Showing posts with label Rap/Beatbox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rap/Beatbox. Show all posts

Tuesday, 14 December 2010

Trip Lee & Lecrae Reviews


I've almost come to view Reach Records albums the way I view Pixar films. Every new one is different from the last but bound to be high quality. I was very exited at the thought of Trip Lee's Between Two Worlds album. His guest spots are usually a highlight on other rappers albums - so a full album of his own is bound to be awesome right? Well I'm sad to say that's not the case.

Between Two Worlds

Judging by the Amazon reviews I may be the only person on the planet that thinks this way, but for me nothing on the album hangs together right. The overall tone of the record seems a little dark, beats are mostly uninspiring, too many tracks filled with noodly gypsy violin solos. The raps themselves are either well done but targeting topics that have been done better before or have a fresh theme or angle (like confession in Snitch or the resurrection in Invasion) that Trip doesn't really handle in any interesting way.


Sadly it makes me want to paraphrase the comment ascribe to Dr Johnson "Your record is both good and original, but the parts that are good aren't original and the parts that are original aren't very good". The production seems sonically cluttered even though on some tracks there's very little on there and occasionally Trips vocals are almost drowned out by the track.

I can't put my finger on what is wrong with this album. I've listened to it so much trying to will myself to like it more that I've ended up liking it even less. Trip almost sounds like a young guy who is not ready to carry his album yet - but this is his third.

The one ray of light is the first part of Twisted. For about a minute and a half the track motors along with a passion, energy and originality that seems to have bypassed the rest of the set. Racking my brains to think what was different about this track, it hit me.

The first section of the song features Lecrae all by himself.

Rehab

Which brings me to Rehab by Lecrae. He seems to have a first among equals status among the Reach Records guys, so any CD by 'Crae is a big deal. And he doesn't disappoint.

Every track is packed with passion, dazzling artistry and deep theology. Some things grab you first or second time around but there are lines that on the tenth listen suddenly jump out at you as you realise how profound an insight he has just managed to slot into two lines.

There are some huge tracks on this record (High, Divine Intervention, Walking On Water) but first place must go to 40 Deep. Over a track that sounds like an outtake from Kill Bill or Enter The Dragon we get 3 body slamming verses from Crae, Tedashii & Trip Lee. And back to form Trip shines (as does Tedashii - singing!).


If this record stood on Lecrae's rapping alone it would be straight out one of 2010’s top albums, but there are a couple of things that let it down. Biggest of all are the hooks.

A chorus on a rap tune is supposed to give you something memorable to grab onto as the millions of words speed by you. The hooks for the most part fail here in an epic way. Tracks with a rap hook (40 Deep, Used To Do It Too, High) are fine, but the tracks with a sung chorus just ramble, have too many words, little definable shape (God Is Enough, ‘Nuff), and sometimes seem unsure about what the title is (Gotta Know). It sounds like Lecrae just let the singer improvise till they got something usable or wrote a rap chorus and then got someone to make up a tune.

Here's my plea - Lecrae you need to work with a real songwriter!

Second I'm a little uncomfortable with the whole ‘rehab’ vibe. NOT cos I have a problem with Christian artists going mainstream, NOT because I'm against Christian rappers reaching out evangelistically to the unchurched. But the artwork (Lecrae blowing smoke like he has a joint just out of shot), songs like Check In and Killa and the whole Rehab concept itself, seems engineered to pull some kind of bait and switch scam on non-christians. eg “Hey kids I'm a gangster doing drugs, screwing my life up. Check me out!” but then when they buy the record it’s "hey praise the Lord, you've been suckered into buying a gospel rap CD"

I won’t mention the continuing Reach Records tradition of awful artwork. I’ll just say ‘light grey liner notes on grey/black background’ and leave it at that.

Overall, a lot of great songs on here and well worth checking out, but I am hoping that Lecrae can kick the habit of putting lame hooks into his music.



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Monday, 14 June 2010

The Saviour of Christian Music is Not a White Guy With a Guitar…



It’s a Black Man on a Mic.


