Monday, November 30, 2009

Great EPs: King Sun x Cold Chillin' - "Strictly Ghetto"

For those of you that frequent the forum, you will undoubtedly have noticed the "Illest EPs Ever" thread that's been ongoing for the past month or so. Too many dope EPs to name have been uploaded by numerous forum members.


One of the best EPs to be uploaded, in my humble opinion, is King Sun's "Strictly Ghetto" EP. Released in 1994 on Cold Chillin' Records, one look at the cover tells you this is a different King Sun than the one you remember from "Righteous But Ruthless." Sun-D Moet traded in his kufi for a Carhartt jacket, and forging a harder-edged street-level experience for the listener. If you are a fan of the TROY blog, I guarantee you will love this record. The beats are top notch (I'm not sure who helmed the boards, as a Google search proves fruitless) and Sun definitely stepped up his lyrical game.


Unfortunately, the EP seemed to get lost in the decline and eventual demise of Cold Chillin' Records shortly after it's release. It's currently out of print, but you can get a CD copy on Amazon for under $100...you know, if paying exorbitant prices for obscure early 90's rap records is your thing.


Enjoy this dope little slice of '94, courtesy of Echo Leader & the TROY blog.





1. Humm Deez Nuts
2. Street Corner
3. BNS Sex
4. Once Upon A Time
5. Suck No Dick
6. Robbin' Of Da Hood
7. Get Down With Da Get Down


Mediafire



- Echo Leader

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Recap 11/15/09-11/29/09

Rollin' in my 2064

It's Sunday afternoon again (shout out to Lighter Shade Of Brown). It's one of those contemplative days. The new albums from Clipse and Souls Of Mischief leaked and they're just so-so. The landscape of music is just looking bleak as can be and yet you feel serene, cool as can be. What better time to get reacquainted with some retro-future rap, the music that bypassed you or was too ahead of its time to suggest. Check out the best of our offerings from the past half-month:


Shoveling Out The New York Crates: Phase 4 - The T.R.O.Y. Blog straight new yorked you.

Masta Killa (No Said Date) - Chinese Sample - Oh snap, that's where he got it from. How in the fuck ThomasV figured this out is anyone's guess.



A Collection Of Independent Hip Hop - Late 90s had this type of shit on lock.

Vintage Rap-A-Lot (1988-1996) - Not from Houston? You still jock Rap-A-Lot.



dirt_dog Remix Packs 5 & 6 - You haven't heard most of this.

Touring The States: Mesa, AZ - Go figure. Smooth flavor from the Southwest.

Dysfunkshunal Family - Mixed Emotions 96 Demo EP - Yeah, we just heard about it too.

Stay tuned!

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Dysfunkshunal - Mixed Emotions 96 Demo EP

Yes! More mid 90's Dysfunkshunal Fam. If you dig the Finsta/Dysfunkshunal/SOB/Bushwick
camp, then you will surely be happy with this. Keep in mind that they ARE demos, so the audio quality isn't polished. Personally, I like that dirty dank basement sound. And also, a few google searches revealed that these demos have been circulating for a couple of years, I just haven't heard them until now.

The joint for me is "Tear Your Kingdom Down". "In Life" is another one that would have gotten some underground airplay back in the day. And "Cause We Are" sounds like it would have fit perfect on the Dysfunkshunal/Finsta Bundy EP from 1997.

A1 Tear Your Kingdom Down
A2 8 Million Stories
A3 In Life
A4 Same Ole Same Ole
B1 Cause We Are
B2 Raw Like This
B3 Life And Death


Peep the snippets:


Thanks to Chopped Herring Records and Crazy DJ Bazarro for surfacing these.
I believe there are still copies left, but be prepared to spend more than a little here, but less then some
other "limited" release based labels.

--Verge

Touring The States: Mesa, AZ

A short release from Mesa's duo Twenty-Two. I don't know should treat this release as a single or as a EP. They have released full lenght album in 1998, but my version that i had found has some skipping on some tracks, so until i found normal ripped version you can regale yourself with this one here.


Twenty-Two
- On The Uprise (1996)

01. What You Say
02. What You Say (Remix)
03. Steppin' In
04. Steppin' In (Remix)
05. What You Say (Remix Instrumental)

Preview:


DOWNLOAD

--Markshot

Friday, November 27, 2009

dirt_dog Remix Packs 5 & 6

Some people love them, some people hate them, but here we go with the final installment of my Remix Packs. For #5, I bring you all the remixes that I loved in the 90's that lean heavily towards the alternative/metal/electronic side. I'm going to guess that Onyx and Biohazzard's collaboration for the Judgement Night Soundtrack went so well that they teamed up again for the "Slam" remix. And I liked the House Of Pain mix so much I don't see any reason that I wouldn't enjoy the Naughty By Nature track either. Dr. Octagon was ahead of his time and on some other level shit in 1996. Last up is Mr. Meth. It was a toss up between the the Prodigy Mix of "Release Yo Delf" and the Chemical Brothers mix for "Bring The Pain." Both are great in different ways.

