Growing up in East Mount Airy wasn’t always easy. If I wasn’t slangin Lemonade in front of the same church that my Mom would attend Sunday service, I was wettin the whole block up with my slip and slide. Real rap. On an even more positive note though, I got the chance to grow up around the likes of the lovely Santi White(SantoGold) who has begun what music historians will refer to as the “Mount Airy Takeover”. Anyway, check out this track from the upcoming “Notorious” Movie Soundtrack. Kanye produced it and some guy from Brooklyn raps on it. http://www.zshare.net/audio/5209347411056a05/
Archive for emynd
London and some Changes ‘Round Here
Man, London this past weekend was crazy. Massive shout outs to the Count and Sinden for putting me on, to the dude Skream for killing it, the boy Sam from Dollop, Roxy Cottontail for stopping by, and the Smalltown DJs as well for taking some shots with me. Seriously such a good weekend full of great music, a ton of drinking, and not enough sleeping… but hey, it’s Monday and I’m back on the day-to-day grind. Didn’t have the traditional American Thanksgiving that we all look forward to, but drinking and partying in a strange rainy land is a nice substitute to the ol’ Turkey and Mash potatoes thing. The best news is that I ate enough kebabs and Haribo to hold me over until my next trip to Europe (frankly, I’m sick of both at this point) and got a really dope Merc jacket so I look like the Lebanese Paddington bear.
If you’re in London before Christmas, please promise me you’ll got to the Mutate London Art exhibit. We spent a day at the Tate, then stumbled into the Mutate London exhibit on Curtain Road in Shoreditch and there was no comparison between the two. The Mutate London show alone made my trip to Engerland completely worthwhile. I will be doing a proper blog post on it later this week.
By the way, I’ve recruited a couple new blog posters for this here jam just to keep this ish fresh and interesting. My man Phil Money is my dude from Philly who’s schooled in the arts and got good taste in music… and he’s quite a funny dude. I fully expect him to contribute some completely random stuff that Bo Bliz and I wouldn’t ourselves post. Same goes for SdotMilla who is the owner and operator of the finest skateshop in all of Philly, Exit Skateshop in Fishtown. He reluctantly comes to every party Bo Bliz and I do even though he hates the music and would much rather listen to Johnny Cash or Neil Young (which I’m not mad at), so I wouldn’t expect a whole lot of music posting from him. He’ll probably just post a bunch of youtubes since all he does when he’s working at his shop all day is give people free product and watch horrible youtube videos.
Over the next couple days, I need to find a way to make it clear who is posting what because right now, the little tag at the bottom of each post that says “Posted by ______” just isn’t cutting it for me. But for right now, please just bare with us and enjoy the new content from the new ‘bols.
CROSSFADED BACON IS A MOVEMENT.
That being said, got another edition of THE BOUNCE this Friday at the Barbary, and I fully expect to be just as wild as the last one. This party continues to get better and better and better and I really can’t wait until Friday. If you’re in Philly and you’re not at this party, you’ve got no one to blame but yourself for doing something lame. As always, FREE PBR AND VODKA FROM 9-11 along with skate video screenings. Cover starts at 10 PM (only $5 all night) and music starts 11ish… then we go in HARD. Expect all the hits, a bunch of our own stuff, and whatever debaucherous music is gonna make all the wifies in the audience forget who their hubbies are.
Let’s go.
-e
Common- Gladiator Prod. By The Neptunes
Sure, the boozing, brawling, Resurrection Common is a little more my speed, but this futuristic, mature Common is no slouch. This track is from his upcoming project Universal Mind Control…
We All Have Special Skills…
EMYND asked me to contribute to www.CrossFadedBacon.com… He Is A Good Friend…
I think he is just jealous of my large collection of Bruce Springsteen Albums.
I will try not to blow it…
Thoughts on Kanye “808s & Heartbreaks”
Believe it or not, I used to have a blog where I actually wrote interesting things and (strangely), people read it and commented on it. This particular blog is more of a “LISTEN TO THIS MUSIC” blog and I don’t often have the time (or desire really) to get my inner Schizophrenic Tenant on, but allow me to do so briefly because I’ve got a few things to say about Kanye’s “808s & Heartbreaks.” I posted something similar on a messageboard recently, but I’ve edited it slightly and re-posted it below.
First of all, I realize this is a polarizing record, and I’m not really too interested in having a conversation where we try to convince each other why we should or shouldn’t like this record. Fundamentally, I don’t think any of us are going to change our mind’s about this record… but I do think it’s a record worth talking about. So, ya know, feel free to comment in the comments section, but let’s not get into a “I CANT BELIEVE YOU DON’T LIKE and/or LIKE THIS ALBUM” yelling match.