At first I thought it was merely a result of my ineptitude as a blogger. 

I mean when you’ve giving away one of the best albums of the year and you’re struggling to find a taker something’s gotta be wrong, right?


Then I started to notice the underwhelming coverage that Lions And Liars was getting on the web in general. Hey! Sho Baraka’s reformed (as in theology) style of rap is a sub genre of a sub genre of a sub genre. No wonder he’s off the map.

Then the aptly named ‘Under The Radar’ podcast airs a special rap edition. The music is incredible (download it here) but the host sounded like he was already bracing himself for the backlash. What the problem?

The Christian music scene doesn’t need a new star, a new hero, or a new trendsetter. But we do need someone to save us from an army effeminate, doctrine-phobic mystics, and the ability to play barre chords is not necessarily a requirement.

Man-up


To borrow a line from Sho, when you have ‘hip hop minus all the thugging’ you’re still left with something inherently manly. On the other hand, take a pinch of ‘God is my girlfriend’ sentiments, sung in an effeminate vocal style and smeared with guyliner and it may be marketable, but it won’t make Driscoll’s playlist.

Word


The new rap is most bible-saturated form of music around today. Proof? Who are the champions for this new style of music? Old white preachers. Mark Dever (a man whose church regards Isaac Watts as a little edgy) interviewed Voice & Shai Linne.

John Piper got Lecrae to rap in a Sunday service at Calvinism H.Q. (aka Bethlehem Baptist Church).

Mark Driscoll had Lecrae & Tedashii over to jam at Mars Hill to the studied indifference of 9000 bemused Seattle cage fighting software programmers.

Why did this happen?

These preachers love the word and they love musicians who love the word.

This is something of a sea change as far as ‘urban’ music goes (and why urban? Do all the white guys live on the farm?). Marred by self-actualisation & the prosperity gospel and hamstrung by a ridiculous allegiance to King James English, too often black gospel artists have sounded like funky positive thinking emissaries from the 17th century.


Sunday morning


That all well and good. But can you rap corporately?

No.

And that’s probably a good thing.

Because at the moment it’s hard to tell who’s a worship leader and who’s not. It used to be easy. The worship leader was the one with a hole in the middle of his guitar.

But now he has a Strat, and a band, and a light show. He’s just like any other band leader (except his band gigs every Sunday morning). This problem isn’t the hardware. It’s the songs.


Let’s call him Don



Don has a Transcendental Experience of God.
Don commemorates that in a song.
Don sings that song at every gig for the next 3 years. 
Cool.

Don brings the song into a worship setting and teaches it to everyone.
They sing about Don’s mountain top experience.
Some identify. Some don’t.
Don introduces a few more mountain top songs.
Touching the divine right here, right now starts to become the expectation for a normal time of worship.  
Not so cool.

Paul met Jesus on the road to Damascus.
When he got up off the floor he carried on down the road.
He didn’t build a roadside tabernacle and go back there every Sunday expecting to feel the same Holy Ghost high.

Imagine a testimony time where after every story of deliverance, healing, financial provision the whole congregation jumped up and started confessing that it had happened to them too.

Crazy huh?
Let’s make sure we’re not doing that when we sing.


This is me.



I’m a white guy with a guitar. I’m not dissing my tribe. But I’m thrilled to see something exciting and ground-breaking happening in gospel rap.

I want to welcome what God is doing with open arms, honouring him for the gifting he’s placed in my Christian brothers Sho Baraka, Tedashii, Lecrae, Trip Lee, Katalyst, Shai Linne (to name just a few)

Will you join me?

Here's three good places to start

Under the Radar #80
Lions & Liars
Identity Crisis





Free songs by a white guy with a guitar

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Sho Baraka's Chicken Interview



Sho Baraka is a funny dude...




Sho Baraka 'Lions & Liars' Interview from Rapzilla.com on Vimeo.


Related Posts: Lions and Liars review


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Monday, 24 May 2010

DJ Official - EnterMission: Review



Don't forget you still have 3 days left to win this album right here.



