Hilarious clip from PTR crews DVD.
That you can order here.
VIA
I love Graffiti
Related posts;
Weekend fun part 1; Real People With Star Wars -Like Names
and
Weekend fun part 3; Revok is very remorseful
and
Weekend fun part 4; Product placement
and
Weekend fun part 5; Jean Claude Van Damme´s scene in Breakin´
and
Weekend fun part 6; Lorenzo Lamas AKA Chilly D in Body Rock (1984)
and
Weekend fun part 7; This or that? (Black Sheep KIA Soul commercial)
and
Weekend fun part 8; Kermit the Frog and Cookie Monster Learn How to Rap
and
Weekend fun part 9; Darth Vader & Yoda recording voices for TomTom GPS devices
and
Weekend fun part 10; Triumph, the Insult Comic Dog mocks Star Wars fans.
and
Weekend fun part 11; Star Wars meets Gangster Rap
and
Weekend fun part 12; Jabba the fucking HAT!
and
Weekend fun part 13;
Classic Robot Chicken
(Arkhum Asylum Shawshank Redemption/Batman & Joker)
and
Weekend fun part 14;
All of Chewbacca's Dialogue from "Star Wars" by Doug Savage
and
Weekend fun part 15;
Antoine Dodson and his Bed Intruder song
and
Weekend fun part 16;
If your teacher corrected graffiti (Reas AOK/RIS)
and
Weekend fun part 17; Tauntaun Sleeping Bag
and
Weekend fun part 18; Star Wars Halloween costumes
and
Weekend fun part 20; Vanilla Ice says...
and
Weekend fun part 22;
Kenny Keil’s; rappers who need to be seen in a comic book
and
Weekend fun part 23; Kanye West's Most Ridiculous On-Air Moments
and
Weekend fun part 24; “Family Guy: It’s A Trap!”
and
Weekend fun part 25; El Barto will never stop writing
Have a nice weekend ;)
Friday, February 26, 2010
Sites you should keep your eye on part 2; Kacao77
Kacao77 is a Berlin graffiti writer recognized the world over for his complex style, elaborate sketches and most notably his large scale trademark "graffiti comics" that depict super heroes and villains in a science fiction universe all their own, not unlike a hip hop Fantastic Planet.
^Freiluft Rebellen by Kacao77 Berlin, Germany 2008^
(click image to enlarge)
Visit and subscribe;
Kacao77´s blog
and
Kacao77´s Flickr
Related;
Sites you should keep your eye on part 1; GreatBates.com
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 3; BraskArt.com
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 4; Dash167´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 5; Stay KD´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 6; Ven´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 7; Caster GBA´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 8; Loomit UA´s iLG blog
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 9; Hip Hop is read
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 10; Great AIO/SRG
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 11; Soten SHH´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 12; Heavy Artillery´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 13; Poet aka Sear aka Kaos45 (GFA/TC5/TNB) blog
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 14; Mr. Ewok one
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 15; Hesoe (STGO/WMD)
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 16; Phos4 (GFA/RTZ)
and
Graff Wars coming to a book store near you 2010
and
Pick up our latest issue; Fat Cap #17 (Star Wars special)
and
Star Wars Graffiti pool on flickr
and
Star Wars productions by Kacao77 on Flickr
and
Kacao77´s MySpace
and
E is for... (Empire strikes back by Kacao77)
and
Graff Wars countdown; 22 Weeks to go (Graff Wars canvas by Kacao77,Berlin,Germany 2010)
and
Graff Wars countdown; 19 Weeks to go (The writers strike back, Chemnitz,Germany 2010)
and
Graff Wars countdown; 15 Weeks to go (Star Wars wall V2 2010 by Kacao77,Mao,Moetrix & Besor)
and
Weekend fun part 13;
Classic Robot Chicken
(Arkhum Asylum Shawshank Redemption/Batman & Joker)
and
Masters of the Universe: The Wizard of Stone Mountain
Buy KACAO77 UNIVERSES:
The Visual Adventures of Kacao77 (book) on Amazon
^(click image to enlarge)^
^Freiluft Rebellen by Kacao77 Berlin, Germany 2008^
(click image to enlarge)
Visit and subscribe;
Kacao77´s blog
and
Kacao77´s Flickr
Related;
Sites you should keep your eye on part 1; GreatBates.com
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 3; BraskArt.com
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 4; Dash167´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 5; Stay KD´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 6; Ven´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 7; Caster GBA´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 8; Loomit UA´s iLG blog
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 9; Hip Hop is read
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 10; Great AIO/SRG
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 11; Soten SHH´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 12; Heavy Artillery´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 13; Poet aka Sear aka Kaos45 (GFA/TC5/TNB) blog
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 14; Mr. Ewok one
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 15; Hesoe (STGO/WMD)
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 16; Phos4 (GFA/RTZ)
and
Graff Wars coming to a book store near you 2010
and
Pick up our latest issue; Fat Cap #17 (Star Wars special)
and
Star Wars Graffiti pool on flickr
and
Star Wars productions by Kacao77 on Flickr
and
Kacao77´s MySpace
and
E is for... (Empire strikes back by Kacao77)
and
Graff Wars countdown; 22 Weeks to go (Graff Wars canvas by Kacao77,Berlin,Germany 2010)
and
Graff Wars countdown; 19 Weeks to go (The writers strike back, Chemnitz,Germany 2010)
and
Graff Wars countdown; 15 Weeks to go (Star Wars wall V2 2010 by Kacao77,Mao,Moetrix & Besor)
and
Weekend fun part 13;
Classic Robot Chicken
(Arkhum Asylum Shawshank Redemption/Batman & Joker)
and
Masters of the Universe: The Wizard of Stone Mountain
Buy KACAO77 UNIVERSES:
The Visual Adventures of Kacao77 (book) on Amazon
^(click image to enlarge)^
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Sites you should keep your eye on part 1; GreatBates.com
Thirsty for styles?
Then GreatBates.com is the spot!
All In One crew presents Pac-Man Mania
^Great, Bates, Side & Goal. ^
March 2008 (Click image to enlarge)
Subscribe to;
Bates blog (RSS feeds)
Related;
Videos; Part 1 and Part 2
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 2; Kacao77
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 3; BraskArt.com
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 4; Dash167´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 5; Stay KD´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 6; Ven´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 7; Caster GBA´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 8; Loomit UA´s iLG blog
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 9; Hip Hop is read
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 10; Great AIO/SRG
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 11; Soten SSH´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 12; Heavy Artillery´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 13; Poet aka Sear aka Kaos45 (GFA/TC5/TNB) blog
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 14; Mr. Ewok one
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 15; Hesoe (STGO/WMD)
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 16; Phos4 (GFA/RTZ)
and
A is for... (All In One (crew)
and
B is for... (Bates AIO)
and
The Original Pac-Man Designs
and
Mario Mania by Mack ATK - Bates AIO COD TNB 156 WCA - Goal AIO COD KD WCA & MCT. Oslo 1990
and
Weekend fun part 13;
Classic Robot Chicken
(Arkhum Asylum Shawshank Redemption/Batman & Joker)
Then GreatBates.com is the spot!
