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    bigpun

    Explore "bigpun" with insightful episodes like "Episode 198- Get That Pulp", "Episode 198- Get That Pulp", "Episode 8 | Retour sur 1998 avec Feelkast & Moodmuzik | Paroles Veritables Podcast", "Classic Album Debate #25: Capital Punishment" and "Episode 141 : Big/Donuts" from podcasts like ""Felipe's Garage", "Felipe's Garage", "Paroles Veritables Podcast", "The Liner Notes: Defining Hip-Hop's Classic Albums" and "Air Adam Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (25)

    Episode 198- Get That Pulp

    Episode 198- Get That Pulp

    Welp... another controversial Who Wore It Best, & a CRAZY movie for the Not Human Centipede segment! The whole squad is back, including The Young, for a wild adventure on this episode! Happy Thanksgiving, y'all! Press Play!!!

    FOLLOW US!

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    EMAIL US!

    FelipesGarage@gmail.com

    COP THAT MERCH!

    www.FelipesGarage.com

    CONTRIBUTE TO THE POD!

    PayPal.me/JasonPSoto

     

    We are truly grateful for ALL the mechanics out there who have continued to support us and the show! Thank You!

    Episode 198- Get That Pulp

    Episode 198- Get That Pulp

    Welp... another controversial Who Wore It Best, & a CRAZY movie for the Not Human Centipede segment! The whole squad is back, including The Young, for a wild adventure on this episode! Happy Thanksgiving, y'all! Press Play!!!

    FOLLOW US!

    www.instagram.com/felipesgarage

    http://www.facebook.com/felipesgaragepodcast

    http://www.youtube.com/felipesgaragepodcast

    EMAIL US!

    FelipesGarage@gmail.com

    COP THAT MERCH!

    www.FelipesGarage.com

    CONTRIBUTE TO THE POD!

    PayPal.me/JasonPSoto

     

    We are truly grateful for ALL the mechanics out there who have continued to support us and the show! Thank You!

    Episode 8 | Retour sur 1998 avec Feelkast & Moodmuzik | Paroles Veritables Podcast

    Episode 8 | Retour sur 1998 avec Feelkast & Moodmuzik | Paroles Veritables Podcast

    Après notre podcast sur l'anné 1996, nous devions nous pencher sur l'année 1998 qui est une année incroyable en terme de musique.


    Pour cet épisode, nous sommes accompagné de feelkast et Moodmuzik_ qui  reviennes avec nous sur cette année incroyable. 


    Les sorties, les meilleurs albums, les nouveaux artistes, les tournants musicaux... tout sera abordé dans cet épisode.  


    _________________________________

    Paroles Veritables Podcast, le podcast qui traite de la Musique, Culture et Lifestyle. 


    Par des passionnés, pour des passionnés.   


    #parolesveritables #montedanslescalator

    Classic Album Debate #25: Capital Punishment

    Classic Album Debate #25: Capital Punishment
    "Dead in the middle of Little Italy little did we know
    That we riddled some middlemen who didn't do diddly"

    -Twinz (Deep Cover '98)

    Next album up: Capital Punishment by Big Pun.  Released in '98, this was Pun's debut. This was also the first solo Latin Hip Hop record to go platinum.  Pun established himself as one of the greatest lyricists ever with this album.

    Is it a classic?

    Episode 141 : Big/Donuts

    Episode 141 : Big/Donuts

    Randy's Donuts

    "Go buy me a drink if you didn't buy the CD."

    - Double K

    February rolls around once again, and so we pay tribute to Big L, Big Pun, and J Dilla in the selection, as well as the recently-departed Double K from Los Angeles' People Under The Stairs. There are some very well known tracks in the mix as well as some new and somewhat obscure ones, combined lovingly for maximum flavour!

    Twitter : @airadam13

    Twitch : @airadam13

    Episode 141 : Big/Donuts

    Episode 141 : Big/Donuts

    Randy's Donuts

    "Go buy me a drink if you didn't buy the CD."

    - Double K

    February rolls around once again, and so we pay tribute to Big L, Big Pun, and J Dilla in the selection, as well as the recently-departed Double K from Los Angeles' People Under The Stairs. There are some very well known tracks in the mix as well as some new and somewhat obscure ones, combined lovingly for maximum flavour!

    Twitter : @airadam13

    Twitch : @airadam13


    Playlist/Notes

    Busta Rhymes : Still Shining

    The technical levels on this track are still stunning, even twenty-five years on from its release on "The Coming". J Dilla used to give Busta Rhymes beat tapes of the most awkward, left-field, off-the-wall material - the beats no other MCs could do anything with! The programming on this track is constantly shifting, moving from one drum and sample pattern to another, and Busta matches the changes with alterations to his flow and lyrical layout all the way through. The display of skill would go straight over the heads of non-heads (as it were), but if you can appreciate it, you have to nod and salute this track.

    J Dilla : Detroit Madness (Instrumental)

    The "Rebirth of Detroit" album is one definitely worth adding to your collection if you're a fan of the great J Dilla. It was a massive added bonus when an instrumental version was also released, so I can blend in gems like this :)

    Diamond D ft. Big L, Lord Finesse, A.G., and Fat Joe : 5 Fingas of Death

    Pure darkness here, nothing pretty about it - in fact, there were a few things in there I had to reverse myself, and it's still as rough as anything. Big L leads off the lineup of five MCs from the DITC crew as they spit gutter rhymes on this cut towards the end of Diamond's "Hatred, Passions, and Infidelity" album. For the longest I'd just assumed that he produced it himself, but this boom-bap killer is actually the work of Kid Capri, very much not in happy party mode!

    Big Pun : You Ain't A Killer

    I mean, I would assume that most of you are not? One of the signature Pun singles, with him pulling the cards of fake gangstas everywhere, including through the headphones! Younglord provides the beat on one of his first placements - he was still in high school when this was recorded. This was on the "Soul In The Hole" OST, but was no soundtrack filler - it also made it onto Pun's full-length debut "Capital Punishment".

    Dubbul O : Life

    New single from one of Manchester's finest, with Clay on the boards. If this is what he's been cooking up while we've all been stuck inside, I want an album! The Voodoo Black and Mothership Connection MC never slips when it comes to the rhymes, so definitely support his releases.

    Phife Dawg ft. Busta Rhymes and Redman : Nutshell Pt.2

    It was a nice surprise to hear this new single - the late great Phife alongside Busta and the Funk Doctor Spock for a taste of the posthumous solo album to come. My only criticism is that maybe the hook could have done a little more! Tidal credits the production to DJ Rasta Root, but the beat is from the original "Nutshell", which was a J Dilla production - so a little confusion there.

    [Pete Rock] J Dilla : The Ex (Instrumental)

    This is a selection from the instrumental version of "The Diary", the Dilla album that was originally entitled "Pay Jay" and intended for release in 2002 - but held up due to record company shenanigans. While you'd think he'd handle all the production himself, more than half the tracks were done by outsiders, with Dilla concentrating on the MCing. It's beautiful that this particular beat was done by his production hero, Pete Rock.