Remix Pack 5
01 Onyx-Slam (Bionyx Remix)
02 House Of Pain-Shamrocks & Shenanigans (Boom Shalock Lock Boom) (Butch Vig Mix)
03 Dr. Octagon-Bear Witness (2 Turntables & A Razor Blade Re-Edit)
04 Method Man-Release Yo' Delf (Prodigy Mix)
05 Naughty By Nature-Hip Hop Hooray (Thrash Mix)

As an added bonus I've created a pack of alternative artists that received the remix treatment by the hip hop industry. Most are pretty obvious, the "Nickel Bag" remix was done by the Dust Brothers and "Make Out City" is by Mike Simpson (one half of the Dust Brothers). I truly feel that these 5 remixes are worth 15 minutes of your time. I've also cleverly combined Remix Packs 5 & 6 together so you're going to get these songs whether you want them or not.

Remix Pack 6
01 Sublime-Doin' Time (Marshall Arts Remix) feat. The Pharcyde
02 Beck-Where It's At (Make Out City) (Remix by Mike Simpson)
03 Rage Against The Machine-Bullet In The Head (Sir Jinx Remix)
04 Propellerheads-Take California & Party feat. Jungle Brothers
05 Filter-Hey Man Nice Shot (Nickel Bag)

DOWNLOAD

enjoy,
--dirt_dog

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Project Blowed Spotlight: The Afterlife / Curbserver Camp

Here's a quick primer one of Los Angeles' most ground-breaking yet under-appreciated rap crews.

Curbserver / Afterlife Recordz was an outgrowth of the legendary Project Blowed collective, which I briefly touched on in this post. Although they've always been a little more hardcore / gangsta, the Afterlife MC's are absolute style kings. They switch from hyper-fast rhyming displays to slower, almost free-form jazz-influenced flows with ease and although this is the hardest pill for new listeners to swallow, if you take the time to interpret their labyrinthine lyrical showcases you'll begin realize that the rappers in question aren't being overly technical simply for the sake of it. They're great writers and storytellers too, in the true griot tradition. These dudes (and ladies) pour a lot of truth and soul into their music, concocting didactic Cali narratives that serve as the logical counterpart (at least in my mind) to their more commercial cousins such as NWA, Snoop Doggy Dogg, and Cypress Hill.


The origins of the Curbservers can be traced back to the Good Life Cafe and it's inception in 1989. During the early 90's, Good Life regulars such as Freestyle Fellowship, Aceyalone, and Abstract Rude would begin to gel and form the original Project Blowed family. Although many luminaries in the LA underground scene would pass through the 'Life, the Blowdians were there nearly every damn week, freestyling, competing, and observing each other's respective styles. One Blowdian, Ellay Khule (aka Rifleman) began to form his own little family of rappers within the Blowed clique that came to utilize a unique form of rapping called "chopping" almost exclusively. This family would eventually be known as the Afterlife MCs/Curbserver camp of Project Blowed.
The sub-collective's roster has fluctuated throughout the years as MCs have come and gone, but the main gravitational forces are the Hip Hop KClan (Rifleman Ellay Khule & Pterradacto) and the Chillin Villain Empire (NgaFsh, Riddlore?, Wreccless, and bunch of other cats). Satellite members include The Eastside Badstads, Of Mexican Descent, Cypher 7, and Legion. Unfortunately, various factors including lack of monetary funds and jail time over the past 15 years have left their physical output spotty at best. The recordings that do surface (usually homemade, retrospective-style compilations burned onto low-quality cd-rs), however, are mostly excellent slices of low-fi four-track madness. No Pro-Tools allowed, cuddy!

What I've composed here is a 19-track compilation of my favorite Afterlife/Curbserver-related material. This mix is by no means comprehensive; it's merely a collection of the songs I feel the most out of the material I have heard. Some of the tracks have been taken from post-"TROY era" releases, but since a lot of those releases were compilations of previously recorded material, I would estimate the years covered by this material span from roughly 1994 to 2005. If anyone actually takes offense to material post-1997 being represented here, bounce. That's not the point. Anyway, here's the compilation:

Echo Leader's Afterlife/Curbserver Picks

1. NgaFsh, Riddlore?, & Chu - "Crack Kills"
2. Otherwize, Riddlore?, & Chu - "Writin' Unda Pressure"
3. Chu, NgaFsh, & Riddlore? - "Hut 2, 3, 4"
4. Hip Hop KClan - "Show'em How 2 Chop"
5. The Eastside Badstads - "Bluntheadz"
6. (Rifleman) Ellay Khule - "Fuck A Cop'
7. NgaFsh - "Cause & Effect"
8. NgaFsh & Tray Loc - "Party N My Trunk!"
9. (Rifleman) Ellay Khule - "Boogie On"
10. Hip Hop KClan - "Massive Meltdown"
11. NgaFsh, Riddlore?, & D-Mac - "Role Model"
12. Busdriver - "Life Or Death"
13. Otherwize - "A Wize Man's Advice"
14. Hip Hop KClan - "Everyday Things"
15. Tray Loc - "Once Upon A Freak"
16. Pterradacto - "As The World Turns"
17. NgaFsh, Riddlore?, & (Rifleman) Ellay Khule - "Street Lightz"
18. Hip Hop KClan - "Full Speed Ahead"
19. Of Mexican Descent - "Mosh 2 Da Sun"

Mediafire


Enjoy...and leave comments if you like the mix. If response is positive enough, I could be persuaded to do another one of these.


