Read The Label: Def Jam

10/08/2009

DEF JAMSpeaks for itself.

This month, there’s a lot going on in tribute to Def Jam, hip-hop’s longest-running and greatest record label of all time, and rightfully so. Russell Simmons and Rick Rubin‘s lil’ independent label that had trouble even getting a distribution deal has ended up becoming quite the empire over these last 25 years, which deserves all the respect in the world.

I remember when they had a 10th Anniversary CD set come out in ’95, which was an impressive collection in itself. I used to wonder how major it would be if they were to make it to 25 like Motown did, and damn if they haven’t done it. I always pictured that in this event, there’d be a big show in its honor, and would be just as big for my generation as the Motown25 show was for the oldheads back when I was a kid. As it turns out, we’re just getting a two-hour show on VH1, but I ain’t bitchin’. In addition to the Hip-Hop Honors show that’ll be airing on the 13th, there’s a new issue of XXL that’ll be covering Def Jam’s history as well.

def jam xxl

BUT… one thing that a lot of people can’t help but notice about both of these is the absence of some of Def Jam’s main stars. Take a look at the XXL cover, for example. You would commonly hear there’s a “Def Jam 25″ cover and expect to see LL Cool J, Jay-Z, Public Enemy, DMX, Beastie Boys… even Ludacris and Ja Rule for that matter, right? No dis to those who are on the cover, but I don’t think anyone thinks “Def Jam” and instantly pictures Juelz Santana and Warren G. This is like if Motown had a cover back in the day, and there was no Diana Ross or Smokey Robinson, but The Commodores were on it like a muh’fukka. I’m sure they tried to get some of the more notable figures to be on it, but C’mon Son!

Russell & Rubin

Ah well, TV shows and magazines aside, Def Jam is still here after all these years. That’s a serious feat, because there’s a lot of labels that were just as strong and bigger than Def Jam that aren’t around anymore. This decade has eaten up and consolidated damn near all of ‘em- you seen a new artist on Arista or Elektra lately? Even in comparison to other hip-hop labels that held weight at one point- where they at? No Limit? Gone. Tommy Boy? Gone. Cold Chillin’? Loooong gone. Bad Boy? Technically still around, but let’s not kid ourselves. Death Row? Living off nostalgia more than the site you’re on right now.

RockTheBells

Def Jam was, at more than one point in time, THE place to be. It was like an automatic stamp of legitimacy- if a new artist had that logo on the back of their record/tape/CD, even if you’d never heard the record, there was an interest in hearing it. I once read an Alkaholiks interview where their DJ E-Swift said that back in the ’80s, he would see a record in the store and buy it just off the strength of it being from Def Jam. Only a few can claim that kind of influence, and Def Jam did it during the ’80s and early ’90s through the work of LL, The Beasties, P.E., Slick Rick, EPMD, Redman, Onyx, and more.

flatlinerz

Now of course, every at-bat wasn’t a homerun. Even at their height, Russ n’nem had a lil’ trouble getting some artists over. But it really started happening around the mid-’90s, as Bad Boy and Death Row were now at the top of the line. For every Method Man or Warren G album that scored, there were twice as many that bricked. Some were by new artists like Russell’s nephew and his friends The Flatlinerz, who had the DJ staff believing that some shit called U.S.A. (Under Satan’s Authority) was gonna pop off. Others were things like solo albums by Pete Nice and MC Serch, which proved that the 3rd Bass group was far more an asset than its individual members. By ’95, even Public Enemy were doing their part to make Def Jam the label that used to be the shit.

RAP TOUR

That continued on for a couple more years, with every Foxy Brown being matched by a Jayo Felony. It was nothing that hadn’t happened before- even Motown reached a point where nobody was checkin’ for the Temptations‘ new shit. But then… unlike 95% of the other labels that fall off, Def Jam came back. A Jay-Z album here, a DMX album there… next thing you knew, everything coming out of that building was a hit. Whether it was through skillful promotion, quality of the music, or street team members buying the albums back, DJ was once again in power. I’m almost convinced that by the end of the ’90s, they coulda put out a new Afros album and the shit woulda sold.

