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  • X*Cell
    Collab: xcellnoah@gmail
    • Sep 2002
    • 8107

    #3061
    Re: fans of underground rap?

    Originally posted by ex carrabba fan
    I know there's a thread on it, and it's not underground, but what do the regulars for this thread think about Untitled? I don't see the guys in this thread commenting, X, you going to review it?
    I haven't legitimately rated anything in a while... but I'll give my two cents most likely. I just got it, so it'll be a few days before I listen to it...

    Other than that... any of yall ever hear of Invincible? She's a female white rapper from Detroit... her new album Shapeshifters is decent. I can't decide which song is the best so far.
    SAN ANTONIO SPURS

    Comment

    • Fresh Tendrils
      Strike Hard and Fade Away
      • Jul 2002
      • 36131

      #3062
      Re: fans of underground rap?

      Maybe I missed it, but has anybody posted any reviews/impressions on Jean's new album yet?



      Comment

      • X*Cell
        Collab: xcellnoah@gmail
        • Sep 2002
        • 8107

        #3063
        Re: fans of underground rap?

        Originally posted by Fresh Tendrils
        Maybe I missed it, but has anybody posted any reviews/impressions on Jean's new album yet?
        just to fill you in, the album is pretty solid from front to back. None of the tracks put it over the edge, but it doesn't disappoint. And remember... it's Jean & 9TH WONDER's album.

        here are some of the sick album covers for it...





        SAN ANTONIO SPURS

        Comment

        • X*Cell
          Collab: xcellnoah@gmail
          • Sep 2002
          • 8107

          #3064
          Re: fans of underground rap?

          <embed src="http://www.undergroundhiphop.com/video/ughh_player.swf" width="480" height="318" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" flashvars="videoPath=http://www.undergroundhiphop.com/video/view.asp?ID=933&imagePath=http://www.undergroundhiphop.com/video/images/snapshots_480_width/TimeMachine_TheUnfortunateTwist.jpg&autoStart=fals e&volAudio=60&vid_id=933" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" pluginspage="http://www.adobe.com/go/getflashplayer" />
          SAN ANTONIO SPURS

          Comment

          • X*Cell
            Collab: xcellnoah@gmail
            • Sep 2002
            • 8107

            #3065
            Re: fans of underground rap?

            Here is an album I slept on playing in my iTunes because in all honesty... Marley Marl just hasn't wooed me much in the recent past... but maybe it couldn't have come at a more perfect time...



            After the Presto album, the Pacewon & Mr. Green joint, and now this, my love for old-school / classic hip-hop has revived. This happens to be the release that put me over the edge though. My favorite songs on it are "Skates" and the appropriately titled "Just What I Need"... appropriate because Marley-Marl's old-school style is brought to life by the mic wizardry of 8-Mile's freestyle writer Craig G. He's just what MM needed.

            Oh yeah, don't get me wrong... this is NOT an old-school compilation!... and neither are the other albums I named... they just give off that feel, with a modern rap flow. It's a great blend in my opinion.

            I give this album an A-

            Download this... "Skates"
            Last edited by X*Cell; 07-05-2008, 11:48 AM.
            SAN ANTONIO SPURS

            Comment

            • sportsdude
              Be Massive
              • Jul 2002
              • 5001

              #3066
              Re: fans of underground rap?

              Originally posted by ex carrabba fan
              I know there's a thread on it, and it's not underground, but what do the regulars for this thread think about Untitled? I don't see the guys in this thread commenting, X, you going to review it?
              I'm enjoying it a lot actually. As I said in the other thread, I could've done without Chris Brown on "Make the World Go Round" but my complaints for the album are few and far between.
              Lux y Veritas

              Comment

              • NC State-31 UNC-27
                MVP
                • Nov 2007
                • 1525

                #3067
                Re: fans of underground rap?

                I'm still listening to the Nas, trying to get a feel for it....takes me a while to take all his stuff in

                no word from Zo! and Tay yet? I'm feening for that 80s album at this point.

                and if you're an Obama fan, check out this funny remake to "A Milli"...not sure who the artist is http://www.zshare.net/audio/14739738a3a6ebc0/

                Comment

                • X*Cell
                  Collab: xcellnoah@gmail
                  • Sep 2002
                  • 8107

                  #3068
                  Re: fans of underground rap?