All In One crew presents Pac-Man Mania
^Great, Bates, Side & Goal. ^
March 2008 (Click image to enlarge)
Subscribe to;
Bates blog (RSS feeds)
Related;
Videos; Part 1 and Part 2
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 2; Kacao77
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 3; BraskArt.com
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 4; Dash167´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 5; Stay KD´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 6; Ven´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 7; Caster GBA´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 8; Loomit UA´s iLG blog
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 9; Hip Hop is read
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 10; Great AIO/SRG
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 11; Soten SSH´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 12; Heavy Artillery´s Flickr
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 13; Poet aka Sear aka Kaos45 (GFA/TC5/TNB) blog
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 14; Mr. Ewok one
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 15; Hesoe (STGO/WMD)
and
Sites you should keep your eye on part 16; Phos4 (GFA/RTZ)
and
A is for... (All In One (crew)
and
B is for... (Bates AIO)
and
The Original Pac-Man Designs
and
Mario Mania by Mack ATK - Bates AIO COD TNB 156 WCA - Goal AIO COD KD WCA & MCT. Oslo 1990
and
Weekend fun part 13;
Classic Robot Chicken
(Arkhum Asylum Shawshank Redemption/Batman & Joker)
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Interviews from the past part 2; Guru of GangStarr (1992)
Guru of GangStarr speaks on;
-Graffiti in their music videos
-Wane COD
-East Coast VS West Coast (Tim Dog,Ice Cube,MC Eith of CMW)
^click image to enlarge^
^click image to enlarge^
Published in
Fat Cap #8 (3.1992)
Order back issues here
Related posts;
Interviews from the past part 1; COD crew (1992)
and
MC Eiht & DJ Premier is currently cooking up a album set to be released summer 2010
and
Guru tribute (graffiti)
and
DJ Premier Gives Backstory On Entire Gang Starr Catalog
and
DJ Premier picks his: Favorite albums of all time
-Graffiti in their music videos
-Wane COD
-East Coast VS West Coast (Tim Dog,Ice Cube,MC Eith of CMW)
^click image to enlarge^
^click image to enlarge^
Published in
Fat Cap #8 (3.1992)
Order back issues here
Related posts;
Interviews from the past part 1; COD crew (1992)
and
MC Eiht & DJ Premier is currently cooking up a album set to be released summer 2010
and
Guru tribute (graffiti)
and
DJ Premier Gives Backstory On Entire Gang Starr Catalog
and
DJ Premier picks his: Favorite albums of all time
Style Wars Outtakes
If you want to get a crash course in Hip Hop history there are a couple of key films you need to watch… Style Wars is one of them.
The documentary, which covered the four elements of Hip Hop, was first aired way back in 1983 on PBS.
According to the film producers there was more than 29 hours of additional footage that never made the cut.
So for the upcoming Blu ray release the filmmakers are going back to the vaults and cutting the additional never-before-seen footage.
Check out some of it from these videos;
Seen UA
Dondi CIA
NYC Vandal Squad & Shy 147 ROC stars
De5,Kase2 TFP & Dez TFA aka DJ KaySlay
Rock Steady Crew
Assorted Style Wars out takes
^Carl Weston shot the footage of the screen of the flatbed editor so the audio/video quality is very low^
VIA
HipHopDx
and
Video Graf Productions
Related;
Smoov-E is the fondler
and
Style Wars The Original Soundtrack
and
Blast from the past part 5; Malcolm McLaren´s (R.I.P) Buffalo Gals
The documentary, which covered the four elements of Hip Hop, was first aired way back in 1983 on PBS.
According to the film producers there was more than 29 hours of additional footage that never made the cut.
So for the upcoming Blu ray release the filmmakers are going back to the vaults and cutting the additional never-before-seen footage.
Check out some of it from these videos;
Seen UA
Dondi CIA
NYC Vandal Squad & Shy 147 ROC stars
De5,Kase2 TFP & Dez TFA aka DJ KaySlay
Rock Steady Crew
Assorted Style Wars out takes
^Carl Weston shot the footage of the screen of the flatbed editor so the audio/video quality is very low^
VIA
HipHopDx
and
Video Graf Productions
Related;
Smoov-E is the fondler
and
Style Wars The Original Soundtrack
and
Blast from the past part 5; Malcolm McLaren´s (R.I.P) Buffalo Gals
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Weekend fun part 1; Real People With Star Wars -Like Names
...and KRS-One made the list.
VIA CHUD.com
KRS-One
Is Really: One of the most influential rappers of the classical period.
Would Be In Star Wars: A fusty power droid with poor people skills, KRS-1 is essential in keeping the Massassi Temple on Yavin IV, the Rebel base in A New Hope, up and running.
More
Real People With Star Wars -Like Names here
Related posts;
Weekend fun part 2; The angry conductor
and
Weekend fun part 3; Revok is very remorseful
and
Weekend fun part 4; Product placement
and
Weekend fun part 5; Jean Claude Van Damme´s scene in Breakin´
and
Weekend fun part 6; Lorenzo Lamas AKA Chilly D in Body Rock (1984)
and
Weekend fun part 7; This or that? (Black Sheep KIA Soul commercial)
and
Weekend fun part 8; Kermit the Frog and Cookie Monster Learn How to Rap
and
Weekend fun part 9; Darth Vader & Yoda recording voices for TomTom GPS devices
and
Weekend fun part 10; Triumph, the Insult Comic Dog mocks Star Wars fans.
and
Weekend fun part 11; Star Wars meets Gangster Rap
and
Weekend fun part 12; Jabba the fucking HAT!
and
Weekend fun part 13;
Classic Robot Chicken
(Arkhum Asylum Shawshank Redemption/Batman & Joker)
and
Weekend fun part 14;
All of Chewbacca's Dialogue from "Star Wars" by Doug Savage
and
Weekend fun part 15;
Antoine Dodson and his Bed Intruder song
and
Weekend fun part 16;
If your teacher corrected graffiti (Reas AOK/RIS)
and
Weekend fun part 17; Tauntaun Sleeping Bag
and
Weekend fun part 18; Star Wars Halloween costumes
and
Weekend fun part 20; Vanilla Ice says...
and
Weekend fun part 22;
Kenny Keil’s; rappers who need to be seen in a comic book
and
Weekend fun part 23; Kanye West's Most Ridiculous On-Air Moments
and
Weekend fun part 24; “Family Guy: It’s A Trap!”
and
Weekend fun part 25; El Barto will never stop writing
Have a nice weekend ;)
VIA CHUD.com
KRS-One
Is Really: One of the most influential rappers of the classical period.
Would Be In Star Wars: A fusty power droid with poor people skills, KRS-1 is essential in keeping the Massassi Temple on Yavin IV, the Rebel base in A New Hope, up and running.