Def Jam 25

They’ve done just about the same during the 2000′s with Kanye, Jeezy, Luda, Ja, and even some R&B/pop acts like NeYo and Rihanna. They’ve had their share of bricks too, but nowhere near that ’93-’96 type of fuckery. Much like Motown was when they had their big celebration, Def Jam is still very much alive. The logo still means something, and that’s impressive in a time where not many of ‘em do.

As it stands in 2009, even with its original founders practicing Yoga and Buddhism not being at the helm anymore, Chuck D said it best- they can’t disable the power of the label.

-D!


True Confessions

09/29/2009

hip hop confessions

Shoutout to Skillz for creating one of the most entertaining things I’ve seen lately, Hip-Hop Confessions. It began as a website which has since made its way to MTVJams as a half-hour special. On this show, everyone from fans to artists are able to shoot the shit about their likes/dislikes/unpopular opinions/etc. regarding hip-hop (the wildest being Joe Budden‘s admission to never having owned a KRS-One album). Everybody has a few, and since I’m no rookie at lettin’ out some of my own crazy-ass admissions, here’s a few more to wrap your head around:

94jay 1. Jay-Z’s Speed-Raps? Nnnnah: For all the great things he’s done, I think the best decision Mr. Carter’s ever made was getting off that “jiggedy-jiggedy-Jay”-type shit. If that didn’t happen, there’s a lot that would be missing from these last 14 years of music and pop culture- including him. Outside of one or two songs, I can really do without the whole early-mid ’90s speed-rappin’ Jigga. Incidentally, I do like “Nigga What, Nigga Who” from the Hard Knock Life album- he’s practically doin’ the same thing, but the execution is MUCH better than that money-machine-sound-effect shit he was on before.

Jay-Z “I Can’t Get Wit Dat” (1995)

ugk

2. I’ve Never Heard A UGK Album: I understand why they’re highly regarded. I understand Pimp C‘s acclaim as a producer, and that Bun B is one of the most respected lyricists from the South. Still, I’d be lyin’ if I said they were ever on my radar like that. Though I’ve known of UGK since “Pocket Full Of Stones” from the Menace II Society soundtrack, there was always a gang of other stuff I was more interested in hearing whenever they had an album out. Maybe I should make it a point to check out one of those albums someday. In the meantime though, as it stands on September 29, 2009… I’ve not heard one in its entirety.

UGK “One Day” (1996)

common sense 1

3. Common Sense > Common: It’s almost a cliche to like the introspective, mature, kinder, gentler, hemp sweater-wearing Common who loves all the children and deaf chicks. Me myself personally? Eh. I’m much more a fan of the brash, comical Common Sense who made songs about cockblockers and such. I even rock with the Common Sense that teetered between the comical and the introspective on Resurrection. But it all pretty much ended for me when he got into cuttin’ up pieces of mango and shit. I’m not sayin’ artists can’t evolve as musicians and human beings. I’m just sayin’ Erykah Badu might be some kinda witch who turns rappers into hippies.

Common Sense “Soul By The Pound (Remix)” (1993)

hip hop hooray

4. If I Never Hear “Hip-Hop Hooray” In My Life Again, I’m Good: There’s a lot of songs I’ve heard over and over that I still don’t get tired of. I may not listen to ‘em every day, but I don’t mind hearin’ them whenever they might happen to pop up on the iPod. There’s this one song though… this one song that I could live to be 100 and die the next day without hearin’ anymore: fukkin’ “Hip-Hop Hooray” by Naughty By Nature. It’s not that I think it’s a bad song, even tho’ the hook is kinda hokey- it’s just that I’ve heard the shit so much. I’ve literally been sick of it since like ’93, and I don’t see that changing.