                  SAN ANTONIO SPURS

                  Comment

                  • jmood88
                    Sean Payton: Retribution
                    • Jul 2003
                    • 34639

                    #3069
                    Re: fans of underground rap?

                    This is a great album:

                    Originally posted by Blzer
                    Let me assure you that I am a huge proponent of size, and it greatly matters. Don't ever let anyone tell you otherwise.

                    If I went any bigger, it would not have properly fit with my equipment, so I had to optimize. I'm okay with it, but I also know what I'm missing with those five inches. :)

                    Comment

                    • X*Cell
                      Collab: xcellnoah@gmail
                      • Sep 2002
                      • 8107

                      #3070
                      Re: fans of underground rap?

                      Originally posted by jmood88
                      This is a great album:

                      I've been trying to find that... can you hook me up?
                      SAN ANTONIO SPURS

                      Comment

                      • jmood88
                        Sean Payton: Retribution
                        • Jul 2003
                        • 34639

                        #3071
                        Re: fans of underground rap?

                        Man I can't stop listening to this Danny album. I was a fan of his before but this is the best album he's done.
                        Originally posted by Blzer
                        Let me assure you that I am a huge proponent of size, and it greatly matters. Don't ever let anyone tell you otherwise.

                        If I went any bigger, it would not have properly fit with my equipment, so I had to optimize. I'm okay with it, but I also know what I'm missing with those five inches. :)

                        Comment

                        • Hassan Darkside
                          We Here
                          • Sep 2003
                          • 7561

                          #3072
                          Re: fans of underground rap?

                          New Joe Budden:
                          The Zshare file hosting providing website had been shut down many few years ago. The new zShare website is a news blog that publishes the latest trending news on the web. So what happened to the old Zshare? As the new owner of the domain zshare.net, I honestly don’t know. The domain had not been


                          He speaks on hip hop (finally) because most of his music is about his life and his own business.
                          [NYK|DAL|VT]
                          A true MC, y'all doing them regular degular dance songs
                          You losin' your teeth, moving like using Kevin Durant comb
                          Royce da 5'9"


                          Originally posted by DCAllAmerican
                          How many brothers fell victim to the skeet.........

                          Comment

                          • jmood88
                            Sean Payton: Retribution
                            • Jul 2003
                            • 34639

                            #3073
                            Re: fans of underground rap?

                            Danny explaining what each song is about and a rating from a blog:

                            That’s right people, not only do I have the album, I got the critical breakdown straight from the man himself. Check D. Swain’s overview, my 2 Cents and rating after the jump.



                            1. “Intro”

                            This is a pretty scathing record, even for me. Everyone knows I start my albums out with a self-aware rant of what’s going on in my life and career, so I got everything off my chest that I was dealing with. Everything from my Def Jux situation, biters, to being overlooked by print media gets addressed.

                            2. “Guess Who’s Back”

                            One of the first beats I made for the album back when I was first starting on it. I reached out to my frat brother Naledge of Kidz In The Hall to hop on the hook and he wound up doing a verse and killed it. The chemistry on the track is crazy, and it helps set the album off perfectly.

                            3. “I Want H.E.R. (She’s So Heavy)”

                            My boy Alex Goose did this beat; everyone knows my projects are usually self-contained but me and him are close friends and he brings the heat all the time. My homegirl Brittany Bosco is on the chorus. This is the part of the “movie” where the boy meets the girl for the very first time and he’s trying to get at her…or rather, H.E.R.

                            4. “At What Price”

                            “And I Love H.E.R.” originally started off as this 60’s-esque, Big Beat record with a lot of big sounds and horns and whatnot, but over time the project morphed into something totally different. It has its moments where it sounds like that, but I never imagined it would have its mellow moments either. “At What Price” is an example of that. It’s a story about a girl that tried to use her friends to get to the top but karma came back at her and now she’s stranded in her hometown doing shows for free. It’s unanimously everyone’s favorite record on the album, and I purposely showed my *** at the halfway mark of the song by letting the instrumental ride out for two minutes. I’m sorry.

