Friday, 13 April 2012

Jay Ghartey - Papa Video - Get ready for summer!




What's good Hip-Hop heads! So busy busy need to re-assure you I haven't left you guys, will be trying to get last year's mixtape out soon so hopefully you'll all enjoy that and I will try to get you some exclusive HipHopInfomant Interviews, reviews and track downloads!

For Now I have something I saw on BET, now strictly speaking it's not Hip-Hop more Reggae/Soca but, it's catchy and will hopefully get you ready for summer!

Jay Ghartey - Papa:



HipHopInformant - Hip-Hop lives here!

Friday, 2 March 2012

Hired Gun's "Hits & Pieces" EP Get your copy now!



What's good Hip-Hop heads! Wow - haven't posted for a long time will aim to get that sorted! Just been so busy with Uni and exams! I'm back and I'm going to try and get something to you guys every single day.

So recently I've been listening to the amazing artist, Hired Gun.
He has a new album out called "Hits and Pieces" EP and I can honestly say it's one of those pioneering works that's rarely found in Hip-Hop.

To a lot of artists, making a club banger and hen sitting back making tracks that have no real substance, is whatHip-Hop has become.

I'm not attacking anyone but when something as amazing as this comes by it's exciting!



Click on the Pic to buy the album (Pay whatever you want)

Link: http://freshroots.bandcamp.com/

Tracklist:
  1. Swing Set
  2. Real Love
  3. The Temptress ft. Tranquill & Jake Lefco
  4. The Pressure
  5. Human Story
  6. The Life ft. Qwazaar
Treat your ears and get this album!

HipHopInformant - Hip-Hop Lives Here!

Saturday, 31 December 2011

Early Happy New Year post!



2012 is nearly here! I said it before but, I'll say it again. Hip-Hop has been mixed this year. We've had the dance-type tracks and we've had some good albums.

Look forward to seeing what 2012 has in store for the Hip-Hop world and I'm excited to see Underground artists change their music, get it out to everyone and really make people listen and say "This is some fresh sh*t!"

Want to say a HUGE thank you and shout-out to my homie, Hired Gun - much love going out to him for letting me listen to his new project and just generally supporting me all throughout the whole, HipHopInformant process and I look forward to hearing "Nice Guys Finish".
Shout-outs going to all my people all over the world, and of course to you guys - the readers my Hip-Hop heads!

Have a great New Year - have fun and stay safe and I'll be back here soon.

I'm going to leave you with a few new tracks, some old just a collection of some stuff I've listened to. I will have "The Evolution of Hip-Hop Volume 3" up here soon, had a couple of technical difficulties with it.

Peace.

HipHopInformant - Let's do it BIG in 2012!

Elemint - Portraits In The Sand:



Nio Tha Gift & Tajai (SOM) - Freestyle:



Blaktrix ft. Ralph Rip Shit - No Drama:



Kasha - Fire In The Booth (Charlie Sloth) :



And of Course:

Why This Kolaveri Di:



HAPPY NEW YEAR! R.I.P Heavy D.

Thursday, 29 December 2011

My Fellow American - Pledge, Support & Change!





What's good Hip-Hop heads! As you may know I've been supporting the My Fellow American project and wanted to let you know about some information and hopefully get you to pledge your support and spread the word.

Now for those of you that are asking what this project is all about, let me tell you. Islamophobia is still a problem in America. It has increasingly been used as a way to victimize Muslims in America. Now after certain events in the world this has increased, and the perceptions that "All Muslims are terrorists" is not true.
This project aims to change those perceptions and say that Muslims are Americans too, we are all equal. This is something I strongly believe in. You should not be picked-out or abused in the street because you follow a different faith, you wear religious clothing or you are a different colour.

So guys please pledge your support, spread the word about this project and spread this blog post and the link around and let's make some changes.

It may even change your perceptions too.

Here's the link: www.myfellowamerican.us



HipHopInformant - Peace.

Monday, 26 December 2011

Enjoy these Tracks & Happy New Year!



