wedding dress. Http://medprophy.ru .. www.biletservis.ru

City of Dope


Yahoo’s Mic Pass
April 29, 2006, 11:31 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

Yahoo’s going dumb. This little video they put together is pretty fresh with a nice cast of the Bay’s heavy hitters. ‘Freestyles’ from Too $hort, Federation, Numskull, FAB, E-40, Dru Down, JT, Yukmouth, and San Quinn.

I especially like the literal mic pass with their fine editing. See above.

Watch it here.



Humm Baby
April 29, 2006, 8:44 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized


‘187 Proof’ Video
April 25, 2006, 5:58 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

Spice 1
‘187 Proof’

And then Indo smoked ‘em all. This video is fucking doooope! I heard it was directed by Chris Cunningham but I could be wrong.

So gangsta.



Pick a Bigger Weapon
April 25, 2006, 3:48 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

Ok, it’s finally dropping tommorow. Go buy this shit, steal it if you must.

The Coup will be at Amoeba Tuesday night at 6 doing a quick set, so if you’re in the City, check ‘em out.



Interview with the Godfather
April 24, 2006, 4:41 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

If you head over to Davey D’s website, hes got a really good interview with Too Short that is definitely worth checking out. It’s pretty rare to read or listen to an interview and actually get some new and interesting material, especially with someone on Too Short’s level.

This thing is about an hour long, so if you don’t work a soul crushing desk job like myself, it will probably be tough to work this into your day.

Click Here to Listen.



‘Wonderful Night’ Video
April 24, 2006, 3:46 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

This shit with Lateef is pretty dope. Theres nothing I like more than a well done hip hop video.



The Rootdown - Friday Night
April 22, 2006, 12:58 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

I’m a little late posting this one, but it’s going down tonight.

Co-Deez
Psychokinetics
Bucc Rogerz
The Sole Vibe

2183 Mission St. between 17th and 18th
SF, CA



Choppin Up Dope (I got 5) —Interview w/ E Da Boss–
April 19, 2006, 1:18 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

High!
You kids ever heard of Blackalicious? What about the Gift of Gab? Did you know that beatmaker/DJ deluxe Chief Excel often doesn’t head out w/ the Quannam crew on tours/gigs overseas and in the States? Why? Duuh dude, you gotta keep it moving and when the crew is touring an album, Excel is in the lab WORKING ON THE NEXT HEATROCK! So who do you think steps up to bat and fills the shoes of a star and deejay’s for Blackalicious? Another star, E Da Boss. This cool cat runs Slept-On Records with Nick Andre and has a mixtape, entitled The Catalog, hittin’ the underground hard with appearances from: JernEye (Lunar Heights), Bicasso from the Living Legends, Gift of Gab himself, Lateef, Nebulus…and me (king ELJEN!)… but peep this, DJ Platurn reppin’ the Oakland Faders mixed the whole joint…its too hot. Anyways, in between touring, doin’ gigs, crushing shows with the likes of Jahi and the Light and the Gift of Gab (he was Gab’s deejay for his solo album onslaught of hype shows worldwide), making beats, DJing everywhere in the city…HE TOOK TIME OUT TO HOLLAR AT ME AND ANSWER SOME VERY IMPORTANT QUESTIONS FOR THE CITY OF DOPE!!! Fame hasn’t fazed this pro, peep…..

E Da Boss

King Eljen: So E, how many times you been around the world on tour now? Name some of the dopest spots…
E Da Boss: Been to Europe hella times, 10+, also Ausralia & New Zealand. The best place to me was Barcelona, Spain…those folks really know how to PARTY !!

What projects are you hollarin about these days, and whats coming up soon for you?
Om records and a mixtape, but I cant give away the plot, also the new Slept-On Records 12″ w/ DJ Enki, Lyrics Born any much much more.

Can i get on a track?
Fa sho!!!

Yo, what movies have you seen recently, whats a good one to see?Dave Chappelle’s Block Party, its like the modern day Wattstax.

