Showing posts with label Nas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nas. Show all posts

Friday, 21 October 2011

Oub!! Back In Businezz (2011, COMPilation)


0001 Nine - Fo'eva Blunted
0002 Attica Blues - Tender (Organized Konfusion Remix)
0003 Jeru The Damaja - One Day
0004 NaS - My State Of
0005 Genius-GZA - I Gotcha Back
0006 Caveman - Streetlife (The Principle Remix)
0007 Funky Fresh Few - However You Want It (Ft Jimmy Grand, Craig G & Dirt Digga)
0008 EPMD - Run It (Duke Dumont Mix)
0009 Armand Van Helden - Hot Butter
0010 Freestyle Fellowship - Government Lies
0011 Afrika Bambaataa and the Soul Sonic Force - Planet Rock: The Journey (Ins)
0012 Eric B & Rakim - The R (Work, Rest & Play Mix)
0013 KRS-One - Temple Tactics
0014 Durrty Goodz - The Weather Man
0015 Dead Prez - It's Bigger Than Hip-Hop (Radio)


Thursday, 11 August 2011

Nas – Illmatic (1994)


#400 on Rolling Stone's "500 Greatest Albums of All Time"

Prior to the release of this now legendary and ground-breaking album, hip-hop had arguably developed into a very fragmented genre of music, both geographically and stylistically. Geographically, as with the rise of Death Row records, and several conscious rappers like Del, A Tribe Called Quest, and Pharcyde, L.A. had become the new hip-hop capital of the world. the industry in New York was left in its wake (for this review we are conveniantly ignoring the Wu's "36 Chambers" in 1993). Meanwhile in terms of style, commercial hip-hop, and specifically gangsta rap, had popularized a self-centered syle of narrative which relied on promoting oneself and blasting others on simple one-liners and rhyme schemes.


Enter Nasir Jones aka. Nas. 1994's Illmatic displayed not only some dangerous and grimy beats that reflected the violent nature of the NYC streets, but more importantly, a vicious poetic style that combined the hardness of gangsta rap, with the highly-detailed narrative, skillfull obeservation and deep self-analysis that was often the focus of conscious rap. Along with Wu-Tang, Nas helped firmly re-establish NYC/East Coast as the epicentre of rap, and nearly every rapper who strives to work beyond the now horribly rigid structures of commercial rap owe it to Nas and specifically this album- even Nas' arch-enemy Jay-Z. (Review : Sputnikmusic.com)

TRACKLIST

The Genesis 1:45 
N.Y. State Of Mind 4:53 
Life's A Bitch 3:29 
The World Is Yours 4:50 
Halftime 4:20 
Memory Lane (Sittin' In Da Park) 4:07 
One Love 5:24 
One Time 4 Your Mind 3:18 
Represent 4:13 
It Ain't Hard To Tell 3:22