EnterMission is less an album BY DJ Official and more a sampler or mix tape on the theme of urban mission featuring Reach Records artists and likeminded friends.

There’s a massive variety on display here, which is both a strength and a weakness. If you like hip-hop there’s bound to be tracks you love and tracks you hate. EnterMission serves you up everything from Nothing Without You (think Pink at her most feminine) to Chisel Me (a masochistic sanctification smackdown) to Not My Own (imagine speed reading Wayne Grudem while listening to nu-metal).

So, while they may not be your favourites, let me tell you mine

Some reviewers have described Show Off (Lecrae & Flame) as cheesy. I don’t agree (this, mon ami, is tres fromage). To me the track is just playful and fresh rather than fresh from the deli counter and as fun is not one of Reach’s strong points I say kudos to ‘em.

Streets Of New York (J.A.Z. & Magellan) is one of the best tracks by DJ Official evoking perfectly the knife edge tension of a city at flashpoint. The lyrics not only paint the picture in stark colours but motivate you to get out there.

Go features some insane speed rapping from H.G.A. (who are these guys?) & Tedashii.

Love Fallen (Gems, Jahaziel, BenJah & Dillavou) is the kind of track that shouldn’t work but is easily one of the best on the album. Crossing so many boundaries that you feel dizzy, the blend of UK & Jamacian rappers meeting over a sizzling reggae track is inspired.

On an album full of gritty realism Sho Baraka’s track Chaos is the hardest hitting of them all. The backing is a claustrophobic Prodigy (Firestarter) style track, all alarms and skittering beats representing the moral chaos Sho is rapping about. This track is Huge.

Overall there’s much to like on this album. DJ Official himself doesn’t cast a big enough shadow to give it a cohesive identity but it would make a good first purchase if you’re unfamiliar with Reach Records and want to check out the different artists.

get this album for FREE.



Related Posts: Sho Baraka - Lions & Liars review



Free songs by Matt Blick


Monday, 17 May 2010

Free Sho Baraka (Re)Mix Tape



This should appeal to you if you like the track We Could Be More on Sho Baraka's new CD Lions and Liars.

I mean really, really, really like it.

Sho proves ha can be more, much more, by giving away a mix tape of 15 remixes of this one track.

Get it here.

Don't forget to check out the Sho Baraka/DJ Official giveaway I'm currently running.


Free songs by Matt Blick

Tuesday, 11 May 2010

Why Sho Serious? Sho Baraka: Lions And Liars Review


  For a chance to win this album click here!



In 2009 Reach Records artist Tedashii released one of the best albums of any genre, Identity Crisis. 2010 looks like being the year of stablemate Sho Baraka and his amazing album Lions And Liars.

What’s so special?


Like all the Reach rappers, Sho is very worded and hard hitting, but he’s humorous with it. He has a gift for handling even the most serious themes in a playful way.

The album is packed with references, both cultural & biblical & is bursting with musical styles & lyrical themes.

Manhood & racial identity, sex, drugs and violence, thug culture & the gospel vie for attention over a crazy mix of stadium rock, & europop anthems, Motown Soul & Black Gospel, sax solos & performance poetry.

Don't trust the trailer


Ever seen a film where the best 3 minutes were all in the trailer? Well this album is the opposite. Don’t judge Oh Well & Revolutionary Died from the taster videos you‘ve seen on Youtube. Like his master, Sho saved the best for last. Both songs will have you hitting replay again and again.

The man raps with a twinkle in his eye. It’s apparent on Lions Anthem from the nod to Whole Lotta Love to rapping about the shoe salesman who’s used to save soles (souls) and his cousin at the IRS dealing with false profits (prophets). 

But he’s just warming up. He catches fire on Mercy On Me. Over a powerfully penitent gospel chorus, the criminal & the cancer patient who’ll “be dead by year's end” are our companions at the mercy seat. 

I’m Black - a creatively recorded performance poem by Tom Ason, serves as an attention grabbing intro to My Life

Nice aim! They taught us to aim for nothing
And look, we hit it, dead on the button.

