Friday, December 28, 2007
Life is But a Beach Chair
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
He Said: "I Write What I See"
I always try to get snippets from my favorite songs:
You're my Sunshiiiiiiine:
Coaching the crowd to mimic the energy of shows he's done in Dublin, Ireland, Lu insisted they jump up and down to the next beat... The Instrumental:
At one point in the show, Lu took a moment to discuss our beloved president, George W. Bush. Promising that he has never wished harm on anyone ("it is the holiday season..."), he then vividly described how a Christmas tree, Chanukah menorah and Kwanzaa kinara should all fall on the president and set him on fire since he is, in fact, an American Terrorist:
The 1st & 15 roster got their shine on too... Sarah Green, Bishop G., Gemstones and new addition Matthew Santos were all given moments to demonstrate their talents. Gemstones can sing and actually rap; his song from the perspective of a $100 bill was cliche, but a well executed one at that. Flow is pretty crazy too... I guess we'll see what comes of that project.
Putting some newness on display in the second half, Lupe delivered a few verses a cappella...
The Coolest
Gold Watch
And what kind of person would I be if I didn't leave you with my favorite verse from the single, Superstar:
Sunday, December 16, 2007
Flashy..........Lights
I wonder if they shot the video where his pieces are on display, or if they just stole the idea and made their own. See for yourself...
Saturday, December 15, 2007
The Mental Plane... To Spark The Brain
She looked ridiculously fierce and sounded even better:
Let That Bitch Breathe
HE HAD A UNIQUE CHILDHOOD:
"Growing up, I learned to hide the fact that I had any passion or enjoyment for music or life. Being "influenced" to laugh or dance was always a sickness or pathology. It made my parents fearful that they were losing their kids. To this day, I'm not sure you could get me to admit that I was influenced by anything. It's just beaten out of the way I think. Perhaps people call my music "unique" because I don't feel beholden to any influences."
HIS DETACHMENT FROM SOCIETY OPENED HIS EYES:
"In music and life, you've got to connect the dots to see how simple things relate to power."
HE DIFFERS FROM MOST ASPIRING ENTERTAINERS:
"I am not in a rush to find an agent, label, a publicist, etc. All of those things are like looking for an apartment. You never move into the first one you find. It's worth it to take the time to get it right."
HE HAS A LOT TO SAY ABOUT RACE AND GENDER:
"I get lots of Janet and Michael comparisons. I take them as compliments. But I also think there's a deeper cultural reason behind them. Any young black man in pop culture who isn't hypermasculine is held to a racist double-standard. Because Aaron Carter is not hypermasculine. Clay Aiken is not hypermasculine. None of the boy-bands were hypermasculine. But there's this idea that because I'm a young black male, I've got to look hypermasculine. I've got to look 'urban.'"
"People need to ask themselves why young black men don't have the same freedom to present themselves that young white men do... Many young white men choose to be hypermasculine, but as soon as a young black man chooses the ordinary suburban-kid look, all of a sudden he violates the prejudice of pop culture. But you can't blame this prejudice on everyday people because the fantasy that all young black males must be hypermasculine, whereas young white males can be wholesome boy-band members, is promoted by business interests that need categories in which people will be predictable consumers."
"People are sick of these categories. They see themselves in the eyes of pop music marketers and know it's not who they are. This is why corporate sales are down across the entire industry. It's not because everyone is stealing music. It's because they woke up to the fact that musical categories, racial categories, and all these other things that are sold to them as their identity, are contrived."
"...I defy category. I'm the new route to the next economic quarter. My demographic isn't black, white, brown, young, old, straight, gay, or any of the above. It's real people. People who don't need labels as shortcuts to who they are."
"People should not worry about what I was trying to do with my music or my videos. They should just experience it in the way that is real to them. It is not my job to understand why people experience my art in the way that they do. I just make the art and people find what they find in it. Leave it at that. We spend too much time in this world trying to be each others' psychiatrists. Does what I was trying to do with the music, or my imagination of how other people experience the music, actually make a difference in what it means to you?"
