Common with No I.D. on the boards guest featuring the king Nas...in 2011? What a miracle.
Sunday, July 10, 2011
Saturday, July 9, 2011
Common is the Most Slept-on Contender for G.O.A.T.
Whenever someone brings up the topic of who is the greatest emcee of all time, someone brings the motherfucking ruckus. The debate can never truly ever be resolved, but there appear to be some recurring players. Nas, Biggie, Rakim, Big Daddy Kane, Ice Cube, Eminem, KRS-One and Tupac are all common choices for the G.O.A.T.. Whenever these debates come up, I always await one name that I rarely hear: Lonnie Rashid Lynn, Jr., or Common. The greatest emcee the Midwest has ever seen (suck it Marshal) rarely gets justice, but why?
Sure, his last two albums have been between average and god-awful, but if can look past his recent mis-steps of inconsistent guest verses, his hypocritical Finding Forever, which was a near carbon-copy of Be (“Specially when you as bitch as Missy Back to back LP's that sound the same” (Doonit, Like Water For Chocolate)) and his terrible experiment into Euro-trash, Universal Mind Control, Common stands as one of the most changing, consistent and mature emcees to ever walk the earth.
Want a rundown of Common’s career? One of the best Dj Premier produced Songs ever, one of the best album intros ever, dope, dope, dope storytelling tracks, debatably the greatest ode to black women ever, ill, ill, ill brag tracks, the most amazing tribute to the black family and THE GREATEST HIP HOP SONG EVER (umadbro? Tell me what the greatest song is then). Not enough? He also has the most consistent album history ever.
Let me rate every album in his catalogue out of 5. Can I Borrow a Dollar (3.5) Resurrection (5) One Day it’ll all Make Sense (4.5), Like Water for Chocolate (5), Electric Circus (4), Be (5), Finding Forever (3.5), Universal Mind Control (2). That’s an average of more than 4/5 an album. That’s incredible. With the exception of Be to Finding Forever, no two albums are the same sonically. Up through Be Common matured on every album. From his Phife-like bounciness on his debut up to a dissection of God as a woman on Be, the Chicago emcee never stayed in one place.
Common stood strong in his moral agenda throughout his career. Never a misogynist, gangsta or club-rat, Common tried to add something of sustenance to the hip hop community, and he stressed that (I’ve never heard an emcee come up with so many different rhymes for ‘hip hop’ in my life). Though it never felt like he put himself on a soapbox or on a pedestal, he just felt like an extremely intelligent guy trying to sway you to be the same. He comes off as a college professor who retired to lead the black panthers, not as a Chuck D-type angry young rebel. No one has more maturely spit topics than Common.
Technically, Common has the chops. A versatile flow that is rarely the same from track to track and when he wants too he can pull lyrical miracles. Full of a charming charisma that can carry even terrible tracks to be somewhat bearable and live, don’t even get me started.
Is Common the G.O.A.T.? I wouldn’t say so, though I would put him in the Top 5. I just wish his name would come up more in these discussions. He’s been around since 1992, making repeatedly great music in the underground and the semi-mainstream and gets no credit. Maybe if he got a couple more pats on the back he’d step his game back up, furthering his legacy, and that could never be a bad thing.
Friday, July 8, 2011
Beyond the Shadows: Excellent emcees who are never seen outside the shadow of their friend/mentors
It’s far too easy to sleep on great emcees. Remember Eminem and Common toiled in the underground? How about the way the Fat Boys got way more commercial exposure than Rakim and Big Daddy Kane ever got for making rap songs about pizza (too be fair, they still spit better Rick Ross at times)? It’s even easier to ignore rappers who happen to have a far more famous and successful counterparts that more people have heard of. Though that’s hardly fair to those fighting in the underground when they might be better at times (or altogether) than their mainstream counterparts. This is a tribute to those underground emcees. I’m doing this off the top of the dome, so the list may seem…lacking. I’ll try to return to topics like this in the future, but for now here they are:
Royce Da 5’9”: Mainstream Friend: Eminem Song to Listen too: Boom
Poor Royce. He had one feature on Em’s debut album, and acted as his hype man from 199-2001. He got signed to Aftermath records, and was bubbling on the surface of success, more so than anyone else in D12 (Eminem’s posse). Than whoop, one little freestyle causes a beef that splits him apart from Marshall for nearly a decade. It’s a shame, because one can’t help but think Royce’s departure aided the dark age of Eminem (2003-2009). He recently re-united with Em last month to put out an EP.
Still, one can always criminally underestimate Royce. Every list of the top 50 emcees I see, Royce appears in the low 30’s. Blasphemy! Royce has put out one of the best Dj Premier Collaborations ever (Boom) gave Eminem one of his best flows of all time (Royce: First verse, Em: Final Verse) and crafted of the greatest dis songs of all time on a goddamn mixtape (Malcom X). Technically, he’s far more consistent than his white friend. So stop sleeping, and go listen.
