February 7, 2011

Video: "J. Dilla: Still Shining" Documentary

The anticipation for this has been building up the last few weeks after Brian "B. Kyle" Atkins announced that he was releasing this project.

"J Dilla: Still Shining" is a project that, according to B. Kyle's Vimeo page, was:

Created in 2006, this remembrance piece is created as a tribute to the memory and legacy of James "J.Dilla" Yancey. This is a piece designed for his fans and supporters who knew of his accomplishments before February 2006 and those that have grown to appreciate his genius. Here, we gain a greater insight and understanding about our musical icon.
If you got an hour to spare (even if you don't make an hour to spare) and check this out.

Dilla Says Go - J Dilla

It's easy to Fall in Love with different musical Players; and throughout the years everybody, from Hoc N Pucky to Beej 'N Dem have tried to Lock It Down.

Many were around only long enough to say Hi. and Bye., but there's always that one You Can't Hold a Torch to, the King of this producing thing, if you will.

First Time I came across this guy was this day, five years ago when Donuts dropped and I remember thinking "this Sounds Like Love, other producers could never make Nothing Like This" only to read in the paper a few days later that he had his Last Donut of the Night.

It is kind of hard to Estimate the amount of People his MPC has affected, but it's crazy how a few Bars & Twists of samples could change hip-hop's History and show the world What It's All About.

They say you never know what you Got 'Til It's Gone,  this is true,  I Don't Know why we Hold Tight and never Take Notice and give them proper Shouts while they're here — maybe one of you can Tell Me. I do know his Friends and The New Waves of fans (like me) won't Stop Scheming to keep The Conversation going and his Lightworks Shining.

The Diff'rence between him and others, he's the producer's producer.

So Give It Up for J Dilla and Think Twice before you deny his talent; and when the next Pay Day comes, take your Milk Money and go cop somethin'.

Happy Dilla Day, y'all.

#RaiseItUp.

Flashback: "Move" - Oh No feat. J Dilla & Roc C

#DillaDay


Photo: Fantastic

February 2, 2011

#RapTaughtMe, Pt. 1

Initially I was going to do this series on my Tumblr page, but after talking to a few people, it was easier to post it on here. #RapTaughtMe is going to explain why I think rappers and journalists are more alike than they are different. Below is the first post done a few weeks ago.

I love hip-hop … rap … rhyming, whatever you want to call it.

To know me or to know of me that’s the second thing you know about me.

The first thing would be that I’m a writer, journalist, blogger, scribe, nosey (whatever).

Today I realized that rappers and journalists are more alike than I ever thought. This is the first of a few posts, possibly five (maybe more, maybe less), that will talk about why I feel hip-hop and journalism aren’t that different.

The similarities go beyond the idea both use words as weapons and vehemently deliver them to unsuspecting audiences who will either love, hate and repeat the same sentences, slowly infecting other people with what they say.

Let’s start with the supersaturation of both fields. Emcees I know, often talk about how the industry has become overrun with the Waka’s, Gucci’s, Roscoe Dash’s and Soulja Boy’s of the world. They say real MC-ing doesn’t get half as much attention from labels, radio or even rap fans. Emcees hustle for years, decades even, to be heard and here comes a guy who gets his speech chopped and screwed, performs on a hip-hop award show, and everyone is hiding their kids and wives.

Rapper is to Emcee as Blogger is to Journalist.

If you’re in journalism school (and at least a junior), when you entered, your professors were still probably talking about how journalists are trying to decide if they are ready to conform. Seasoned journalists are desperately trying to hold on to the traditional values that have shaped who they are, when the reality is, blogging is where the money is and the quickest way to gain, track and interact with readers.

Blogging made writing famous, which may be why writers tend to hate/discredit bloggers. Bloggers are the YouTube rappers to most journalists, (in a few cases) they didn’t put in half the work, internships or clips many formally trained journalists did, yet they’re taking the few available jobs because a byline with their name on it would attract more readers.

It’s the same as a socially conscious, lyrically awesome rapper making that one song with the catchy hook that downplays their talent because

a) they need some type of money coming in to pay for the studio, the album graphic, etc.

b) it’s what the people want.

It’s a money game and when money gets involved reality hits. No matter how much you love it, at the end of the day bills have to be paid and you have to eat.

It’s the beginning of compromise.