New music from an estranged duo.
Showing posts with label Slaughterhouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slaughterhouse. Show all posts
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Royce Da 5'9 And Eminem - Fast Lane
Labels:
Eminem,
hip hop,
rap,
Royce da 5'9,
Shady Records,
Slaughterhouse
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Crooked I "2.0 Boys" Verse
Performed at the Nectar Lounge in Seattle, Washington April 3, 2011.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Cashis - Focus On Stuntin'
If you're a regular BOI reader, you know that I'm very friendly to Shady Records and everything Eminem and Dr. Dre are doing with hip-hop. If it weren't for some of the great stuff they're putting out, I may not have had the inspiration to create this site.
Cashis has been hustling on Shady for a while, even when other acts like Obie Trice were leaving and Eminem was semi-retired. He's got some new work out and I hope he benefits from the current Yelawolf/Slaughterhouse buzz.
Cashis has been hustling on Shady for a while, even when other acts like Obie Trice were leaving and Eminem was semi-retired. He's got some new work out and I hope he benefits from the current Yelawolf/Slaughterhouse buzz.
Friday, March 18, 2011
Slaughterhouse: Everybody Down
BOI favorite Slaughterhouse have a series of video "previews" in promotion of their SXSW appearance in Austin, Texas. This one seems oddly like a rap version of Frank Miller's Sin City:
Labels:
Frank Miller,
Shady Records,
Sin City,
Slaughterhouse
Hip-Hop As Social Commentary
Have you been visiting the Blood Is One Twitter page? No? Well, you should!
Will Pierce is the cofounder of Blood Is One. He isn't as prolific of a writer as I am but actually says some really brilliant stuff almost regularly. On the Twitter page he wrote:
The question of how much rappers should provide an example is the only mainstream debate about ethics in art the last 30 years.Hiphop provides the only satisfactory compromise between naturalism and romanticism in contemporary art.No other artform but hiphop has successfully decried the situation of a cultural underclass while trumpeting success beyond it.That's in abstract- substance, means is another matter. It at least engages the listener to the thump and challenges them with a message.Modern art does not invite question, fears it; hiphop is cultural dialogue. It's like a jungle sometimes, it makes me wonder.Where would country music be if it had a sinuous system of self-criticism of hiphop? The social dialogue collapsed, biting became the form.
Hip-hop has been good and bad. All music genres have big problems and the biggest one that I have noticed for rap is that, in escaping the hood, rappers and DJs often bring the hood with them. For a long time, hip-hop was dominated by entourages of rapper's friends from back in the day who they've brought along in order to spread the wealth. Think Outsidaz, Ruff Ryderz, D12 and G-Unit. That doesn't happen that much anymore. Now record labels are filled with business ventures.
Despite becoming more and more business inclined, however, hip-hop manages to "keep it real" in a way that the lubricated genre of country, which Will mentions, rarely does. Rappers frequently start and own their own labels. Raekwon has been releasing his last few albums independently, directly to his consumers, while Eminem has owned his own Sirius satellite radio station and 50 Cent has used his fame to launch an acting career. This doesn't happen so much with rock musicians, who often are total messes and sneer at the business ropes that get tied around them when they ignore them. When trying to grab for money, rock musicians like the guys at Metallica often do so in reaction, using the courts to give them all sorts of copyright money while guys in hip-hop use piracy and bootleg music to their own benefit. Country music, meanwhile, with a few exceptions, has totally sold itself to corporate radio, with the only hope of breaking the hold being the rise of alt country guys like Jamey Johnson through iTunes and the internet.
As Will Pierce said, "Modern art does not invite question, fears it; hiphop is cultural dialogue. It's like a jungle sometimes, it makes me wonder." Hip-hop puts right up front alot of stuff that we prefer not to recognize. While educators talk theories about socially constructed gender roles, hip-hop shows us what happens in real life to young men when dad leaves home and mom drops her kids off with grandma so she can work all day. It shows us - through the tales of former drug dealers 50 Cent and Jay-Z or Yelawolf, who hails from methodone lab hotspot Alabama - what the drug war has done to African American, poor white and Hispanic communities.
In one song called "I'm Paranoid," 50 Cent declares, "We thought the dope and the coke would help us escape poverty. When that didn't work, we resorted to armed robbery." In a duet with Wu-Tang veteran Raekwon, Yelawolf called "I Wish," rhymed of life in the south, "Confederate flags I see 'em, On pick up trucks with the windows down, Why's he playing Beanie Sigel? Because his daddy was a dope man. Lynyrd Skynyrd never sang about slinging keys of coke, man." Even when it thinks it's apolitical or even ignorant, hip-hop packs more social commentary than your average indie rock or country band will in their entire career.
In fact, when you think about it in retrospect, the fact that academia wasn't pouring over rap lyrics and relating them to modern society shows academia might not be that clued into American societal dynamics.
Labels:
50 Cent,
beanie sigel,
country music,
hip hop,
Jay-Z,
Lynyrd Skynyrd,
rap,
Slaughterhouse,
Yelawolf
Sunday, March 6, 2011
BOI Mix Volume 1: A Clear Night
Uploaded today is the first installment of what I hope to be a recurring line of Blood is One mixes. Going with the theme of this blog - "multiple skin tones, the blood is one" - I've made sure to encompass many different arenas of production, from electro to down south rap to old school soul samples. Here is the track list:
Miami Horror - Infinite Canyons
Emeralds - Candy Shoppe
Orbital - Belfast
Yelawolf and Gucci Mane - I Just Wanna Party
Slaughterhouse - Fight Club
Pacific - Narcissus (Alan Braxe Remix)
Flouie Fluent - N.W.N.Y.H.M.
Fat Tony - N!gga You Ain't Fat
Download here.
Miami Horror - Infinite Canyons
Emeralds - Candy Shoppe
Orbital - Belfast
Yelawolf and Gucci Mane - I Just Wanna Party
Slaughterhouse - Fight Club
Pacific - Narcissus (Alan Braxe Remix)
Flouie Fluent - N.W.N.Y.H.M.
Fat Tony - N!gga You Ain't Fat
Download here.
Labels:
electro,
emeralds,
Fat Tony,
flouie fluent,
hip hop,
miami horror,
orbital,
pacific,
rap music,
Slaughterhouse,
Yelawolf
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Yelawolf XXL Freestyle
Via Ill Roots:
Monday, February 7, 2011
Yelawolf - The Next Great White Hope
Yelawolf just got signed along with the supergroup Slaughterhouse to Shady Records, the label that Eminem started and that launched the career of 50 Cent. The guy is really interesting - half Cherokee and a small town boy from Alabama who once lived in the Bay Area. Slaughterhouse is probably going to be pleasing to hip hop aficionados like yours truly but Yelawolf may actually bring in cross over appeal and wreak in alot of love from white people too scared to touch hip-hop that doesn't look like them.
Besides all that, Yelawolf is mad talented and has paid his dues with mixtapes like Trunk Musik, which is available to download free. His lyrical ability is proved by his ability to spit over the best tracks in hip hop canon, like in this Outkast/Mobb Depp compilation:
Besides all that, Yelawolf is mad talented and has paid his dues with mixtapes like Trunk Musik, which is available to download free. His lyrical ability is proved by his ability to spit over the best tracks in hip hop canon, like in this Outkast/Mobb Depp compilation:
Yelawolf OutKast and Mobb Deep Freestyle from I'm Really Popular! on Vimeo.
Labels:
50 Cent,
Eminem,
freestyle,
mixtape,
Native American,
Shady Records,
Slaughterhouse,
white rapper,
Yelawolf
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