Naughty By Nature “Hip-Hop Hooray” (1993)

hammerpumps

5. I Actually Like “Pumps & A Bump”: Um, yeah. That “Pumps & A Bump”. The Hammer song from when he tried to come back on some tough shit. The song that’s supposed to be about scantily-clad women, but is mostly remembered for him dancin’ around the pool with his dick aaallll in the videooo. I don’t care for any of that business, but I like that beat, and that part at the end when Aaron Hall starts goin’ in. Of course this song is awful, and I know this- but the sheer retardation of it is what makes it entertaining to me. Now bring them pumps and flex that bump.

Hammer “Pumps & A Bump” (1994)

There’s many more where those came from, and I might throw ‘em out there at another time, but I feel I’ve embarrassed myself enough for one day. Now, it’s time for y’all to come clean: what are some of your confessions? I won’t tell nobody…

-D!


Summer Seven Series: 1999

08/24/2009

danj99

Aight, so… shoutout to everybody who followed the Summer Seven Series from the get-go, or went back and checked ‘em all out. I enjoyed yappin’ about all the bullshit and craziness I did during the different summers of the ’90s. Today, I conclude the Series with the summer of 1999.

92qjams

I was 19 and a couple years out of school. I had a lil’ bit of money and I was starting to DJ more parties. I was really hopin’ to parlay my 92Q stuff into more opportunities at the station, but not much happened there. I kept contact with the top DJ at the station for a while, sending him tapes and inquiring about possibly joining the team, but mainly just got the run-around on that. I kept it movin’ though, not letting that prevent what I wanted to do, which at the time was some of every got-damn thing. I didn’t know if I wanted to rap, DJ, write- any road that was possible, I was hoping for the chance to take it.

Looking back now, I really shoulda tried to continue on with the lil’ bit of rep I got from “the Cipha”. Had the “srtist mixtape” phenomenon been going on, I likely would’ve done some of those and tried to get ‘em circulated. At the time though, I was more concerned with getting my own beats to rhyme over, which I didn’t have much access to. I knew one or two people who had the equipment, but didn’t seem interested in actually doing anything. In retrospect, I feel like I def. shoulda ventured out to meet people who could’ve been of further assistance in keeping the ball rollin’. But of course, hindsight is always 20/20.

downtownBaltimore

Other than that, I was still all about watchin’ videos all day, and listenin’ to music whenever I wasn’t watchin’ em. I was spending a lot of time in downtown Baltimore, sometimes just on some “get out the house” shit. I had a lil’ interest in this chick I knew named Brandie, but that went all kinds of awry. I was mostly just coasting during ’99, living at my mother’s house and applying to get my own apartment (which finally happened in 2000). It was a decent-enough summer, if not a lil’ anti-climactic.

OK, so… since we’re at the end of this road, let’s just keep it real (like they used to say). By this point, you’ve noticed a lot of my summers were boring as all hell. I didn’t always have as much fun as I should’ve, and some of these years were on some real introvert shit. But whatever went on, I was still able to enjoy the music- which further proves how big of a fan I was. Hence, the site you’re on right now. See how it all ties together in the end? I hope y’all have enjoyed the Summer Seven Series, and now “without any further TO DO” (c) Carlito Brigante…

quietstorm

The Danj! Summer Seven of 1999

Mobb Deep feat. Lil’ Kim “Quiet Storm” (Remix): Queensbridge meets Queen Bitch, and puts another classic in the Mobb catalogue. It’s the real… hip-hop.

Q-Tip “Vivrant Thing”: This was another one of those joints I hated at first, but got into it later. Some Quest fans felt this was a commercial departure from his original style, but I still had to rock with that beat… R.I.P. J. Dilla.

Jay-Z “Jigga My Nigga”: With Swizz on the beat, Jay-Z keeps his momentum going with a track from the Ruff Ryders Ryde Or Die compilation. Niggas betta get it right, bitches betta get it right.

Cam’ron “Let Me Know”: Prior to Dipset taking off, Cam starts the movement and moves away from being seen as a Mase sidekick. The Monday Night Football theme manages to sound even more epic than it already was.