    Beatsy Collins : Bobby's Body (Beatsy Collins Remix)

    Killer cut! Sam Tweaks on Twitch put me up on this one when he played it on 45, and even though I don't buy many modern 45 releases (way too expensive), I absolutely had to have this. Beatsy Collins is a UK-based remixer/re-editor who is clearly doing great things when it comes to freaking old tracks! That said, he started with great source material, "Thinkin' About Your Body" by the acapella master Bobby McFerrin, which is worth checking in its own right. When that bass drops...

    Sunni Colón : Little Things

    This is the kind of record it feels like it's impossible to dislike! Sunni Colón is a singer/songwriter and self-taught producer originally out of Los Angeles, who by all accounts is one of those people who just bleeds creativity. This bumping Kaytranada-produced soul number was a single-only release from 2017 which is well worth adding to your collection, with its extremely casual drum timing, bouncing bassline, and vocals that are just the right fit.

    Clear Soul Forces : Runnin'

    This is a classy piece of Detroit music, with Ilajide taking the same sample that J Dilla used for Busta Rhymes' "Show Me What You Got", but flipping it in his own way with some banging drums. Even on their first full album, from which this is drawn ("Detroit Revolution(s)"), their skills were highly developed, as you can hear on this one, with the MCs indeed keeping pace with the beat with flavour.

    A Tribe Called Quest : Crew

    I was sitting for a good few hours trying to remember what the drums on the preceding track reminded me of, and eventually I realised it was this! This is a short track from the "Beats, Rhymes, and Life" LP, with Q-Tip going solo on the mic in storytelling mode. The Ummah (Tip, J Dilla, Ali Shaheed Muhammad) on production, as on the rest of the LP.

    [M-Phazes] Sean Price : Dump In The Gut (Instrumental)

    This one swaggers along headed by the horns, only to be periodically punctuated by the sound of the hammer! A quality instrumental from the "Land of the Crooks" EP.

    Camp Lo : Double Doors

    A super-obscure Camp Lo cut, which I don't think actually got commercial release, but was made available on the "Passion of the Weiss" blog back in 2010. Lyrically the Lo come through with the slang-heavy diamond crook business I love them for, over a 70s-styled beat courtesy of a producer called Reality. Check the video for some accompanying b-boy styles!

    Little Brother : Good Clothes

    If you can relate, then I'm right there with you! Classic track from "Getback" about trying to be fresh on a limited budget, with Illmind on the beat soundtracking it perfectly.

    People Under The Stairs : Listen

    Possibly the best track from "Carried Away", the seventh PUTS LP. The struggles of the everyman Hip-Hop artist are well-described, and anyone who's either been an underground performer - or been on the scene as a fan for long enough - will be able to hear what they're saying! I can't even describe the vibe of the beat, it's just really well-assembled and engineered with crispy drums, sneaky bass, and even finished off with some turntable work after the two verses. RIP Double K.

    Curren$y ft. Big K.R.I.T. & Smoke DZA : Skybourne

    Cruising music from the king of lifestyle! This is an old cut now, from 2010's "Pilot Talk", and Ski Beatz laced Curren$y with a laid-back floater which still has a solid groove on the low end. New Orleans, Meridian (Mississippi), and NYC combine on this one for pure vibes.

    Str8Beatz : Freek In You

    Dug this one out from a quiet corner of my digital crates, from a collection by The Beat Tape Project - "The Smooth Grooves Beat Tape". Washington D.C.'s Str8Beatz gets busy.

    Nicolay ft. Phonte : Lights In The Sky

    We close the episode with an uptempo, uplifting song courtesy of longtime collaborators Nicolay (on the music) and Phonte (on vocals). This is the title track of the "Lights In The Sky" EP, and the double-time drumming and bright keyboards do indeed take you on an astral trip, with the multi-talented Phonte leading the way with his vocals.


    Please remember to support the artists you like! The purpose of putting the podcast out and providing the full tracklist is to try and give some light, so do use the songs on each episode as a starting point to search out more material. If you have Spotify in your country it's a great way to explore, but otherwise there's always Youtube and the like. Seeing your favourite artists live is the best way to put money in their pockets, and buy the vinyl/CDs/downloads of the stuff you like the most!

    Episode 129 : Wheel And Come Again

    Episode 129 : Wheel And Come Again

    try again.

    "I don't wanna be a playa...I just coach the team."

    - Lord Finesse

    I had a new experience recording this episode - making an error which meant I had to re-record the whole thing again! Still got it out on time, and so we have our annual tributes to the catalogues of J Dilla, Big L, and Big Pun - alongside some other heavyweight picks. We open proceedings with something fairly topical...

    Twitter : @airadam13

    Episode 129 : Wheel And Come Again

    Episode 129 : Wheel And Come Again

    try again.

    "I don't wanna be a playa...I just coach the team."

    - Lord Finesse

    I had a new experience recording this episode - making an error which meant I had to re-record the whole thing again! Still got it out on time, and so we have our annual tributes to the catalogues of J Dilla, Big L, and Big Pun - alongside some other heavyweight picks. We open proceedings with something fairly topical...

    Twitter : @airadam13


    Playlist/Notes

    Ice Cube : Chase Down The Bully

    The recent march in Washington DC by masked white supremacists (with a police escort, at that) put me in mind of the Charlottesville rally in 2017, which is sampled in the intro to this track from "Everythang's Corrupt", and made this a fitting opener for the month. Ice Cube may be running a basketball league and making family films now, but he can still bring the righteous fire on the mic whenever he chooses. Beau James' beat has the kind of heft needed to match, although I think the little breakdown on the second half of each verse could have been swapped for more of that heavy main loop!

    J Dilla : Jay Dee 37

    I don't think I've played this one before - with so many Dilla beat compilations created over the years, filled with tracks with no real titles, it's easy to make a mistake! This is taken from the 2016 "The King of Beats" release, and it's a neck-snapper for real - doing the most with just bass, a simple drum pattern, and a few keys. 

    Jay Dee ft. Frank N Dank : Pause

    If you're a fan of the man's work to any substantial degree, you'll know this one - a favourite at every tribute night and on mixtapes for sure. Frank N Dank grab the mics and swagger all over this one with the kind of lyrics that make the whole crowd join in! This banger was a clear standout on his solo LP "Welcome 2 Detroit", which was the first of the "Beat Generation" releases on BBE. There's a specific reason why that LP was first - many of the other producers signed up were so intimidated by the total free rein they were given, they let Dilla go first to see what he'd do!

    D.I.T.C. : Stand Strong

    If the lyrics sound familiar to some of you, that's likely because this is basically a remix of the Show & AG track "Dignified Soldiers" (as you can hear in the hook), done for the crew's self-titled LP. I think the original does have the edge, but I wanted to play this for those that may have missed it, and of course for everyone who wants to hear lyrics from the late Big L!