What celeb honey do you think is the flyest?
Taral Hicks (Kisha from Belly)

Pick one, Jennifer Aniston or Angelina Jolie?
Angelina

Okay okay, name some dope deejays aside from you that are reppin for the Yay right now…..
Joe Quixx always holdin it down for the City of Oakland!!!

Word, I agree. Me and that pimp trade Curb Your Enthusiam DVD’s..and at ‘Radio’ a couple weeks ago, that fool was spinning and I was broke, he let me borrow $20 bucks! I thought he was gonna gimme a drink ticket or some shit! That kid is MAD COOL and sick on the “his and hers”. I need a beat from him, and from you too E Da Bossalini!

Thx E!

Peep E Da Boss @ SleptOn.net, respect the real heads reppin for the Yay and beyond and get “The Catalog” (pssst..listen to the hidden track too!).

And now…..you know I got 5 on it.
Top 5 albums to “knock” in your “scraper” and “go dumb” when your “thizzin” and driving around in this beautiful weather, on the search for “rippers” with your “stunner shades” on…..

1. Keak the Sneak, “Counting Other Peoples Money”.
2. 3XKrazy, “Stackin’ Chips”, peep Keaks intro.
3. Mac Dre, “Mac Dre Presents: The Rompilation”. The sheer number of albums from Dre the great can be overwhelming and thus intimidating to those who need to get up on the thizz icon, start with this sick classic.
4. E-40, “Breaking News”. One word…..Walllaaahhhh!!!!!
5. Neptunes, “The Clones”. Trust me on this one kids….

I’ll see you in the traffic pimpin, throw up the playboy bunny when you see me!

Peep me rippin a track with Nate Mezmer and Bucc Rogers on the new Bucc Rogers album, “Music for the 21st Century“, and learn how to rap…

Peace!



Living and Dying Hip-Hop
April 15, 2006, 11:22 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized


187 Proof
By NATE MEZMER

KRS-One is often quoted as saying, “rap is something you do, hip-hop is something you live.” However, what does it mean to ‘live hip-hop’ in this day and age?

Hip-hop was originally created in a similar manner to that of the blues. Like the music that was born in the ‘juke joints’ of rural Mississippi, hip-hop was also created as a result of black struggle and ingenuity. Indeed, the early ‘park jams’ in New York City were as much about showcasing ones individual talents as they were about forming community and celebrating an entire culture that had been enslaved, ignored and disenfranchised.

Today, although alternative outlets exist that continue to maintain these original ideals, mainstream hip-hop, or the most popular forms of rap music have become much more negative. Disguised as party music and marketed to people of all ages and race, the hip-hop lifestyle has been transformed into a commercial entity that is now in the process of destroying its original values in search of greater profits.

This lack of lyrical credibility as well as social value is demonstrated on a daily basis, every minute of the day, on mainstream ‘Urban radio.’ Claiming to represent “hip-hop and R&B,” these commercial radio stations promote ignorance, misogyny and violence to the tune of billions of dollars. [Checkout a lyric from the Number 8 song on the Billboard Charts this week]:

“I bounce in the club so the ho’s call me Rocket, posted in the cut and im lookin for a blockhead, yup in my white tee, i break a bitch back, and i keep a big bank, oh i think dey like dat, before i leave the house, im slizzard on a goose, and im higher than a plane, so a nigga really loose, and i can lean wit it, and i can rock wit it, and if u gotta friend, she gotta suck a cock wit it”

(from, “Lean Wit It, Rock Wit It” by Dem Franchize Boyz)

* * *
Earlier this week, Detroit rap artist ‘Proof’ of the group D12 (which includes Eminem), was shot and killed in a night club on the infamous 8 mile. According to police reports, ‘Proof’ allegedly shot first and was then killed by a subsequent gun shot to the head.

Since Tuesday, it seems the reaction to this deadly event has been mixed between mourning and disgust. I have since spoke with many who say they are sick and tired of all the violence associated with hip-hop and others who merely express sympathy for the loss of life. However tragic an event this may be, one thing is clear, it is certainly not the first time such an incident has occurred.