Maxwell “Fortunate”: Maxwell, with his music’s long-lasting ability to cut thru whatever else is going on at the moment, does it in ’99. Hard to believe he’s still doin’ the same in ’09.

50 Cent feat. Madd Rapper “How To Rob”: The song that set shit off for 50 and made all kinds of rappers mad. With “The Mad Rapper” doing his usual rants-n-raves, 50 names off all the artists he’d like to catch out there.

Ja Rule “Holla Holla”: Speaking of 50 makin’ rappers mad, Ja Rule’s debut album gets set off with this one right here. Also notable for the video that made Gloria Velez the shit for the next two years, but that’s neither here nor there.

(AND IN CASE YOU MISSED ALLLLL THE OTHERS: Check out the whole Summer Seven Series HERE)

-D!


Summer Seven Series: 1998

08/17/2009

noodlesO-Kaaay. Last week was kinda like a tough one, and I caught a brick the other day. RESET.

streets

SO… in ’98, I was staying at my older brother Kawann‘s apartment in Reisterstown, Md. Shit was cool for the most part, even though we bumped heads about certain stuff like my leaving lights on in different rooms and smashin’ all the lunchmeat. I mainly remember my time spent there because of three things: drinkin’ Bud Ice, eatin’ Oodles of Noodles every day, and runnin’ the shit out of Streets Is Watching on the VCR. I think every last person that visited the apartment saw that tape at least once, cause we watched that shit REGULARLY.

I was 18 and still not up to much except trying to get my money situation right. Most of the time, I was in the house- either tryin’ to convince a girl to come all the way out there via MTA, or watchin’ BET all day long. Wild to think that there was a time when I’d literally watch that one station from 9 a.m. to late in the evening, just tapin’ videos. Nowadays, I don’t even watch videos (or BET), but ’98 was a whole ‘nother story. Other times, I chilled with my brother and his friends- at least when they went to places that I wasn’t too young to get into.

austinrock

Also, during that time, I got back into watching wrestling. I had gradually lost interest in it since ’92, and eventually stopped watching it altogether. One day, I happened to see Monday Night Raw on Prevue Guide (now the TV Guide channel), so I figured I’d check it out on a whim. What I ended up seeing was some shit waaay different than I remembered it. One of the main reasons I had stopped watching was because it was all kid-catered and I was getting older… but now it was about things I liked as a teenager (i.e. profanity and sexual innuendo). It was catchy enough to make me continue watching, so I did.

Near the end of the summer, I heard 92Q having a call-in battle segment of sorts called “The Cipha” (the same segment Cassidy held dowm in Philly when the host Neke was on their station). I called in to appear on the show one Friday night, and for the following month, I was the champion. I had to do it four times a week, but I was always ready to go in soon as 9:30 p.m. hit. Crazily, no matter how much I figure nobody remembers it, I’ve run into at least one person every year since then who still recalls that. I’ve tried to avoid makin’ that my Al Bundy/”four touchdowns in one game” story, but it never fails.

Summer ’98 was fun, if not much else. Nothin’ to complain about here- I weighed about a buck-oh-five, ate every piece of lunchmeat and package of Oodles in the house, eventually got a chick to make the long-ass MTA trip, rhymed on the radio, rediscovered a childhood interest, and taped hundreds of videos. It was what it was.

aaliyah

The Danj! Summer Seven Series of 1998:

Aaliyah “Are U That Somebody”: With Timbaland still pushing limits with his beats (baby noises and no hi-hats), Aaliyah locks the summer of ’98 all the way down.

Noreaga “Super Thug”: “What, what, what, what, what, w-what!” Nore makes a hot hook out of ONE word. On top of that, the beat was insane, provided by The Neptunes. Who knows what Nore was talkin’ about, but it didn’t even matter.

Big Pun feat. Joe “Still Not A Player”: Pun remixes his own “I’m Not A Player” with Joe rewriting his hook from his own “Don’t Wanna Be A Player”… and everybody goes crazy.