    Marco Polo ft. Supastition : Heat

    I somehow overlooked this one for quite a while, despite the fact that pretty much any Marco Polo beat is worth your attention, and Supastition is never one to bring a weak verse. Don't sleep - make sure you give "Port Authority" from 2007 a few good end-to-end listens for some straight-up Hip-Hop.

    Big Pun : Leatherface

    The title may be a reference to "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre", but the sample on the hook and outro tie this one firmly into the infamous motel scene in "Scarface" (actually, doesn't show as much as you remember). This version is from a white label 12", but you can easily find the uncut raw on Pun's second LP "Yeeeah Baby", with the same production by Arkatech Beatz (known elsewhere as Infinite Archatechz). 

    Mix Master Mike : Rebel Enforcer

    The "Anti-Theft Device" album by one of the founders of the Invisibl Skratch Piklz probably had more straight-up beats (rather than cuts and juggles) than many would have expected before hearing it, and it certainly set out that Mike has a well-rounded skill set. This was a nice inclusion with a few samples heads will immediately recognise alongside others that aren't obvious at all!

    Sean Price & Lil Fame : Center Stage

    Given the aggression of the lyrics you can actually hear, I can't even imagine what the censored material was! "Price Of Fame" (genius!) is a major Brooklyn team-up of the late great Sean P and Lil Fame of M.O.P, who not only contributes the hook here but also produced the raw beat. His use of the "Brownsville" vocal sample is a perfect, inspired addition! Great video too - worth watching just for the puppet version of Jill Scott :)

    DJ Shadow : Walkie Talkie

    A producer I know was commenting recently how different DJ Shadow's catalogue has been since "Endtroducing", which is the work that brought him to prominence. That's definitely true, but this track from "The Private Press" has a touch of the energy of something like "The Number Song", as Shadow pieces together pieces of vocal to go braggadocious in his own way over an abrasive beat.

    Inspektah Deck : City High

    Dug this one out on a mixtape and realised I didn't have a good copy, so digital purchase came to the rescue as I grabbed it from the "The Movement" album. Deck is in solid form describing the grind of trying to come up in NYC - though it's a tale that could fit many other places. Production is by Phantom of the Beats (aka Haas G), whose catalogue has tracks as varied as "Apollo Kids" and "Magic Stick"! This one is soul-sampling crispness from the era when producers were leaving the vocals in and letting them run through the verses; notably in this one, the sample isn't actually saying "city high", but I'll leave you to find it...

    Busta Rhymes : Show Me What You Got

    One of my favourite Dilla beats gets an outing here, highlighting the fact that the work he did with Busta Rhymes is still probably the most weirdly-overlooked part of his overall production catalogue. The drums lazily skip over a late 90s sample - bearing in mind that this is from the 2000 "Anarchy" album, so this was an unusually contemporaneous sample source - that is guaranteed to move your neck or shoulders!

    14KT : Down The Street From Peace

    Skills to pay the bills...for everyone on the street. The Michigan native coming out of LA with the ill jazz styles is an absolute wizard on Maschine and this track gives you just a taste. This track is a great example of the work on the "For My Sanity" album, which often throws tradition structure and bar counts out of the window, and embraces freedom and experimentation.

    Away Team ft. Nervous Reck : Look

    It's been a very long time since we visited the "Training Day" album from the heyday of the extended Justus League crew out of North Carolina, but it's never too late to go back. Khrysis is on the boards with the heat ;) and Sean Boog joined by Fayetteville's Reck, who strides along next to the beat just daring it to say something!

    Black Moon : Look At Them

    Only partially chosen as a thematic companion to the preceding track, this was from a strangely overlooked LP from last year, the long-awaited return of Black Moon on "Rise Of Da Moon". With Buckshot's slithering flow, 5 Ft giving contrast, and Evil Dee on the turntables and the beats, how could you go wrong? If you've not heard the album yet, do give it a shot.

    J.Chambers ft. Koro Fyah : Escape The Kingdom

    New single from a Manchester MC who continues to grind on the underground and work on his craft. With the recent resumption of deportations of British Black people to Jamaica, this reggae-fused track is right on time. The Rastafari vocalist Koro Fyah is the perfect addition on the hook for this short and pointed piece.

    Gang Starr : Beyond Comprehension

    This isn't the first track that comes to mind when I think of the "Step In The Arena" LP, but it's a low-key smoker. Guru's ability to use his monotone style at slow tempos was solidifying in this period , and Premier's scratching fits the beat perfectly.

    4Hero : Les Fleur

    This is a beautiful cover version of the classic 1970 song by the legendary Minnie Riperton - not an easy act to follow by any stretch! Nonetheless, Carina Andersson does a praiseworthy job vocally over the production from Marc Mac and Dego on a song just made for the springtime. The 2001 "Creating Patterns" LP is the source for this one, an album which has aged very well.

    Royce Da 5'9" ft. Cee-Lo Green : Politics

    We finish the month with a great track from the time after Royce had build something of an underground audience, but long before much of the wider world had caught on to what he was bringing. This standout from the 2005 "Independent's Day" album is a great collaboration - Nottz' beat is gritty, but is shepherded into a bluesy feel courtesy of Cee-Lo's voice and re-interpretation of an old Spooky Tooth lyric for the hook. Perhaps despite the curses, this track for me definitely fits into the category of "Tracks That Could Play At The End Of A Series Of 'The Wire'"!


    Please remember to support the artists you like! The purpose of putting the podcast out and providing the full tracklist is to try and give some light, so do use the songs on each episode as a starting point to search out more material. If you have Spotify in your country it's a great way to explore, but otherwise there's always Youtube and the like. Seeing your favourite artists live is the best way to put money in their pockets, and buy the vinyl/CDs/downloads of the stuff you like the most!

    Episode 117 : Rockin' Steady

    Episode 117 : Rockin' Steady

    Metronome

    "...and though the flag been tattered and beaten..."

    - General Steele

    The short month of the year puts a little pressure on the recording schedule, but the show is here on time for you as always. Once again, we feature the sounds of J Dilla, Big Pun, and Big L, alongside plenty of other great stuff - and we keep the same speed going all the way through the mix!

    Shows coming up;

    Sadat X & El Da Sensei @ Joshua Brooks, March 20th

    GZA @ Gorilla, Manchester, April 9th

    Twitter : @airadam13

    Episode 117 : Rockin' Steady

    Episode 117 : Rockin' Steady

    Metronome

    "...and though the flag been tattered and beaten..."

    - General Steele

    The short month of the year puts a little pressure on the recording schedule, but the show is here on time for you as always. Once again, we feature the sounds of J Dilla, Big Pun, and Big L, alongside plenty of other great stuff - and we keep the same speed going all the way through the mix!

    Shows coming up;

    Sadat X & El Da Sensei @ Joshua Brooks, March 20th

    GZA @ Gorilla, Manchester, April 9th

    Twitter : @airadam13


    Playlist/Notes

    EPMD ft. KRS-ONE : Run It

    We start the episode with an all-NYC, all-uppercase collaboration from the "We Mean Business" LP, the seventh in EPMD's industrially-titled discography. A nod to LL on the hook, stick-up business over an Erick Sermon beat (of course), with KRS playing clean-up man flawlessly. Favourite part of the verse - real 'G's do indeed want to stay at home and read the paper.