More
Real People With Star Wars -Like Names here
Related posts;
Weekend fun part 2; The angry conductor
and
Weekend fun part 3; Revok is very remorseful
and
Weekend fun part 4; Product placement
and
Weekend fun part 5; Jean Claude Van Damme´s scene in Breakin´
and
Weekend fun part 6; Lorenzo Lamas AKA Chilly D in Body Rock (1984)
and
Weekend fun part 7; This or that? (Black Sheep KIA Soul commercial)
and
Weekend fun part 8; Kermit the Frog and Cookie Monster Learn How to Rap
and
Weekend fun part 9; Darth Vader & Yoda recording voices for TomTom GPS devices
and
Weekend fun part 10; Triumph, the Insult Comic Dog mocks Star Wars fans.
and
Weekend fun part 11; Star Wars meets Gangster Rap
and
Weekend fun part 12; Jabba the fucking HAT!
and
Weekend fun part 13;
Classic Robot Chicken
(Arkhum Asylum Shawshank Redemption/Batman & Joker)
and
Weekend fun part 14;
All of Chewbacca's Dialogue from "Star Wars" by Doug Savage
and
Weekend fun part 15;
Antoine Dodson and his Bed Intruder song
and
Weekend fun part 16;
If your teacher corrected graffiti (Reas AOK/RIS)
and
Weekend fun part 17; Tauntaun Sleeping Bag
and
Weekend fun part 18; Star Wars Halloween costumes
and
Weekend fun part 20; Vanilla Ice says...
and
Weekend fun part 22;
Kenny Keil’s; rappers who need to be seen in a comic book
and
Weekend fun part 23; Kanye West's Most Ridiculous On-Air Moments
and
Weekend fun part 24; “Family Guy: It’s A Trap!”
and
Weekend fun part 25; El Barto will never stop writing
Have a nice weekend ;)
Friday, February 19, 2010
Blast from the past part 2; Strong Island
Classic piece;
^Strong Island 2 by Sean66,Mack,Goal AIO & Pay2.^
Oslo,Norway 1990 (click image to enlarge)
Classic joint;
^Strong Island by JVC Force^
Long Island,USA 1987
Published in
Fat Cap #12 (February 1995)
Order back issues here
Related links;
Blast from the past part 1
and
Blast from the past part 3; Ice T & Chris "The Glove" Taylor in Breakin' 'n' Enterin'
and
Blast from the past part 4; QD3 in Stockholms Natt
and
Blast from the past part 5; Malcolm McLaren´s (R.I.P) Buffalo Gals
and
JVC Force´s official site
and
JVC FORCE - Livin' In C.I. (1988-1993) (Bust The Facts MixTape)
^Strong Island 2 by Sean66,Mack,Goal AIO & Pay2.^
Oslo,Norway 1990 (click image to enlarge)
Classic joint;
^Strong Island by JVC Force^
Long Island,USA 1987
Published in
Fat Cap #12 (February 1995)
Order back issues here
Related links;
Blast from the past part 1
and
Blast from the past part 3; Ice T & Chris "The Glove" Taylor in Breakin' 'n' Enterin'
and
Blast from the past part 4; QD3 in Stockholms Natt
and
Blast from the past part 5; Malcolm McLaren´s (R.I.P) Buffalo Gals
and
JVC Force´s official site
and
JVC FORCE - Livin' In C.I. (1988-1993) (Bust The Facts MixTape)
HipHopDX Interviews Producer's Corner: Mike Dean
VIA HipHopDX producer's corner
Producers often earn kudos for inventiveness of their beats, but any music head knows that with the wrong mixing and mastering—the process of working with the sound levels of different elements of a song before it’s released—even the best songs can be rendered useless.
Before becoming a go-to producer, Southern legend Mike Dean earned his chops by mixing and mastering for Rap-A-Lot Records, helping shape Houston’s signature whip-ready sound with pioneers like Scarface, Geto Boys and Devin the Dude. But work with seminal west coast artists like Tha Dogg Pound and Seagram, mixing on Kanye West’s most important solo records, and impending material with a new crew from Brooklyn called Hip-Hop Howl! prove that Dean’s sound expertise oversteps time regional boundaries. In an interview with HipHopDX Producer’s Corner, Dean recounts nuggets from his extensive discography, speaks on the importance of loyalty, and gives a couple tips on testing sounds before they hit the streets.
Mike Dean: I’m working on Scarface’s album, mixing some pop/R&B stuff and shit like that. Working on a song with Drake right now, too.
HipHopDX: How is Scarface’s album sounding?
Mike Dean: It’s sounding good. We just scored a feature from John Legend on there. I hooked him up with John, making shit happen. I don’t know what’s up with the album or a release date or anything, we’re just working on a few songs right now. For the last few albums, I haven’t had much on his albums because we haven’t been in the studio together. He’ll do music somewhere else and bring it to me, because I’m off doing shit with Kanye [West] or Common.
DX: What takes up more time, your production or engineering?
Mike Dean: Probably about equal. If I’m in a creative phase, I’ll do more tracks. But if I’m on a technical kick, I’ll do more mixing. Either way, there’s always something going on.
DX: One of the best album cuts of the last decade was Scarface and Nas’ “In Between Us” , from The Fix. Could you please talk about how that song was created from top to bottom.
Mike Dean: We were in Atlanta working. Me and Scarface and Tanya Herron were there, and Lofey was there co-producing. I started the keyboard progression, and ‘Face came in and did some drums, I think he did the bass on it. 'Face wrote the hook, and Tanya performed it with all the crazy vocals. Nas was there, too. It came out pretty fast actually, about an hour and a half or two hours.
DX: Do you think it would’ve been a single if it weren’t for label politics going on around that time?
Mike Dean: Definitely. wish it would’ve been! [Laughs] Hopefully somebody else samples it and makes a good R&B song out of it.
DX: All the emcees sounded so vulnerable, something traditional of 'Face, but not of Nas.
What do you think brought that out of him?
Mike Dean: Scarface did. Scarface did the first verse, and Nas heard that and had to follow that. Nas actually re-did his verse, I just thought about that. Three months later, he changed it because he had some people he was feuding with at the time. I think he was shooting caps at Jay-Z; I don’t know if it was Jay-Z, but it was somebody. So he changed the verse up.
DX: Like Duro and Young Guru, you're arguably one of the most recognized engineers in Rap history. Tell us about your transition from mixing to production, and what it took to get both J. Prince and the artists you were working with to recognize your amazing talent as a general behind the boards?
Mike Dean: It was a gradual transition. I started out playing guitar and bass on peoples’ records that I was mixing, and it eventually turned out to where I was doing everything on the record except the drum programming. At that point, I was given the chance to produce stuff I started doing my own drum programming and collecting drum sounds, and that’s what took me into producing. Plus, engineering for good producers for all those years, I picked up on shit from everybody.
DX: Is there anybody that you learned from that left a serious mark on you?
Mike Dean: John Bido, he did all the Geto Boys stuff. I worked with him for years and years, and he taught me a whole lot of shit. He taught me how to make beats, and he made me want to be a producer.
DX: You are one of the few active guys in Hip Hop that can tell us about Seagram. His albums today sell for hundreds of dollars on eBay in a way that ensures he was way ahead of his time. What do you think made him special as an emcee, and how do you remember those sessions and handling his music?
Mike Dean: Seagram is just a real-ass emcee. He raps about shit he did, and some shit he did, he didn’t rap about. I fucked with him, he was always really cool. We worked in his studio a lot doing pre-production on his album. I met him in L.A., Tone Capone hooked me up with him. He came back to Houston for us to do pre-production on his album Souls On Ice. He came to the studio one night, we were mixing. He had gotten his first big check from Virgin Records, his first big, legit money he made. He left to fly home to the Bay, and he got killed that fucking night, it’s crazy. [2Pac] came through and was listening to it; 'Pac was going to get on Seagram’s album, and then he got fucking murdered two weeks after that.
