Archive for the ‘Mixtapes’ Category

Tapes ‘n’ Tapes: Surveying the latest hyphy-friendly Bay Area mixes.

Saturday, April 15th, 2006

Reposted from the East Bay Express

Tapes ‘n’ Tapes
Surveying the latest hyphy-friendly Bay Area mixes.

By Eric K. Arnold
Article Published Apr 12, 2006

In a recent conversation with Impereal of the Demolition Men, the mix-tape guru agreed that the local mix scene’s development played an instrumental role in the emergence of Hyphy: The Movement. Increasingly Bay-centric local mixes serve both the indie rappers and labels and the listeners; from your perspective, the mix tape basically a compilation with a concept may well represent the best bang for your buck, should you consider yourself hyphy and/or thizzin’.
Here’s a rundown on the Bay’s latest mix sensations.

Demolition Men
Best of the Bay 2005 Recap Pts. 1 & 2 (MySpace.com/demolitionmenmusic)

Overview: Two CDs with 49 tracks of straight slump everything you would expect from Impereal and Devro, who keep knock on lock around the clock. Part 1 features many of the celebrated slaps that made 2005 the hyphiest year in Yay Area history: San Quinn & EA-Ski’s “Hell Yeah” (featuring Mr. Ski’s finest turn on the mic ever), Balance’s “Gotta Get It,” Dem Hoodstarz’ “Getz Ya Grown Man On,” and Zion-I’s “The Bay” remix, significant in that it unites the 415, 510, and 707 area codes. Part 2 gets props not only for familiar favorites like Mistah F.A.B.’s “Super Sic wid It” and Bailey’s “Fuck Yo Couch,” but also such underground hard targets as Sean T. & Biaje’s “Dat Bump” and EA-Ski & Too $hort’s “Check the Resume.”
Most Inspired Moment: The Team’s “Just Go” (Pt. 1); San Quinn’s “The Bay Is in the Area” (Pt. 2).

Least Inspired Moment: When you realize how sore your head, neck, and back feel the morning after.

Why Is It Stunna-Worthy? It’s got everything you need to turn your scraper into a chariot suitable for gas-break-dipping and turning tight ones. Shout-outs, machine-gun sound FX, and plenty of scratching up the intensity way past crunk.

Does It Include E-40’s Smash Hit “Tell Me When to Go”? Hell motherfuckin’ yeah.

Best Suited For: Those with fully updated collision insurance.

Poignant Observation: If you lay both CDs next to each other, they form a montage of Bay Area rap celebrities with two microphones and the Golden Gate Bridge in the background something you wish you’d see on a KMEL billboard.

Hyphy factor: 9.8

DJ B Cause & Ross Hogg
Slump & Grind Vol. 2 (4OneFunk.com)

Overview: Besides the requisite megamix intro, there are no real bells & whistles, just a connoisseur-style selection of recent rumpus-inducing Bay shit. Plenty of big hits repeat on other comps, but nice surprises sneak in the mix like the Team’s “Show Me Your Nasty.”

Most Inspired Moment: DJ Shadow, Keak da Sneak, and Turf Talk’s “Three Freaks,” wherein Josh Davis navigates Rick Rock territory.

Least Inspired Moment: The nondescript cover photo of the Bay Bridge is a little misleading, given the magnanimous boasting of the songs therein.

Why Is It Stunna-Worthy? No less than four tracks featuring Turf Talk, dummy.

Does It Include “Tell Me When to Go”? Yupper.

Best Suited For: Newcomers and casual hyphy aficionados who enjoy listening at home as well as in the scraper.

Poignant Observation: The late, great Mac Dre is twice paid tribute, with his humorously self-aggrandizing “Me Da Mac” and ode to ’80s electro, “Dredio.”

Hyphy Factor: 8

DJ Styles
The Scrapulation, Vol. 1 (MySpace.com/DJStyles)

Overview: Styles’ ambitious effort attempts a historical context for the hyphy movement, and hits more than it misses. The wide-ranging disc covers such ubiquitous Yay anthems as the Team’s “It’s Getting Hot” remix, Casual’s “In the Whip,” and Balance’s “Right There,” digs up classics by RBL Posse, Spice 1, 11/5 and Richie Rich, and places Mystic Journeymen’s “Next Stop Oakland” immediately following Baby Ray’s “Nothing Like the Town.”

Most Inspired Moment: 3xKrazy’s “Hit the Gas,” featuring a young Keak da Sneak.

Least Inspired Moment: Hammer’s “Ring ‘Em” seems more suited for dancing the Running Man in genie pants than ghost-riding the whip.

Why Is It Stunna-Worthy? You can’t really argue with Pooh Man’s “Fucking wit Dank,” a dinosaur from 1990 that’s still funky sixteen years later.

Does It Include “Tell Me When to Go”? Fa sho dat.

Best Suited For: People who watch the History Channel.

Poignant Observation: In retrospect, the carnival-like melody on the Luniz’ “Ice Cream Man” sounds like Droop-E on Vicodin.

