Wednesday, June 24, 2009

R&B Dudes Trash Talkin': Where's the Beef?


In the early days of hip-hop, beef was a way of challenging your friends and rivals (who were sometimes one and the same) on wax to showcase one another's skills. Sure, bragging rights were involved, but it was all for entertainment of the audience. Somewhere along the way the meaning got lost. Beef became all too real when both Tupac and Biggie were slain as a result of their diss records leaving the musical matrix and becoming a real-life blood bath. Later, the entourages of Foxy Brown and Lil' Kim traded gunfire that inadvertently led to Kim's incarceration on perjury charges.

Around the turn of the decade, though, beef started to become culturally acceptable again as violence was for the most part kept out of the tear. Nas and Jay-Z's war of words led to one of the most intriguing "which side are you on" arguments in hip-hop history. The bravado makes for entertainment value as well as potential for records sold (who wants to buy the loser's album?).

This strategy has been employed in recent years by R&B crooners like Trey Songz, R. Kelly, Mario, The-Dream, and countless others. Does the R&B thug beef tactic hold weight, though, or is it a bunch of hot air?

Trey Songz in particular lately has sent warning shots out toward R. Kelly for using auto-tune and reportedly becoming irrelevant, as well as trying to best Mario on his own track.

Mario for his part asserts that "Trey does that all the time. He gets on records that are hot, that he may wish were his, but they aren't. ... I've been doing this for a minute and I don’t put myself in the same lane as Trey or anybody else." Them's fightin' words!

Elsewhere, Dream recently threw shade on J. Holiday, for whom he wrote and produced his biggest hit "Bed", saying: "Him getting that record had nothing to do with J. Holiday. You would know if me and J. Holiday really had a good relationship—you'd see us [together] more often. He'd probably be on my album. I would probably be on his [new] album, which I didn't do a song for."

So, where's the beef? And I mean that in the sense of, "where's the meat (pause) of this conflict"? Why do I care if Trey Songz throws shade at R. Kelly or Mario, Mario throws it back, or if The-Dream writes off J. Holiday?

The truth is, I don't. I just can't take dudes who sing love songs for a living trading barbs seriously. No shade -- I'm an R&B head 'til death and I will knock a good love joint just like the next person. But I'm not thinking I can hear your heart crying out for me when I'm plotting on getting brolic with the dude giving me the stank eye from across the bar.

There's a way to uphold your masculinity while still singing ballads. Creating empty beef is not a viable option. Hell, rappers these days can barely get right, and most of them survive based on street cred. R&B fellas, take heed and be lovers, not fighters.
Read more!

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Where was NASA on this one?

Okay, so apparently 79 year old space-age star Buzz Aldrin is collaborating with the likes of Snoop, Talib, Soulja and Jones.




Alright, alright, we all know Funny Or Die is the product of Will Ferrell, Adam McKay and Chris Henchy getting stoned on social media and getting down with the get down of viral vids so you guys can take a breather. No one is going to be stormin' up on Power 106 about space travel anytime soon but Buzz Aldrin, only the second man to ever walk on the moon, is intent on spreading science love to kids everywhere. Obviously, he's hip to technology (he walked on the freakin' moon, I'm sure he knows about Twitter and shit) and knows the best way to win the hearts of millions of kids on summer break and billions of twenty somethings sitting at their desk job wasting away their glory days in artificial lighting is to make them laugh via the internets.

"I want kids interested in space. It's their future," says Aldrin.
Snoop jumped on the project "because (Aldrin) pushes kids to achieve their dreams."

But it's not all LOLZ people, you can purchase the single on ITunes to help benefit three of Aldrin's charities, including his ShareSpace Foundation which premotes education and exploration of space.

Although, I have to be honest.
This did not make me go run and read about space.
Instead, I watched a three year old explain Star Wars.
Read more!

Monday, June 22, 2009

Neo-Noir: Nas Laces an Entirely Digitally-Produced Track with a Classic Sound


It's good to know that technology and "the internets" can be used for good in this day and age of music. The past few weeks have been wrought with auto-tune hate and a cry for the days of crate digging and vinyl scratching.

The bottom line is, though -- shit changes. We can't live in the past forever. Here's what Queensbridge vet Mr. Nasir Jones recently had to say about digital production:

"With digital, it's a lot faster, it's a lot easier—so it's all good. There's probably a sound difference between digital and analog, but I haven't figured it out yet so I just keep it moving."

So there you have it. If Nas can keep it movin', the rest of us can too.