Basically, it’s like this… I can totally understand why people don’t like this record. It’s obviously not traditional hip-hop (duh) nor is it particularly forward-thinking electronic music. I mean, the only thing “hip-hop” about the record are some of the drums and maybe a couple of the verses. But to put it simply, everything Kanye does is so incredibly charming to me. There’s an unabashed humanity to his stuff that is really easy for me to like at a very simple level. There’s a ton of books and movies and music that I appreciate theoretically but that do nothing for me emotionally… but Kanye is the exact opposite of that. I really just get a great deal of pleasure out of listening to music. Like all great producers (and I suppose rappers, too) he’s just got an incredible ear for melody and music in general that really resonates with my tastes, so it’s not surprising that I really really like this record. Maybe I have horrible taste, but for whatever reason, my tastes seem to rhyme pretty closely with Kanye’s.
In a recent messageboard post, I felt that it was also worth mentioning that never in the history of rap has an artist who is accepted in the urban community really branched out as far as this… but on second thought, I guess that’s not entirely true though because Common and Q-Tip and Andre 3000 all already did that… and most people would say they failed doing it. I guess the “traditional rapper branching outside of rap” isn’t a new concept at all… but there’s something I can’t put my finger on that makes this record feel A LOT DIFFERENT than those previous examples. I don’t think it’s the music itself… it’s something to do with the context. Perhaps it’s just that Kanye is a producer? Common, Q-Tip, and Andre were all rappers that branched out with “weird” albums, but Kanye is a producer… Is that what makes this different I’m speaking of palpable? Or maybe it’s just that Kanye is a SUPERSTAR? I’m really not sure, but again, there’s something different and GRANDER about Kanye’s departure that makes this record feel like much more of an EVENT then the previous departures.
But, back to the music, I don’t mean to argue that the music on this record is particularly forward-thinking on its own merits because it’s really not. It’s 808s and synths with bad singing (most of which is auto-tuned to hell), moments of great lyricism and moments of truly bad lyricism. But, it’s not like this music is really pushing boundaries sonically. Yeah, it’s kind’ve weird at times, but only if you look at it through the lense of hip-hop… it’s mostly pretty easily consumable pop music that isn’t particularly tied up with urban black music signifiers (though certainly some are there)… and I think that freedom from traditional urban black music signification is what makes this record kind’ve interesting. Now, I don’t really expect this album to have any far reaching affects on contemporary urban black music, but I do agree with a sentiment that a friend of mine (Dances With White Girls… buy his record!) expressed a couple weeks back in that this album seems important in its unabashed willingness to show another aspect of the urban black man’s possible identity. The characters most popular in hip-hop are nothing like the character presented in “808s & Heartbreaks” and never has any one artist in hip-hop been in a position to make an “experimental” (for lack of a better word) album like this where a large number of people (perhaps even including the nebulous “the streets”?) will actually LISTEN to it… and maybe even like it?
Or I guess to put it more simply, Kanye is an accepted mainstream hip-hop artist who is making this album, and that CONTEXT of him being an accepted mainstream hip-hop artist makes this album a much different beast than if it were an album that Anti-Pop Consortium made or whatever. I’ll be curious to see over the next couple weeks and months what the overall reaction to this album is and how it sells.
But back to me… at a very basic level, I really really like this ish.
-emynd
Thanksgiving Eve & Emynd in London
Man, we just got back from Stockholm and Helsinki this weekend and we officiall CRUSHED that sh*t. Such a fun weekend. Big ups to Stefski, Agge, and the Top Billin’ boys for putting us on and allowing us to destroy their clientele with a whole crapload of Bmore, hip-hop, and house. Truly a fantastic weekend.
The madness continues as we’re back stateside this Wednesday in Philly where we are doing our next installment of “It’s The Year…” at Johnny Brenda’s with “IT’S THE YEAR 1993“! Should be an absolute rager. Click the flyer for more info:
And on Thursday, Emynd is heading back to Europe to rock out with The Count & Sinden in London town at On The Rocks. It’s going to be an officially WILD affair. Click the flyer for more details.
See y’all there!
Lastly, if you haven’t seen or heard it yet, here’s Emynd’s new track with Young Chris from Rocafella and Def Jam that can be downloaded HERE.