Hyphy Factor: 6.5

Various: Thizz Radio
Volume One (ThizzWorld.net)

Overview: If Thizz Entertainment programmed its own radio station, it’d sound something like this 23 tracks of hastily assembled exclusive freestyles and previously unreleased stuff you won’t find anywhere else, possibly with good reason.

Most Inspired Selection: “O.A.K.,” featuring F.A.B., BMR, Geezy, and G-Stack reprising Too $hort’s version of Donny Hathaway’s “The Ghetto.”

Least Inspired Selection: “Golden Shower Up,” on which the usually appealing Keak da Sneak expresses his desire to heap abuse and streams of fresh urine on hoodrats R. Kelly-style, adding I don’t give a fuck. As Dan Savage would say, thanks for sharing.

Why Is It Stunna-Worthy? It’s underground, raw, violent, and frequently hella ig’nant.

Does It Include “Tell Me When to Go”? Nope.

Best Suited For: People who’ll buy anything with Mac Dre’s face on it.

Poignant Observation: Thug Radio would’ve been a more appropriate title.

Hyphy Factor: 5

DJ Backside
Got Bay? 3 (DJBackside.com)

Overview: Yay Areaaaaaa!!! Ya gurl Backside represents one mo’ ‘gin with the follow-up to her classic Got Bay? 2. This time, “your nephew” Turf Talk hosts, and the excellent track selection features F.A.B.’s “Metros & Chirpers,” Balance and EA-Ski’s “It Is What It Is,” and Turf Talk & Hoodstarz’ “Bullshit.”

Most Inspired Moment: Backside’s exclusive “Turf Talk Mega Mix.”

Least Inspired Moment: Actually, the whole damn disc is fairly inspired.

Why Is It Stunna-Worthy? The inclusion of Keak’s “Super Hyphy Hyphy Hyphy Hyphy,” which makes it four times as hyphy as other mix tapes.

Does It Include “Tell Me When to Go”? No, but you won’t miss it.

Best Suited For: The transition from turf to club.

Poignant Observation: If you ain’t got Bay, you might just be a zarc.

Hyphy Factor: 10

Mac Dre
Don’t Hate the Player, Hate the Game: In the Mix (ThizzWorld.net)

Overview: This mix was originally released in 1999 by DJ Mac G, DJ Smurf, and Young G of old-school (that is, pre-”Feelin’ Myself”) Mac Drizzle, featuring such Crestside classics as “Young Black Brotha,” “Too Hard for the Radio,” “California Livin’,” “Stupid Doo Doo Dumb,” and “Hoes Love It.”

Most Inspired Moment: Dre yelps Yee! on “Nothin’ Correctable,” presaging the current popularity of the catchphrase by several years.

Least Inspired Moment: The super-boring cover artwork, which probably cost a quarter to design.

Why Is It Stunna-Worthy? C’mon, cuddie, that’s a stupid doo doo dumb question.

Does It Include “Tell Me When to Go?” No, but it has “Love That Donkey.”

Best Suited For: Listeners of distinction who appreciate the classics.

Poignant Observation: Probably 75 percent of the people wearing Mac Dre “Romp in Peace” T-shirts never listened to him when he was alive; here’s their chance to go back and catch up.

Hyphy Factor: 8

Danny Dee
The Bay: We Fresh, hosted by Dem Hoodstarz (MySpace.com/DannyDeez)

Overview: Several freestyle segments by East Palo Alto’s finest intercede throughout this superlative mix, featuring all the current hot shit from Cutthroat Committee, Mak & AK, Black & Brown, Mistah FAB, Skyballa, and Doey Rock.

Most Inspired Moment: Yukmouth’s “Moment of Silence” for Mac Dre perhaps the only time in recent memory Yuk has, in fact, been silent.

Least Inspired Moment: When you have to Q-Tip your ears vigorously after listening to all 44 tracks.

Why Is It Stunna-Worthy? This mix contains many cuts not found on other tapes, like E-40’s “Pussy Niggas” and a roguish remix of Dem Hoodstarz’ “Grown Man” featuring heavy hitters F.A.B., Clyde Carson, San Quinn, and Turf Talk.

Does It Include “Tell Me When to Go”? Ritt, ritt, mane.

Best Suited For: Scrape-aholics and full-time ballas who getz they grown man on.

Poignant Observation: The hyphy movement is far deeper than anyone could have imagined.

Hyphy Factor: 9.5

Yahdidabooboo.

Niggaz and White Girlz

Thursday, March 23rd, 2006

Kirb and ChrisStop, before you all jump on me. This is a review of the new Mixtape by Bay Area underground Hip Hoppers, Kirby Dominant and Chris Sinister, aptly titled, “Niggaz and White Girlz.” This is easliy the most ambitious album out this year. They blend a mix of 80’s New Wave, Rock, Pop, and pure Hip Hop to take a look into the taboo subject of Black Men dating White Women. It is highly entertaining and almost reads like a lecture on the subject. Kirby told me they were just trying to be funny and do something different, but they struck a key nerve here with this album.