Check out this entirely digitally produced track by young'n C-Sick (an 18 year-old contest winner hailing from Chi-Town), "Film". You can't tell me this doesn't take you back to the heyday of dark, message-driven '90s east coast rap.

Nas "Film" - zShare | Mediafire Read more!

Friday, June 19, 2009

Calling All Kids With Yoni Wolf Tonight.


You may have read a couple posts down about Yoni Wolf.
Well, I have good news for you !
He's doing a guest DJ spot tonight at Calling All Kids.
Tonight also features the first live performance for CAK with Serengeti.
Resident DJs Sodapop (anticon) and Matthewdavid (dublab) will also be throwing it down.

If you're new to this jive, Calling All Kids is a jam-packed evening with entertaining and enthusiastic aesthetics- music and visuals as well as free mix cds with purchase of a drink (FYI: it's only beer). It's held at probably my favorite bar on the east side, Hyperion Tavern. Classily quirky with its walls of law books and chandelers, Hyperion is a great place to wind down after a long hard week of hustlin' social media or whatever you spend your forty plus hours a week getting into.
Read more!

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Crossover Rappers that Never Should Have Tried


With the recent success of actor-turned-rapper Aubrey "Drake" Graham, there most likely will be an influx of similarly aspiring MCs who are talented in other arenas. Halt for just a moment, though, sir, and let us use history as a cautionary tale against those who think they know what they're doing with a mic just because they've been in front of a camera or live audience before.

Follow the jump for some crossover rappers who should have stayed in their respective lanes and left hip-hop to the professionals.


Brian (Austin) Green - "You Send Me"




The year was 1996. "Beverly Hills 90210" was at its peak of popularity, and Brian Austin Green decided to try and cash in on his celebrity and make a hip-hop album. Green, who dropped the "Austin" probably when he realized his name sounded a lot like the kid's from "Home Improvement", released a single album titled One Stop Carnival (insert clown joke here) and tried to get all coffee shop slam poet gangsta on our asses with this joint, "You Send Me".

With production (and probably ghostwritten verses, too) from The Pharcyde's Slimkid3, the song isn't nearly as terrible as it could have been. But even with Pharcyde's backing, there was no transforming Green's nasal tone and lame posturing into something that you could blast in your car without frantically rolling the windows up when you came to a stoplight.

2 Fail Kazaams (out of 5)


Kobe Bryant (feat. Tyra Banks) - "K.O.B.E."


As a Laker fan, I'm sure I'm not the only one who watches Kobe on the court sometimes, especially in this most recent championship series win, and feels like there is nothing this man can't do.

Just watch this video to remind yourself that he's human.

It's a good thing the crowd is cheering so loud and probably can't even understand what he's saying, because he is making Mase's Harlem World (LOL! Remember them?) look like Rakim. I'm not sure what he was going for with that Sway Calloway head piece, either. Let's just say I'm glad Weezy wrote his victory anthem and not him.

Shouts out also to Tyra Banks, who manages to make my ears bleed even when she's lip synching.

3.5 Fail Kazaams (out of 5)


Joaquin Phoenix - "Unknown/I Didn't Care to Look it Up"



The people in this club in Vegas must have felt bamboozled when they were promised Walk the Line star Joaquin Phoenix and looked up on stage to find the Unibomber doing some kind of hillbilly voodoo chant over a Casio keyboard default beat. The audio's bad, but seriously, I think he's just babbling incoherently. Watching this just makes me feel uncomfortable even more than it does embarrassed, which is not a good look.

The best moment in the performance came a few minutes later. I like to think this was a "Showtime at the Apollo"-esque elimination tactic, i.e. a trap door opened and took him away because he was so awful.

5 Fail Kazaams (out of 5)
Read more!

JoJo's Old Soul


It's been three years since JoJo released her last album, and you may be asking yourself where she's been -- but probably not, since she's best known for two sugary "TRL" friendly singles and starring in a movie with Robin Williams about a trailer.

Don't sleep, though: the sexy singer (she's legal now, I can say that) has been keeping busy in the midst of label drama (Blackground Records is currently in limbo between distributors), deciding to go to Northeastern University in the fall while putting the final touches on her forthcoming album, All I Want is Everything.

Take one listen to some of the covers she's done while on hiatus (she absolutely murdered the original versions of Sean Kingston's "Beautiful Girls" and T-Pain's "Can't Believe It") and it's apparent that JoJo has a more diverse taste than one might expect a white girl from the 'burbs thus far portrayed as a teeny bopper might have.

