Monday, January 26, 2015

Video Premiere: Manolo Rose’s ‘Run Ricky Run’ Video Revisits Classic ’90s Films

Manolo Rose drop "Run Ricky Run" feature Telli

Manolo Rose
Manolo Rose’s ‘Run Ricky Run’ Video Revisits Classic ’90s Films
Relive 'Juice' and 'Menace II Society' too!

Manolo Rose’s buzzing “Run Ricky Run” has a new video and it’s like taking a trip down classic movie memory lane.

As the title suggests, “Run Ricky Run” will take you back to 1991’s “Boyz N The Hood,” the 1991 John Singleton film that featured Morris Chestnut and Ice Cube, among others. But that’s not where the movie references end.

more: ‘Boyz N The Hood’ A ‘Coming-Of-Age Story,’ John Singleton Says

“Juice” also gets a shoutout. “You never give a hitta like Bishop no handgun,” Manolo raps, referencing the character played by Tupac Shakur. “The moral of the story is you keep the grass cut so you see the snakes come.”

more: Tupac Created ‘Juice’ Character From Life Experience


The song continues the theme by reenacting a classic scene from 1993′s “Menace II Society,” also. Watch the full video and revisit some classic ‘90s films below.

by: andres tardio 

click on the link below to watch the video


http://www.mtv.com/artists/manolo-rose/

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Hip Hop Future: SheemKluaf

SheemKluaf


When music meets talent it glows effortlessly.  No matter your age, where you are or where you come from, when good beats mingle with hot lyrics, it makes you feel that music is life and soul.
SheemKluaf is that kid at the blog to make you feel this way. An MC from the “Boogie Down” Bronx, the borough that birthed Hip Hop, Sheem is no doubt the future of Hip Hop.
Sheem performing 

Sheem started making music at the age of 17, with a friend that originated the idea in their college lunchroom.
Sheem rhymes with a passion and vulnerability that is felt in every song.
Compared to other and upcoming cats, he’s just much more lyrical, more emotionally available and authentic, much more soulful.  Those of us who have lived that “hard knock life” whether it be growing up in poverty, in a broken home, or in the ghetto.

Sheem says, “I [rap] for people to understand me I'm young but I have a lot to say.  I do this for me and I do this for the fam. I just wanna last and not come in to get kicked.”
From The Bronx

Sheem Kluaf’s music is across between hip-hop, RnB, and trap. “I love to blend the sounds; they can be so beautiful together.” Sheem’s music is like a fusion between trap and soul, like drake meets Andre 3 stacks and pun, Like 2PAC meets migos and yeezy.
Sheem performing on stage with a friend

Sheem says that “[his] music is for [our] ear’s to find astonishment.”
So listen to his new single GOIN DUMB on soudcloud and let us know what you think:https://www.soundcloud.com/sheemkluaf/going-dumb-free-pete-prod-by-skid-premise

Some other Sheem hits on soundcloud:
Innercity Ruffianz
Floozie
Amnesia
M$$$. Know It All feat. Sylvester J Wiz
Illusion
Love Burials ( Feat Sheem Kluaf ) Prod. Canis Major
2 AM in Babylon
BerĪ€ie
FINAL HOUR


Sunday, January 18, 2015

10 Songs Honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.


King


Today (Jan. 19), we remember the life and legacy of late civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., whose contributions to the social and political sphere of the United States are innumerable. And over the years, the global musical sphere has become filled with songs inspired by or dedicated to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The Billboard staff has picked our 10 favorites among those songs, from the sobriety of U2's "MLK" to the unfettered optimism of Springsteen's "We Shall Overcome."


1-     Pride In The Name Of Love  (U2 (1984)
2-     By The Time I Get To Arizona (Public Enemy (1991)
3-     Happy Birthday (Stevie Wonder (1981)
4-     We Shall Overcome (Bruce Springsteen (2006)
5-     One Visio Queen (1985)
6-     Like A Kin Ben Harper (1994)
7-     I Have A Dream  (Common feat. Will.i.am (2006)
8-     MLK U2 (1984)
9-     King Holiday  (King Dream Chorus and Holiday Crew (1986)
10- Dream Speech (The Gregory Brothers' Auto-Tune the News (2009)

Friday, January 16, 2015

Defining Hip Hop Culture From The 70's


What is Hip Hop Culture?

5 Pointz New York

Too many people are unclear as to what Hip Hop Culture really is and tend to use the term frivolously. Hip Hop Culture is commonly recognized by its main elements: Graffiti, Djing, Breakdancing, Mcing Rapping, and Beatboxing.  However, these elements are simply forms of art designed to express a deeper meaning.  At its core, Hip Hop is so much more than mere art and entertainment.  Hip Hop is the constantly evolving spirit and consciousness of urban youth that keeps recreating itself in a never-ending cycle.  It is joy, sorrow, pleasure, pain, victory, defeat, anger, happiness, confusion, clarity, humor, intensity, dream, nightmare, life, death, and everything else in between.  

Depending on who's telling the creation-story of Hip Hop, the day of its birth ranges.

It is the spirit that connects the past to the present and lays a path towards the future.  The spirit of Hip Hop is the same as Jazz, Reggae, Blues, Doo-wop, Be-bop, and a multitude of other types of expressions, be it musical or otherwise, that African people throughout the Diaspora have given birth to and introduced to the world.  That very spirit is what breathes life into a simple idea and transforms it into a living cultural movement.  Hip Hop Culture cannot be assimilated, integrated, diluted, watered-down, sold for profit, or pimped.  It will always exist, in this incarnation or another. What the mainstream promotes as Hip Hop is only a commercial product misleading you into believing that it represents Hip Hop in its totality.

The origins of hip hop music

 70s guys with shades Embracing my inner Hip Hop.
Hip Hop Files
Is this not the best? Jumping off balconies onto mattresses…..I want to have a go!
It has its origins in the Bronx, in New York City, during the 1970s, mostly among African Americans but with some influence from the Latin American population of the area as well. The culture has gone from being a relatively underground style to being a major style throughout the world, and it has been commercialized and popularized, especially in the United States.
Remember This! LIKE✔ Style Wars 1983 documentary on hip hop 'n graffiti culture