Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Get Fresh Batteries If It Don't Rewind
Here is his first song on the chart, "I Just Can't Live Without My Radio," produced by the great Rick Rubin very early in his career. Here all you have is J's vocal, a constantly ticking high hat, a pounding drumbeat, some scratching in the middle of the song, and short blasts of horns, and it's great as he raps about his big boombox that he loves to carry around with him at all times (yes, for you youngins, this is what some people used to hear music before the days of iPods).
LL Cool J-"I Just Can't Live Without My Radio" (7.50 MB, 192 Kbits/second)
http://www.bestsharing.com/files/vVsglc233229/LL%20Cool%20J-I%20Just%20Can%27t%20Live%20Without%20My%20Radio.MP3.html
Oh, and to address something that I read on another website, it'd be inaccurate to portray me as someone who enjoys everything that Missy Elliott puts out. I mean, for example, when she bleated like a sheep on "Gossip Folks" or "Pass The Dutch",that was just terrible (thankfully for the former, the song is saved by Ludacris, something you can't say about the latter). But, she's had some kick-ass songs, such as "We Run This", "Get UR Freak On" (the remix with Nelly Furtado was even better, although the downside is that it gave Ms. Furtado the idea to abandon her unique sound and become another random pop chanteuse, which except for "Maneater" has proved to be a TERRIBLE idea), and "Work It".
I'll be back on Thursday with a rather odd video download.
Monday, February 26, 2007
And You Can't Explain Why You Claimed Your Cat
I know, I'm late with this. I was just swamped with things to do today and I didn't have a whole lotta time to write this until now. Funny thing is, this is going to be pretty short and sweet. Hopefully at least some of you are familiar with Kurtis Blow and his famed song "The Breaks", which oddly enough is the only song of his I really cared for ("Basketball" didn't do a lot for me). But, The Breaks is a monster jam. Besides it being very Goddamn funky, you also have Kurtis humorously rapping about how everyone experiences bad breaks in their life (such as dealing with the IRS, people who go to dinner with you but they make you pay the bill, and so on and so forth), but you should just go with the flow, which is a good life lesson overall. Don't be downtrodden by the bad things in life-enjoy all the good shit instead.
http://www.bestsharing.com/files/cZ9w8W232240/Kurtis%20Blow-The%20Breaks.MP3.html
I'll be back on Tuesday with the last song for this old school week.
Friday, February 23, 2007
And I Got More Rhymes Than A Bank Got Dimes
This selection came when I was reading a random webpage one day and they mentioned Jimmy Spicer, an old hip-hop performer who had a long song known as "The Adventures of Super Rhymes" where he raps for almost 15 minutes straight with a unique sounding voice and delivery. I downloaded the song and what was said about it was true. If you can believe it, he raps about:
Being Dracula and going to Studio 54 in NYC (!)
Being Aladdin and going to 1980
Jimmy Spicer-"The Adventure of Super Rhymes" (13.17 MB, 128 Kbits/second)
http://www.bestsharing.com/files/7cOXo230773/Jimmy%20Spicer%20-%20The%20Adventures%20Of%20Super%20Rhymes%20(1).mp3.html
I'll be back on Sunday with another tune.
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Don't Push Me, 'Cause I'm Close To The Edge
One of the most important artists in the rap genre all time (let alone old school hip hop) is Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five, who in a few weeks will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame alongside such people as R.E.M. and Van Halen. This album is a cursory but still important glance at explaining why they're renowned. Even though they were only together for a few years the Furious Five left an indelible mark on the genre. If you're familiar with them, it's probably due to "The Message", the first ever rap where social issues are discussed and mentioned in a serious manner. Before that, though, their records either showed off Flash's scratching skills or were party records featuring kazoos (really).
Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five-"The Birthday Song" (7.93 MB, 192
Kbits/second)
Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five-"New York New York" (9.94 MB, 192 Kbits/second)
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Hey, it's still Tuesday night over on the West Coast…
It's appropriate for me to start off this old school hip hop week by uploading what was the first ever successful hip hop song, even though The Sugarhill Gang weren't exactly a well-respected "crew" by any means. That's right, it's the classic "Rapper's Delight". Everyone is familiar with it, but I don't know how many have heard the full album version, all 14 and a half minutes of it. As it's such a historic song, it pays to hear the full version rather than any edited version of it, right?
http://www.bestsharing.com/files/P23On2q229194/Rapper%27s%20Delight-The%20Sugarhill%20Gang.MP3.html
Sugarhill Gang-"Apache" (8.57 MB, 192 Kbits/second)
http://www.bestsharing.com/files/ZyGJvtT229195/Sugarhill_Gang_-_Apache.MP3.html
Missy Elliott-"We Run This" (4.70 MB, 192 Kbits/second)
http://www.bestsharing.com/files/gsLPR229196/Missy%20Elliott%20-%20We%20Run%20This.MP3.html
Monday, February 19, 2007
Happy President's Day
It would be the ironic thing for me to pick a political song where countries such as the
Time Zone-"World Destruction" (7.68 MB, 192 Kbits/second)
http://www.bestsharing.com/files/nMCfx3228466/World%20Destruction-Time%20Zone.MP3.html
I'm trying out a new service where you just click on the link and it sends you to a page where you can click on another link and it will download the MP3 right onto your computer without having to unzip it by WinZip or another similar service. I'm sure everyone thinks that's a better and easier way to d/l songs.
Starting tomorrow is my Old School Hip Hop week.