-Echo Leader

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Long Lost Favorite Tracks: DC Scorpio - Stone Cold Hustler

(From "Stone Cold Huslter Pt. 1")

What's good ladies and gentlemen? First off for the introduction, some of y'all might now me and some of you might not. I go by Trav, nothing fancy, straight up "Trav". That should be easy enough to remember, even after a fifth of Henny. Some of you might know me from the long running WYDU blog (Wake Your Daughter Up for those not in the know, after the infamous No Face album). I decided to join the TROY squad on a part time basis when I feel like dropping some old school goodness. My love for the "old school" hip hop runs deep. I'm an old cat who has been jamming hip hop tapes, CDs, and vinyl since the mid 80's. I haven't lived in any hip hop hotbeds during those times, no New York or LA, or even Philly or Chi-Town. I was out in the boonies of the Northwest. Meaning I wet my hip hop thirst mainly through The Source magazine, when it was the bible of hip hop, and through Yo! MTV Raps. It was a lesson.

Enough of the biographical bullshit, that's not why you are reading this. Every now and then, there is a track that comes along from your past and you remember it being the jam back in the day. Maybe they were just personal favorites, but they just got lost in your subconscious to never be heard from again...or are they?

I have several tracks that fit this description, stuff I never thought I'd ever think of or hear again. I have several, Euro K's "She's A....", Blackmale's "Body Talk", stuff that might sound kinda booty now, but you loved the shit when it first dropped. I figured I'd cover a few of those every now and then. The first is from a DC artist by the name of DC Scorpio. Scorpio was mainly a Go-Go artist, a genre that is to DC as is House to Chicago. I'm sure there are Chocolate City natives out there that could shed more light on the career of DC Scropio since I know very little about his career and finding much about it on the net isn't very easy neither. He dropped the single, "Stone Cold Hustler" sometime between '87 and '90. My experience with him is through catching the video ONCE on Yo! MTV Raps sometime in 1989. Luckily enough I was either recording videos as I was watching, as I often did, or I recorded the entire episode.




As you can tell, the video is a little dated. The fashion is kinda humorous and of course, who the hell uses dancers in their videos now? Regardless, I jammed this video for about six months straight as part of my "get ready for school" routine. I never did get the track on any audio source. No tapes, records or CDs, and no MP3's, yeah, we was living in the stone age. As times went on though, I forgot about it...kinda. Once the internet started to take grip around '05, it was my mission to find this track again.

In what you think would be a somewhat easy undertaking turned into a royal bitch. It wasn't until last year that someone finally came through and ripped their vinyl for me that I had "Stone Cold Hustler Pt. 2". That's right, there is an more go-go sounding part one that is floating around out there. I actually found that first, before realizing it wasn't what I was looking for.

We have the whole 12 inch vinyl single up for grabs today. It contains the original "Stone Cold Hustler Pt.2" version. What's so great about this song? It sounds dated, and I'm sure for the cats that don't like that late 80's sound with plastic sounding keys and hollow bass lines over the snares of the day will probably not be digging this. For me, it was a combination of the beat and Scorpio's rhymes. Not that he was the most lyrical cat, but he made it sound intense and real. His delivery is raw, his vocal tone is somewhat high pitched, but very memorable. Then of course the stories of the hustler tales also was something that hooked me in.

The vinyl also contains a couple other mixes, one being the "Jeep Mix". While not as good as an original, and still dated in it's sound, but it's a decent listen. It's got the cheesy keys and is a little more go-go influenced, but the bass kicks make up for that. The "Jazz Mix" is absolutely horrible, with some new jack swing shit going on in it and horrible keys littering the whole thing. Overall, not a lost classic in a general consensus, but a lost personal classic most definitely. --Trav

DC Scorpio - Stone Cold Hustler II (Washington Hitmakers, 1989?)
http://usershare.net/3yhsxm0wnjb5

A1 Stone Cold Hustler II 4:15
A2 Stone Cold Hustler II (Jazz Mix) 4:59
B1 Stone Cold Hustler II (Jeep Mix) 3:52
B2 Stone Cold Hustler II (Instrumental) 3:44

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Vintage Rap-A-Lot (1988-1996)



Chances are, if you read this site (or listen to rap music at all) you know about Rap-A-Lot Records. Legendary in the southern hip hop scene, RAL is one of my favorite labels and a sure-shot candidate for "greatest independent ever to do it." Admittedly, they have enjoyed major-label distribution over the past decade and a half or so, but J. Prince and company rarely have rarely made commercial concessions and have never, ever sold out on their fan base. Not only have they remained staunchly underground for over twenty damn years, they've brought us talents such as the Geto Boys (Scarface, Willie D, Bushwick Bill and/or Big Mike), the Convicts, Devin the Dude, and Z-Ro.



Most people know the names above either because of their popularity or their overall impact on rap music (re: 'Face), but RAL was also home to a gang of damn-near unknown and criminally underrated rappers that released albums through the label. What you know about Mad CJ Mac? Poppa LQ? Blac Monks? What about Menace Clan, or Seagram? These dudes smashed records that people north of the Mason-Dixon line rarely got a chance to hear...or maybe they just ignored them. Because of both limited release and (unfortunately) limited interest, many of Rap-A-Lot's best offerings are now out of print. Most of these albums can still be found with ease on sites like Amazon or eBay, but expect to drop some serious coin. Last time I checked, Willie D's solo debut was still pushing three figures.