    Jay Dee : Another Batch - 11

    One of a bunch of late-90s Dilla beats that got leaked onto the internet back in the day, this one smacks along with a bassline that comes through like a funky duck! I don't know if anyone ever rhymed on this, but I can imagine someone like De La doing great things with it.

    Chuck D ft. Jahi : BOT

    I don't know if it was intentional, but this track seems to call back to two tracks from the legendary "...Nation of Millions..." album; "She Watch Channel Zero?" ("she looking at the screen more than talking to me") and also "Night of the Living Baseheads" ("battery on low, look like fiends with a Jones"). Chuck D might have been one of the very first in Hip-Hop to catch onto the Internet, but the elder statesman sees the BS it's brought us as well! He combines here with the lead MC in the group known as "PE 2.0" to get it all off his chest, and he's got plenty more to say on the new "Celebration Of Ignorance" album.

    Black Thought : 9th vs. Thought

    No-one can accuse Black Thought of not being a team player, with it taking until 2018 before we saw a solo release from him, the "Streams of Thought Vol.1" EP. 9th Wonder was the producer for the project, and on this track he gets headline billing. Fans of top-flight lyricism are in for a treat here, as the MC of choice for many MCs shows his skill level in a major way.

    Boot Camp Clik : World Wide

    Serious track from the Brooklyn stalwarts, uniting on 2006's "The Last Stand". I absolutely love General Steele's opening verse, from which this month's epigram is taken, and then it's followed with the late, great Sean P just thugging it all the way out on the second verse! They go out of the immediate crew for production, tapping up Large Professor for a head-nodding beat that easily could have made for a fire single. Not the best-known tune maybe, but a tune that is big by nature!

    Big L : Don't Front (Freestyle)

    Short and powerful like a shot of rum, this is a concise taste of Big L's legendary freestyle aggression over a smooth 90s beat from Diamond's "You Can't Front". 

    Slum Village : Go Ladies (Instrumental)

    One of my favourite Dilla beats easily, as heard on the "Fantastic, Vol.2" album, flipping a well-known 80s soul sample and somehow making it even better than you could have imagined. It's only when you listen back to what else was coming out around that time you can hear how much of a shock to the system a laid-back groove like this was.

    Donnie : Cloud 9 (Spinna Mix)

    If you enjoy soulful music, Donnie's 2002 debut "The Colored Section" should definitely be in your collection. "Cloud 9" was one of the standouts, and DJ Spinna puts some extra bump into it on this remix, which is on a nice 12" release. His bass style is so distinctive, and with so much of the beat being in the lower frequency range, it leaves plenty of room for Donnie's masterful vocals!

    Foreign Exchange : Hustle, Hustle

    There are plenty of great tracks on "Connected", the debut Foreign Exchange album, and I was sure I'd already played this - glad to find out I hadn't, as it was the perfect fit for this slot! Nicolay's beat is smooth on that kind of early-2000s, neo-soulish vibe, and then you have lyrical treats coming from every angle. Quartermaine and C.A.L.I.B.E.R spit bars about trying to get ahead in the world, and Phonte comes in beautifully on the hook, in a fairly early demonstration of his singing talent. I don't blame you if you find yourself humming this one on the way to work.

    Kev Brown : Hold Fast

    One of the great bassline masters in Hip-Hop, Kev Brown certainly put Landover (MD) on the map with his top-quality "I Do What I Do" album. He's just as solid on the mic, and takes the reins alone on this track from the second half of the LP. Scratches are credited to DJ PMD, who is not Parrish Smith, but in fact Peter Rosenberg (who hails from the same area) under his original DJ name!

    Jermaine Dupri ft. Snoop Dogg, Warren G, and R.O.C : Protectors of 1472

    Unless there's some other, non-publicised significance to the number 1472, the "Life In 1472" album has one of the most contrived titles of all time! I don't actually have the album, but this DJ Premier-produced cut is on a compilation of his rarer/lesser-known cuts. I cut this one fairly short, as I think you get the best of it in a compact dose - the last verse is by far the longest, but Snoop towards the front is the clear headliner.

    J Dilla : Won't Do (Instrumental)

    Classic Dilla from towards the end, based around the "Footsteps In The Dark" drums, with fragments of the vocal yelling out for help along the way. The vocal version is on "The Shining" LP, but for this instrumental, you may need to pick up the 7" boxset of the album (or the MP3 version), which contains instrumentals for every track!

    Sadat X ft. Timmy Hunter : Neva

    The three-bar loop makes mixing a bit tricky, but I really wanted to play this one! Sadat looks back over his life and career, and celebrates his own effort and self-belief - justifiably so. Diamond D provides the beat, as he does all the way through the "Sum Of A Man" album. It's been a long road since that first LP with Brand Nubian, but Sadat is still travelling it, and for that we should be thankful :)

    Dabrye ft. Jay Dee and Phat Kat : Game Over

    That beat will definitely do things on a big sound system. Sparse, menacing, insistent. Ann Arbor's Dabrye takes no prisoners on the production, and then pulls in his fellow Michiganders Jay Dee and Phat Kat, who just spit raw Detroit flames in the space the beat leaves! The 2006 "Two/Three" album is one for anyone who likes the more angular, awkward, and aggressive style of production.

    Clear Soul Forces : Continue?

    I've been saving the combination of this and "Game Over" for ages :) CSF's 2013 "Gold PP7s" is an essential album for anyone who thinks they don't make MCs like they used to - it should give you faith for the future! I can't even keep up with all the gaming, comic, and anime references that they just firehose you with, but the spirit is undeniable. Ilajide's videogame-styled beat bumps hard, and overall this is just one of those tracks I can't see any reason for anyone not to love!

    C2C ft. Tigerstyle, Netik, Rafik, Vajra, Kentaro : Le Banquet

    Here we have an all-star lineup of scratch DJs, liquefying their crossfaders one after another as the featured instrumentalists on this track from the "Tetra" album. If you listen closely, there are actually some quotes from "Game Over" in the mix - they sound like vocoded re-records, but they could well be heavily-manipulated samples...

    J Dilla : Dillatronic 09

    One more Dilla instrumental as we come towards the end, this time taken from the "Dillatronic" collection of beats, a posthumous collection of 41 pieces - many very short - from the MPC of the man himself.

    Noreaga ft. Nature, Big Pun, Cam'ron, Jadakiss, and Styles P : Banned From TV

    Late 90s thug styles, and the kind of triumphant sound that either had to start or finish the episode. Nature was the original guest on here, but while almost everyone else was invited on, Big Pun bullied his way onto the track! While everybody comes off, the true gems on this tune are towards the front - Nature's memorable opening line, and Pun's devastating verse. The Swizz Beatz production is a perfect snapshot of the keyboard-based beats of the era - the "horns" should be corny, but somehow they work in context, and the kick/basstone combo bangs! Classic Berra-ism from Nore on the last verse too - if it's with tomato juice, then it can't be Hennessy straight...


