rulururu

post Oh Yeh

June 26th, 2007

Filed under: Pharoahe Monch, Talib Kweli — gowhere? @ 3:47 pm


PHAROAHE MONCH “DESIRE” in stores today. be sure to pick it up!


New TALIB




post Become Stronger In Japan With Entourage

June 26th, 2007

Filed under: Kanye West — gowhere? @ 3:46 pm

Finally,,, its here!!

STRONGER premier from TRL in Germany



Kanye West - Stronger

haha lovin the ギャー!! part

also…

post Kanye West - Stronger PREVIEW

June 25th, 2007

Filed under: Kanye West — gowhere? @ 3:43 pm

post Mosdefinitely Cool Common Collected

June 23rd, 2007

Filed under: Common, Guru, Mixtapes, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, The Roots — gowhere? @ 3:36 pm

I just had to get these… HMV store in Japan had em.

check out these tracks

 
Cool Common Collected Mixtape

post NEW T.I., Mos Def, Kweli

June 22nd, 2007

Filed under: Jay-Z, Mos Def, T.I., Talib Kweli — gowhere? @ 3:33 pm

TI feat. Jay-Z “Watch What You Say”

Mos Def “Poison Live”
-Mos breaks it down in this joint

Peter Rosenberg Interviewing Talib Kweli



post Common - The People f/ Dwele - VIDEO PREMIERE

June 22nd, 2007

Filed under: Common, Dwele — gowhere? @ 3:27 pm



Great Video, made in looop, chi-town

post Dangermouse

June 21st, 2007

Filed under: Dangermouse — gowhere? @ 3:26 pm
From DangerMouse and Jemini’s “Ghetto Pop Life”


“Ghetto Pop Life”

Ghetto Pop Life (2003) was Danger Mouse’s Debut album on Lex Records and is an unmissable Hip Hop classic.

Having slipped into the Brooklyn wilderness, early 90s should-be-super-star to be, Jemini The Gifted One was enlisted along with guests; Tha Alkaholiks, Cee-Lo, The Pharcyde, J-Zone and Prince Po from Organized Konfusion (and of course a full choir), to lead on Danger Mouse’s magnum hip hop opus.

Immediately praised by critics, indie fans and hip hop headz alike, Ghetto Pop Life is a richly textured, sometimes political and always fun journey through the golden era of beats, rhymes and (Ghetto Pop) life. The long awaited sequal album provisionally titled ‘Kill Your Heroes’ is yet to appear, but you can alreayd download a track from the album from out MEDIA section.

You can download or buy the album from these reputable sources:

post Finding Forever Tracklist

June 19th, 2007

Filed under: Common — gowhere? @ 3:25 pm

“The People”
Set to be Finding Forever’s first single, “The People” begins with a chopped interplay between the sampled “Louder!” and “Yeah!” from Mountain’s ultimate breakbeat jam “Long Red.” Not long ago “Long Red” was sampled by J Dilla for De La Soul’s “Verbal Clap” on The Grind Date. West said that during a meeting with Steven Spielberg. the director told him that he made the film AI in the way he imagined Stanley Kubrick would have told the story. West revealed that this inspired him to produce all his tracks on Finding Forever in the same way the recently departed Dilla would have, in tribute to him.

“Black Maybe”
Another Kanye West production, the title of this song was taken from a song by Stevie Wonder and Syretta Wright and is about the problems that come once you’ve grown out of the circumstances you were born into. Repeat Common collaborator Bilal provided the vocals on the hook, furthering the album’s reference point of classic soul.

“I Want You”
A track of electro love soul with sonic nods to Busta Rhymes’ “Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Can See” and Audio Two’s “Top Billin.’” “I write love songs, point blank and I ain’t ashamed of it,” said Common. Will.i.am whipped up the beat when he and Common were working on that song from the Gap commercial.

“Southside”
A shorter version of this song was released earlier this year when the Bears were in the Super Bowl. Hardly any attention is paid to hooks or catchiness, it’s just bullet-spray lyrics from West and Common, who in the space of a couple lines compares himself to both James Baldwin and Kool G Rap.

“Driving Me Wild”
Featuring Lily Allen and produced by Kanye West. Our notes say something about it being “unhinged.” We’re not really sure what we meant.

“So Far To Go”
This one was produced by J Dilla and features D’Angelo. You should have heard it already when it was released on Dilla’s posthumous album The Shining. You’d be surprised how many people at the listening session seemingly hadn’t.

“Break My Heart”
Common had only recorded one verse for this storytelling piece that tracks a relationship from the initial flirtations to its end. “Breaking a girl’s heart,” said Common,” sometimes it happens.”

“The Game”
The use of Ahmad Jamal’s “Swahililand” (as heard on De La Soul’s “Stakes Is High”) is an obvious nod to Dilla by West, but “The Game” also incorporates ’90s boom-bap hip-hop. The duo even brought in DJ Premier to scratch a chorus out of lines from OC’s “Half Good, Half Sinner” : It’s only right that I address this/ You gotta be in it to win it.

“Start The Show”
Slated as the album opener, the beat for “Start The Show” is much more dominating than most Common tracks, though West was sure to add some sparkle as it progresses. “Start The Show” features one of Common’s patented putdowns of other rappers: “You was better as a drug dealer.”

“Misunderstood”
Produced by Devo Springsteen, West’s cousin and collaborator, the song is introduced by a verse and chorus from a live Nina Simone performance of “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood.” A cast of characters that commonly appear in Common songs find their way into the lyrics: the college girl gone wrong, the smart kid stuck on the corner, etc.

“Forever Begins”
This is going to be the last song on our album and was probably our favorite, from it’s military drums to afro-soul instrumental outro. Once it was over Common kept up his tradition and asked everyone in the room what they thought the best two tracks were. The most popular picks were “The People,” “The Game,” “Southside,” and “Forever Begins.” Common said his favorites were “”The People” and “Drivin Me Wild.” West abstained.

-gowhere?

post Eclectic Collective

June 18th, 2007

Filed under: Eclectic Collective — gowhere? @ 3:22 pm


a hip-hop/rock ish band from Boston,
The Eclectic Collective

kinda sounds like Gym Class Heroes when they used to be good.
from their newest album “THE FLUX”

post NEW Monch

June 14th, 2007

Filed under: Pharoahe Monch — gowhere? @ 3:20 pm

a track from Pharoahe Monch’s upcoming album “desire”

“hyped to be best rap album of 07!”

When Guns Draw (featuring Mr Porter)
ruldrurd
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