                            5. “Jet Set”

                            The original beat for “Jet Set” was a sample from this dreamy, French pop record but I switched it up when I remembered this Charlie Brown movie from when I was younger and flipped that. I purposely used these southern drums with extra-loud hi-hats and even a dude saying “what! what!” in the background just to be funny. Matter of fact, I think they’re the same drums from “Café Surreal”. I like to think of it as a “Can’t Wait, Pt. 2” but not quite. It’s got a similar subject matter though.

                            6. “The Groove”

                            Speaking of “Café Surreal”, I had the same reservations about “The Groove” when I was working on it as I did with “Café…” Personally I liked it, but I didn’t know if it would go over with the extra hardcore hip-hop fans. But when “Café…” took off it gave me a little reassurance so I basically did what the hell I wanted to on this song. It’s the only song on “And I Love H.E.R.” that I don’t care if anyone likes it or not, I think it’s dope. It’s basically a party track and after I recorded to the original version I found out that the Beatnuts used the same sample so I added clips from that song to bridge the two and pay homage.

                            7. “Not The One”

                            Again, as “And I Love H.E.R.” continued to develop I branched out I began to let these chill, down-tempo tracks make their way onto the project. The beat for “Not The One” is actually two years old. The basic premise is that me and my boy Kid Syc are at this club trying to get at these girls but as soon as we think we’ve got ‘em they hit us with the okie-doke. I’m sure a lot of people can relate to it.

                            8. “Misery”

                            The beat for “Misery” is actually two years old too, I think it was done around the time “Not The One” was made. I even recorded a demo version of this song in late 2006 that you can find on the internets if you know where to look. “Misery”, along with “Do You” later on in the album are the most personal songs I’ve ever done in my life. Collette from Columbia is on the track and she did the damn thing.

                            9. “Intermission (interlude)”

                            This is one of those self-indulgent tracks where I get to say sh*t like if people don’t like this album, I’ll be okay ‘cause I’ll just re-release “Charm” with a bonus DVD and still get paid. I like my self-aware songs the best ‘cause I tend to say whatever I want and people are like, “only Danny would say that!” “Intermission (interlude)” ends Act I of the album and begins Act II.

                            10. “Wanderland”

                            “Wanderland” is the second of three songs on “And I Love H.E.R.” that’s produced by my friend Alex Goose. I love how the heavy drums and sparseness of the track bring my voice front and center, I don’t think I have many songs like that. When I got finished writing it someone told me it reminded them a lot of “Second Childhood” by Nas, which is one my favorite records by one of my favorite MCs.

                            11. “Where You Goin’”

                            When people ask me what my favorite track on the album is, I’m always torn between this and “I Don’t Know”, which comes later in the album. My friend Maria makes a guest appearance, and I just love the production on it as a whole. It’s the part of the “movie” where I’m trying to reconcile with my girl because she thinks I’ve been cheating on her with someone else.

                            12. “Never Change”

                            This song sort of picks up where the intro left off. It’s basically my frustration with everyone not accepting me as an artist because I’m not “deep” or fit into the mold of what they think a rapper should be. I’ve always been outspoken but never really spoke on the issue in depth so this was my way of venting. There’s two funny parts about this song: the first is that I actually sing briefly after my verse is over (I never sing), and the second is that at the very end of the song I have my boy Branden sing “**** y’all niggas!” “Never Change” is the last track that Alex Goose produced.

                            13. “I Don’t Know”

                            Again, I keep switching between this song and “Where You Goin’” as my favorite joint on “And I Love H.E.R.” It’s very catchy and I feel like if it came on the radio it’d be a hit. My man Von Pea from Tanya Morgan came through on the first verse and Stephanie Mae knocked out the chorus. I throw another jab at Def Jux on the bridge when I’m like, “she asked when my Def Jux album droppin’ / Told her ‘I don’t know’”.