DX: On a related note, from Seagram to C-Bo to 3 x Krazy, you've worked almost as much with Northern California acts as you have with Texas acts. That was a critical market to Rap-A-Lot's success in the '90s. Why were you guys so drawn to Bay rappers, and how did your job transition on the work you did with those guys?
Mike Dean: Probably me starting to work with Tone Capone. I met him when I was doing the Untouchables album from ’96, I brought him in to help me produced that. In return, I did 3X Krazy’s album, Keak Da Sneak and all them. I like Northern California shit, and all west coast music pretty much. I kind of like that better than southern music. I like working with Daz [Dillinger], Kurupt, Seagram and all those guys. They make that hardcore shit, instead of rapping about the same shit over and over like rides, chains and grills and shit.
The south has gotten stagnant to me. Well let me not say that, but they need to step up their game down here a little bit. That’s why I fuck with the east coast, and a lot of Hip Hop shit. I like fucking with all types of music instead of getting bored.
DX: Usually, people who say the south needs to step up aren’t from the south, or they don’t work there. So it’s weird to hear you say that.
Mike Dean: People like Slim Thug and ‘Face are always spitting dope shit. I’m just talking about a lot of the hits that came from down here, and the singles and bullshit. I’m working with a bunch of guys from Brooklyn right now. We’re going to South By Southwest all together. HipHopHowl.com, it’s just a bunch of emcees doing their thing.
DX: How do you decide who you want to work with? You work with big names like Kanye, then smaller names like Hip Hop Howl!.
Mike Dean: I just go with the flow of what I feel at the time. It also depends on peoples’ budgets; I’ve got to make a living. [Laughs] With the guys from Brooklyn, it’d be a good look for me to sell records in New York again. With these up-and-coming cats from Brooklyn, one of them might pop up and be a big artist.
DX: Ganksta-Nip is another artist often overlooked in the mainstream media. Tell us, how was he compared to the persona we heard on these records?
Mike Dean: Totally the opposite. He’s just real calm. I think he had split personalities. Outside of the booth, he was real softspoken and very proper. But when he got in the booth, he was a psycho maniac. I saw him about a year ago, he’s still crazy and still rapping about the same shit.
DX: Yeah, that was my next question. How much are you in touch with many of the former Rap-A-Lot acts today?
Mike Dean: 3-2, from The Convicts, called me yesterday. They’ve been getting in touch with me for the past couple of months, thinking about doing something with those guys and keep ‘em straight. [Smit D of Facemob] was locked up for a long time and he just got out, I’ve been working with him some. Devin [the Dude is] not on Rap-A-Lot anymore, but he just came over the other day to do a song for Tanya’s album.
DX: A while ago, Devin the Dude talked about doing a Country album. Have you guys gotten started on that?
Mike Dean: [Laughs] Yeah, I saw that last night. That’s unbelievable. We did this hook on [Just Tryin' Ta Live], on one song ["R & B (Reefer & Beer)" [that had a Country feel]. We’re going to do a song with Willie Nelson. In this Houston music magazine, I was quoted best Hip Hop producer for ’09, and they said I had a Country Western background. But when I was a teenager, I played with Dancehall bands and Mexican bands and Country bands.
DX: Kanye West worked on some projects with you early in his career. With his budgets and stardom, he went you to mix some of his best work. Did he ever tell you what it was about your mixing that appealed to him so much?
Mike Dean: He said they were the best mixes he’d ever had. I mixed “Guess Who’s Back” from The Fix, and he really liked the mix on that, so he hit me up for his first record. He actually came to my house, and we did the first three or four mixes here before he had budgets for a big studio somewhere.
I mixed four or five records from College Dropout, but I think only two of them made it. The rest were mixtapes, like “Keep the Receipt,” the song with [Ol' Dirty Bastard]. I mastered “Through The Wire,” I mixed the “Two Words” song with Mos Def and Freeway. For [Late Registration], I pretty much did all the singles except for “Diamonds From Sierra Leone,” I didn’t do the final mix on that. For the third album, Graduation, I think I did eight or nine mixes and co-produced on “Stronger” , “Good Life” ,“Barry Bonds” , and “Drunk and Hot Girls.”
DX: Also, you reportedly worked on King Tee's tragically shelved Tha Kingdom Come LP on Aftermath. Talk to us also about the technical dialog Mike Dean and Dr. Dre share, as two pioneers of major trends in Rap.
Mike Dean: I didn’t see Dre much. When we were in the studio, I just did a couple beats…Dre was in the next room over working on 2001. But they never even paid me for that shit. Dre still owes me $12,000 or $24,000. I think I was charging $12,000 a beat back then. [Laughs] I saw Dre in a club probably a year after that, and I’m like, “Y’all took my money!” And he’s like, “Come to the office we’ll take care of it.” I got the chick that hooked it up to get me my reels back... That was a freebie. [Laughs] I didn’t even know it came out until I saw the discography on AllMusic.com. [Moe Beats Records] dropped it or something, it didn’t come out on Aftermath.
DX: Texas Rap, particularly "slab music" sounds so good in cars, when you listen to so many albums from UGK, Scarface or even Z-Ro. As the producer of so many records, do you test your work in the car? Are there certain routines you can test the durability of a record?
Mike Dean: Sometimes, but not as much as I used to. It used to be a necessity, but now I’ve got speakers in my house that are better than my car. I’ve got four 18’s and four 15’s in the small room that I mix at. There are crazy overdone subs in the studio to sound like it does in cars or the clubs. I used to have stereo contests and shit, I’m a Bass nut. But it used to be a necessity, especially when you go to different studios.
Now, I listen to it on the speakers from the laptop. That’s the equivalent of listening to it on a small speaker or on a TV back in the day, just to see what it would sound like. I’d say about 50% of people who listen to music listen to it on laptop speakers, iPhones. So you have to mix it for how they’ll hear it, too. Not everyone has big ass speakers. I used to mix everything in mono back in the day, ‘cause I’m like, “When are people going to be up on speakers?”
DX: Tell us about the loyalty and family environment that's kept you so close to Rap-A-Lot and J. Prince. Is that a missing element in Hip Hop today?
Mike Dean: Yeah, people don’t stay where they start at. That’s a lot of peoples’ demise, jumping cliques and shit. People fall during that, whether that’s the reason or that’s a coincidence. Rap-A-Lot gave me my first opportunity to work on my first real records back in the day, so why would I not continue to work with them? They pay me, shit.
Rap-A-Lot’s good for a paycheck every month; we’ve always got something going on. It was slow last year, I think they’re switching their distribution to a different label right now. I was just on the phone with J last night talking about that shit. We’re getting ready for the next Rap-A-Lot run. We’ve got Rap-A-Lot anniversary projects we’re working on, where all the big artists are remaking Rap-A-Lot songs. Three 6 Mafia did [Scarface’s] “Balls And My Word,” Ja Rule did “Snow,” we’ve got Redman doing “Mary Jane.” We’ve got people redoing the beats over. It’s going to be a really good album. Then Bun B’s album has 40-50 songs done, I heard.