What's good Hip-Hop heads! Apologies for not posting for a while I've been so busy with a lot of projects and Uni stuff I havent been able to post. I'll try and get some regular posts on here in the new year.

This is a just a quick post to tell you that this year's been mad. The Arab Uprising, Occupy Movement and the London riots have all made headlines and changed the way the world operates and even challenged people's perceptions of the world. Remember WE can make a change, we are all revolutionaries.

Happy holidays, be safe and have a great new year. Here are a few tracks to inspire you for any new year's parties or just to expose you to some new tracks. Enjoy these and the holidays!

Sway featuring. Lupe Fiasco - Still Speeding Remix:



Basic Vocab - Our Day In The Sun:



Clement Marfo & The Frontline - Overtime:



Jay Electronica - Exhibit C (prod. Just Blaze):



Gappy Ranks featuring Russian & Collie Buddz - Tun Up Remix:



Let's do it BIG in 2012 - HipHopInformant

Friday, 7 October 2011

Full Spectrum Vol. 3 Mixtape Free Download!


What's good people! So, as I've said before, Hip-Hop is worldwide. We have artists in every part of the world and we need to make sure that all artists are given a platform, to show their talent.
People believe that Hip-Hop is only prevalent in the U.S but, it is a worldwide movement.

Here's a free mixtape for all of you guys that really shows that and it features Hired Gun's track : Real recognize real - which can I say never fails to amaze me, the lyricism, delivery and production just leaves me speechless and this is what I mean when I say REAL Hip-Hop.

Take this link, spread it around and let's get this music heard!

Click the pic or click the link below to get this mixtape!



HipHopInformant - Hip-Hop Lives, Works & Plays Here!

Friday, 30 September 2011

A sit down with the Cornel West Theory by Mikal Amin Lee



What's good Hip-Hop heads! So apologies for this rather sporadic posting - been extremely busy. Just to keep you update, I'm working on some Interviews and trying to finish off "The Evolution of Hip-Hop Volume III" Mix-tape so look out for that and before I post the link anywhere you guys will get it first! I have some real Club-Bangers on there and then some Hood- Classiks and I hope that you do all enjoy it.

My very good friend Hired Gun did an Interview with Cornel West. Now for those of you that don't know, Cornel West is a Civil Rights activist, Actor, Philosopher, Author and Critic. He often delves into topics that are not freely discussed and is a very interesting man.

Peep the exclusive and enjoy this amazing Article:



A brand new theory on the shape of Hip Hop….A sit down with the Cornel West Theory

By Mikal Amin Lee

Most of the time (probably 99 percent of the time) when you think about Washington D.C. you think of one thing, Politics. If you do happen to know the rich history of D.C.’s cultural and musical legacy, you may drift to Punk (Bad Brains), or maybe Jazz (Duke Ellington) or GoGo (Chuck Brown). But Hip-Hop? Not really. Despite technically being a part of the “East Coast” and “Down South” as well as being the home to noted artists such as Asheru, Oddisee, and now Wale, D.C. hasn't been acknowledged for its rap music.

On the rooftop of a Sheraton Hotel nestled on the crossroads of SoHo and the West Village I spoke with the group that could change all of that; The Cornel West Theory. Most of the group, (minus Yvonne Gilmore) including Dr. West were in town to promote their second release, “The Shape of Hip Hop to Come” and perform later that evening at the famed S.O.B's. The group founded in 2004 consists of Sam Levine (Drums), Rashad Dobbins (Vocals), John Wesley Moon (vocals/production/percussion), Tim Hicks (Vocals, Composition), Katrina Lorraine Starr (Vocalists/percussion), Yvonne Gilmore(Vocals) plus their friend, mentor and muse Dr. Cornel West.