                            14. “Yoko Ono”

                            The funny thing about this track is that when I named it “Yoko Ono” originally I never really thought of a reason why; I just wanted to tie every song on “And I Love H.E.R.” to the Beatles in some way, whether by title or by musical influence. Before I even finished my verse someone asked me, “why DO you call this beat ‘Yoko Ono’”? And, as if it were scripted, I said “’cause this bitch is crazy!” and it just stuck. The homie Che Grand hits it out of the park on the first verse.

                            15. “Do You”

                            Most albums have the requisite introspective/”deep” track but “And I Love H.E.R.” has what, three? “Do You”, along with “Misery”, are very dear to me because they’re extremely personal and give people a glimpse of a part of my life that they never knew. In this I kinda talk about the relationship between me and my mom. I love the sample I flip because it’s haunting, and the drums try to drown it out but it can’t.

                            16. “After The Love Has Gone”

                            I purposely named this song “After The Love HAS Gone” instead of “After The Love IS Gone” as homage to the Earth Wind & Fire track. This song went through a lot of changes, as the original beat was switched up so many times to the point that the liner notes list Alex Goose as the producer when in fact we made a 11th hour change and used my beat instead. Me and my girl decide to break up for the time being but there’s always the possibility we’ll hook back up. Someone said the sample reminds them of the Hawaii 5-0 theme song but I don’t know.

                            17. “Keep Dreamin’”

                            I freakin’ love this song. No one expects D. Swain to do a track like this but again I prove people wrong. The drums are all over the place and the sample I used came from this French library record used for sporting events. I even rap in double time! Cats ain’t ready for that. It has a triumphant feel to it even though most of the album has come off kinda defeatist at this point. At the end of the song I don’t rule out the possibility of putting out another album, but we’ll see…

                            R.E.’s 2 Cents: In the same way that Charm was a conceptual masterpiece, “And I Love H.E.R.” adopts a concept throughout the album that Danny! delivers perfectly. What makes this album great isn’t Danny!’s rhyme skills, but instead his concepts, ideas, lyrical content, outstanding production and the way the album’s story is painted so vividly are what make this project memorable. In a time in hip-hop where Lil Wayne can sell 400,000 albums in one day, without anyone knowing what the **** he’s rapping about, Danny! is the anti-Weezy. Of course, the words don’t sound as good coming out of his mouth, but it’s clear through 17-tracks that D. Swain is in love with hip-hop, just as Common expressed his love on “I Used To Love H.E.R.” in 1994.

                            Rating: 4 and 1/2 chicken sandwiches (and a side of waffle fries, just because my name is in the “Thank You” notes, but they don’t count towards the rating).
                            Originally posted by Blzer
                            Let me assure you that I am a huge proponent of size, and it greatly matters. Don't ever let anyone tell you otherwise.

                            If I went any bigger, it would not have properly fit with my equipment, so I had to optimize. I'm okay with it, but I also know what I'm missing with those five inches. :)

                            Comment

                            • X*Cell
                              Collab: xcellnoah@gmail
                              • Sep 2002
                              • 8107

                              #3074
                              Re: fans of underground rap?

                              <div><object width="420" height="339"><param name="movie" value="http://www.dailymotion.com/swf/x2svga" /><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always" /><embed src="http://www.dailymotion.com/swf/x2svga" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="420" height="339" allowFullScreen="true" allowScriptAccess="always"></embed></object><br /><b><a href="http://www.dailymotion.com/swf/x2svga">(9th wonder remix) ini - fakin' jax</a></b><br /><i>by <a href="http://www.dailymotion.com/dougpark17">dougpark17</a></i></div>
                              SAN ANTONIO SPURS

                              Comment

                              • jmood88
                                Sean Payton: Retribution
                                • Jul 2003
                                • 34639

                                #3075
                                Re: fans of underground rap?

                                The 9th Wonder remix album is nice.
                                Originally posted by Blzer
                                Let me assure you that I am a huge proponent of size, and it greatly matters. Don't ever let anyone tell you otherwise.

                                If I went any bigger, it would not have properly fit with my equipment, so I had to optimize. I'm okay with it, but I also know what I'm missing with those five inches. :)

                                Comment

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