Tupac Shakur, Biggie Smalls, Big L, Freaky Tah, Jam Master Jay, Mac Dre and now Proof. All hip-hop artists. All murdered by gun violence over the past decade.

(Of course there have been many other violent incidents during the last ten years including the recent fatal shooting at the Busta Rhymes video shoot, the brawl and stabbing at the Vibe Awards and even New York’s good samaritan and sometimes marathoner, P-diddy’s champagne bottle incident with record executive Steve Stout.)

Certainly their are sizable differences when comparing the death of super stars like 2pac and Biggie, with rappers such as Proof or even San Francisco Bay Area legend Mac Dre, however there is one glaring similarity that all these dead young black men have in common?

Nothing will be learned.

(I’m sorry to say but it’s the hard truth! For example, let’s take a look at the deaths of Tupac Shakur and Mac Dre, two rap artists who grew up in my native Bay Area.)

* * *
Tupac Shakur, in all his frailties was a talented hip-hop artist and a very passionate human being. Although his personal flaws and contradictions (and his involvement with criminal minds such as Marion “Suge” Knight), spelled his ultimate demise, Shakur did make valiant efforts to stand before the world and call for change. A direct quote from Shakur on his thoughts about the future were as follows, “I’m not saying I’m gonna change the world, but I guarantee I will spark the brain that will change the world.” (2pac was gunned down after a boxing match in Las Vegas in 1996.)

What is 2pac now? Is he a bootlegged remix? A VH1 special? A t-shirt?

On the other hand, Mac Dre, with all his valid accomplishments before his death was not an extraordinarily talented lyricist. Although he was a savvy promoter of his music, he did not strive for much more musically than his hustle (to his credit he never claimed to do anything more than that). Indeed from his early records which were literally “too hard for the f*ckin radio,” to his stint in prison for alleged bank robbery, to his return and re-birth through a Bay Area rap craze he helped create called “Hyphy” (which literally means to “get stupid,” or “go dumb” from drug use), Dre didn’t stand for much more than pimping and getting high. (Mac Dre was gunned down after a concert in Kansas City in 2004.)

What is Mac Dre now? He’s an icon? A hero? A t-shirt?

(If you don’t believe me, you haven’t been to the Bay Area lately.)

* * *
Obviously, the virtuous legacy of hip-hop artists like Tupac Shakur is not lost and there are indeed people who will continue to keep his memory alive however, it seems to me that over the past ten years or so hip-hop has taken a turn for the worst. Sadly, messages concerned with change and consciousness have been replaced by threats of senseless violence and calls for mindless behavior. Although both criminal and party elements have always existed in hip-hop, there were once many other aspects or ‘elements’ that were equally represented. Today, rap artists can’t get on the radio unless they “Get crunk,” “Get hyphy,” “Get stupid” or “Go dumb!”

Imagine 2pac in a video, dancing around in a triple extra large white t-shirt, exclaiming, “Get stupid! Get stupid! Go dumb! Go dumb!” While it is true, that ‘Pac’ was often involved with less than virtuous activities, I cannot for the life of me imagine the man would ever put out a record that wack!? (wack: adj. meaning lacking lyrical integrity.)

Of course, the argument is raised that this type of hyper, mindless rap music is a release valve for folks and a direct reflection of their socio-economic situation… AND I understand that there is a lot of potential positive energy behind such a release… However what is the energy being used for and by whom is this energy being harnessed?

If three white guys walk into a hip-hop club trying to sell “Hyphy water” and “R.I.P. Mac Dre” t-shirts, is that hip-hop?

If two young men (white, black, brown or yellow) do a bunch of exstacy because they’re favorite rapper does it, is that hip-hop?

If one young person, anywhere, loses their life to a bullet in a hip-hop club, is that hip-hop?

I don’t know … I guess it is up to you?

-Counterpunch.org


Nate Mezmer
‘Kill The Precendent’
Mad Seven Records