She most recently tackled Drake's "Houstatlantavegas", and while she didn't shame Drake's version quite the way she did with the other two, she definitely showed a wise-beyond-her-years lyrical sensibility as well as emotional growth in her vocals (or it could just be puberty). Double props for incorporating Jay-Z's "I Know", the video for which might play with JoJo's take as an alternate soundtrack.

Here's hoping the all grown up JoJo will get a chance to shine once the technical logistics are figured out.

JoJo "Houstatlantavegas" (Drake cover) - zShare | Mediafire Read more!

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Busdriver: It Ain't Club Anthems But I'm Still Down.




So, on the ninth, Los Angeles' indigenous and obscure MC, Busdriver, released his eighth full length. Ten years after his first LP, the monikered Regan Farquhar has dropped Jhelli Beam, another layered and lavish trip into underground hip-hop, flourishing with fast flows and beefy beats. And of course, his famous grasp on vocabulary. His music is chalk full of cerebral chants that could leave even the wisest wordsmith bewildered. But this album isn't just for English majors but lovers of music as well (did you catch the way he plays with "Piano Sonata No. 11 in A Major"?) and pop culture enthusiasts / shit talkers (hahaha, dude, he calls out everything from American Apparel to Dane Cook to rappers acting like they're Joaquin Guzman Loera).

I thoroughly enjoyed Jhelli Beam, in all its crafty, comedic and less than commercial glory, even if I had to do the oh-so-careful-rewind on my Ipod to catch half the shit he was spitting.

And all you local Angelinos, Busdriver is playing tonight at Ameoba on Sunset at 7pm. Read more!

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Is Miley Cyrus Next?!


When Cassie showed up with her partly shaved head, she did so to perhaps send the message that although she is sleeping with the boss, that she is still an individual, an artiste, a force to be reckoned with. Or maybe she just wanted to be cool. Whatever. Either way, did anyone really think that haircut would take off? I mean, it's not very flattering. You always have to be mindful of which side people are viewing you from. And then there's the eventual problem of what to do when you get tired of it, or when it grows out. Your options are limited. So, why, oh why Lala, would you bite this haircut?

Lala added a little spin to it, but it's undeniable that Cassie was a big influence. Now that D-list "celebrities" are blatantly biting this freakin haircut, who's to say that this won't become an epidemic? I already had to deal with Velour track suits (Thanks J.Lo), T-Mobile Sidekicks, and purse dogs, I will literally gouge my eyes out if I see some teeny bopper with this crap. So once Miley Cyrus/Hannah Montana posts pics of her with a wet t-shirt rockin' this damn haircut, I swear I'm gonna' have to look for a new BFF.

Read more!

The DJ Equivalent of the Madd Rapper


Remember when Bad Boy Records tried to spin their skit "The Madd Rapper" into a formidable product? Yeah, neither do we.

But yet there's a new anonymous shit talker on the streets (or tweets, as it were) who is taking it upon him or herself to call out all of the... ahem, shit DJs out there. We here at Electric City decline to comment on our opinions of DJs put on blast here (unless you spin "Right Round" by Flo Rida).

Some select rants:

* if more than 2% of your set comes from crooklyn clan dot com (sorry @djriznyc) you should quit DJing

*
PLEASE LISTEN: I am not on here to "hate." If i tell you that you suck, don't waste time arguing, spend time practicing. because you suck.I HAVE NEVER SEEN A GIRL THAT CAN DJ. (except for @djturbulence) EVER. IF YOU KNOW ONE, PLEASE LET ME KNOW.

This Twitter page has a few good laughs on it, but with less than 200 followers, I don't think anyone is taking this person seriously. I'm sure there's more than a couple DJs looking over their shoulders before their sets begin, though.
Read more!

Oh-Oh-Oaktown Collabs: Why? & AmpLive.

Oakland's indie outfit Why? didn't start as that. Why? started as simply the sobriquet of a somber Cincinnati native by the name of Yoni Wolf, rapping off the beaten path about accidental lesbian crushes and chickens (not exactly Too $hort but sometimes dudes bitching about flat booties isn't really what I'm in the mood for, ya know?).