Tamia “So Into You”: If you watched BET between June and September ’98, there’s no way in hell you didn’t see this shit. The homie Fabolous likes this song, and so do I, and so should you.

Goodie MOB feat. OutKast “Black Ice”: The Dungeon Family‘s two strongest links collab for one of my favorite tracks by either group. This song also made me a SERIOUS fan of Andre‘s lyricism.

Jay-Z feat. Memphis Bleek “It’s Alright”: When I say we were killin’ that Streets Is Watching soundtrack, it’s some real shit. Jay-Z, nigga- thaaat’s riiight.

Rell feat. Jay-Z “Love 4 Free”: Rell’s prob’ly still tryna find out what his album’s release date is… but at least he got a (turrible) video and a hot song out of his Roc-A-Fella deal in ’98. More Streets Is Watching soundtrackery.

ANNND IN CASE YOU MISSED ‘EM: Check out the other Summer Sevens HERE.

-D! (one more week of the Summer Seven to go)


Summer Seven Series: 1996

08/03/2009

danj!

’96what a summer. By then, I was starting to perform at showcases here-n-there, improving with the DJing, and generally enjoying my responsibility-free life. I wasn’t rockin’ with Aisha around that time, but I was off into other stuff (so to speak) and lookin’ forward to my senior year.

bigblunts

I still remember the last day of school, riding home on the bus listening to Lost Boyz’ Legal Drug Money. That same day, I went to my father’s house in Bel Air and chilled out there with my little younger brother Erin for a good 2-3 weeks. That was an interesting lil’ “vacation” because it was the first (and 5th, and 10th) time I smoked weed. It was also interesting because this nigga hung around all kinds of muh’fukkas. So we’d do anything from smokin’ with this grungy, Grateful Dead-shirt wearin’ kid to chillin’ with some lil’ rich girl who stayed in her parents’ liquor cabinet. It was some different shit for me, but I wasn’t mad at it.

I also spent a lot of time at Music Liberated on Saratoga St. that summer. That was where a lot of DJ’s around town went for records, because they always had them before most other stores. I was trying to make some kinda breakthrough by meeting people and getting my tapes heard, so I would hang out at the store, sometimes just to listen to records all day. I’d also occasionally make copies of a tape, go up there, and give them to everybody at the store for the fuck of it.

The one thing I remember most about the summer of ’96 was my homegirl Jada. At that point, she was the only girl I knew that I could talk music with, not to mention the only girl I actually liked talkin’ to for hours at a time. It was nothin’ for us to start a phone conversation at 10 p.m. and finally end it as the sun was coming up. It didn’t matter if the convo was about something as simple as how funny Chris Rock’s Bring The Pain was- we’d talk all night like we hadn’t spoken in years. We had lil’ sayings/inside jokes, passed notes in school all the time, and rarely went one full day without callin’ each other.

It’s wild in hindsight, because even though it never went past cool-level, everybody around us didn’t seem to wanna believe that. People in school SWORE we were GTD-in’, my friends thought I was in love with her, and her friends didn’t understand why we didn’t get together. I def. wouldn’t have minded, but we were just cool-as-fukk, because we had a lot of similar interests (and common enemies). Sometimes I think it was thisclose to gettin’ there… but a poor choice of words on my behalf deaded whatever chance existed, and from there things broke down FAST. By September, we were in the hallway at school exchanging “fuck you”‘s like ‘Pac and Janet in Poetic Justice.

There’s a GANG of songs from ’96 (including the seven featured this week) that always remind me of Jada to this day. I mean, I don’t sit around obsessing over her all the time, but the songs remind me because we always had the radio on in the background whenever we talked on the phone. I’ll always remember that summer for how tight we were. Well, that and the obscene amount of weed I smoked with E.

total

The Danj! Summer Seven Of 1996 (Want ‘em? Freakin’ click ‘em):

2Pac “Hit ‘Em Up”: I’ll always maintain that I was a bigger fan of B.I.G. than I was of ‘Pac. But damn if I didn’t play this to death. That rant at the end is timeless.