Sho’s personal journey through self-identity issues features superbly crafted lyrics - each line of the chorus recaps the line before, and the final line leads us back to the first line. 

On Me, Myself & I he gets all Smeagol/Gollum on the mic, as he documents his battles against the flesh.

You’re a liar, a jerk you’re a creep,
So prideful, arrogant and weak.

Don't waste your skit


Liar’s Anthem is built on a sample from a Don’t Waste Your Life video skit. Singing from the thug’s p.o.v. could be dangerous move, turning this into a gangster's song, but Sho manages to makes the transition via looking at the sins of the rap industry, church & Nike(!) to straight out preaching. 

Propaganda supplies the second performance poem BOYS!!! and it is a killer. In 1:29 he manages to reduce wannabe gangsters to “silly boys.” And sets the stage perfectly for the album’s high point Revolutionary Died

It’s still hip-hop minus all the thugging
Take the poet & the priest & put it in the husband

I know one song can’t change the world
But maybe the dude next door [will] stop beating his girl

download it right now!


This song is a classic and the only reason not to get immediately is that’s ‘cos you’re gonna get the whole album.

Oh Well keeps up the pressure over a swaggering rock groove

They save whales, save dogs, save dolphins,
Save trees – but kids ain’t really that important

All the money he wants can’t buy joy
Dollar bills don’t make men out of boys

By this stage Sho is relentless. When the beat drops he keeps going - right of the edge of the map.


Perfect?


No, there’s a few weak points - all of them minor. 

The early tracks struggle to sustain the weight of the grand concept. Who is the dead lion? Jesus? Christians? Does the cover mean Sho is a Liar? Or a Lion and a Liar? As well as making him look freakishly ugly it’s trying to make a metaphor mean too many things all at once. AND IT DOESN’T MATTER! The songs and the track listing are strong enough to tell their own story. 

Just for once I’d love to see a hip hop album presented simply as “a collection of the best tracks I recorded this year” without feeling the need to make some kind of over hyped statement. Because the songs make a powerful enough statement all by themselves. Though strictly speaking this is not a concept album I can’t remember the last time I’ve heard an album with such a powerful flow (particularly from I’m Black to Oh Well).

The ugly photo isn’t the only sleeve issue. This is the second Reach Records release I’ve had to go online to find out the name of a track or featured rapper.  
Readab1E fOnts  guys!

The album is 17 tracks plus 4 bonus tracks. Filling every second of the CD runs the risk diluting the album. There’s nothing wrong with the bonus tracks – (Kobe Bryant On Em extended mix? Yes, please!) but why not keep the album tighter and include a unique download code for bonus tracks?

So to sum up, the only things wrong with this CD are Sho paid more attention to the music than the artwork and is too generous with his tracks. Shame on you Sho!

This is an incredible, inspiring five star album. It will make you laugh and make you think. It will move your heart and probably the rest of your body with it .


Wanna get your hands on a free copy of this CD? Tune in tomorrow to find out how.

Related Posts: Free Sho Baraka mixtape

John Piper vs Led Zeppelin (Tedashii & Lecrae)

Free songs by Matt Blick

Tuesday, 30 March 2010

Sho Baraka's New Album Is Out Now!


shobaraka_lions&liars_final

Thats right Sho Baraka's Lions & Liars is available RIGHT NOW!
Lecrae, JAMM, Trip Lee, Tedashii are all on board.

Deluxe versions are available here. There are five versions to choose from.




For more promos and snippets go here, more information? Visit www.reachrecords.com

US peeps can get it at Walmart ($9.99 w/bonus tracks), Family Christian, LifeWay, Berean, and Mardel Christian stores.



Related Posts: The Sho Must Go On


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Tuesday, 23 February 2010

The Sho Must Go On





Sho Baraka is one of the best Christian rappers out there. Not only has he got the same strong doctrinal underpinning to his rapping shared by all his Reach Records stablemates, he's a heavy hitter like Tedashii and he tops off the brew with a sense of humour. Here's a few recommendations for you to check out.