    Please remember to support the artists you like! The purpose of putting the podcast out and providing the full tracklist is to try and give some light, so do use the songs on each episode as a starting point to search out more material. If you have Spotify in your country it's a great way to explore, but otherwise there's always Youtube and the like. Seeing your favourite artists live is the best way to put money in their pockets, and buy the vinyl/CDs/downloads of the stuff you like the most!

    Episode 93 : (for small values of infinity)

    Episode 93 : (for small values of infinity)

    "All that happy, 'let's be friends' shit? Yo, this is the opposite."

    - Konny Kon

    As usual, we pay tribute to J Dilla, Big L, and Big Pun this month, but also two giants from a previous generation who both made a massive impact on Hip-Hop; Clyde Stubblefield and David Axelrod, who both passed in the last few weeks. Besides that, we have some great recent tracks from Manchester, some US classics and a few tracks that may have passed you by! Let's get it going...

    Twitter : @airadam13

    Episode 93 : (for small values of infinity)

    Episode 93 : (for small values of infinity)

    "All that happy, 'let's be friends' shit? Yo, this is the opposite."

    - Konny Kon

    As usual, we pay tribute to J Dilla, Big L, and Big Pun this month, but also two giants from a previous generation who both made a massive impact on Hip-Hop; Clyde Stubblefield and David Axelrod, who both passed in the last few weeks. Besides that, we have some great recent tracks from Manchester, some US classics and a few tracks that may have passed you by! Let's get it going...

    Twitter : @airadam13


    Playlist/Notes

    D.I.T.C. : Best Behavior (Showbiz Remix #2)

    From "The Remix Project", we go heavy in multiple ways right from the jump. Big Pun may not have been a charter member of D.I.T.C, but Fat Joe certainly is, and it's via Joe that we end up with this connection to one of the fiercest MCs of all time. One verse each over this Showbiz beat which somehow manages to be even darker than the excellent Amed-produced original

    David McCallum : The Edge

    I'd imagine a good number of you thought this was about to be an entirely different record :) This track from the "Music: A Bit More Of Me" album is definitely the most famous track by the actor/musician David McCallum, and one of the most well-recognised by the producer, the brilliant David Axelrod, who passed away this month. That intro is just a monster.

    Big L & Jay-Z : Freestyle

    Given the origin and the content, I hope you can excuse the sound quality! This is one of the great freestyle sessions of all time, with the then-rising Big L and Jay-Z trading serious bars over the beat for Miilkbone's "Keep It Real"; as it turns out, they'd already battled off-mic earlier the same night! While that clash is lost to folklore, it's good to have this back-and-forth preserved for posterity, thanks to Stretch & Bobbito.

    Ras Kass : Soul On Ice (Remix)

    Diamond D remixes the title track from Ras' debut, blessing Ras with a David Axelrod-sampling instrumental that is probably better known than the original. Ras is in the political lyrical mode many people would associate him with here, but as always managed to blend that with just vicious battle lines. "The waterproof MC, you ain't wettin' me/You need to stop rapping and start robbing banks like Steady B"? *Ouch*...

    SoundSci : The Remedy (Jonny Cuba Remix)

    This one has just missed the cut a few times but it fit nicely here! Super relaxed vibe all the way through on this closing track from the "Dig For Victory" EP.

    James Brown : Funky Drummer (Parts 1 & 2)

    We join this track about a minute and a half in - the full track is seven minutes long. At 19:25 though, one of the most famous, sampled, re-used, re-formulated pieces of audio of all time appears to grace our eardrums. Clyde Stubblefield claimed to not particularly like this song as a whole all that much, but these few seconds of solo drumming when he was given his shine have immortalised it - and him. 

    [Jay Dee] Slum Village : Climax (Instrumental)

    Easily one of my favourite Dilla beats, from the "Fantastic, Vol.2" album - a fantastic blend of samples and that clap on the two and four are perfectly crisp and clean.

    Busta Rhymes : Genesis

    Busta was one of those MCs who caught on to J Dilla relatively early and the two artists combined for some excellent tracks over the years. On "Genesis", Busta's fifth album, Dilla contributed this title track and "Make It Hurt", which sounds like it was done by a completely different producer, which just goes to show his versatility. 

    Gang Starr : Mass Appeal

    It just seemed to go well with the Busta record, and it's a great single, taken from the "Hard To Earn" LP. What you might not know about it is that DJ Premier essentially put the beat together as a bit of a mickey take! The track is supposed to sound like catchy elevator music, in keeping with the lyrical theme of rappers simplifying their material for a popular audience - but it just sounds so good! 

    Souls of Mischief : 93 Til Infinity (Remix)

    Do I prefer this to the original? Absolutely not - however, that doesn't mean it's not a quality track in its own right. If you listen carefully, you'll hear that it's an actual re-record, with the lyrics being very slighly different and the delivery also tweaked to better fit this alternative beat by A-Plus. The easiest place to find this is on the original 12" single, though it has been released by itself as well.

    Masta Ace Incorporated : Saturday Night Live (L.A. Jay Remix)

    Staying in '93 for a remix of a track from the "SlaughtaHouse" album - an LP notable for largely being a parody which a lot of people either took literally or assumed wasn't about them! This particular track has its own dark humour, showing about how live a Saturday night can actually get, and feaures Uneek, Eyce, and Lord Digga on the mic. L.A. Jay from the Pharcyde crew rocks the same sample heard on Gang Starr's "Jazz Music" for a beat that manages to surpass the album version!

    Pete Rock : Dilla Bounce (R.I.P)

    A fitting instrumental to include this month. Dilla came up idolising the work of Pete Rock, so it's poetic that after his passing (as in life), Pete pays respect to him in return. I feel that "Petestrumentals 2" may follow the same path as its predecessor - underrated on release, and retrospectively hailed as a classic.

    Run The Jewels ft. Joi : Down

    The "RTJ3" album came out on Christmas Day and ensured that we all got at least one present :) This was the opener and a worthy one - a look back at Killer Mike and El-P's pasts, and a look forward to where they plan to go. There's a kind of warmness to the beat which isn't a word I'd usually use to describe an El-P track, but it envelops your ears and draws you in to focus on the lyrics.

    Ellis Meade : Kings & Queens

    Ellis was kind enough to send me a copy of this a few months back and I finally found a good place to showcase it in a mix. The flow is crazy over a double-timed, almost southern-style Pro P beat. Another win for the Room 2 Records crew!

    Chamillionaire : You Gotta Love Me

    "Mayn, let the truth free". That shout-out to the then-incarcerated Pimp C firmly dates this one, a longtime headphone favourite for me finally making it onto the show! From the DJ Whoo Kid (hence the annoying adlibs) collaboration mixtape "The Truth", Cham focuses his anger on Mike Jones ("who?", you may now ask?) - that beef lasted for several years. I haven't been able to find out who produced this but that sped-up vocal sample is a serious earworm!