Thus, in the interest of bringing some shine to these oft-ignored released, I present to you a compilation of hand-picked Rap-A-Lot tracks spanning from 1988 to 1996. Those years are generally revered as the RAL Golden Age, during which most of the label's classic records were released. I tried not to include any super obvious material like "Straight Gangstaism," "Mind Playin' Tricks On Me," or anything from "The Diary." If I included some obvious stuff (and I did), well then that's because the obvious is so damn good, and I'm really only skimming the surface here anyway. I'm not trying to impress anybody with some esoteric b-side mixdown of a forgotten Choice single here. In fact, I'm not really sure who would be impressed by that in the first place. But I digress.


Simply put, these are 15 of my personal throwed-ass favorites. Nothing more, nothing less. I guarantee you will like at least one of these tracks. Hopefully you will like more.



Enjoy.

Echo Leader's Vintage Rap-A-Lot Mix (1988-1996)

1. Geto Boys - "Read These Nikes"
2. Willie D - "Bald Headed Hoes"
3. Ganksta NIP - "Psycho"
4. The Convicts - "1-900-Dial-A-Crook (featuring Geto Boys)"
5. Scarface - "A Minute To Pray & A Second To Die"
6. Seagram - "The Dark Roads"
7. Menace Clan - "Da Bullet"
8. Too Much Trouble - "Invasion Of The Purse Snatchers"
9. 5th Ward Boyz - "Swing Wide (featuring UGK)"
10. Big Mike - "Havin' Thangs"
11. 3-2 - "Coming Down"
12. Poppa LQ - "Why Hate Me?"
13. Odd Squad - "Fa' Sho"
14. Mad CJ Mac - "Powda Puff"
15. The Terrorists - "Make A Life Out Of Living"


Mediafire

-Echo Leader

Monday, November 23, 2009

A Collection Of Independent Hip Hop

This compilation was dropped on UK's label named UpperCut Records. On my copy of the disk there is no year of the release, so maybe we can trust discogs and have it in mind, that it was released in 1998.
Enjoy.

1. Network Reps - Simplistic Feat. Shawn J Period, Tru Persona
2. Tommy Tee - Horizon Feat. Basheeba Earth, Black Sun, The High & Mighty, Network Reps
3. Mike Zoot - High Drama Feat. Mos Def, Talib Kweli
4. Network Reps - Dos Collabo Feat. L-Fudge, Mike Zoot, Tru Persona
5. Homeliss Derelix - Survivin The Game
6. All Natural - 50 Years
7. Homeliss Derelix - Player Status
8. Homeliss Derelix - Downsides
9. Persevere - So They Say
10. Grandmaster Garner (b.k.a. 'Gundei) - The Solution?
11. J-Live - Longevity
12. Mood - Another Day
13. Mass Influence - Space Cases
14. Mike Zoot meets Receiver - Blessed
15. 2 Amigos - Get Potential Feat. F.T., Mike Zoot
16. Purple Penguin - East Of West

Re-Up Link Here

-- Markshot

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Is it just me or is KRS-One completely bat shit?

From his comments last month calling Lil Wayne the "Greatest MC alive" to saying "Jay-Z vs. 50 Cent would be the greatest Hip-Hop battle of all-time," he has completely lost it. Am I right? Do you think with his comments and recent material taint his legacy in Hip-Hop? --Philaflava








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Saturday, November 21, 2009

Saturday Night Jams




I'm a child of rap's middle school and middle ground. Compared to some of the other contributors to this blog, I'm practically a teeny-bopper. I've owned about three crates of vinyl in my life (all purchased between '97 and '01) and 95% of my hip-hop listening consists of Native Tongue, Wu-Tang, Boot Camp Clik, Hit Squad, and DITC. This is bad because I always feel like an imposter claiming critical expertise when there is so much freakin' "underground" vinyl only stuff from the 90s that half the world (particularly Scandinavia) seems to be up on. But this is good because I frequently stumble upon things I didn't know existed.

Today, thanks to the good ol' T.R.O.Y. Forum, I discovered the following two songs which I feel entirely comfortable playing on repeat loop all goddamned night long if I so please:

Grand Puba "Hip Hop" (from Echo's Underground Airplay: Volume IV"


Okay, I KNOW that I had this tape but I only vaguely remember hearing the song. I must've liked it, right? Ah, thirty may be the new twenty but you can't revive brain cells, eh? In any event, this is classic Grand Puba comical punchline and smooth flow here, striking the perfect sonic and thematic balance between Guess n' Lo crisp flyness and goretex tough. Blast this in a jeep and if you don't have a jeep, just sip on E&J until you're too faded to remember what year it is.

Tung Twista ft. Dres "React With A Mic" (from Resurrection, 1994 - nope not that Resurrection from 1994 by a Chicago artist, but a different one)


OMG TWISTA BEFORE HE DROPPED THE TUNG RHYMING WITH BIG WORDS BLAH BLAH YADDA YADDA. Save it, Chi-town fanatics, this song is only worth a listen because Dres is on it in top form, ripping high speed flows that make young Twista sound like a souped up apprentice in comparison. Note to rappers: once you have flow, you need some fucking lyrics. This jam is super disgusting raw. Get with the program.

