Run This Town or Make Her Say?
song showdown
thu 8/27/2009
"Life's a game but it's not fair, I break the rules so I don't care, so I keep doin' my own thing, walkin' tall against the rain."
Artist: Jay-Z featuring Rihanna and Kanye West
Song: Run This Town
Album: The Blueprint 3
Produced by: No I.D.
After "DOA" made Jay-Z relevant again, Jay-Hova has returned to stake his claim as the king of hip hop over distorted guitars and martial drum rolls.
OR
"She wanna have whatever she like, she can if she bring her friends, and we can have one hell of a night… through the day."
Artist: Kid Cudi featuring Common and Kanye West
Song: Make Her Say
Album: Man on the Moon: The End of Day
Produced by: Kanye West
Kid Cudi flips Lady Gaga's "Poker Face" and references T.I's "Whatever You Like" while Common mentions Jamie Foxx's "Blame It." Wait, who's song is this again?
check out time
daily dos
tue 8/11/2009
McLovin of Superbad and rap star Common re-imagine the movie Training Day.
all apologies
daily dos
tue 7/21/2009
Kid Cudi is in the driver's seat in a new video featuring Kanye West and Common, "Make Her Say (Poke Her Face)." (via Concrete Loop)
movin' on up
daily dos
fri 6/12/2009
The Jonas Brothers rob a bank with… Common? on a new song, "Don’t Charge Me for the Crime."
hats off
daily dos
wed 3/18/2009
The Ocarina of Rhyme: Music from the Legend of Zelda mashed up with Jay-Z, Dr. Dre and Common.
Akon, Common, Fall Out Boy, Keyshia Cole and Kevin Rudolf
the music press
mon 1/5/2009
- Senegalese-American singer-rapper Akon returns with Freedom, an album filled with "extremely breezy, Caribbean-tinged songs that are less hip-hop than lucid pop," according to The Boston Globe. "[H]is best songs [are] light, expertly constructed and just a touch insipid," writes The New York Times. Rolling Stone calls Freedom "pure melodrama about love and love lost, delivered in a hooting style over synth-swamped beats that are closer to early Peter Gabriel than to 2008 hip-hop."
- Rapper and actor Common drops Universal Mind Control, his eighth album. Spin magazine loves its retro sound: "While we're used to Common in the role of poetic prophet or self-righteous rhyme slayer, Universal Mind Control is primarily a rhythmic celebration, paying tribute to Afrika Bambaataa and Jonzun Crew jams." The Los Angeles Times applauds his new direction: "Common tries to break away, taking on a harder, naughtier persona and dipping his typically dusty grooves in executive producer Pharrell's cold chemical wash. For part of the album, the techno gambit blows fresh air into Common's paisley pondering."
- American pop-punkers Fall Out Boy release their fifth album, Folie à Deux (Madness For Two). "For all the negatives said, written or blogged about Fall Out Boy (and trust us, there are a lot), it's damn near impossible to fault the Chicago-born band for their creativity, ingenuity and willingness to try just about anything," gushes Alternative Press. The Onion's AV Club gives the album an "A" while underscoring that the band is overshadowed by bassist Pete Wentz's tabloid escapades: "While the adulation of millions of kids has made the Chicago quartet a platinum-selling arena act, the group inspires equally passionate disdain from non-fans, who made 'Wentz' slang for 'douche.'"
- California R&B singer-songwriter Keyshia Cole is back with a new hairdo and a new album, A New Me. USA Today calls it "sexier [and] more playful," featuring "much less pain than on previous works." Entertainment Weekly thinks she's "chosen an odd way to escape" the Mary J. Blige comparisons, since Cole "turns her focus from heartbreak to happiness only a few years after Blige promised she was done with drama." Allmusic digs the change of pace: "Cole pushes herself into new territory and becomes a more versatile songwriter and vocalist in convincing, frequently thrilling, fashion."
- Miami based producer and rocker Kevin Rudolf releases In The City, an album that "cribs tricks from both rap and rock 'n' roll, not in the pursuit of a bastardized Limp Bizkit-type hybrid, but with the intention to produce a crossover rock record with modern hip-hop tools," according to the BBC. Despite the album's flaws, hip hop webzine Rap Reviews enjoys Rudolf's Cash Money Records debut: "In the City offers good production, excellent melodies, and – of course – the same song, ideas, and kinds of guest appearances many times over. Still, I'd recommend it as a blueprint for potential."
get off your ass
daily dos
wed 10/8/2008
Check out Universal Mind Control from Common featuring a robotic Pharrell. (via Nah Right)
wildin' out
daily dos
thu 8/28/2008
The number of New York City residents who contracted the HIV virus in 2006 is three times higher than the national average, according to the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.
wildin' out
daily dos
thu 8/28/2008
T-Pain goes crazy with computer animation on the video for "Can't Believe It," featuring Lil Wayne. Common keeps it simple in Announcement featuring Pharrell. (via Concreteloop)
wildin' out
daily dos
thu 8/28/2008
T-Pain goes crazy with computer animation on the video for "Can't Believe It," featuring Lil Wayne. Common keeps it simple in Announcement featuring Pharrell. (via Concreteloop)