    Don Jagwarr : The Cure

    I've had this one hanging around for a long while, not sure it's everyone's speed but it fit tempo-wise into this selection and I think was a reasonable follow-up to the soul sample in the previous track. Don Jagwarr is almost certainly best known to most as the guest on Ice Cube's "Wicked", but he did have his old LP, "Faded", from which this track is drawn. The beat and hook are based around a replay of Diana Ross' "Love Hangover", which is a chilled backing for Jagwarr to spin his tale over.

    Jake One : Oh Lord

    We go back to the gospel-themed "#PrayerHandsEmoji" beat tape for this instrumental, a perfect warm-up for this month's closer...

    Children of Zeus : Crown

    An anthem already (wow, alliteration)! Tyler Daly goes straight rhymes alongside the always-ready Konny Kon over a no-drums track based around a stirring gospel sample; both MCs turn it out in fine style! Absolutely huge track from the "Two Syllables, Volume Thirteen" compilation and one that deserves as much shine as possible - on top of everything else, it also has one of the best videos I've seen in ages, so no excuse not to share and share again!


    Please remember to support the artists you like! The purpose of putting the podcast out and providing the full tracklist is to try and give some light, so do use the songs on each episode as a starting point to search out more material. If you have Spotify in your country it's a great way to explore, but otherwise there's always Youtube and the like. Seeing your favourite artists live is the best way to put money in their pockets, and buy the vinyl/CDs/downloads of the stuff you like the most!

    Episode 81 : Bruce Lee Of The Beats

    Episode 81 : Bruce Lee Of The Beats

    "Now let me say it again, and say it with feeling."

    - Jay Dee

    Ten years since the passing of J Dilla. Feels odd just thinking about it being that long. As always on the show, we pay tribute to him with a solid selection of his work, and the title of the episode; in reference to his refusal to be boxed in by the orthodoxy of any particular style, I thought it was fitting. We also give respect this episode to the late greats Big L, Big Pun, and Maurice White of Earth, Wind, and Fire, who left us this month, and I hope this mix does them all justice.


    Playlist/Notes

    Jay Dee : The $

    Some months I like to start with something gentle and refined. This is not one of those months. Big time slammer from the "Ruff Draft" EP, exemplifying the rawness he speaks of on the intro! Oh yes, if you know the track well and notice a difference - yes, I did sneak in a couple of extra sounds at one specific point, just for emphasis ;)

    J Dilla : Go Get 'Em

    From the recent "Lost Tapes, Reels + More" collection, I believe this is based around the same sample as KMD's "Nitty Gritty (Remix)", and bumps along nicely with the added keyboard and harder drums.

    Q-Tip : Go Hard

    The "Amplified" album, by and large, did not get much love when it came out back in 1999, going gold at a time when platinum sales were definitely achievable for Hip-Hop releases. The singles "Vivrant Thing" and "Breathe & Stop" made a little commercial noise, on the underground tip "Let's Ride" is a popular one at J Dilla tributes, but this track never seems to get any shine! The beat is upbeat but kind of austere, with Jay Dee channelling some late-70s synth sounds and adding some sharp drums. 

    E-40 : The Slap

    Always been a fan of this track, and it's been sitting here for the longest waiting to be played - finally, it makes the cut once I realised how perfectly it blended with the Q-Tip track! Living up to the title, this Rick Rock produced beat slaps crazy while E-40 goes into unrestrained Vallejo game spitting mode. This is on a 12" with "7 Much" on the flip, but you can also find this on the 2002 "Grit & Grind" album.

    Camp Lo & Pete Rock : 99 Bottles

    Not the longest track, but the kind of quality you'd expect from the union of Camp Lo and one of the greatest producers ever to do it! It's got that 70s cop show vibe to it, and while the samples sound familiar, I can't place them exactly; either way, Lo ride the instrumental impeccably on this gem from the second "80 Blocks From Tiffany's" free mixtape.

    The X-Ecutioners ft. Kool G Rap & Big Pun : Dramacyde

    An interesting combination of personnel on this one, with a legendary battle DJ crew hooking up with Big Pun and one of his biggest influences, an MC he called "Master" whenever they met. The production matches up to the title and gives a worthy setting for the MCs to go straight crime rhyme all over it, but the DJs absolutely get their shine here, with plenty of space to feature the cuts. The "Built From Scratch" album is definitely worth having for the varied track styles and collaborations throughout - we could do with more such experimentation!

    Dela : Jay Electropietricus

    It's not been that long since we visited the "Translation Lost" album, but when I heard this track while kicking back and relaxing I thought it might be time for a return! Nice boom-bap drums on top of some lush keyboard work, straight from Toronto.

    Big L : Flamboyant 1

    A little something from the all-too-short Big L catalogue, a freestyle which you can catch on the "Harlem's Finest" compilation, if you can find a copy! These lyrics eventually made their way onto the officially-released version of the track "Flamboyant" from "The Big Picture" LP. As for the beat, see below...

    Lord Tariq & Peter Gunz : We Will Ball

    I could have saved this for another month, but with the recording quality of the previous track being pretty ropey, I thought I may as well draw on the original beat in all its shiny glory! When I first heard this on Westwood's show, I recorded one verse (not sure why) and didn't even hear what it was called, so it was a mystery to me for a long while. Eventually some lyric googling turned up a result, and I picked this up as a used 12". Lyrically, they're celebrating their success, going back and forth over a thumping, piano-seasoned Dave Atkinson track with flossy finesse. The 12" I have doesn't mention the guest MC on the third verse, and I can't even find her name on Discogs; you may see the correct credit given on the "Make It Reign" LP.

    Panda One : The Essence

    Even if this tune hadn't been fire, I might have been tempted to play it purely because of the artist's name :) Excellent 2002 underground release with Chops of the Mountain Brothers on the beat; solid drums, the bass backing the low horn sounds and some nice flute riding on the top! Panda himself was formely owner of Good Vibe recordings, but stepped out from behind the desk to the mic for three solo 12"s - he's not Rakim, but he's certainly competent and makes this a pleasure to listen to.

    Janet Jackson : Together Again (DJ Premier 100 In A 50 Remix)

    This was a big C'mon Feet record and I was lucky enough to be gifted my own copy of this vinyl! You already know about the quality of Janet Jackson's catalogue (or you should), and she has the nous to call in Hip-Hop royalty to remix this track from "The Velvet Rope". Premier has this one absolutely bumping, and spare enough to allow Janet's voice to breathe. On the same 12", there's an even more stripped-back remix with the non-drum/bass instruments removed - good enough that I had a hard decision working out which one to play :)

    [Waajeed] Onra : The One (Waajeed Remix Instrumental)

    When a noted producer hands the reins to another practitioner of the craft, it shows a huge level of respect; in this case, that respect is well earned. The original was dope, and the remix? Might be better. Both are available on Bandcamp, at a very reasonable price.