Case feat. Foxy Brown “Touch Me, Tease Me”: Young Inga meets some random new R&B cat, and a classic is made. And for the record, the faces this nigga Case makes in the video used to have me geekin’.

Jay-Z feat. Foxy Brown “Ain’t No Nigga”: More Young Inga! Here, she meets some random kinda-new rap dude, and a classic is made. Who coulda correctly guessed which one would end up being the bigger star?

Nas feat. Lauryn Hill “If I Ruled The World”: Nas might have caught a lil’ flack for going mainstream-ish with It Was Written, but he made it count with this joint (especially with Lauryn on the hook). I miss Ms. Hill.

Gina Thompson feat. Missy Elliott “The Things You Do” (Bad Boy Remix): Hee-hee-hee-hee-how-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-HOW the hell did that line catch on like it did? Who knows, but this shit was hot.

LL Cool J feat. Total “Loungin” (Remix): Of course, I love most of those old ’90s-jack-the-’80s joints, and this might be one of my favorites. Who do you love?

Total feat. Puff Daddy “Kissing You (Oh Honey)”: More Total! This song never fails to make me nostalgic- even the video has “summer ’96″ written all over it.

AND IN CASE YOU MISSED ‘EM: The other Summer Sevens are HERE.

-D!


Attempted Murder

07/10/2009

xxlmurder

So here’s what happened:

In the spring of ’95, I first heard Jay-Z, DMX, and Ja Rule on the same track. It was the B-side of Mic Geronimo‘s “Masta I.C.” single, on a song called “Time To Build” (produced by Mic’s man DJ Irv). At that time, Mic was an underground artist on TVT Records, and yet more well-known than any of the other parties involved. The song was OK, but nothing I retained much from. Ja and X sounded like the average raspy-voiced rappers from NY during that era, and Jay was ehhh- still not fully out of that hyper shit he was on at the time.

Three years later, I heard them together again. By early-’98, things had changed. Jay wasn’t a household name yet, but he was successful, not to mention one of my favorites. X was the “new” artist everybody was checkin’ for, off the strength of his numerous guest appearances. Ja was a former member of the Cash Money Click (not that one) who was also supposed to be coming out with his debut soon. They were all in together on a Clue tape, doing the opening freestyle that later became known as “Murdergram”.

jarulexjayzdjirv

A year later, it was a whole different story. Jay was officially a superstar with his Vol. 2: Hard Knock Life album. X was on top of the world with his albums, It’s Dark & Hell Is Hot and Flesh of My Flesh, Blood of My Blood. Ja’s debut album, Venni Vetti Vecci, was highly-anticipated at this point- mostly due to his appearance on Jay’s “Can I Get A” single. DJ Irv was now Irv Gotti, and he was known as the guy responsible for putting this new movement together. The Hard Knock Life Tour was selling out city-to-city, and hip-hop in general was a HUGE deal.

So then, out comes a new issue of the relatively-new XXL magazine. The cover story is about an upcoming project, slated to hit the stores later that year: Murder Inc., comprised of Jay-Z, DMX, and Ja Rule. Wow- couldn’t have happened at a better time. They were amongst the hottest names in hip-hop, popular on the street level and mainstream-wise, and there was no way the album could fall short of its expectations from a creative or sales standpoint. I read this article, as Gotti raved about how they were about to go SO hard with this album, and how it was gonna be on N.W.A. levels of unabashed nigga-ness and so forth. I was ready to hear it, as I’m sure a lot of people were.

