MC Shan-Let’s Bring Hip-Hop Back Produced By: DJ Pocket Video Produced By: Serious Knock Entertainment
Thanks —
MC SHAN for the FAV & RETWEET–of my post
Throwbacks— Informer ~ Snow ft. MC Shan
MC Shan-Let’s Bring Hip-Hop Back Produced By: DJ Pocket Video Produced By: Serious Knock Entertainment
Thanks —
MC SHAN for the FAV & RETWEET–of my post
Throwbacks— Informer ~ Snow ft. MC Shan
I thought this movie was really good. First and foremost I would like to thank Ice-T for birthing this movie project. Ice-T went around and talked to different rappers and producers. He asked them different questions like What is your writing process and other good questions. Ice-T really got into mind of the hip hop artist of Q-Tip, Dr. Dre, Kanye West, Dougie Fresh, Snoop Dogg and many more. I really thought coming into this movie that a lot of the old school cats were going to start dissing the new generation of hip hop and start being real negative. As a matter of fact I was wrong and a lot of the old school cats in the video just talked about how they would write their rhymes and tell you the kind of things they needed in the booth. Most of the emcees like Treach from Naughty By Nature or Xzibit just needed a pen and a pad. Rakim goes in on some other level shit and talks about how he tries to take you into a whole other world.
I really liked what DJ Premier said about hip hop and being able to listen to it. He said a lot of the older generation doesn’t like hip hop because their ear isn’t use to the sound. They haven’t listen to it enough to get use to it and like it. I thought this statement was so true. A lot of people that don’t like a certain kind of genre of music or don’t understand it is because they have not listen to that genre that they don’t like enough times. I thought a lot of stories from the old school cats like Public Enemy, Marley Marl, or Melle Mel was just great. This is a movie you have to go see if you are a fan of hip hop and the culture.
Rap legend Heavy D — one of the most influential rappers of the ’90s — died earlier today … TMZ has learned.
Heavy D — real name Dwight Arrington Myers — was rushed to an L.A. hospital around noon today … and was pronounced dead at the hospital at 1 PM. He was 44 years old.
We’ve learned a 911 call was placed from Heavy’s Beverly Hills home around 11:25 AM to report an unconscious male on the walkway .
When help arrived, we’re told Heavy D was conscious and speaking — and was transported to a nearby hospital.
He died a short time later.
Cops are investigating the death — and so far, there are no obvious signs of foul play.
Heavy just performed at the BET Awards in October — and appeared to be fine.
Story developing …
Marley Marl has to go down as my favorite producer ever. What he built over there with the Juice Crew and laying down dope samples was something else. Here is a man who had no one to look up to in the hip hop game pretty much and he had his own style too. I mean he did have some dope emcees but he did lace them with dope beats. Marley Marly set the bar and blueprint for cats like me.(Rest of the Article Below).
Marley Marl previously stated that he produced the Eric B. and Rakim tracks “Eric B. Is President” and “My Melody” off 1987′s Paid in Full, a claim Eric later denied. While he may have only served as engineer, Marl recalled giving Rakim a shot after Eric, his roommate at the time, asked for studio time to lay down tracks with the up-and-coming rapper.
“Eric B., he was my roommate with me over in Queensbridge. He used to see a lot of cats come in and really start bubbling. He was like, ‘Yo Marl man, I got some dudes who can do this too. Let me get a day in the studio,’” he told Brooklyn Bodega’s Wes Jackson. “He was like, ‘OK, my man’s coming today.’ So we sitting and his man never showed up. ‘Yo, where’s your man at?’ The first man who never showed up was Freddie Foxx. Yo man, I got my other dude form Long Island. He’s dope, I’m telling you. That nigga nice. We’ll give you another shot.”
Over the next week, Marl ended up having a hand in the cuts “My Melody” and “Eric B. Is President,” as well as Biz Markie’s “Make the Music With Your Mouth, Biz” and MC Shan’s “The Bridge.”
“Rakim comes in, rhyming slow, he made ‘My Melody’ first. So collectively, we both had the ideas for the song but I physically put it together. For ‘Eric B. Is President’ and ‘My Melody.’ We made ‘Make the Music With Your Mouth,’ ‘Eric B Is President,’ ‘The Bridge’… I used to call it the sound of the week, so I used to have the kick and snare in the sample. Whatever songs I was making that week had that kick and snare in it.”
Marley Marl and Grand Wizard Theodore doing a show for Mr. Magic now that’s whats up. Mr. Magic had his own hip hop radio station. He also played nothing but real hip hop on his shows. If you missed out on his shows you can still get copies of his mixes on compact disc and vinyl. Marley Marl paying tribute to him is dope too because Marley Marl has to be my favorite hip hop producers of all time. Here is a guy who pretty much had no influence in the hip hop game and was still able to make dope records and to start up the Juice Crew. (Rest of Article Below).
On July 14, Brooklyn Bodega will present the latest event in their “Salute The DJ” series. In conjunction with the 7th annual Brooklyn Hip-Hop Festival (July 16), Salute The DJ will include turntable-scratch pioneer Grand Wizard Theodore this year, as well as Juice Crew founder and legendary producer/deejay Marley Marl.
Theodore, a Bronx, New York native, is credited with being the first deejay to intentionally scratch records, a feat he achieved in the early 1970s. Marl, who hails from Queens, New York is responsible for producing and in large part discovering the likes of Big Daddy Kane, Kool G. Rapand Tragedy Khadafi, among many others.
The pair will be joined by 5th Platoon deejay Roli Rho, as well as Chicago, Illinois veteran Twilite Tone, who worked with Common, early in the emcee’s career.
Both musical sets and proceeds from the evening will be dedicated to Mr. Magic (a/k/a John Rivas), a legendary 1980s New York City deejay and radio personality who died in October of 2009. The donation will be made to the Mr. Magic Shout Out Foundation.