And just like Why? transformed from a one maned band of lugubriously lush lyrics and carefully calculated noise progressions into the art pop club that released last year's Alopecia, another Oakland aboriginal, DJ/Producer of Zion I fame, AmpLive, has taken "The Vowels, Pt. 2" and metamorphosed its music into a brand new jam that I'm sure will keep Why?'s fans satiated as they await the arrival of the band's fourth release due out this fall, Eskimo Snow...

which may be a bit disappointing for anyone hoping Yoni would be leaning towards his nondescript lyrical spits since he has been quoted saying Eskimo Snow is "the least hip-hop out of anything I've ever been involved with".

I'll still be into it.
There's always a day or two I need a break from Born To Mack.

Why? - The Vowels, Pt. 2 (AmpLive Remix)
Read more!

New Kobe Puppet Spot or: David Alan Grier Gets Paid



You know, as much as I really loved this whole LeBron/Kobe as puppets as the Odd Couple campaign, this particular spot falls a bit flat. Would Kobe actually allow himself to have fun at all? That dude has been a loner since before the NBA and I'm pretty sure he was in some way ostracized all the way up to the Olympics just cause of his choice to wear some janky ass Oakleys with some ill-fitting suit when he declared for the draft.

The commercial almost feels like it was written for LeBron and then someone had the foresight to shoot a Kobe version just in case. I guess this will hold us over until he gets into the studio to lay down a Shaq diss track (hopefully ghostwritten by Drake). Read more!

Gucci + Snoop = Awesome.

I'm not a mathematician by any means but that formula is correct.
Yes, that's the answer: awesome.

As in the song, "Awesome".
You know, Gucci Mane's new track featuring Snoop Dogg?
Produced by Drumma Boy?
Oh...
Yeah,
You better get on that.



Gucci Mane feat. Snoop Dogg - Awesome (prod. Drumma Boy) Read more!

VIDEO: "Always Strapped" Remix



We met Rick Ross recently at some random club in San Diego and got the feeling that dude always feels out of place everywhere no matter how hard he rocks that chain with his face on it. After watching this video, it's hard not to imagine him as some sort of a wallflower; that guy's just not fitting in anywhere. While Weezy, Jeezy, and Birdman are doing their respective things on this piece, what we like to think of as a throwback or ode to proto-Southern Rap Videos, Ross is just kind of bouncing around phoning in his verse. Must be tough to be seen as hip-hop's less attractive Donnie Brasco. Whatever. It really doesn't kill our undying love for Jeezy and expected yet completely unnerving shots of Birdman counting money on top of a rented car. Read more!

It's Time to Start Selling That Milkshake


It's been about a month since Kelis filed for divorce from Nas because of "irreconcilable differences", and things have been getting uglier by the day.

The latest involves Kelis' claim that she has run out of money to support herself or the former couples' unborn child (due later this month), as well as her assertion that she is entitled to maintain the lavish lifestyle she has become so familiar with during their six years of marriage.

Among the things she wants back from Nas' possession (from TMZ):

* A princess-cut diamond tennis bracelet worth $190,000
* A nine-carat diamond solitaire engagement ring
* Cartier, Rolex, Frank Muller & Chopard watches

Now, I don't know what she plans to do with all this stuff if and when she gets it, and I know she once sang that she had "diamonds on her neck", but I know she better downgrade to cubic zirconia and keep it movin'! It's time for her to hit the pawn shop or Craigslist with the quickness and get an apartment or SOMETHING.

I'll be honest, I do think it sounds a little cold as ice on Nas' part to not want to pay for anything, considering that there's a child in the mix, but this is why you don't enter into a marriage expecting to be taken care of!

Did I mention she wants $20,000 for strollers and cribs? Someone introduce this woman to Wal-Mart.

Kelis, mama, I'll lend you a poker table, some cardboard boxes and a magic marker. Hell, I might even throw in a blender. It's time to start selling that milkshake because if you think you are "entitled" to live the good life "just because", you need to SIT DOWN! Read more!

Friday, June 5, 2009

Lil Wayne's "Kobe"



This song is kind of a trip when you really think about it. Released on the day of the first game of the NBA Finals, everything about it makes too much sense in a conventional matter. In a post-Weezy F. Baby rap game, isn't convention now the new random declaration of being a Martian? Something about the whole thing seems too forced, Weezy relegating himself to a cold, measured flow to mirror the Black Mamba's ice cold killer instinct, and leaving rap and basketball fans alike bored as hell. We're sure Lakers fans that hang out on Fairfax with Pirates caps on are jerking off to the idea of this, but we're still more in line with the idea of LeBron being the on-court Little Wayne, as both have exhibited a penchant for bending spacetime in their respective fields to get shit done. Read more!