    Slum Village ft. 5 Elementz : 5 Ela (Remix)

    From the very early days of Slum Village comes this incredible flip of Patrice Rushen's "Remind Me", just a great example of how chopping up a sample (actually, two different ones from the same track) gives a beatmaker a lot more versatility with the composition than a straight loop would ever allow. The trademark relaxed drum timing and handclaps are in effect even at this early stage, prefiguring a lot of the work that was to come later. Depending on which version of "Fan-tas-tic Vol.1"  you see, this may be labelled as "Slow Up", but it looks like on the now-official version that the title here stands. As far as the lyrics...kind of up and down throughout the cut really. 5 Elementz is another crew from Detroit, and they take their place on here alongside the regular Slum MCs to administer a vicious verbal beatdown to some unknown antagonist...glad that wasn't me they were talking about!

    Termanology ft. Big Pooh, Chaundon, and Joe Scudda : Pay Jay

    My favourite cut from Termanology's "If Heaven Was A Mile Away" tribute mixtape. Taking the Michael Jackson-sampling "Inhuman Nature", one of my favourite unreleased Jay Dee beats as a basis, you get Termanology and a contingent from the Justus League paying homage and weaving Dilla-related song titles and other references into their flows. On the cuts, DJ Statik Selektah does the business to add a little extra flavour. The overall sound quality is kind of trash, but I included it despite that, just because the track is so ill!

    Nas : It Ain't Hard To Tell (J.Period Meets Spinna Remix)

    The original track from "Illmatic" is primarily based around the intro piece of "Human Nature", but this remix by J.Period and DJ Spinna from their "Man Or The Music 2" project takes the groove from the verse instead, which makes for a very different feel despite it being the exact same record! If you're an MJ fan at all, be sure to download this top-notch mixtape.

    Tall Black Guy : Nature's Miracle

    Again. He kills it again. This time, "Human Nature" gets the treatment from TBG on his 2010 "Tall Black Guy vs Michael Jackson" remix suite - he just atomises it and turns all the pieces into his own personal sonic puppets. Recommendation for the month - if you don't know his catalogue, get to know!

    Rapsody ft. Heather Victoria : Black Girl Jedi

    Five years old already but only just coming to my notice, the "Thank H.E.R Now" LP was a solid pickup for me this month. Rapsody is always going to give you that work, and she brings in Jamla's Heather Victoria to handle hook duty while she gets busy on the verses over what I think is a 9th Wonder beat - it's certainly got the sonic characteristics. Black girl magic on that next level!

    9th Wonder : Volume 3, Beat VII

    A little something from a vinyl of unreleased instrumentals from 9th - although some of them were used on official releases eventually. I'd love the chance to go through his folders of unused material...

    Earth, Wind, & Fire : Fantasy

    The passing of Maurice White, founder of EWF, demands that we take some time to appreciate some of his work right here. From 1978's "All 'N All" LP, the lyrics were partly inspired by the film "Close Encounters Of The Third Kind" - you can hear the space traveller vibes in there. It's beautifully smooth, and the perfect wind-down ending to the month. RIP Maurice White.


    Please remember to support the artists you like! The purpose of putting the podcast out and providing the full tracklist is to try and give some light, so do use the songs on each episode as a starting point to search out more material. If you have Spotify in your country it's a great way to explore, but otherwise there's always Youtube and the like. Seeing your favourite artists live is the best way to put money in their pockets, and buy the vinyl/CDs/downloads of the stuff you like the most!

    Episode 81 : Bruce Lee Of The Beats

    Episode 81 : Bruce Lee Of The Beats

    "Now let me say it again, and say it with feeling."

    - Jay Dee

    Ten years since the passing of J Dilla. Feels odd just thinking about it being that long. As always on the show, we pay tribute to him with a solid selection of his work, and the title of the episode; in reference to his refusal to be boxed in by the orthodoxy of any particular style, I thought it was fitting. We also give respect this episode to the late greats Big L, Big Pun, and Maurice White of Earth, Wind, and Fire, who left us this month, and I hope this mix does them all justice.

    Episode 69 : Turn It Up!

    Episode 69 : Turn It Up!

    Way Past 11

    "...do yo' city love you?"

    - Mr. Wrong

    My goodness, getting this one out on time was tough! I think it's a good one though, and I do like the shot I put together for the cover art too :) As always in February, we celebrate the lives of J Dilla, Big Pun, and Big L - all make an appearance on the episode, alongside some other greats. Enjoy!

    Oh yes - one excellent thing I heard this month was an interview with Joe Schloss, absolutely exceptional scholarly discussion on the Hip-Hop culture, origins, and ethics. A must-listen!


    Playlist/Notes

    Xzibit ft. KRS-ONE : The Kenny Parker Show 2001

    This popped into my head recently, and with that intro it was a good candidate to lead off the episode! Despite the words of KRS-ONE, this track from Xzibit's "Restless" LP was actually produced by X and Thayod, with Dr.Dre taking Executive Producer credit as with the rest of the album. As far as I know, Kenny Parker himself isn't on this track but this is basically a retouched cover of the original track from the Boogie Down Productions "Edutainment" album; Hip-Hop doesn't do covers often, but this one clearly has the blessing of the original artist. Respectful.

    Sepalot : Measured Amount

    For some reason, I was sure I'd already played this one for you but it must have been on a mixtape somewhere, away from the podcast. Straight out of Munich, Sepalot has very much shown he can work that jerky-rhythmed electronic angle to good effect (I recommend "She Likes Me" with Frank Nitty of Frank N Dank), and this one jumps and tics along nicely. Find it on the "Beat Dimensions Vol.1" compilation.

    Jay Dee ft. Frank N Dank : Off Ya Chest

    First Dilla track of the month! A man whose beats covered many styles and moods, this came from the phase where he basically worked out what all the "for the club" producers were doing and then did it better, even if he didn't get the big sales. I've always been a bit of a fan of this 12", despite (or maybe because) it not fitting into what most people think of as the Dilla sound. His compadres Frank N Dank take joint charge of the verses and keep it simple. Good one for the gym!

    Antonique Smith : Hold Up Wait A Minute

    Heard a snippet of this on the "The Black Guy Who Tips" podcast (excellent, by the way), and rushed to scribble the artist name down - I'd never heard of her, and thought this track was a killer! Apparently this got a Grammy nomination (Best Traditional R&B Performance), and it was well deserving. Antonique will be known to some of you as an actress, having played Mimi in the Broadway show "Rent" and Faith Evans in the Biggie biopic "Notorious," but she is *not* playing with her debut single! She lets it all hang out on the vocals, and the production has to be top-notch to keep up - luckily, Darryl "Darulah" Farmer gets busy with the heavy drums and the choppy, stuttering organ line just to name the two foremost elements. Great way to open a career!

