevitably would help them improve their economic standings. The majority of the target market obviously agrees. DJs/MCs that have been around since the beginning of DefJam and the whole late 80s New York scene (Run-DMC, The Beastie Boys, Afrika Bambaata, etc) are hardly around anymore and they're about as real as hip-hop gets. Anyways, that's my 3 minute stoned rant. Your thoughts? *awaits the inevitable reeming from the hip-hoppers* edit: Oh, and for the record, I'm into hip-hop acts like Abstract Rude, People Under the Stairs, Run-DMC, The Beastie Boys, and KRS-One.. stuff like that. So that might cast light on my opinion. Last edited by tiedye; Feb 08, 07 at 02:45 AM. |