There's gems aplenty at the forum, so stop sleeping.

-- Thun


Thursday, November 19, 2009

A Small Medium At Large

We speak of rap's yesteryear to marvel over the beats, perhaps even the slang, the gear, the personalities, all style variants. We presume the history of the rap genre to be mostly a mysterious series of stylistic collisions. Styles come and go and randomly dissipate into the ether, like that. We forget that the grandmasters have armies, that style is not simply unfettered intuitive poetic rumbling but also theory, conjecture, high concept, in short, propaganda. The idea is usually barebones "THISISME," or "THIS IS IT! THIS IS IT!" or some such similar epiphanic nonsense made important by a puffed chest, an ice grille, an emphatic, insistent tone.

Rap insists on moving forward, on burning every opponent or elder statesman, causing much damage to any system it encounters. We stole this lexicon from graffiti, of course, and out of this militant terminology the most desparate, egoistic, and noble endeavors were launched. Neo-Quasi-Egyptian Cosmic Race Baiting, Jheri-Curled Pseudo-Outlaw Agitprop, Sewerbound Cartoonish Babble - whatever the movement du jour, all victories were in the abstract. The imagined gladiatorial confrontations were simply vehicles for broadcasting ideas, scattering seeds, proclaiming "I a somebody" and carving that message in the clouds or shooting it to the moon.

It gradually became very important thing in the collective imagination to be a Johnny Appleseed of some such rap coalition or style or trend. The roughly hewn primary documents - the lyrics, the smashed together samples, the static, the sirens became less noteworthy than the assertions of the propagandists. Rap, as a cultural phenomenon, inexplicably shifted its focus from the poet who stares down shards of glass and sees transcendent hope to the self-styled journalist propping himself for stumbling upon said poet during his formative idealistic years. Find lightening in a bottle, then dig a hole to pass it on to China, making sure the brand of the smuggler is uttered in the same breath as the brand of the originator. Hustle.

Which is all well and good, because after the blackout of '77 birthed a million DJs, each advance in listening technology was sure to produce self-proclaimed tastemakers, the too-powerful and often small-minded "heads" that Chuck D. warned us about in his autobiography. Anyone with a blog (or an iPod, for that matter) is descendent of this phenomenon. That everyone is now a critic with the potential to amplify their critiques no matter how kneejerk is not an inherently bad thing. This genre was always a hugely critical, discursive one, and its culture of critique became only more cutthroat and intense with every technological advent.

It was probably inevitable that the armchair rap critic snatched power and voice back from the published 'zines, who had failed for the most part to sustain a generative and nuanced discussion of the art. Day in and day out the blogosphere does that the printed giants cannot - inject insight, dissent, sobriety, contemplation, nuanced critique into the discussion. Do some bloggers simply rehash the same bullshit that can be found in the increasingly emaciated print 'zines? Sure. Is our ability as bloggers/fans/heads/critics/broadcasters/propagandaists/player participators to help the cream rise to the top magnified? Y equals self, indeed. The proof is in the pudding - when the print 'zine cannot even offer a remotely credible assessment of the blogosphere, the game has not only changed in nature, but in venue, reach, and every other way. T.R.O.Y. isn't on XXL's rap blog radar but judging by how slim slim slimmy the rag is looking these days, we'd rather be out in St. Elsewhere, right?

Just last month T.R.O.Y. celebrated is first year anniversary. It might not seem very long ago, but I assure you everyday for the last 13 months we've been putting in work in hopes you come back to us. From our interviews, to our thought-provoking analysis, comprehensive lists, to our endless amounts of compilations covering samples, b-sides, remixes or complete discographies--we're out for the gusto!

We've managed to bring you guest blogging from the likes of Kurious Jorge, JVC Force, B-Real, Chip Fu, Tame One, and L.G. among others. Our main aim has always been to celebrate the music with our readers. To discover, relive or retrieve music we all appreciate. While hip-hop might be a dying art, or your favorite magazine publications cease to exist or shows like The Box, Pump It Up and Yo! MTV Rap are long gone, T.R.O.Y. will be here.

We realize the hip-hop we all know and love might not exist in the real world anymore, but it will always exists here. Every single day until the T.R.O.Y. casket drops we're going to make sure you have a place to reminisce. Whether we're challenging Dante Ross or campaigning for Easy Mo Bee, T.R.O.Y. will be here. Whether we're compiling our lists, conducting interviews with Prodigy, Guru or Henry Chalfant, T.R.O.Y. will be here. T.R.O.Y. will be here because Paul C. still matters. Because Big L will not be forgotten. Because we should know where the music originates from. Because it's important we don't forget our roots in this rap game. It's rewarding to get props from Prince Paul, Stretch Armstrong, Dres or when Vibe Magazine recognized us as the#20 best rap blog, but what's more rewarding is that you all take away something when you visit us. Hey, at least Quincy got it right!

And in case you forgot...

