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The Inspired By Album

ALBUM REVIEW: The Birth Of A Nation: The Inspired By Album

Originally posted on HipHopDX 10/7/2016
Rating: 4/5

The past few months have seen the long-awaited slave period film Birth of a Nationmired in controversy. Nate Parker, the film’s creator, lead actor and co-writer, has had quite the task escaping the cloud cast by his past acquittal of a college year rape accusation and all but saw the buzz of his Sundance Film Festival darling halted. To add valleys to the uphill battle, Parker’s rendition of the story of Nat Turner has also been met with a plethora of mixed reviews. For what the movie may lack, The Birth of a Nation: The Inspired By Album offers up a suitable alternative.

Boasting of a laundry list of Hip Hop’s elite and R&B stars, the original soundtrack seamlessly mixes artists across multiple rap subgenres to create a sonic experimentation of music that spits in the face of sedition. Lecrae and Leon Bridges embody the film’s rebellious persona with their own haunting, organ-backed and percussion laced opus “On My Own.” Lecrae preaches the plight of our ancestors with powerful bars “I’ve been pushing hard/I’ve been praying harder/Only Heaven can help me/They took my Earthly father/Mama they promised me death and walked me into my grave/I’d rather die a free man than live on Earth a slave/I’m fighting for people they put in chains/they stripped our heritage they took our names/Put our women to shame.”

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Jay IDK

ALBUM REVIEW: Jay IDK – The Empty Bank

Originally posted on HipHopDX 9/29/2016
Rating: 3.8/5

For Maryland MC Jay IDK, life has been on an upward incline since his 2015 album SubTRAP. The success of his last album has put him on a trajectory to gain traction outside of PG County and the DMV. Jay opens up on what his newfound progress comes with and how to balance the expectations of getting money with his latest album The Empty Bank.

The cover art, depicting Ben Franklin with a noose around his neck as he sits on a rented luxury car, serves as the perfect metaphor for the album. Jay gets right into the heart of the album’s subject material with the Kain Carter and Masego-assisted “Mr. Mills” to kick off The Empty Bank. The song starts with an instructional chant of, “Sex, Drugs, Money” as Jay IDK raps, “I guess I figured it out; money ain’t shit. I guess I figured it out; money is dick/a bitch will tell you your shit is good if your money long even if your dick is shorter than Gary Coleman”. As Mr. Mills continues to wax poetic with lines such as, “I’m spending everything I got on everything I don’t need” and “My friends see they say ‘sheesh he got lots of cheese’ it’s probably from the smiles they see on my IG but them smiles ain’t really me” he’s interrupted by a bill collector attempting to collect on his $30,000 studio bill.

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Chinx

ALBUM REVIEW: Chinx – Legends Never Die

Originally posted on HipHopDX 9/27/2016
Rating: 2.7/5

Lionel Pickens, or Chinx as was best known by, became another MC taken away due to gun violence in May 2015 — adding to that long list of rappers whose clock was punched much too soon, much like his Rockaway Riot Squad brethren Stack Bundles, who was murdered in June 2007. His follow-up to last year’s impressive Welcome to JFKLegends Never Die is the second album to be released since Chinx’s still unsolved murder. With the exception of the first Rockaway Riot Squad track since Stack’s murder in 2007, “All Good,” all of the tracks were recorded prior to Chinx passing.

Legends Never Die isn’t reinventing the wheel, nor is it meant to. The subject material is insubstantial and the production (scored predominately by Blickie Blaze with sporadic offerings from Harry Fraud and Lee on the Beat) is decent yet redundant. The LP opens up with the upbeat, smooth and flowing pop single “Like This,” featuring Chrisette Michele and Chinx’s mentee Meet Sims. From jump, the French Montana influence is noticeable not only in the way Chinx puts his bars together but tonally and in his vocal afflictions as well. “Like This” doesn’t stray away from the typical Top 40 single we’ve been beat over the head with as Chinx raps about things the woman currently worthy of his attention isn’t accustomed to as the chorus chants, “She ain’t never rolled with a nigga like this, she ain’t never smoked with a nigga like this, she ain’t never rolled with her hair pulled back in a drop top whip with a nigga like this.”

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Atmosphere

ALBUM REVIEW: Atmosphere – Fishing Blues

Originally posted on HipHopDX 8/26/2016
Rating: 3.5/5

For Slug and Ant, the past 19 years in the game since releasing their first album in 1997 have cumulated into tremendous success. The Godfathers of the everyman rap genre have amassed a cult following and continue to define what independent success can look like. They’ve taken their own Rhymesayers Entertainment imprint to the next level with their own major festival, Soundset Music Festival, in their native of Minnesota. The duo has signed former major label acts such as Freeway and Dilated Peoples to releasing two Billboard 200 Top 10 charting albums. Now, after a two-year hiatus, Atmosphere is back with their latest album Fishing Blues.

Slug has carved out a very long, successful career over the emotive, mood enhanced and melancholy instrumentation of Ant’s production. The album opens up with “Ringo,” a cheeky 50’s, All-American inspired production that displays Slug reminiscing about summer days in the Twin Cities. On the flip side, he’s able to capture the angst of an entire society fed up with police violence with “Pure Evil.” Over a soundbed that could have been taken from a Django monologue, Slug tells the story of a killer cop through the eyes of the cop as the chorus chants, “I don’t believe you, this is pure evil.”