I know a number of sistas sitting around waiting for this mythical SuperBrother to come flying thru the air with his cape on, open doors, pay the rent, cook dinner and generally be enamored in that Babyface “Whip Appeal” type of way “as soon as we get home from work.” Well, why they’re sitting there, legs crossed and lonely, there is a brother trying something new with a White girl who “justs wants to have fun!”

Kirb and Chris analyze this phenomenom like two tenured professors. Musically it features classic beats from The Cure, The Smiths, Depeche Mode, The Family, Gary Numan, U2, and many more. Filled with many introspective skits and appearances by Z Man, Murs, Micah 9, and Andre Nickatina, they hit the mark here. Check their album out and join in the discussion.

DJ Styles Mixtape: The Scrapalation defines the Hyphy Movement

Monday, February 27th, 2006

The ScrapalationHave you been hearing about folks getting Hyphy out here in The Bay and want to find out what it’s it all about? If you want to own the definitive mixtape that explains Hyphy then you have to pick up The Srapalation. In the Bay, brothers roll oldschool whips with tight rims and trunk rattling, bass-rumbling stereo systems which are affectionately known as scrapers. Well, The Scrapalation is the ultimate compilation of scraper music. Featuring all the latest hyphy anthems as well as many of the classic Bay Area artists that started this movement years ago.

The Scrapalation starts off with the No. 1 song in the Bay, “Tell Me When To Go” by E-40 and Keek da Sneak produced by Lil Jon. The song samples the infectious “DUMB!” chorus from RUN DMC’s classic, “Dumb Girl” and has kid’s in The Yay going, “DUMB! DUMB! DUMB! DUMB!” From there it features many of the hottest Hyphy artists and Bay MCs out now like Turf Talk, The Team, Mistah F.A.B., Balance, Hoodstarz, Zion I, San Quinn and many more. But for a double dose of Bay love it also includes classic cuts by the artists that put the Bay on the map in the first place: Too Short, Spice 1, RBL Posse, 11/5, 3xCraxy, Luniz, MC Pooh, and even Hammer. 

So if you love you that Bay flava, be sure to check out The Scrapalation. It’s the Hyphy Soundtrack of Sideshows everywhere.

Rise Up with Azeem

Saturday, February 25th, 2006

Azeem - Rise UpPro-Black, politicized hip hop used to have hard beats and slap as hard on the block as it did among the college crowd. Well heralded Oaktown MC, Azeem has dropped the Rise Up mixtape to take us back to that day. This mixtape is pure ‘Rebel Music.’

For those that don’t know, Azeem has a long track record in the game dating back to the last millenium, touring on Lollapalooza, winning Slam titles, and working with Michael Franti.

For this mixtape Azeem jacks many of the fat hip hop and dancehall beats that are out now to bless us all with his special brand of wordsmithery and revolution. The mixtape opens with the title track, ‘Rise Up,’ which starts with a version that’s freaks the old Whodini, ‘I’m a Hoe’ beat, then it flips into the remix with the ‘Welcome To Jamrock’ beat. Azeem spits hot fire on this track. He rhymes over more beats from The Game, Bob Marley, Common, 2Pac, Ying Yang Twins, and Young Jeezy. On ‘Weeping, Wailing’ Azeem spits rhymes so pure over the Kanye ‘Drive Slow’ beat, he’d have Kanye wondering why people consider him a conscious rapper. Azeem also kills the ‘King of Kings’ beat that Terry Ganzie used to rock on ‘Dangerous.’

He features ample political speeches from Malcolm X and Angela Davis over some dope beats, which used to be a key part of hip hop. His guest artists who get wreck include DJ Child, Tiye Selah, Pressure, Ras Bumpa, DJ Zeph, Mikey Dread, Rankin Scroo, and even a cameo by his daughter Sana Azeem.

If you like real hip hop, with a real message to it, then be sure to Rise Up with Azeem.

The Boogieshack Showcase Another Side of Oakland

Saturday, February 25th, 2006

Boogie Shack: The Mixtape

If you think all of the Oakland hip hop artists are super-hyphy or going dumb, then you are sadly mistaken. Some people in the Bay aren’t doing donuts at the sideshow or ghostriding the whip. The Boogieshack are one of many talented hip hop groups that hails from what we lovingly call, The Town. Boogieshack is comprised of Korise and MonteCristo, two brothers from Oakland who have been at this since 1996.

On their latest mixtape, “The Mixtape,” hosted by DJ Sake 1 and DJ Juice they take us on a musical journey that has touches of soul, jazz, a few hyphy jams, and some good, pure, hip hop beats. Refreshingly, these guys don’t seem like they used to be drug dealers, trappers, pimps, murdered anyone, or even jaywalked. It’s just some good music minus all the obligatory “N’s and B’s.”

Standouts include “Town Love,” yet another ode to Oakland, the city that loves us like nobody can. “Hip Hop Is” features another dope Oakland MC, Zion I. “Raise Up” is a heater with a super fat beat and a slapping kick drum. “Scrapperz and Spittaz” showcases Boogieshack’s versatility as they get Hyphy, featuring Chopp Black of The Whoridas. And of course their underground hit, “Trendy,” that’s been percolating around the Bay. They have a little something for everyone.

Be sure to check the brothers out!