Creme De La Creme
Sounds Like The 90s
Philaflava.com's 100 Greatest Obscure Tracks
Fifty Remixes You Need To Hear (1-50)
Native Tongues Month
Gang Starr Month
Hieroglyphic Month
Touring The States
Every One Leg Up Release
Ego Trip Singles ('79-88)
Easy Mo Bee Career Retrospective
Eric B "Eric B"
The Fondle 'Em Collection
L.O.N.S. And The Crisis Of Time, Part 1
20 Hip Hop Songs You Must Listen To Before Voting
Every Schenectadyfan Compilation
All The Ras Kass Singles That Really Matter

Analysis & Commentary
Ghostface Killah "The Sun"
Juggaknots "Generally"
Black Sheep "Still In The Ghetto"
The Legion "New Niggas"
RZA "Sunshower"
Das Efx "Hard Like A Criminal"
GP Wu "Black On Black Crime"
An Infamous Genealogy, Pt. 1
Figure Eight: Slavery
Ultramagnetic MCs and Inexplicable Mobility
The Most Prominent Member Out The Group (Pause)
Security Blanket
Various Videos

Non Album Tracks
Artifacts Spotlight
Ras Kass - Non-Album Tracks (1994-1996)
Chino XL Spotlight
Diamond D - Non-Album Tracks
Black Sheep - Non-Album Tracks
K-Solo Non-Album Tracks
J-Live - Non-Album Tracks (1995-2002)
Leaders Of The New School - Non-Album Tracks
Big Daddy Kane - Non-Album Tracks (1986-1990)
Krs-One - Non-Album Tracks (1986-1997)
JVC Force Non-Album Tracks
Bush Babees - Non-Album Tracks
De La Soul - The Instrumentals (1988-1998)

Interviews
Philaflava Exlusive Prodigy Interview
Philaflava Exclusive Guru Interview
The Henry Chalfant Interview Part. 1

The Henry Chalfant Interview Part 2

Compilations
Thirty & Good Vol 1 (90s R&B)
Valentine's Stimulus (90s R&B)
T.R.O.Y. Presents: The Moaning
Valentine's Weekend "Funk Drops" Compilation
Jingle Jangle: Rock The Sleigh Bells
History of Hip-Hop: 90's
Dancehall/Raggamuffin Meets Hip Hop
Big L - The Best of The Rest

Guest Bloggers
T.R.O.Y. Guest Blogger w/9th Wonder
T.R.O.Y. Guest Blogger w/Jean Grae
T.R.O.Y. Guest Blogger w/ Chip Fu
T.R.O.Y. Guest Blogger w/Tame One
T.R.O.Y. Guest Blogger w/ AJ Woodson (JVC Force)
T.R.O.Y. Guest Blogger w/B-Real
T.R.O.Y. Guest Blogger w/Superstar Quamallah
The Top 10 Tracks I've Produced by LG
Kurious Jorge's Top 10 Posse Cuts

Diamonds In The Rough
The Diggaman (Lord Digga Discography)
In Search Of A Complete Prince Paul Discography
Omar Epps' Wolfpack
Ca$h Money Click
PHD (Poet & Hot Day)
Big Kwam
This ol' clan from Now Born got shit locked...
Paul C. Lives
Producer Highlight - Mel Man
Rakim "The Cellar" EP

Samples
That Backwards Sample
Sample Compilation 3
Les McCann - Samples Volume 1
A Tribute To Freddie Hubbard
Quincy Jones "Summer In The City" Samples

The Meters (Vol. 1-3)
Who Flipped It Better? Company Flow, Parallax, Lord Digga?

Peace to Harry Allen.


The Faculty - Yes You May ( Big L Tribute)

Here's an exclusive that's gonna be a bonus feature on the Street Struck: The Big L Story DVD. Peace to The Big Sleep, DJ Mike Nice, BigLOnline, Dangerzone Films & Venom Records for this one. --Philaflava



The Faculty (Ei8trak & LY.F.E.) - Yes You May

Cameos By: Andre the Giant (A.G.), DJ Mike Nice, Donald "Don Ice" Phinazee (Big L's oldest brother), Lord Finesse & Stan Spit

Directed By: Jewlz the Director / Tommy (childhood friend of Big L)

The Philaflava Project (Various Artists)

Our sister blog Steady Bloggin' recently dropped the latest Philaflava compilation featuring many rappers and producers found on our website. While this isn't necessarily old school, there are several tracks on here I feel will grab you. It's a quick listen and I'm proud to be behind this project as we continue to bring fourth new music on both Philaflava and its blogs. --Philaflava



The Philaflava Project

the-project-final

Download Compilation

back-cover

Back-Up Links:


#1

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Masta Killa (off No Said Date) (Chinese Sample)


Song: Masta Killa - Masta Killa (2004) Produced by Baby Dooks


Original Sample: 王昭君(粤语) 刘君儿 广东民歌
Wang Zhao Jun (Cantonese Version)


This is probably my favorite song from No Said Date. I had been looking for this sample ever since I heard the album. I even asked people on forums but no one knew. Glad I found it!

-- Thomas V

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Shoveling Out The New York Crates - Phase 4


Recently Verge started a thread on the t.r.o.y. forum strictly for eps. It reminded me that my ep sampler series has gone by the wayside for awhile now. Here's volume 4 from the New York ep collections. There are 8 volumes more to come so check back. Look closely and you'll see some pretty rare material on this compilation. Tracks 1 and 4 are not from eps but they fit right in.