    Diamond & The Psychotic Neurotics : I'm Outta Here

    Heavy. One of the many great cuts from Diamond's debut "Stunts, Blunts, & Hip-Hop" (as summarised on Episode 12), and the final choice to follow up the Antonique Smith track after a long period of digging for tracks with organ sounds and heavy drums! Great bit of storytelling, based on the chaos of the 80s, with a protagonist who keeps getting himself into terrible situations which he's then forced to run away from. Trivia note: to hear him tell it, the voice of the would-be robber in the cinema in the first verse is that of a pre-fame Fat Joe!

    Big Pun ft. Tony Sunshine : 100%

    Went to Pun's posthumously-released second album for this one, which has some of that commercial appeal alongside some of those seriously hardcore lines for the undergound! Sean C brings the Latin flavour to the production, and Terror Squad's Tony Sunshine the spice on the hook. Pun reps Puerto Rico 100% on this one, hence the name...

    Frankie Cutlass : Puerto Rico (Instrumental)

    A spot-on fit I think - with the "Puerto Rico" sample already inserted into the background of the outro of the preceding track, the speeds being similar, and this being an instrumental...it'd have been a waste to use it any other time. Working a vocal sample from DJ Grand Wizzard Theodore's "Live Convention '82" tape, Frankie Cutlass shouts out his homeland atop some classic drum and bassline samples. This is one of the few well-known classic Hip-Hop singles that doesn't have a rapper on it at all, but will always get a reaction and people joining in when you play it in a club!

    J Dilla ft. Tone Plummer & Mr Wrong : Rebirth Is Necessary 

    This incredible beat was first heard on one of Dilla's famous (on the underground) beat tapes, and I always loved it, so was glad to see it get picked up for a better airing. It's so dark, you could only really match that vibe with the lyrics, and Detroit's Tone Plummer and Mr Wrong do just that, speaking on the severe effects of the economic downturn on their city. Well put-together piece from the J Dilla "Rebirth Of Detroit" album, which is worth checking out - it turns up a few choice gems.

    Bumpy Knuckles : Teach The Children

    As I say on the voiceover, I thought that in terms of theme, this worked well as a follow-up to "Rebirth Is Necessary," especially with the closing news sample. Picked this 12" up in London recently and Bumpy embraces the wise elder role and offers jewels on life to the young. Great B-side to the Nas-featured "Turn Up The Mic," with DJ Premier's production providing the perfect reflective backing.

    Oh No ft. Posdnuos : Smile A Li'l Bit

    Had forgotten all about this but it popped into my head at just the right time! Oh No's "Exodus Into Unheard Rhythms" LP was a journey into the catalogue of the Canadian composer Galt MacDermot, who has supplied the world of Hip-Hop with many a dope sample. Sampling strictly from one artist can be a challenge (well, unless you're going James Brown or something), but Oh No makes it work and the album features a host of MCs who make it a solid package. I'm a big fan of Posdnuos' lyrics here, talking about the industry while reminding all the wannabe hard rocks to smile once in a while :)

    Skinnyman : When I Give My Heart To You (Joe Budha Remix)

    DJ Mentat did a sterling job on the original version of this track, but Nottingham's Joe Budha takes it in completely different direction that for me fits the subject even better. Luckily, there's a 12" with both mixes on which is well worth having, especially with the bonus of Mystro's "Waiting" on there too - there's a track very likely to make a future episode!

    Pete Rock & CL Smooth : Searchin' (Instrumental)

    All it's going to take is a small research grant to prove that it's scientifically impossible to dislike this beat. SP-1200 all the way as Pete Rock works his magic on a sample from the legendary Roy Ayers' and his vibraphone. If you don't have the Pete & CL album "The Main Ingredient," definitely fix that - it's a staple.

    Big L : Stretch Debut

    The Stretch & Bobbito radio show on WKCR (1990-1998) was an absolute landmark in Hip-Hop radio, helping to break more important acts than you could shake a very large stick at, and one of the many was Big L! In 1992, before most of us knew him, a then-18-year-old L went up to the studios and laid down these vicious bars over a classic breakbeat. Someone gave me a digital copy of this, and I thought this was a perfect month to share it. Just check the raw talent, and some of the rhyme influences of the period coming through in his flow.

    Keith Murray : It's That Hit

    I have this on a 12", and yet only had a clean version on the Erick Sermon "Insomnia" compilation! Staying with the "Impeach The President" drums that came in on the last track, Erick blends up multiple funk sources on the instrumental and lets the man from Carlton Avenue do what he does on the mic. 

    Artifacts : It's Gettin' Hot (DJ Spinna Remix)

    Newark, NJ in the house on this one, connecting with Brooklyn as the man DJ Spinna lends his hands and ears to remix duties. The classic boom-bap original of this track came from their second album "That's Them," but this bubbling version is a bit harder to find; look for the "DJ Spinna Remixes" white label, and you should be in business.

    The Mouse Outfit ft. Mattic : Fantasy Function

    This Manchester crew are continuing to make big moves, and ahead of the release of their second album, they collaborated with North Carolina born, Paris-resident MC Mattic for the "Born Lupers EP," a quality little set available for a very reasonable price. This particular tune is early on the EP but also an early favourite for me, and check how the beat changes halfway through, with a noticeable speed increase to boot, making it an interesting one to mix in and out of. Would have liked a longer instrumental intro and outro though ;)

    [J Dilla] Busta Rhymes : Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check (Jay Dee Bounce Remix)

    If I drank, this would be the kind of track to sip a glass of wine to. Don't let me stop you though :) Released before Dilla entered most people's consciousness, he cooks up a track that probably couldn't be further away from the Rashad Smith-produced original

    Robert Glasper : Dillalude #2

    Very classy tribute. Houston jazz virtuoso Robert Glasper turns his hand(s) to a medley of his own renditions of classic Dilla beats, running over nine minutes in total. My favourite piece has to be his take on the beat for Busta Rhymes' "Show Me What You Got" starting @ 54:29 - worth the money for that bit alone. "Black Radio Recovered : The Remix EP" is available for under £4 currently and is absolutely a recommended purchase for all lovers of quality music.


    Please remember to support the artists you like! The purpose of putting the podcast out and providing the full tracklist is to try and give some light, so do use the songs on each episode as a starting point to search out more material. If you have Spotify in your country it's a great way to explore, but otherwise there's always Youtube and the like. Seeing your favourite artists live is the best way to put money in their pockets, and buy the vinyl/CDs/downloads of the stuff you like the most!

    Episode 69 : Turn It Up!

    Episode 69 : Turn It Up!

    Way Past 11

    "...do yo' city love you?"

    - Mr. Wrong

    My goodness, getting this one out on time was tough! I think it's a good one though, and I do like the shot I put together for the cover art too :) As always in February, we celebrate the lives of J Dilla, Big Pun, and Big L - all make an appearance on the episode, alongside some other greats. Enjoy!

    Oh yes - one excellent thing I heard this month was an interview with Joe Schloss, absolutely exceptional scholarly discussion on the Hip-Hop culture, origins, and ethics. A must-listen!

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