And of course… after the cover story, the tour, the ads… it never happened. I’m just guessing, but the thing that killed the chances of the Murder Inc. project ever coming out was likely the same thing that built the hype for it. X and Jay weren’t the same dudes who were battling each other in a pool hall five years earlier, and Ja wasn’t about to be X’s hypeman like he’d been previously. They all became top-tier stars with their own crews to lead.

murderers

Next thing you knew, “Murder Inc.” was the record label headed by Irv, and the closest we got to a Murder Inc. album was that terrible compilation. Instead of some murderously bloody Jay/X/Ja collabs, we instead got treated to the “talents” of Black Child and Vita. Then, Ja started suggesting that if not for his willingness to fall back and wait his turn, “maybe” X wouldn’t have been signed to Def Jam, and “maybe” Jay wouldn’t have had a hit with “Can I Get A”. Following that, the party was over. X dissed Ja, Ja dissed X, X and Jay shot subliminals back and forth, and Irv only cared but so much because he was busy piping promoting Ashanti and counting his cash.

So here it is 10 years later. Ja Rule scored a fair share of hits from singing his little heart out during the earlier part of this decade, but he’s finished now. DMX has gone from arguably the most popular rapper of ’98 to whatever the fuck this is. Irv is… the guy with the reality show on VH1? Jay-Z is literally controlling the fate of his own career at this point- not to mention the richest artist in hip-hop. It’s kinda a shame that those four egos couldn’t have gotten on the same page long enough to put the album together back in ’99. Instead, all we have is a couple tracks to indicate how it might’ve sounded… which I guess will have to be good enough.

ddd.black.crime.ja.rule.dmx.jay.z.

It was probably the easiest thing in the world to get them all together when neither one knew where their careers were headed. But the bigger they got, they probably felt like they didn’t need to work together, so it could either happen or not- emphasis being on “not”. When it boils down, the Murder Inc. project was meant to happen in 1999, and 1999 only. It would’ve been less relevant any year before then, and not as urgent any year afterward. It’s one of hip-hop’s biggest never-happened moments that coulda shut the game down 10 years ago, but would mean jackshit if it happened tomorrow.

Mic Geronimo featuring Ja Rule, Jay-Z, & DMX “Time To Build” (1995)

Jay-Z, Ja Rule, & DMX “Murdergram” (1998)

Ja Rule featuring DMX & Jay-Z “It’s Murda” (1999)

-D!


The ’90s Loved The ’80s!

06/08/2009

real80s90s

First of all, I wanna big up everyone who checked me out during the first week of DanjLovesThe90s. Just to let y’all know, I’m just gettin’ started, so be sure to keep coming back!

NOW… if you love Hip-Hop and R&B from the ’90s, you kinda automatically love the ’80s by degree of separation. A lot of the biggest hits from the ’90s were songs that borrowed heavily and liberally from ’80s R&B and Pop music. Most artists spent the first half of the decade trying to get away from the one before it, but they ended up spending the second half revisiting it. I ‘m kinda surprised that music of the ’90s hasn’t been heavily re-used during this decade in a similar manner, but then again… I guess it’d be a lil’ harder to do.

A lot of people cried foul when this craze was going on, because they felt it was a little lazy to just snatch loops from songs that were already poppin’ years prior. I saw where they were coming from, but at the same time, I think a lot of them only felt that way because they vividly recalled the songs that were being used. It was no different than when half of Cali spent the early-’90s using funk records from the ’70s, or when hip-hop of the late-’80s practically raided James Brown‘s catalog of the ’60s. It was just more in their faces now that the music of their youth was being jacked.

Admittedly, in some instances, it was unimaginative and somewhat of a get-a-hit-quick move. I’d still have to say some quality songs came out of that trend, though. In keeping with the m.o. of DanjLovesThe90s, I’ll now mention a few of what will be a number of instances where the ’90s sampled the ’80s to great effect. And, as usual… you wanna hear ‘em, click ‘em.

jayhustlemelisa-morgan-fools-paradise-uk-12

Jay-Z’s “Can’t Knock The Hustle” (Remix) sampled Meli’sa Morgan’s “Fool’s Paradise”: In ’86, Meli’sa Morgan was a big-haired R&B talent known for her hit “Do Me Baby” and her smaller hit, “Fool’s Paradise”. The latter song found Meli’sa hoping her significant other hadn’t gotten caught up in the “bright lights and big city”, as it wasn’t all it was cracked up to be from her standpoint. 10 years later, Jay-Z recruited Mary J. Blige to sing a piece of it for his single, “Can’t Knock The Hustle”. In light of its’ popularity, he remixed it with the full “…Paradise” sample and a Meli’sa feature (which she KILLS). Couldn’t knock it.