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=PDHGKPYC

01 (3:53) Freestyle Professors - Rap Mathematician (1994?)
02 (4:40) Gunrunners - Shakedown 1995
03 (5:02) Lodd Manafess - You Dont Wanna Tess 1994
04 (4:03) Ra Capone - Down With The Black Mob 1995
05 (3:20) Rakim - I Get Visual 1996
06 (4:09) Prose (Steady And Efeks) - One People 199?
07 (5:45) Black Majik - Rotten Apple 1996
08 (4:12) Da Phathedz - Darkness Surrounds Me Ft. Lord Rebel 1996
09 (4:23) Herb Mcgruff - 8 Iz Enuff (Demo Version) 199?
10 (4:32) People Without Shoes - Green Shoelaces 1995
11 (2:46) Main Source - Bootlegging 1994
12 (4:06) Nappy Crumbsnatchas - Black Rain 1994
13 (3:55) Mg1 & Brownsville Mobsters - The Sun Never Shines 1995
14 (0:46) Troopa Deal - Interlude 1995
15 (2:15) Branded Black - Zones (3:47 A.m.) 199?
16 (4:39) Shadez Of Brooklyn - Wanted Man 1997
17 (5:05) Da Noe Doe Network - Once Upon A Time 1997
18 (4:24) Pete Rock and CL Smooth - In The House 1994
19 (4:12) Dysfunkshunal Familee - To Have Or Have Not 1994
20 (3:49) Lace Da Booms - Ain't No Secret (Clean) 1997

I tried to stick with a relatively narrow time range, 1994-1997. The number of dope eps from just these three years alone is incalculable. Let me know what you like, I'll be glad to share any of the full eps these tracks are pulled from. Enjoy volume 4 in the meantime!

--Schenectadyfan

Edit: Apparently the .rar file was missing track 11. Here is another link with that cut included.

http://sharebee.com/6cb00f60

Monday, November 16, 2009

Touring The States: Kenosha, WI

I was thinking that you g-funk lovers would appreciate an album with dope beats, familiar samples and solid mc-ing (from two emcees that I cannot identify by name). Anyway you look at it, this release is definitely not worthless.


Worthless Freedom - Introduction To Death (1996)

01. Dead Man
02. The Devils Anthem
03. Dead R Alive
04. Them Fall
05. Concrete Jungle
06. Up In The Life
07. Ain't No Love
08. No American Dream
09. Ghetto Soldiers
10. Mr. Man
11. Gimmie Dat Money
12. Death
13. Concrete Jungle (Remix)
14. Ain't No Love (Remix)

Preview:


DOWNLOAD

-- Markshot

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Recap 11/01/09 - 11/15/09

Sawed off shotgun, hand on the pump


Artifacts Rhyme Biting Scandal - Because we hate a rhyme biter's rhyme.

In Full Gear, 20 Years Later - Speaking of a crew called Stetsa.

Sounds Like The 90s (Volume 11) - Ever feel like you're living in New Jack City? Bridge the present to the past with the latest installment of our popular series.

Who Flipped It Better? "The Rub" - George and Gwen McRae are given new life by Mobb Deep, Meth and Red, The Coup, and Brand Nubian. But who flipped it loveliest? Listen and decide for yourself.

Philly Retrospective Volume 8 - Listen if only for the fact that The City of Brotherly Love still get overlooked for its immense contributions to hip hop music.

Beef: X-Clan vs. Boogie Down Productions - Their beef was ideological, they kept it on wax and made some great music, and then they reconciled and collaborated. How it should be done.

Touring The States: Tulsa, OK - Markshot continues his quest across the fruited plain, this time proving there's more to Oklahoma than the Trail Of Tears and the Homestead Act.

Southern Series Volume 5 (1991-1997) - It sounds like the 90s ... int he land of Dixie!

Tall Dark & Handsome - Jackson 5 - Recorded 15 B.K. (Before Kanye)

Godfather Don Samples - Volume 1 - Because we're pretty much a Godfather Don blog disguised as a throwback blog, you see....

What's that you say? You heard that we're compiling a list of late 90s gems? Hmmm .... maybe so. Maybe so.

Friday, November 13, 2009

The Godfather Don Samples - Volume 1


I've been holding out on this one for a long minute. It just didn't feel right without having some of Don's horn samples on here, but they'll have to be on Volume 2.

One of my favorite producers on the mic, of all time, who made those beats that any producer wished he had done himself. The first track, Cloudburst, starts off with a Natural Elements' sample. KA - I Mean This. You'll also catch a Double XX Posse sample in there if you pay close attention. If you can catch it, name it in the comments. All I'll say is it's off their "Ruff, Rugged, And Raw" album from 1995.

I could go on about how great some of these originals are and what other samples you'll find on them, but that would take up too much space. Do peep Marcella's Dream and see how Buckwild flipped that one for Big L's MVP Remix, though. Crazy.

Most of the Don joints here are from the Hydra Beats instrumental records he dropped in the mid 90's. The other tracks I figured you guys already had, so I just used the instrumental versions. Except the last three, which happen to be three of my favorite GFD tracks. I don't have the instrumentals for those.

If you know of any of his horn loop sample sources, please do tell in the comments.