DX: I interviewed Bun B a while ago, and I pointed out how his solo albums usually have tons of guest appearances. He said he wasn’t a solo artist by nature because he’s used to recording with Pimp C. On his new stuff, does he have guest appearances or does he have solo material?
Mike Dean: He has more solo stuff on this one. He’s always in the studio a lot, probably for six months every day [straight]. So he’s just doing bookoo songs. For about three weeks, I worked in the next studio over from him working on beats. I’m not sure what was used yet.
^The late Pimp C,Mike Dean & Too $hort ^
DX: Although the marketing and promotion methods have always been independent, how do you feel the Rap-A-Lot catalog stacks up against those of Death Row, Cash Money or even Tommy Boy? So many of those releases were so groundbreaking for their lyrics and production, which you played a huge role in...
Mike Dean: Well, one big difference is that we are still making records that make a difference in industry. We are the ones to follow in this shit. Controversy has always pushed our performers, and i always try to make the music classic. Combined, that's historical. It just comes naturally for me - don't follow the trends, and it's always better. You'll never see me doing a Bounce record or a "Whatever's hot in Dallas now" record. [Laughs] We don't have dances in Houston! Leave that to the Cowboys [footballl team] in Dallas.
Look out for Rap-A-Lot's 25th Anniversary CD and a load of Best Of's and Greatest Hits coming this year. I remastered the whole catalog so it's up to today's mastering levels, so everyone can re-experience the Rap-A-Lot era and prepare for our new artists' albums coming soon.
DX: What was it like to revisit those records? Did you realize anything new in those songs that you didn't remember or notice from before? Did they seem even more timeless when you were revisiting them?
Mike Dean: It was actually fun. It was an eye opener, really. You never really see your mass of work like that, and it's rare to get to re-master my own records. I get see how my mixing and mastering ability has progressed, along with Scarface, Bido, etc.
DX: So did you hear any of those old mixes and get pissed like "Damn, I could've had this bumpin' even more when I put it out!"
Mike Dean: Most definitely. On "Let Me Roll," the hat was so loud in the mix. It was one of the first that me and 'Face did alone.
VIA
HipHopDX
Related;
Scarface New Album News!
Producers often earn kudos for inventiveness of their beats, but any music head knows that with the wrong mixing and mastering—the process of working with the sound levels of different elements of a song before it’s released—even the best songs can be rendered useless.
Before becoming a go-to producer, Southern legend Mike Dean earned his chops by mixing and mastering for Rap-A-Lot Records, helping shape Houston’s signature whip-ready sound with pioneers like Scarface, Geto Boys and Devin the Dude. But work with seminal west coast artists like Tha Dogg Pound and Seagram, mixing on Kanye West’s most important solo records, and impending material with a new crew from Brooklyn called Hip-Hop Howl! prove that Dean’s sound expertise oversteps time regional boundaries. In an interview with HipHopDX Producer’s Corner, Dean recounts nuggets from his extensive discography, speaks on the importance of loyalty, and gives a couple tips on testing sounds before they hit the streets.
Mike Dean: I’m working on Scarface’s album, mixing some pop/R&B stuff and shit like that. Working on a song with Drake right now, too.
HipHopDX: How is Scarface’s album sounding?
Mike Dean: It’s sounding good. We just scored a feature from John Legend on there. I hooked him up with John, making shit happen. I don’t know what’s up with the album or a release date or anything, we’re just working on a few songs right now. For the last few albums, I haven’t had much on his albums because we haven’t been in the studio together. He’ll do music somewhere else and bring it to me, because I’m off doing shit with Kanye [West] or Common.
DX: What takes up more time, your production or engineering?
Mike Dean: Probably about equal. If I’m in a creative phase, I’ll do more tracks. But if I’m on a technical kick, I’ll do more mixing. Either way, there’s always something going on.
DX: One of the best album cuts of the last decade was Scarface and Nas’ “In Between Us” , from The Fix. Could you please talk about how that song was created from top to bottom.
Mike Dean: We were in Atlanta working. Me and Scarface and Tanya Herron were there, and Lofey was there co-producing. I started the keyboard progression, and ‘Face came in and did some drums, I think he did the bass on it. 'Face wrote the hook, and Tanya performed it with all the crazy vocals. Nas was there, too. It came out pretty fast actually, about an hour and a half or two hours.
DX: Do you think it would’ve been a single if it weren’t for label politics going on around that time?
Mike Dean: Definitely. wish it would’ve been! [Laughs] Hopefully somebody else samples it and makes a good R&B song out of it.
DX: All the emcees sounded so vulnerable, something traditional of 'Face, but not of Nas.
What do you think brought that out of him?
Mike Dean: Scarface did. Scarface did the first verse, and Nas heard that and had to follow that. Nas actually re-did his verse, I just thought about that. Three months later, he changed it because he had some people he was feuding with at the time. I think he was shooting caps at Jay-Z; I don’t know if it was Jay-Z, but it was somebody. So he changed the verse up.
DX: Like Duro and Young Guru, you're arguably one of the most recognized engineers in Rap history. Tell us about your transition from mixing to production, and what it took to get both J. Prince and the artists you were working with to recognize your amazing talent as a general behind the boards?
Mike Dean: It was a gradual transition. I started out playing guitar and bass on peoples’ records that I was mixing, and it eventually turned out to where I was doing everything on the record except the drum programming. At that point, I was given the chance to produce stuff I started doing my own drum programming and collecting drum sounds, and that’s what took me into producing. Plus, engineering for good producers for all those years, I picked up on shit from everybody.
DX: Is there anybody that you learned from that left a serious mark on you?
Mike Dean: John Bido, he did all the Geto Boys stuff. I worked with him for years and years, and he taught me a whole lot of shit. He taught me how to make beats, and he made me want to be a producer.
DX: You are one of the few active guys in Hip Hop that can tell us about Seagram. His albums today sell for hundreds of dollars on eBay in a way that ensures he was way ahead of his time. What do you think made him special as an emcee, and how do you remember those sessions and handling his music?
Mike Dean: Seagram is just a real-ass emcee. He raps about shit he did, and some shit he did, he didn’t rap about. I fucked with him, he was always really cool. We worked in his studio a lot doing pre-production on his album. I met him in L.A., Tone Capone hooked me up with him. He came back to Houston for us to do pre-production on his album Souls On Ice. He came to the studio one night, we were mixing. He had gotten his first big check from Virgin Records, his first big, legit money he made. He left to fly home to the Bay, and he got killed that fucking night, it’s crazy. [2Pac] came through and was listening to it; 'Pac was going to get on Seagram’s album, and then he got fucking murdered two weeks after that.
DX: On a related note, from Seagram to C-Bo to 3 x Krazy, you've worked almost as much with Northern California acts as you have with Texas acts. That was a critical market to Rap-A-Lot's success in the '90s. Why were you guys so drawn to Bay rappers, and how did your job transition on the work you did with those guys?
Mike Dean: Probably me starting to work with Tone Capone. I met him when I was doing the Untouchables album from ’96, I brought him in to help me produced that. In return, I did 3X Krazy’s album, Keak Da Sneak and all them. I like Northern California shit, and all west coast music pretty much. I kind of like that better than southern music. I like working with Daz [Dillinger], Kurupt, Seagram and all those guys. They make that hardcore shit, instead of rapping about the same shit over and over like rides, chains and grills and shit.