So! If you didn't know I was a huge nerd before, I'm certain you're aware now!
And to make myself appear even more dorky, I'll leave you with a quote I pulled from another Tay interview that hit me very hard:
"What inspires people to be publicly silent? We all have these moments of brilliant expression between ourselves and the wall. Anyone who says they don't is a liar. The fact that I take a camera and put it on YouTube doesn't make me special. Everyone dreams of not being silent. Everyone has the "drum major instinct." Most people stay silent."
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Batter Up
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
The Cool
Sunday, December 9, 2007
Little Girl Gone
What do you think???
Friday, December 7, 2007
Cool For Thought
Laurence Fishburne almost killed my favorite architect. More on why I love Frank Gehry in a future post, but yup, he got on Smokey McPots' motorcycle and they wiped out.
Check out photos from Jessica at Frolab.com... we met during Drama's Rap City taping last week. It was shot at Nostylgia, my favorite sneaker spot on Dyckman, so you know I had to cover it. Her photos are up and look great!
I might hate on Beyonce a little bit, but this is just classic.
The Dream's Love/Hate album is alright... He definitely loves to play with repetition and "ey!" and "ooooh" noises. There are a few heatrocks though (She Needs My Love, I Luv Your Girl, Falsetto and Playin' In Her Hair) and the rest grow on you enough to be tolerable. Cop it and go make some babies.
Secret to keep between you and I? I used to watch Ricki Lake a lot when I was in middle school. Just saw this great clip of her on The View discussing divorce and heard she's rumored to be dating John Mayer. Get 'em girl.
I didn't want to comment on it until the dust had settled. Wayne and Lauren London are not engaged. Thank you all for your kind, consoling words during this allegedly tumultuous time for me, but I assure you: Contrary to popular belief, I'm not infatuated with Weezy romantically. I just like his music and provocative character.
And lastly, Sexy and The City is coming:) I hope the movie lives up to the show and isn't disappointing!
Sunday, December 2, 2007
Girl You (Should) Know
...And I still love him for making a romance grinch (me!) feel tingles when they see the NEW video, Never.
But just when you thought I was getting soft, let's come back to reality! The real reason behind this post? I have to hit you with one of the most truthful songs I've heard in a while regarding male/female relations... It's true ladies, most guys are incapable of being tied down to one woman.
Get your TOUGH LOVE here with Scarface f. Trey Songz "Girl You Know":
Nod to Mr. Russell for calling this one... early.
Saturday, December 1, 2007
Form The Alliance
I also LOVE fashion.
This week's episode of Project Runway showed that human beings can be versatile in their interests. Former NY Giants running back Tiki Barber guest-starred as the judge and inspiration for Week 3's sewing challenge. It was nice to see a pro athlete openly discuss his interest in the fashion industry... Although they're not the most far-fetched combination of hobbies, fashion and sports are also not necessarily two things that often get paired together either. In an interview after the show, Tiki displayed an open-minded ability to align himself with an interest that (he admits) is not the most masculine.
Since I often struggle with having widespread interests, I empathize with people who find it hard to categorize themselves as a this or that type of person... And that's why programming like this is so refreshing to see. I wish more people would not just think, but live outside the box; trying new things that don't fall within the category you like to imagine yourself in might be what you're missing.
I jacked this clip from MissInfo and wanted to post it since Rza talks about Wu Tang's ability to approach "all walks of life." The context has nothing to do with my sports/fashion dichotomy, but what he says is ironically relevent to my point:
Anyhow... Bravo to Bravo and all those who are brave enough to walk through life collecting what they like, how ever bizarre or contradictory it might seem.