Their name ultimately was co-signed as Dr. West tells it when Tim Hicks approached him at a book signing in D.C. and asked him if it was ok to use the name. “I said I'd be honored, humbled, delighted and full of joy for such a group, if in fact that group preserved the dignity of poor people, working people, oppressed people, and was sensitive to the struggle of black folk in America. Then he preceded to lay out a group that met every possible criteria I could have had”. Problem solved. The group's sound can't be labeled or named, (an often overstated claim of music nowadays...but in this case, the truth) which makes sense as they rattled off influences that ran the gamut of human existence, from the Wailers to Ornette Coleman to Eric Dolphy to physics. “What if (Sam) Beckett Rapped? What if Frederick (Douglas) Rapped?” were questions Rashad Dobbins asked himself in his own personal journeys as a lyricist. John Wesley Moons broke it down further, “Its not just musically inspired. We're inspired by literature, film , dance, it all just kind of leaks in, it starts with us having great conversations about things, and then that unites us to say, let's try that musically”.

All in all, the make up of the group while being diverse (I'll let you look up which one is an ordained minister, and no its not Dr. West) is not only bonded in their eclectic taste, but their tough love relationship with their hometown of D.C. .The group having grown up inside the beltway has experienced all of its many phases, and perspectives. It is a place that is misinterpreted, misunderstood, and underestimated. The seat of power for the country is what Katrina Starr calls “The Eye of the Storm” where multiple worlds and language codes exist. To simply survive in D.C. you develop a new double consciousness not simply to defend yourself but also to thrive. “The Shape of Hip Hop to Come”, their second album reveals that consciousness to the world in their own way, and the group wants to make sure they get it right...”Suffering is not a secret and it is not a celebration” she continued “I want to be very careful with the music I'm putting out, I don't want to celebrate that I'm coming from a low place, because that's not necessarily true. Coming from a low place even if that is true doesn't validate your perspective over someone else. Its not something to be celebrated but its not something to be ignored” . “D.C. is a big illusion, it is a beautiful coffin” added Tim Hicks “We're trying to reflect that D.C. is not just the white buildings that you see with the Roman Greek architecture its not just Capital Hill, its people's waking up every morning figuring out how am I going to survive.”
“We Love D.C., its the city that made us” John continues “Our families are there, its where we went to school, there's a lot of love there. We want to be a part of the legacy that comes out of that city. We want to show that D.C. is not dead that it is alive, it is vibrant, it has beautiful people in it and we're a part of that.” Its within this crucible that you begin to understand the drive of this group whose first record was as Dr. West puts it, “Hip Hop's first album in history about America as an empire”.

The answer to that album (Second Rome), is why we were all sitting atop the Sheraton looking out over the skyline of a Post 9/11 New York City. A city in its own right that has multiple personalities, with a degree from the school of hard knocks as well. The look and feel of the individuals in front of me was as powerful as their sound; warm, inviting, but all business. If their first album, “Second Rome” was a critique of the American Empire, their latest offering, “The Shape of Hip Hop to Come” could only be encapsulated by Dr. West's description, “You have an album that is a critique of the imperial state of mind ”. The group's self awareness, the challenge of coming out of D.C. as a sonically innovative, socially aware hip hop group while offering up gemstar sharp commentary on the most powerful city in the most powerful country in the world isn't putting them under pressure. John puts it in his own terms ”For me, no one is taking chances, there is such a lack of courage, this is how I want to say it, this is how I want to present it, regardless of the audience. Taking chances, being courageous, spreading out the spectrum of what things can sound like, what can songs be about, where can songs actually go.”


In a time where what passes as “revolutionary” often is dressed up in high end designer brands, or whittled down to thirty second vulgar shock value sound bites (like screaming rape in a crowded women's dressing room or eating bugs) The Theory wants to give you that weight. Soul by the metric ton with an eye on the future, an ear to the past and their foot on the gas (and the other foot probably in a politician's ass). None of this is lost on Dr. West, who sums up The Cornel West Theory profoundly “As an Older Brother for me it was what Marvin Gaye explained from the depths of his soul. Save the babies. And What's going on. We're not going to save the babies unless we bridge the gap”.

The Shape of Hip Hop to Come was releaed in July, 2011. For more info on the group check out http://www.thecornelwesttheory.com.