The south has gotten stagnant to me. Well let me not say that, but they need to step up their game down here a little bit. That’s why I fuck with the east coast, and a lot of Hip Hop shit. I like fucking with all types of music instead of getting bored.
DX: Usually, people who say the south needs to step up aren’t from the south, or they don’t work there. So it’s weird to hear you say that.
Mike Dean: People like Slim Thug and ‘Face are always spitting dope shit. I’m just talking about a lot of the hits that came from down here, and the singles and bullshit. I’m working with a bunch of guys from Brooklyn right now. We’re going to South By Southwest all together. HipHopHowl.com, it’s just a bunch of emcees doing their thing.
DX: How do you decide who you want to work with? You work with big names like Kanye, then smaller names like Hip Hop Howl!.
Mike Dean: I just go with the flow of what I feel at the time. It also depends on peoples’ budgets; I’ve got to make a living. [Laughs] With the guys from Brooklyn, it’d be a good look for me to sell records in New York again. With these up-and-coming cats from Brooklyn, one of them might pop up and be a big artist.
DX: Ganksta-Nip is another artist often overlooked in the mainstream media. Tell us, how was he compared to the persona we heard on these records?
Mike Dean: Totally the opposite. He’s just real calm. I think he had split personalities. Outside of the booth, he was real softspoken and very proper. But when he got in the booth, he was a psycho maniac. I saw him about a year ago, he’s still crazy and still rapping about the same shit.
DX: Yeah, that was my next question. How much are you in touch with many of the former Rap-A-Lot acts today?
Mike Dean: 3-2, from The Convicts, called me yesterday. They’ve been getting in touch with me for the past couple of months, thinking about doing something with those guys and keep ‘em straight. [Smit D of Facemob] was locked up for a long time and he just got out, I’ve been working with him some. Devin [the Dude is] not on Rap-A-Lot anymore, but he just came over the other day to do a song for Tanya’s album.
DX: A while ago, Devin the Dude talked about doing a Country album. Have you guys gotten started on that?
Mike Dean: [Laughs] Yeah, I saw that last night. That’s unbelievable. We did this hook on [Just Tryin' Ta Live], on one song ["R & B (Reefer & Beer)" [that had a Country feel]. We’re going to do a song with Willie Nelson. In this Houston music magazine, I was quoted best Hip Hop producer for ’09, and they said I had a Country Western background. But when I was a teenager, I played with Dancehall bands and Mexican bands and Country bands.
DX: Kanye West worked on some projects with you early in his career. With his budgets and stardom, he went you to mix some of his best work. Did he ever tell you what it was about your mixing that appealed to him so much?
Mike Dean: He said they were the best mixes he’d ever had. I mixed “Guess Who’s Back” from The Fix, and he really liked the mix on that, so he hit me up for his first record. He actually came to my house, and we did the first three or four mixes here before he had budgets for a big studio somewhere.
I mixed four or five records from College Dropout, but I think only two of them made it. The rest were mixtapes, like “Keep the Receipt,” the song with [Ol' Dirty Bastard]. I mastered “Through The Wire,” I mixed the “Two Words” song with Mos Def and Freeway. For [Late Registration], I pretty much did all the singles except for “Diamonds From Sierra Leone,” I didn’t do the final mix on that. For the third album, Graduation, I think I did eight or nine mixes and co-produced on “Stronger” , “Good Life” ,“Barry Bonds” , and “Drunk and Hot Girls.”
DX: Also, you reportedly worked on King Tee's tragically shelved Tha Kingdom Come LP on Aftermath. Talk to us also about the technical dialog Mike Dean and Dr. Dre share, as two pioneers of major trends in Rap.
Mike Dean: I didn’t see Dre much. When we were in the studio, I just did a couple beats…Dre was in the next room over working on 2001. But they never even paid me for that shit. Dre still owes me $12,000 or $24,000. I think I was charging $12,000 a beat back then. [Laughs] I saw Dre in a club probably a year after that, and I’m like, “Y’all took my money!” And he’s like, “Come to the office we’ll take care of it.” I got the chick that hooked it up to get me my reels back... That was a freebie. [Laughs] I didn’t even know it came out until I saw the discography on AllMusic.com. [Moe Beats Records] dropped it or something, it didn’t come out on Aftermath.
DX: Texas Rap, particularly "slab music" sounds so good in cars, when you listen to so many albums from UGK, Scarface or even Z-Ro. As the producer of so many records, do you test your work in the car? Are there certain routines you can test the durability of a record?
Mike Dean: Sometimes, but not as much as I used to. It used to be a necessity, but now I’ve got speakers in my house that are better than my car. I’ve got four 18’s and four 15’s in the small room that I mix at. There are crazy overdone subs in the studio to sound like it does in cars or the clubs. I used to have stereo contests and shit, I’m a Bass nut. But it used to be a necessity, especially when you go to different studios.
Now, I listen to it on the speakers from the laptop. That’s the equivalent of listening to it on a small speaker or on a TV back in the day, just to see what it would sound like. I’d say about 50% of people who listen to music listen to it on laptop speakers, iPhones. So you have to mix it for how they’ll hear it, too. Not everyone has big ass speakers. I used to mix everything in mono back in the day, ‘cause I’m like, “When are people going to be up on speakers?”
DX: Tell us about the loyalty and family environment that's kept you so close to Rap-A-Lot and J. Prince. Is that a missing element in Hip Hop today?
Mike Dean: Yeah, people don’t stay where they start at. That’s a lot of peoples’ demise, jumping cliques and shit. People fall during that, whether that’s the reason or that’s a coincidence. Rap-A-Lot gave me my first opportunity to work on my first real records back in the day, so why would I not continue to work with them? They pay me, shit.
Rap-A-Lot’s good for a paycheck every month; we’ve always got something going on. It was slow last year, I think they’re switching their distribution to a different label right now. I was just on the phone with J last night talking about that shit. We’re getting ready for the next Rap-A-Lot run. We’ve got Rap-A-Lot anniversary projects we’re working on, where all the big artists are remaking Rap-A-Lot songs. Three 6 Mafia did [Scarface’s] “Balls And My Word,” Ja Rule did “Snow,” we’ve got Redman doing “Mary Jane.” We’ve got people redoing the beats over. It’s going to be a really good album. Then Bun B’s album has 40-50 songs done, I heard.
DX: I interviewed Bun B a while ago, and I pointed out how his solo albums usually have tons of guest appearances. He said he wasn’t a solo artist by nature because he’s used to recording with Pimp C. On his new stuff, does he have guest appearances or does he have solo material?
Mike Dean: He has more solo stuff on this one. He’s always in the studio a lot, probably for six months every day [straight]. So he’s just doing bookoo songs. For about three weeks, I worked in the next studio over from him working on beats. I’m not sure what was used yet.
^The late Pimp C,Mike Dean & Too $hort ^
DX: Although the marketing and promotion methods have always been independent, how do you feel the Rap-A-Lot catalog stacks up against those of Death Row, Cash Money or even Tommy Boy? So many of those releases were so groundbreaking for their lyrics and production, which you played a huge role in...