02. GFD - Depressed (instrumental)
04. GFD - Piece Of The Action (instrumental)
06. GFD - Do You Know (instrumental)
08. GFD - For My Pa (instrumental)
10. GFD - Buster (instrumental)
12. GFD - 7 Degrees Of Elevation
13. GFD - Creepin (instrumental)
15. GFD - Status
16. GFD - Forever My Lady

Some Previews:



I didn't name the original artists to avoid problems for the sampling artist. But the links on the song titles
will lead you to either more information and more music by the original artists, or to a place to support said artists.
Peace to Lyrical Gymnastics at T.R.O.Y. for the Piece Of Mind connection.

--Verge

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Tall Dark & Handsome - Jackson 5


Does anyone recognize a track that sampled the beginning of "Darling Dear" by The Jackson 5? The melody and the "La La La" singing?

Back in August, I posted on the "Track ID" thread from the T.R.O.Y. forum looking for the track that sampled it. I mentioned that the track was probably from the late 80's or early 90's. At first, I thought that it was Three Times Dope but after going through their albums, it wasn't. I was still pretty sure that it was done by a group. After 5 days, no one replied so I asked again. Fellow T.R.O.Y. Bloggers Cenzi, Verge, and another forum member said that it didn't ring a bell to them.

Today, November 7 as I'm writing, I don't really remember what triggered me listen to this track but I went on Youtube to hear Tall Dark & Handsome (self titled track) from their 1988 hip-hop album on B-Boy Records. As soon as the track started, I remembered that it was that song that I was looking for 3 months straight. I knew that I wasn't dreaming.. It's definitely a classic 'ahead of its time' type of joint! If you want their album you can buy the Traffic Ent. Reissue from 2005. I still included a link courtesy of bustthefacts for those who wants to give it a quick listen.

Peace,


Tall Dark & Handsome - T.D.H. (1988)

- Thomas V

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Pete Rock & CL Smooth Reunited On Stage 11/09/09

WORD!! Sorry if you already saw this on other blogs already, but it had to be posted here for obvious reasons. Not much info out there about this and I have no idea if this implies any future endeavors between the duo. But we can only hope. Apparently they are touring Europe together right now. This show was in London at Relentless Garage, Highbury.

Also, if you didn't know, Mr.Chop recently dropped an album of Pete Rock beats that he covered with some extra instrumentalists, more in the psyche/funk/jazz vein, but dope. Philaflava featured the T.R.O.Y. cover on the latest Sounds Like The 90's compilation.
But here's the kicker: Sometime in the near future, a couple of those beats will be released on 45's and will have CL Smooth rhyming on them. I don't know if he's just going to rhyme the same verses again or what, though. Stay tuned.

Thanks to CDubb over at the T.R.O.Y. forum for pulling my coat to this. Pause.

--Verge

Southern Series Volume 5 (1991-1997)




I'm posting the 5th volume from my southern series today. It's underground hip hop from Florida, Lousiana, Georgia, Texas, Alabama, and Tennessee, 1992-1997. There is some rare shit here so don't sleep ! A few of the more obscure cuts include numbers 5, 9, 14, 16 and 17. Dont make make the mistake of thinking this is all booty music. Southern hip hop has flavor and variety just like anywhere else. If you are below the Mason-Dixon stand up and be counted! Here's a link and the tracklist--

DOWNLOAD

01 (5:11) Poison Clan - Zooism [Florida 1995]
02 (3:05) Strugglin' Souls - Who Dat Man [Atlanta 1992]
03 (5:52) Micranots - Decapitation Free [Atlanta 1995]
04 (3:37) Mad Flava - Feel Tha Flava (Bomb Remix) [Texas 1993]
05 (4:21) Threatt II Society - Make Me Scream (Radio Mix)[Tampa 1994]
06 (7:29) Odd Squad - Came Na Gedown [Texas 1994]
07 (3:15) Example - '2 7 26' [Texas 1997]
08 (3:54) Native Nuttz - 40 Oz. (Remix) [Atlanta 1994]
09 (4:45) Black Saturday - That much harder [Tampa 1992]
10 (3:26) Fesu - War With No Mercy [Texas 1994]
11 (4:03) Alex P. Body - South Coast Jazz [Texas 1995]
12 (3:41) 4 Deep - True Blue Brother [Texas 1994]
13 (3:07) Javier And The Str 8 Jackers - Real Deal [Atlanta 1991]
14 (5:12) Tap, Ghost, and Phobia - Rugged Aspects [Tampa 1993]
15 (4:27) Native Nuttz - All N Da Splendor [Atlanta 1994]
16 (4:23) Black Saturday - What's an Excecutioner ? [Tampa 1992]
17 (4:00) Threatt II Society - Lynchin' Mf (Album Version) [Tampa 1994]
18 (4:11) Detrimental Ganxta - One In The Chamba [Texas 1993]
19 (5:13) Orange Juice Click - Reminisce [Memphis 1995]
20 (4:37) Ant Tink, Smooth, Raw, Walt Sw - Hood Rat Hoes [Alabama 1995]
21 (3:58) Organized Rhyme & Ganksta N-I-P - Southern Pimp Funk [Texas 1993]

Leave some comments, let me know if you like what's coming up from down under.

--Schenectadyfan