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2 Chainz

ALBUM REVIEW: 2 Chainz – Daniel Son; Necklace Don

Originally posted on HipHopDX 8/21/2016
Rating: 2.9/5

For 2 Chainz, the past few years have been spent trying to keep up with the buzz and success that 2011 garnered him with his T.R.U. REALigion mixtape and his 2012 debut album Based on a T.R.U. Story. His sophomore album B.O.A.T.S. II: Me Time peaked at #3 on the charts but fell way short of the impact his previous efforts made. After a series of swings and misses including ColleGrovehis joint album with Lil Wayne, 2 Chainz is back with his latest offering Daniel Son; Necklace Don.

As you can imagine by the name of the project, the direction and theme borrow influences from The Karate Kid. The tape opens with an offensive Asian accent complete with live action karate sounds to bring the accompanying, stereotypical artwork full circle. Mr. Hair Weave Killer continues the oriental trend with “Get Out the Bed” as he combines hard hitting bass over a nostalgic, melodic soundbed akin to the 1987 Sega Genesis hit game, Shinobi. 2 Chainz The sounds of robust 808’s and the fawning over his codeine addiction highlight that he is certainly in his element.

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Tyga

EDITORIAL: The Double Standard On Justin Bieber & Tyga’s Underaged Girlfriends Cannot Be Allowed

Originally posted on HipHopDX 8/18/2016

If you’re like me, you try to shield yourself from the world of annoying, incessant pop culture and the Kardashian “famous for being famous” microwave era of celebrity. So you may not be aware that 22-year-old Justin Bieber is dating 17-year old-Sofia Richie, daughter of Lionel Richie. You are, by this time, most certainly aware that a 23-year-old Tyga started dating Kylie Jenner when she was 17. What are the differences in these scenarios and why would you be so openly aware of one over the other? Both girls, at the age of 17, are underage and cannot legally consent to a sexual relationship with a 22 and 23-year-old, respectively. But it’s only a year from consent right?

Let’s make this clear out of the gate so that there’s no misunderstanding my stance: There’s no reason a man over the age of 20 should even WANT a girl that’s 17 and under. What the fuck is wrong with you? What do y’all even have in common socially, mentally, and sexually? She’s a junior or senior in high school and you’re of the age where you’re finishing off college. You’re at least 3-4 years deep into full-time employment. She’s not even fully developed. You’re gross. You’re sick. You might literally be sick medically and you should seek professional help.

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EDM

ALBUM REVIEW: Prodigy – Untitled EDM EP

Originally posted on HipHopDX 8/17/2016
Rating: 3.4/5

Prodigy has been delivering his special brand of trendsetting for the better part of 23 years. After a two-year hiatus, the Mobb Deep capo is back and pushing the boundaries on his music to places he has never previously been as his partner Havoc appeases longtime fans alongside The Alchemist. His latest extended player shows the Queensbridge MC painting his brash and braggadocios bars over a canvas of EDM and Dubstep.

The EP opens with “Black Panther,” a scratch-heavy and synth-driven Baauer soundbed. While Prodigy is known for his unorthodox approach to riding the beat, his flow comes off more jarring than usual as he delivers his street tested bars we’ve come to love him for. P holds his own, however, with his patented flavor in lines like, “Thought you getting over but I’m slicing faces open, thought they could get away with murder but the reaper coming/repeat the first two bars describe ‘em to a Tee, I keep my enemies far (get) the fuck away from me”.

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Mafia

ALBUM REVIEW: Fredo Santana – Mafia

Originally posted on HipHopDX 8/2/2016
Rating: 2.1/5

In a world where black men are continuing to become hashtags, be it over inner-city turmoil or police brutality, the increasing rise in this generation of rappers glorifying violence remains a conundrum. The modern-day ground zero for what ails the urban community, Chicago, has churned out some of rap’s most notorious trap rappers as of late. Fredo Santana is one of those rappers and as the older cousin of Chief Keef, Fredo takes his brash style of rap to the next level with Fredo Mafia.

Fredo is not the rapper you seek out for content, flexibility, or cleverness. With his ability to ride a beat resting somewhere between Silkk The Shocker and Talib Kweli, Fredo is not the MC you’d wish to listen to for technical ability either. Fredo’s appeal arrives in the form of how he paints the picture of the life he lives and the life of how we’ve come to expect those struggling in the streets of Chicago to live.

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Love Can't Wait

EDITORIAL: Hip Hop & The Urban Community Need To Man Up Against Homophobia

Originally posted on HipHopDX 7/29/2016

In 2016, one’s sexuality continues to be a divisive subject. Just a week ago, the NBA announced that in lieu of the Public Facilities Privacy & Security Act, an anti-LGBT bill passed in North Carolina, that there would be no 2017 NBA All-Star in the city of Charlotte. It’s an unprecedented move by such a large corporation, costing the state’s largest city upwards of $100 million in estimated revenue during professional sport’s most popular All-Star break. 

Finally.

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Jacqueees

ALBUM REVIEW: Birdman & Jacquees – Lost At Sea

Originally posted on HipHopDX 7/21/2016
Rating: 2.4/5

Recent headlines haven’t been too kind to Birdman. From continued allegations of short-changing Lil Wayne to becoming a punchline after his Breakfast Club interview, the Stunna has been trapped in a revolving door of L’s. In between it all, the Cash Money capo has still been able to keep a pulse of today’s music scene with Young Thug and Rich Gang. And now with his latest protégé Jacquees, Baby is looking to shift the focus back to the music. Unfortunately, for him, rapping is still not his forte.

Lost At Sea opens up with “Wise Words”, an underwhelming, emotive soundbed chocked full of empty rhetoric and lackluster lyrics. Jacquees thoroughly disappoints with lines like “And I’m lost at sea on a yacht and plus my Rollie’s a pool/and then I stack my money longer than you.” 

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