foxywilde

Foxy Brown feat. BlackStreet “Get Me Home” sampled Eugene Wilde’s “Gotta Get You Home Tonight”: Speaking of Jay, he also wrote an even bigger hit for another artist around the same time. Brooklyn‘s Foxy Brown was 17 years old and the raunchiest female rapper out, second only to Lil’ Kim. However, she toned down the “playin’ inside my pubic hairs” talk long enough to score a smash with “Get Me Home”, which sampled a 1984 hit by Eugene Wilde. With BlackStreet on the hook and the Trackmasters on the… track, Foxy set things off nicely for her debut album, Ill Na Na. Oh, and props to whoever suggested Fox throw in the “uh-oh, uh-oh!” on the hook.

az

AZ’s “Sugar Hill” sampled Juicy’s “Sugar Free”: I’ve mentioned a few times on other sites that while AZ has spent a lot of his career being considered “Nas‘ homeboy”, he actually did something with his first single that Nas didn’t do until his fifth: he scored a legit nationwide hit. The MissJones-featured “Sugar Hill” was hot around mid-’95, and it borrowed from a song that was moderately popular 10 years prior. Juicy’s “Sugar Free” was a minor R&B hit that my mother happened to love, thus I already recognized (and appreciated) it once AZ used it.

lbfamclubnouveau_jealousy_12

Lost Boyz “Lifestyles Of The Rich & Shameless” sampled Club Nouveau’s “Jealousy”: This one fucked my head up, because I was completely oblivious to it for a whole 12 years after “Lifestyles…” dropped. “Jealousy” was a hit by Club Nouveau in 1986. It was also a “dis record” of sorts aimed at the Timex Social Club, whom Nouveau member Jay King had a falling-out with after producing their hit, “Rumors”. Producer Easy Mo Bee managed to slow this record waaaay down and utilize it for the LB Fam’s first hit in ’95. Only a visit to The-Breaks.com in ’07 gave me any idea that “Lifestyles…” sampled “Jealousy”. I can usually spot a familiar sample, but for years, I’d liked both of those songs without ever connecting one to the other.

Much like the “Posse”, I’ll be revisiting this topic here and there in future entries. There’s a lot more that did just as well (if not better) at making the ’80s new for a whole ‘nother generation. It was definitely an important part, for better or worse, of ’90s Hip-Hop, as well as R&B for that matter.


Stop, Wait, Reverse The Tape… “Death of Autotune”… Thanks, Jay!

06/06/2009

younghova

Maaan… didn’t wanna do this because it’s not exactly in the format… but on behalf of those who’ve had their fill of all this rampant robotic singing and rapping (whom I suspect, could also happen to love the ’90s)… gotta.

This was needed and necessary, because anyone coulda stepped up and addressed it, but niggas were takin’ too long. I just heard a new song yesterday by Mary J. Blige… yeah, MARY J. BLIGE, where even SHE’s using it. When artists who are seen as leaders are now following a trend YEARS after it became prominent, it’s time to call for a pulling of the plug. Besides, let’s be real: it’s peaked. There’s nowhere else for it to go. No one’s gonna make a career out of it like T-Pain did. No one’s gonna make a better album with it than ‘Ye did. No one’s gonna have a bigger single than Jamie Foxx just had with “Blame It”. Let’s move along…

HUGE Shout-Out to Jia for the link, in addition to the advice and assistance she’s given as far as this very site goes. No DJ, no drops, here we go:

Jay-Z “D.O.A. (Death Of Autotune)” (2009)

Aight, back to the ’90s in a lil’ bit. More posse on the way… Butt In The Meantime, what’cha think of this?

-D!


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