Showing posts with label rap hip hop carl roe raekwon yelawolf paul wall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rap hip hop carl roe raekwon yelawolf paul wall. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Big K.R.I.T. Feat. Yelawolf – “Happy Birthday Hip-Hop”



Yelawolf has done some great cameos in his come up, with Slaughterhouse, Eminem and Raekwon, among others, but the best chemistry has been with Big K.R.I.T. The two are on a similar wavelength - K.R.I.T. from Mississippi while Yelawolf from Alabama. Both represent the south with heavy accents, a working class family oriented social disposition that makes them a bit tamer than the hustle-or-die rappers of Detroit, NYC or Compton.

This song has some great takeaway lines, especially from Yelawolf:

(Put 'em up) waffle house, 2Pac's rock song
You see I had to dig to find the hieroglyphics
My mama didn't know about Souls of Mischief
See the Bible Belt gave me that holy spirit
But didn't give me rap because I wasn't suppose to hear it

Through K.R.I.T., Yelawolf and similar artists like David Banner (see Banner's great verse on "Sookie Now"), we're introduced not just to a crop of southern rappers that know the reality of the southern United States, where racial division is rooted deeper than most of Mother Nature's plants. There's not as much rage as the urban hip-hop of yore, however, and the picture these guys present seems more like one of the blues.



Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Yelawolf's Personal Battles

Here is Yelawolf talking with Tim Westwood about his personal struggles.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Monday, May 30, 2011

Yelawolf calls out Rob Dyrdek on set of Daddy's Lambo + Rotisserie Jesus

Yelawolf talks hunting catfish, Native American hunting traditions and filming the "Daddy's Lambo" video.


Sunday, May 29, 2011

VIDEO: Yelawolf - Daddy's Lambo

Yelawolf seems to be dropping videos like flies lately, a liberty he is granted by the freedom of internet social networking and YouTube.



This song, "Daddy's Lambo," is on the Trunk Muzik 06-60 album, which you can download through Amazon.com as a Blood Is One affiliate. Just click on the link below!

Friday, May 27, 2011

Blood Is One: Here Because Of You

This is incredible.

When I went to sleep last night, Blood Is One had 692 followers on Twitter. Pretty substantial, especially since we were at 600 earlier that day.

When I woke up, we were up at 727 followers. That's 35 followers adding themselves overnight.

Even more impressively, the followers were more than just the Eminem/Yelawolf followers I've been courting. We got a bunch of followers who were new artists seeking to establish their name. It was really pretty surprising. My inbox was also filled with artists asking to have their stuff reviewed on the website.

This entire venture started as an effort between Will Pierce and I to have our ramblings back and forth about hip-hop be more than just a masturbatory Facebook effort of sending back and forth songs we liked. I didn't expect it to take off the way it has or for us to become affiliated with the legitimately talented artists we have. The work I've been getting for the next mixtape from Kenan, CaLii and Carl is as top quality as I could expect and I really can't wait to release it to the world.

Thank you!

Yelawolf says: "College Students are the Biggest Critics in Music"




Monday, May 23, 2011

Hip Hop As Community Unifier

Have you been following Brother Ali on Facebook? You should. Ali is flipping the script on hip-hop, taking it from the voice of the angry and bitter forgotten and taking up the voice of unifier and pastor. Ali isn't an outsider cutting hip-hop into a shape more edible for mainstream audiences. He is from the hood (Minneapolis, to be exact) and knows poverty and hardship.

Ali's music and upbeat Facebook messages don't air a voice of persecution or hardship, even if he has all the reason to do so. On his latest album "Us," he took the community unifier (I avoided the term "organizer" because of its many political implications) approach on the title song:



Here's a taste of his statuses on Facebook as well, with this one from May 13:
Had a lot of great answers to the questions but I want to specifically thank Abdulaziz Dandan who commented eloquently, lovingly and truthfully on the question of Racism's existence in America. I don't know you, but I admire your courage and honesty.

Another from the same day:

I was born privileged, but nurtured by the love/wisdom of oppressed people. Left me with a fanatic fixation on universal Justice. I sincerely hope that if we privileged people take anything away from Hip Hop, it's a deep appreciation for the precious human souls who created it. I've asked these questions to see where our heads are in 2011. Truthfully, we can do better. Love you all very much.

Hearing and reading such things give you hope for hip-hop. The genre came out on a wave of reverberating cultural anger, culminating in the west coast/east coast beefs that took the lives of Biggie and Tupac, followed by the miniature beefs of Nas and Jay-Z and then Eminem and The Source. These beefs all represented, even if the actors didn't do it consciously, varying elements in society. They made it easy for the outsider to misjudge hip-hop, as well.

Maybe it's the recession, Obama or something in the water but the beef seems to have stopped and rappers from all different avenues are working together epically. Today I had the pleasure of being in the studio with my man Carl Roe, an upcoming rapper in the northwest who is recording an EP to be released on the internet.

While talking about the studio owners, etc., it somehow got to the subject of the owner handing eventual ownership to Randy, who obviously knew what he was doing behind the boards. Carl said, "That's great to see and not very common. People helping out one another."

That strand of thought carried over later, as Carl seemed really grateful for the press we've given him here and the cover of several mixtape and podcast covers. His visage is a permanent fixture on the right side of the website and we're going to tout his EP when it comes out. Carl told me that before he joined the military, he had gotten some newspaper coverage but never anything significant.

I'd reached out to him partly because he was in the area and because, after hearing him, I thought the sound would go over well with alot of people. As I've learned more about him, I'm tremendously excited about having him as the musical engine of the Blood Is One machine. We do need to help each other out, keep each other protected and generally look out for one another. That won't happen through supporting a politician or giving to a church but actually going out and helping one another. I look forward to doing it and I think hip-hop has a significantly untapped ability to help get there.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Podcast Episode One: The Mixtape Preview


Here it is! The first in a series of preview podcasts leading up to the next Blood Is One mixtape. This podcast features Paul Wall, Yelawolf, Raekwon, XV, Machine Gun Kelly, June G., Kenan Bell and Carl Roe. If you like what you hear, keep following this blog for more!

Blood Is One Podcast Ep. 1 by bloodisone