AZ: Mainstream Friend: Nas Song to Listen too: Life’s a Bitch (first verse)
Poor-er AZ. Like Royce he had a guest spot on his friend’s debut. Then he goes on to put out one of the best Mafioso albums of all time (Sugar Hill, cop it, its fucking great). Nas lays down some sold verses on this album, and begins to slightly bite AZ’s angle and style. Then…nothing. AZ has appeared on a Nas album once since then (ironically Stillmatic) and his own output is shotty at best. However, there is no excuse to ignore his accomplishments in mid 90’s. It would be hard to argue that anyone in that time-period could spit internal rhymes better than him or
Others who I wish I knew enough about to write an accurate piece on them: Killa Priest (GZA) Cormega (Nas)
Thursday, July 7, 2011
Odd Future is NOT the new Wu-Tang, Nor will they ever be
Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All is a name that is turning heads and snapping necks in the hip hop world today. Tyler, The Creator’s 2nd LP debuted at number 5, they have performed on Jimmy Fallon, been interviewed for Rolling Stone and have almost hit mainstream appeal. Working a Skater-Horrorcore angle, attracting everyone from teenage white girls, to thirty year old Eminem fans, Odd Future is the ‘next big thing’ for the underground hip hop world. Consisting of 11(with only 7 of whom actually rap) kids from LA (and adding more with some regularity), they spit vulgar, rape-y and overall fucked-up content over dark synths (for the most part). Every member brings something slightly different to the party (though some seem eerily similar, though more on that later) to create a conglomeration not worth fucking with.
Due to their large numbers and their supergroup-mentality, many similarities have been drawn between OF and the undeniably classic Wu-Tang Clan. However, while surface deep appearance may paint the illusion that the groups are inherently alike; the groups could not be more different.
Any half-baked fuck can offer an explanation for the founding of OFWGKTA, but The Wu had a clear intent: an industry shift and takeover. Wu-Tang never had any intention of becoming one of hip-hop’s most darling and successful groups, they all just wanted their piece of the pie, and it just so happened pie-snatching occurs the easiest in posses. Even with the within Wu, they functioned as a group. 36 Chambers (their debut album) had a whooping five posse cuts on a 11 track album. To date, I have not heard a single Odd Future song with more than three members. Odd Future is a collective, Wu is a group. The WolfGang should run as a pack, not as pairs.
At least every individual Killa Bee had their own identity. I’d be hard pressed for anyone listening to Wu to confused RZA with GZA, Ghostface with Raekwon, or Method Man with Ol’ Dirty Bastard. Hell, any mildly seasoned hip-hop fan could tell Masta Killa apart from Inspecta Deck. Every member of Wu shined bright. I wish the same could be said of Odd Future. Outside of Tyler, The Creator, Frank Ocean and Earl Sweatshirt, not a single member of Odd Future really stands out. Could be Jasper Dolphin, could be Hodgy Beats; like I could give a fuck. You could say, “but durrrr danneh dere voicez r diffrnt…” bitch that’s not what I meant. Listen to ‘Bitch Suck Dick’ and ‘Sandwiches’ and see how bright Tyler shines, then focus on the guests. Besides the overall theme of the songs, notice how both seem to bring an identical style, which is just Tyler-lite. Shit, if you take out all of the rape in Jasper’s verse from ‘Bitch suck Dick’ and had Timberland produce it instead, you could have had a club single. Earl also brings a Tyler-lite style, but his age and his sheer technical skill set him apart. Frank Ocean is just so talented (and fairly normal) that he stand head and shoulders over anyone else in the collective.
Will anyone say they’re ‘influenced by Odd Future’? Of course. But that’s more of a generational thing. Anyone from 5 years ago who brought a similar style would have blamed DMX or Eminem, 10 years ago the Getto Boyz or Esham hell, maybe even Ganksta N.I.P. (bonus points if you’ve ever heard of him). Really, besides the rape being taken to a new level (though COUGHMINDOFALUNATICCOUGH) they add nothing new to horrorcore. And fuck yeah they’re horrorcore, maybe a little more from left field than ever before, but the themes are the same. Honestly, I would give more kudos to their image than their music. Maybe a little-bit more outlandish, but nothing special.
Wu, on the other hand helped shape the landscape of the 90’s. Mafioso (and talking about hustling in general), which gave us the downfall of Nas, and Kool-G-Rap (two of the best to ever spit) and birthed AZ, Jay-Z and Notorious B.I.G., was forever changed by Ghostface Killah and Raekwon, even within a year or two period. RZA along with Dj Premier helped pioneer the Boom-Bap style of production, which rivaled G-funk as the most popular style of production from 1993-1997. Perhaps most important they, along with Onyx, helped define Hardcore rap.
Now I’m just rambling. My final point is that Odd Future, besides Frank Ocean’s Multi-talented gifts and Earl Sweatshirt’s amazing rhyme-schemes, do not offer much technical skill. Yes, Tyler one of the best voices and biggest personas in hip-hop today, and the production can be extremely good. But would anyone put any member of Odd Future in the category of GZA, Raekwon, Ghostface or even Method Man? Doubt it. Hell, even new school emcees enjoying roughly the same popularity as them (J. Cole, Lupe Fiasco, Blu to name a few) are much better emcees than any found in OFWGKTA.
Though don’t call me a hater. I still like Odd Future, and will continue to listen and follow their their movement. Hell, if they ever show up next to my hometown, I’d love to see them live. However, I find them overhyped and starting to become overexposed. Remember how Eminem could only produce two albums of good horrorcore in the mainstream eye? Odd Future could easily lose all shock-value and simply fall back into the dank LA underground from whence they came. Although that would be bad for the music, and that’s the last thing I want. Though a second coming of Wu-Tang would be better…
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