First up you want to get Sho's FREE mix tape Barakology. The flavour varies from the out and out silliness of the Serious Rapper Skit and the Intro to the epic track Glorious.


Sho recorded a great interview for christianmanifesto.com which you can download here.


Sho's Prodigy-influenced track Chaos is one of the standout songs on DJ Official's Entermission album. I'll be reviewing the album and giving away a free copy soon, but if you can't wait here's where you can download the track, the album or buy the CD.




Lastly Sho has a new album Lion And Liars out soon. Don't let the freaky artwork put you off ( if you aren't the lions doesn't that make you the liar Sho?).




Related Posts: Tedashii: Identity Crisis review
Lecrae Don't Waste Your Life video (starring Sho Baraka)



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Thursday, 14 January 2010

Christian Rap Primer




9 Marks Audio has a very interesting and thought provoking interview with two reformed (as in Calvinist) rappers, Shai Linne and Voice. They cover (among other things)what hip hop culture is,rap music's potential for the gospel, and why rap can’t replace preaching.
  Check it out.

If you do get bored you can always count how many times in the first 15 minutes Mark Dever asks a question and then interrrupts.

Your answers in the comments section please!





Related Posts:Lecrae: Don't Waste Your Life
Lyrycyst's Revolution FREE download

Monday, 19 October 2009

Ladies & Gentlemen - John Pointer!



Here's the truly amazing John Pointer, Texas based multi-instrumentalist, producer, arranger, composer and actor. Watch him doing alone what it took 4 members of Led Zeppelin to do, armed only with a guitar, delay pedal, flight case and healthy set of lungs. Amazing...

Kashmir - Solo Acoustic performance by John Pointer (Short) from John Pointer on Vimeo.



Related Posts: John Piper vs. Led Zeppelin
Yuri Lane

Friday, 14 August 2009

How Do They Do That?


Ever wanted to see what a DJ does up close and personal?

Weeeeell...what Beastie Boys collaborator Mix Master Mike does is absolutely nothing for the first 1:48 but thereafter is amazing.

Check it out!




Related Posts: You can't beat this rap

Thursday, 6 August 2009

Don't Waste Your Life



Here's another hot Piper-approved rap track from Lecrae.




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Thursday, 9 July 2009

You can't beat this rap...


(Do you see what I did there...?)


If rap is your thing and you can stand to tear yourself away from Tedashii’s new album for a few minutes, here’s a few more beats for treats.


Lyrycyst may have the worst case of name mispelling since Motley Crue (“Yo! I’m a lyrical tumour!” – not good!) but his free track Go Get ‘Em Kik v3 is really rather splendid.

(The Free Christian Music Blog heard it first)



Ditto for Praize Him, a live track from The Rep over at Kyle Campos’s blog Our Rising Sound.




The wonderful eccentric Pigeon John has two free tracks on RelevantMagazine.Com, Money Back Guarantee and Weight Of The World, that are “gonna melt your face off”. Unlike most of the downloads on the site they’re not ‘unplugged’ (unless the drum machine and keyboards you can hear are running off batteries).





Lastly but not leastly there’s beastly beats a plenty at BeastieMixes.Com which is a remix website where you can download, upload and for all I know sideload all manner of crazy user-generated remixes of Beastie Boys tracks.

For a band that allegedly put DRM on one of their recent albums they seem awfully cavalier about letting their peeps infringe other people’s copyright, but maybe they’ve seen the light.

If you don’t know where to start on this mash-up smorgasbord, let me suggest the awesome
Ch Check It Out_Istanbul (Not Constantinople) Remix,

And Intergalactic-Stronger Mix
both by Nygel (a friend the Cyst meister?)

and the crazy lo-fi-sci-fi drum and bass sound of
Bassdriver’s Pass The Mic- Children Again Passdamic


Peace Out – DJ Blyk

Saturday, 20 June 2009

Six or 7?



Naturally 7

These guys sound like Take 6: The Next Generation…




 

Related Posts: Beatboxing Chef




Friday, 5 June 2009

Tedashii: Identity Crisis - Best Album of 2009 (so far)

`

If Christian music can make you cringe with embarrassment, Christian rap can be extra cheesy. So often it’s just a pale imitation of whatever was big with secular audiences 10 years earlier.