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Mad, But Not Mad Enough To Shoot Ya
In other news... Cops are tasering people almost as much as DJ Khaled says "We Da Best!" This disturbed me a few months ago when that kid got tasered while John Kerry was giving a lecture, but a PREGNANT WOMAN HOLDING A CHILD?!?! Holy smokes! I think Franklyn said it best:
Frank's Screenname: thats wat happens when you make star wars fans cops
Frank's Screenname: n*****s be getting carried away
Frank's Screenname: this is not defcon 9
I agree. SMH.
Friday, November 23, 2007
It's Just a Phase
Also, I know it's not brand new, but you need this:
The Dream "Falsetto"
And what I wish made it on As I Am:
Alicia Keys "Hurt So Bad"
Same Color as Cranberry Sauce
I've noticed quite a few blogs and message boards this week that oppose Thanksgiving's alleged inaccurate, hypocritical message. I don't remember much of 6th grade global studies all that well (maybe because I knew it was bullshit?), so I had to admit ignorance on this topic at first. But after doing a little bit of online fact-checking, it seems as though Thanksgiving was more of a violent act of ethnic cleansing than the tolerant, multi-cultural celebration we've been taught. I definitely find it interesting that there are so many extreme versions of the story... but I wasn't there, so I really can't say what went down for sure. However, I can say that as 1984ish and robotic as it is for the whole country to eat the same meal on the same day because they were told to do so, these holidays can bring families together in a positive way. You can't always just see red.
Friday, November 16, 2007
Here's Another Hit...
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Real Recognize Real
I swear... if people don't get it this time around, I'm losing faith in mankind.
Monday, November 12, 2007
The Best Rappers Alive
As a confessed Waynehead, I downloaded The Drought #4 mixtape last week:
Even though I've heard far too much Wayne this year, I wasn't upset to hear a just little bit more. Insert your stan comment if you wish (I know everyone complains that he's tired), but Wayne always brings something new to the table for me. Whether it's a different flow, a great delivery or just an overall ridiculous statement to LOL at, I always find his bafoonery refreshing. He even SINGS on "I Like It"... not just a hook either, but for the track's entirety. I read in The Fader that singing is something he wants to conquer, but not from the "talented vocal" standpoint... for him, it's more about having a "unique" vocal swagger. Getting on his Prince shit, so to speak (pg. 47). I therefore assume we'll be seeing more of this is the future.
I brought this up not because I think all the tracks on the mixtape are incredible, but because many stood out, having me think "I wouldn't be upset if this was on the new album." Can't be mad at that!
Speaking of The Carter III, it drops 12/18... the same day as The Cool, from my other hero... Lupe the Great. And by the way, I heard Lupe's album 2 weeks ago in the office and I was blown away.
Bottom line, these two dudes are MY "kept" dudes. Am I torn over 12/18? Yes and no. This whole thing is clearly meant to be.
LUPE spits that intellectual fire... relentlessly stubborn, "way above their heads" verbals that you can still smell hours after listening. WAYNE takes a more savage approach, plowing us over with ignorant rapper stereotypes woven into his rhymes. But don't underestimate him; his portrayed ignorance has nothing to do with his level of intelligence. I, for one, think Weezy's a crazy genius. LUPE, on the other hand, would never participate in such things... equally as brilliant, he'd rather educate and inspire his listeners by letting them decipher and decode the more progressive messages beneath his words.
On the surface, it appears as though they're coming from opposite sides of the hip hop spectrum... similarly to Kanye and 50's 9/11 battle, it could be said that "Hip Hop" (Lupe) is battling "Rap" (Wayne). But if you examine the fundamentals of both, they're strikingly similar: VERSATILE FLOWS, CREATIVE WORDPLAY/LYRICISM, UNIQUE DELIVERY... all aspects of what I consider to be a great MC. But to each their own, right?
Unfortunately, "Kanye" can't win this time... Wayne has the south on lock, and we haven't really broken Lupe yet, SMH. I just wish both of my boys get the numbers AND the critical acclaim that they respectively deserve.
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Graphic Displays Melt the Steel Like Blacksmiths
My favorites are below:)... enjoy!