Mike Dean: Well, one big difference is that we are still making records that make a difference in industry. We are the ones to follow in this shit. Controversy has always pushed our performers, and i always try to make the music classic. Combined, that's historical. It just comes naturally for me - don't follow the trends, and it's always better. You'll never see me doing a Bounce record or a "Whatever's hot in Dallas now" record. [Laughs] We don't have dances in Houston! Leave that to the Cowboys [footballl team] in Dallas.
Look out for Rap-A-Lot's 25th Anniversary CD and a load of Best Of's and Greatest Hits coming this year. I remastered the whole catalog so it's up to today's mastering levels, so everyone can re-experience the Rap-A-Lot era and prepare for our new artists' albums coming soon.
DX: What was it like to revisit those records? Did you realize anything new in those songs that you didn't remember or notice from before? Did they seem even more timeless when you were revisiting them?
Mike Dean: It was actually fun. It was an eye opener, really. You never really see your mass of work like that, and it's rare to get to re-master my own records. I get see how my mixing and mastering ability has progressed, along with Scarface, Bido, etc.
DX: So did you hear any of those old mixes and get pissed like "Damn, I could've had this bumpin' even more when I put it out!"
Mike Dean: Most definitely. On "Let Me Roll," the hat was so loud in the mix. It was one of the first that me and 'Face did alone.
VIA
HipHopDX
Related;
Scarface New Album News!
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
In Rotation 3.9
^click image for tracklist^
Download
Related posts;
In rotation 4.2
and
In rotation 4.1
and
In rotation 4.0
and
In Rotation 3.9
and
In Rotation 3.8
and
In Rotation 3.7
and
In Rotation 3.6
and
In Rotation 3.5
and
In rotation 3.4
and
In rotation 3.3
and
In rotation 3.2
and
In Rotation 3.1
and
In Rotation 2.5
and
In Rotation 2.4
and
In Rotation 2.3
and
In Rotation 2.2
and
In Rotation 2.1
and
Best of 09 Y (Part 10)
and
Best of 09 T-W (Part 9)
and
Best of 09 R-S (Part 8)
and
Best of 09 N-P (Part 7)
and
Best of 09 K-M (Part 6)
and
Best of 09 I-J (Part 5)
and
Best of 09 H (part 4)
and
Best of 09 E-G (part 3)
and
Best of 09 C-D (Part 2)
and
Best of 09 A-B (Part 1)
and
Favorite album of 2009; Magnificent Ruffians; Elevated Ruffians
and
Favorite album of 2008; Young Maylay; The Real Coast Guard
and
DJ Crazy Toones; It's a CT Experience (The mixtape & The DVD)
and
Earl Hayes; The First 48 Disc 1
and
Earl Hayes; The First 48 Disc 2
and
Goal´s Gangster Shit propaganda
and
Kurupt; “Tha 4:20 Mixtape (Prequel To Streetlights)” (mixtape download)
and
Kurupt; “Tha 4:20 Mixtape (Prequel To Streetlights)” (mixtape download)
Snoop Dogg X Star Wars X Adidas (Video)
Bonus;
Snoop Dogg & Fred Wreck; Ashes To Ashes (Previously Unreleased)
Related posts;
Snoop Dogg X Adidas X The Cantina scene from Star Wars EP4; A New Hope = Thumbs up!
and
Pick up our latest issue; Fat Cap #17 (Star Wars special)
and
International Store List
with information where to buy the Graff Wars book
Monday, February 15, 2010
Smoov-E is the fondler
What do you get if you mix Dion and the Belmonts; "The Wanderer" with Smoov-E´s crazy ass?
Answer;
Related;
Style Wars The Original Soundtrack
Answer;
Related;
Style Wars The Original Soundtrack
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Favorite album of 2008; Young Maylay; The Real Coast Guard
For those that missed out on this great album/mixtape/street album or what ever you like to call it.
Don´t worry it´s nothing like those other mixtapes out there.
(Read; DJ Shouting his name all over it,in other words fucking it.)
All original beats
Mixed by DJ Crazy Toones.
Here´s a little taste of what to expect;
Young Maylay; I Show You
Young Maylay; The Real Coast Guard
Available for free download here.
^dead link^
new link; http://www.megaupload.com/?d=JAXRFNOJ
Related posts;
Favorite album of 2009; Magnificent Ruffians; Elevated Ruffians
+
DJ Crazy Toones; It's a CT Experience (The mixtape & The DVD)
+
Blaq Poet of Screwball Ft. Young Maylay & MC Eiht of CMW; Ain't Nuttin' Changed (Remix) Produced by DJ Premier (MP3 download and Video)
+
In rotation 4.1
and
In rotation 4.0
and
In Rotation 3.9
and
In Rotation 3.8
and
In Rotation 3.7
and
In Rotation 3.6
and
In Rotation 3.5
and
In rotation 3.4
and
In rotation 3.3
and
In rotation 3.2
and
In Rotation 3.1
and
In Rotation 2.5
and
In Rotation 2.4
and
In Rotation 2.3
and
In Rotation 2.2
and
In Rotation 2.1
and
Best of 09 Y (Part 10)
and
Best of 09 T-W (Part 9)
and
Best of 09 R-S (Part 8)
and
Best of 09 N-P (Part 7)
and
Best of 09 K-M (Part 6)
and
Best of 09 I-J (Part 5)
and
Best of 09 H (part 4)
and
Best of 09 E-G (part 3)
and
Best of 09 C-D (Part 2)
and
Best of 09 A-B (Part 1)
and
Favorite album of 2009; Magnificent Ruffians; Elevated Ruffians
and
Favorite album of 2008; Young Maylay; The Real Coast Guard
and
DJ Crazy Toones; It's a CT Experience (The mixtape & The DVD)
and
Earl Hayes; The First 48 Disc 1
and
Earl Hayes; The First 48 Disc 2
and
Goal´s Gangster Shit propaganda
Don´t worry it´s nothing like those other mixtapes out there.
(Read; DJ Shouting his name all over it,in other words fucking it.)
All original beats
Mixed by DJ Crazy Toones.
Here´s a little taste of what to expect;
Young Maylay; I Show You
Young Maylay; The Real Coast Guard
Available for free download here.