Which is a shame. Cos if there’s any musical form suited to preaching in song it’ s rap. The typical rap track contains as many words as a whole rock album, giving an unparalleled opportunity to treat a subject with all the necessary nuances and qualifications – vital when most heresy is birthed trying to make God simple to understand. Sad to say much hip-hop has failed to live up to it’s potential. The Christian alternative to ‘bigging yourself up’ is often preaching ‘actualise your potential, ‘be your best you now’, ‘God loves a winner’. Yadayada...

Things are changing however.


A new breed of rappers seems to be emerging, particularly around the Reach record label, guys like Lecrae, Trip Lee & Tedashii. Clear on the doctrine of sin & the importance of the local church, wise to the snare of worldly approval, they rock hard, preach holiness and sample John Piper. Tedashii’s new album, Identity Crisis, is exhibit A.



Intro get off the starting line full throttle, taking you from “Hey baby, what’s up?” to rapping about “Imago Dei” in 1:43 backed by a hyperactive classical piano riff.

I Work follows right on. An aggressive renunciation of peer pressure perfectly welded to a track that would feel at home on the Rocky 2 soundtrack.

In a similar vein 26s’ gives a wake up call to idolatry in the low rider culture. Tedashii perfectly captures the wide-eyed worship of the ride while guest Lecrae preaches to the “self proclaimed kings”

“Tell me where it ends boy,
‘cos the truck don’t bring you luck,
and it sho’ nuff ain’t gonna pay your sins, boy”

Though there are several mellower tracks on the album, Tedashii is at his best when he plays hard. And he plays hardest on Make War.



Kicking off with a sample of John Piper bemoaning why Christians don’t fight harder against sin in their lives, Tedashii grabs the baton and rams the point home so powerfully that I almost wish he could back Piper every Sunday morning!

And maybe Piper would be glad to have him - there’s a mature theological grasp on display here that should make many Christian singers ashamed to open their mouths when they have so little to say, and say it in such a bland rehashed way.

After spending most of the time out in the world, the album bows out with a pair of tracks closer to home.

Church’s hilariously sleepy groove paints the futility of the nominal churchgoer “Jesus must know me cos I heating up a seat in the church” and contrasts sharply with Community’s relentless forward motion. In fact the contrast is almost too sharp. A casual listen could give the impression that this exciting ‘community’ is something to be found ‘outside’ the church. But the chorus spells it out. There’s a blessing on “them church boys” when they “live in community”.

Overall verdict – a relentless drive-by against idolatry and apathy.

If you love rap – Buy It
. And if you think you don’t because your only point of reference is DC Talk - Buy It anyway.

Related Posts: John Piper vs. Led Zeppelin

Friday, 24 April 2009

Friday, 17 April 2009

Beatboxing Chef



Beardyman - the beatboxing chef



(Props to my man B-BOY BOB K @ www.worshipmatters.com for this!)

Want to see up close how he does it?

Here you go...



Related Posts: Yuri Lane



Friday, 3 April 2009

White & Nerdy?


Ooh. I'm all conflicted.

I think this is Cheese On A Stick.
BUT...
As a longtime fan of the Beastie Boys I DO have a high tolerance for old white guys rapping
HOWEVER...
I can't help feeling that someone's youth pastor had too much time on his hands
BUT THEN AGAIN...
He does rhyme "One of those large ones..." with "lots of space in the margins"

No - I love it.
(I think)





Dan Southpaw Smith
Baby Got Book (Buy-Her-a-Rock Remix)

courtesy of Crazy Christian Clips

Saturday, 7 March 2009

Tithing Explained



Some people just have a gift for making complex theology simple...

"Now when I say a hundred..."



12 Stone Church via Zach @ Take Your Vitamin Z: Tithe Rap

Friday, 20 February 2009

Yuri Lane

Here's Yuri Lane an incredible beat-boxer/performance artist. Check it out...