Sunday, May 27, 2007

Ill Poetic live from the Taste of Cincinnati

Walking through the taste of Cincinnati and stumbled upon Ill Poetic. I got lucky. And you got lucky I had a camera to share it with you.



*****If you haven't noticed, the audio cuts out halfway through the video. I'll have to fix this when I get back to Cincinnati tomorrow.*****

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Thursday, May 17, 2007

The real danger of hip-hop culture

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Sunday, May 06, 2007

The Roots disappoint at UC

The Roots latest release, Game Theory, remodeled a usually raw sound into a tightly produced and refined hip-hop album.

All of the innovation on the album was lost in its live presentation at the University of Cincinnati on Saturday night.

To be fair, the Roots had the deck stacked against them from the beginning. The three-fourths empty arena killed the atmosphere. The decision to not sell beer kept those who were there even more somber than their suburban upbringings should dictate. And the fact that the seat-assigned floor was not even half full while eager fans were pushed to the back of the bleachers in the name of assigned seating didn't help either.

Not your typical jam-packed Roots concert at Bogart's.

All outside factors aside, The Roots delivered an uninspired, uneven performance. Fans of the Roots' music, and hip-hop in general, were put-off by the seemingly 30-minute Bob Dylan cover put forth by ?uestlove, the guitarist and the tuba player. The cover, an anti-war tune written 40 years ago, was played with the band's heart in the right place, but people don't go to hip-hop shows to experience Woodstock.

Obscure tunes were played all night. Determine to prove their above hip-hop musical prowess, they lost touch with their base of fans in the process.

The most invigorating part of the whole evening was a medley of current and old hip-hop played as a tribute to refute Nas' assertion that "hip-hop is dead." The crowd finally got amped when they heard Mims' "This is why I'm hot," or other mainstream songs by the likes of Lil John – music The Roots have spent a career separating themselves from.

When they played their own tunes, the reactions from the crowd matched the performance by the band. Muddled and confused. Most cuts of the "Game Theory" weren't even recognizable from the album versions of the same songs. It took a few bars of each song for the crowd to even know what was hitting them.

Overall, a disappointment from the hardest-working group in hip-hop.

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Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Cincinnati's Hip-Hop star comes back home 05/07

Cincinnati's own turntable master Mr. Dibbs is coming back into town on Monday night at TopCats.

Dibbs is known for pioneering the genre of cross-genre turntable manipulation and is fun to hear even for non-hip-hop fans. The last time I saw him he replayed a hip-hop version of the masturbation scene from the 40-year-old Virgin. A little something for everyone.

El-P is an underground MC with a lot of street cred. I don't know a ton about him, but I'll shell out the $15 for Dibbs alone.

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Thursday, February 22, 2007

Hip-hop deconstructs politics, continues to apply pressure

Immortal Technique, whose work has been posted here previously, continues to write some of the most politically-pointed lyrics in all of music today. Much to the chagrin of the anti-skeptic, his latest shows no mercy:

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Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Nas getting killer reviews

Read one here.

Just as a reminder, everyone get out to your favorite, locally owned music store today and pick up the new Nas and Mos Def albums. Keep real hip-hop alive by voting for it with your dollars.

I will put up the title track/video, "Hip-hop is dead," from Nas' new album right here. Review it in the comments if you want – classic rock fans might recognize the beat.



**Update** The Mos Def album has been pushed back, again. It's new release date is January 9th... That ruins my day.

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Sunday, December 10, 2006

Hip-Hop albums make great stocking stuffers

This month should be a good one for the hip-hop heads.

December 19th marks the release of Mos Def's latest effort, Tru3 Magic, as well as Nas' new album, Hip Hop is Dead. When these two drop albums, it usually means a revolution of the genre.

Talib Kweli has pushed back the release of his album, Ear Drum, but it's now scheduled to hit stores some time in January.

All of these artists bring hip-hop to a different level than what is served to us on the radio. If you're an old rap fan, someone who is wondering what happened to the revolutionary spirit in music, or even someone scrambling to find a stocking stuffer for a teenager, these are albums that can't miss.

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