^dead link^
new link; http://www.megaupload.com/?d=JAXRFNOJ
Related posts;
Favorite album of 2009; Magnificent Ruffians; Elevated Ruffians
+
DJ Crazy Toones; It's a CT Experience (The mixtape & The DVD)
+
Blaq Poet of Screwball Ft. Young Maylay & MC Eiht of CMW; Ain't Nuttin' Changed (Remix) Produced by DJ Premier (MP3 download and Video)
+
In rotation 4.1
and
In rotation 4.0
and
In Rotation 3.9
and
In Rotation 3.8
and
In Rotation 3.7
and
In Rotation 3.6
and
In Rotation 3.5
and
In rotation 3.4
and
In rotation 3.3
and
In rotation 3.2
and
In Rotation 3.1
and
In Rotation 2.5
and
In Rotation 2.4
and
In Rotation 2.3
and
In Rotation 2.2
and
In Rotation 2.1
and
Best of 09 Y (Part 10)
and
Best of 09 T-W (Part 9)
and
Best of 09 R-S (Part 8)
and
Best of 09 N-P (Part 7)
and
Best of 09 K-M (Part 6)
and
Best of 09 I-J (Part 5)
and
Best of 09 H (part 4)
and
Best of 09 E-G (part 3)
and
Best of 09 C-D (Part 2)
and
Best of 09 A-B (Part 1)
and
Favorite album of 2009; Magnificent Ruffians; Elevated Ruffians
and
Favorite album of 2008; Young Maylay; The Real Coast Guard
and
DJ Crazy Toones; It's a CT Experience (The mixtape & The DVD)
and
Earl Hayes; The First 48 Disc 1
and
Earl Hayes; The First 48 Disc 2
and
Goal´s Gangster Shit propaganda
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Blast from the past part 1
^ Goal AIO,Puppet,Cose (R.I.P),Size & characters by Spade. ^
Västerås, Sweden 1992 (click image to enlarge)
Published in
Fat Cap #8 (3.1992)
Order back issues here
Related posts;
Blast from the past part 2; Strong Island
and
Blast from the past part 3; Ice T & Chris "The Glove" Taylor in Breakin' 'n' Enterin'
Blast from the past part 2; Strong Island
and
Blast from the past part 3; Ice T & Chris "The Glove" Taylor in Breakin' 'n' Enterin'
and
Blast from the past part 4; QD3 in Stockholms Natt
and
Weekend fun part 5; Jean Claude Van Damme´s scene in Breakin´
and
Blast from the past part 5; Malcolm McLaren´s (R.I.P) Buffalo Gals
and
Just Writing My Name; Subtopia Festival, Stockholm Sweden 2010
and
Grid Stormtrooper by Puppet. Stockholm,Sweden 2010
Interviews from the past part 1; COD crew (1992)
Wane (click image to enlarge)
Wen (click image to enlarge)
Reas (click image to enlarge)
Published in
Fat Cap #8 (3.1992)
Order back issues here
Related links;
Interviews from the past part 1; COD crew (1992)
and
WritersBench.com
and
WaneKnowsHims
and
PhotoGraffs Wane COD
and
Graff Wars countdown; 4 Weeks to go
(The Phantom Menace by
Wane COD/FC,Virus COD/AA & Goal AIO/COD/KD/WCA. NYC 2010)
and
Weekend fun part 16;
If your teacher corrected graffiti (Reas AOK/RIS)
Wen (click image to enlarge)
Reas (click image to enlarge)
Published in
Fat Cap #8 (3.1992)
Order back issues here
Related links;
Interviews from the past part 1; COD crew (1992)
and
WritersBench.com
and
WaneKnowsHims
and
PhotoGraffs Wane COD
and
Graff Wars countdown; 4 Weeks to go
(The Phantom Menace by
Wane COD/FC,Virus COD/AA & Goal AIO/COD/KD/WCA. NYC 2010)
and
Weekend fun part 16;
If your teacher corrected graffiti (Reas AOK/RIS)
Friday, February 12, 2010
In Rotation 3.8
^ Click image for tracklist ^
Download
Related posts;
In rotation 4.2
and
In rotation 4.1
and
In rotation 4.0
and
In Rotation 3.9
and
In Rotation 3.8
and
In Rotation 3.7
and
In Rotation 3.6
and
In Rotation 3.5
and
In rotation 3.4
and
In rotation 3.3
and
In rotation 3.2
and
In Rotation 3.1
and
In Rotation 2.5
and
In Rotation 2.4
and
In Rotation 2.3
and
In Rotation 2.2
and
In Rotation 2.1
and
Best of 09 Y (Part 10)
and
Best of 09 T-W (Part 9)
and
Best of 09 R-S (Part 8)
and
Best of 09 N-P (Part 7)
and
Best of 09 K-M (Part 6)
and
Best of 09 I-J (Part 5)
and
Best of 09 H (part 4)
and
Best of 09 E-G (part 3)
and
Best of 09 C-D (Part 2)
and
Best of 09 A-B (Part 1)
and
Favorite album of 2009; Magnificent Ruffians; Elevated Ruffians
and
Favorite album of 2008; Young Maylay; The Real Coast Guard
and
DJ Crazy Toones; It's a CT Experience (The mixtape & The DVD)
and
Earl Hayes; The First 48 Disc 1
and
Earl Hayes; The First 48 Disc 2
and
Goal´s Gangster Shit propaganda
and
Kurupt; “Tha 4:20 Mixtape (Prequel To Streetlights)” (mixtape download)
MC Eiht & DJ Premier is currently cooking up a album set to be released summer 2010
MC Eiht of CMW is getting ready for his next solo album.
His last solo album "Affiliated" was released almost 4 years ago on Paid in Full Entertainment. His next album will be executive produced by DJ Premier (who he recently worked with for the remix of Blaq Poet of Screwball leading single for "The Blaqprint") on Preems own label Year Round Records.
The upcoming album "Which Way Is West" is set to drop in late summer, first details is that Marco Polo is getting in to produce some beats, and that NYGz will be featured on the album. Together with DJ Premier and some other unknown producers he should bring MC Eiht back on the spot where he belongs.
MC Eiht of CMW; Which Way Is West Sampler (Thanks to DJ Vinyl!)
(None of them are produced by DJ Premier!)
Also is getting rumored that Young Maylay is about to sign an album deal with Year Round Records.
Blaq Poet of Screwball Ft. Young Maylay & MC Eiht of CMW; Ain't Nuttin' Changed (Remix) Produced by DJ Premier
Ain't Nuttin Changed (remix) MP3
Update;
MC Eiht of CMW details "Which Way Is West" Album With DJ Premier
and
DJ premier speaks on it (Examiner interview February 2010)
and
MC Eith of CMW speaks on it (DubCNN interview February 2010)
and
DJ Premier Gives Backstory On Entire Gang Starr Catalog
and
DJ Premier picks his: Favorite albums of all time
VIA
DJ Premier´s blog
His last solo album "Affiliated" was released almost 4 years ago on Paid in Full Entertainment. His next album will be executive produced by DJ Premier (who he recently worked with for the remix of Blaq Poet of Screwball leading single for "The Blaqprint") on Preems own label Year Round Records.
The upcoming album "Which Way Is West" is set to drop in late summer, first details is that Marco Polo is getting in to produce some beats, and that NYGz will be featured on the album. Together with DJ Premier and some other unknown producers he should bring MC Eiht back on the spot where he belongs.
MC Eiht of CMW; Which Way Is West Sampler (Thanks to DJ Vinyl!)
(None of them are produced by DJ Premier!)
Also is getting rumored that Young Maylay is about to sign an album deal with Year Round Records.
Blaq Poet of Screwball Ft. Young Maylay & MC Eiht of CMW; Ain't Nuttin' Changed (Remix) Produced by DJ Premier
Ain't Nuttin Changed (remix) MP3
Update;
MC Eiht of CMW details "Which Way Is West" Album With DJ Premier
and
DJ premier speaks on it (Examiner interview February 2010)
and
MC Eith of CMW speaks on it (DubCNN interview February 2010)
and
DJ Premier Gives Backstory On Entire Gang Starr Catalog
and
DJ Premier picks his: Favorite albums of all time
VIA
DJ Premier´s blog
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