-e
1st & 15th Mixes: Vol 4 – BEST OF BMORE CLUB RAP
The 1st & 15th (Pretty Much) Mix Series is a series of mixes presented by Emynd & Bo Bliz on (or around) the 1st and 15th of every month.
Crossfaded Bacon Presents
1st & 15th (Pretty Much) Mix Series
Volume 4: Emynd 11.15.2008
BEST OF BMORE CLUB RAP
DOWNLOAD
This month, Emynd brings you a live, one take mix of a bunch of his favorite Bmore Club Rap anthems, from his new track with Young Chris, his remix of Tittsworth’s “Drunk as F*ck” with Federation, to modern classics like Class’s “Stop Snitchin’,” Blaqstarr’s version of “Ryder Girl,” to the new 410 Pharaohs and Prinse stuff.
Tracklisting:
1. Emynd featuring Young Chris “We Don’t Give A …”
2. DJ Class “Stop Snitchin”
3. Debonair Samir & Mz Streamz “Tear It Up”
4. 410 Pharaohs featuring David Banner “Pull Shorty” (Remix)
5. DJ Class “I’m the Ish”
6. Prinse “F*ck ‘Em All”
7. Prinse “Go DJ”
8. Tittsworth featuring Federation “Drunk as F*ck” (Emynd Remix)
9. DJ Unk “In Yo Face” (Scottie B Remix)
10. Diplo featuring Rye Rye “What’s Up” (Original Version)
11. 410 Pharaohs “Hammer Dance”
12. Say-Wut featuring A-Ma-Zon and Jae Poet “Keep Rockin'”
13. Deboniar Samir “Booty” (Gutta Music Remix)
14. Scottie B featuring Wale “Elevators”
15. Blaqstarr “Ryder Girl” (K-Swift Version)
16. Cooli Hi featuring Blaqstarr “Take Down”
17. D’Vo and Storm “Dudes in Da House”
-e
Paper Route Gangstaz Drops Next Week!
Stolen from the Mad Decent blog, but it’s quality rap music over adventerous beats… one of which is mine!
racklisting:
01. Blaqstarr feat. Jhi-Ali – Stuntastic (prod by Diplo)
02. Jackie Chain feat. Jhi Ali – Rollin’ (Diplo Remix)
03. PRGz – Woodgrain (Emynd Remix)
04. B.O.S.S. feat. G-Side – Real Good
05. B.O.S.S. feat. X.O. – Naturalz Pt. 2
06. Big P.O.P.E. feat Wale – Don’t Go (Diplo Remix)
07. Dawgy Baggz feat. Money Addict & B. Dewitt- Travelin
08. Untamed feat Dawgy Baggz – Shotz
09. PRGz – Bama Gettin’ Money (Diplo Remix)
10. Mata feat Mali Boi, M.P. & Big P.O.P.E. – Streetz
11. Jhi-Ali feat Cooley Da Dude & Big P.O.P.E. – Alabama
12. X.O – Grind Baby
13. PRGz – Soul Glo (The Knocks Remix)
14. X.O feat Mali Boi & CeeCee – 100
15. Money Addict feat Pluck – Hood Celebrity (Diplo Remix)
16. Money Addict – Life, Money & Drugs (Diplo Remix)
bonus tracks ( $5.00 and over )
17. PRGz – Woodgrain
18. PRGz – Bama Gettin’ Money
19. PRGz – Soul Glo
20. Money Addict feat Pluck – Hood Celebrity
21. Amp G – Lookin Good
That ish drops Tuesday. For now, hit up Mad Decent blog and get the free tracks.
-e
Mad Decent Worldwide Radio #30: BOUNCE IT (RE-UP)
****THIS IS A RE-UP TO UPDATE THE DEAD ZSHARE LINK. THIS POST WAS ORIGINALLY POSTED JUNE 26, 2008.****
I started listening to Bounce music about two years ago and, over the past couple years, have acquired a pretty extensive collection of CDs, MP3s, and records of this really rich music. For those unfamiliar with Bounce, it is a fairly unique strain of club-oriented hip-hop that originated in New Orleans sometime around 1991 with MC TT Tucker’s “”Where Dey At.”” Almost 20 years later, Bounce still dominates the urban club and block party scene in New Orleans with very little major label backing. Just as Baltimore Club is based on the Lyn Collins’ “Think” break and the Gaz “Sing Sing” break, Bounce beats are based on samples from The Showboy’s “Drag Rap” (aka “Triggerman”) and Derek B’s “Rock The Beat” drum break (more commonly known as “the Brown Beat”). The best club music seems almost always to thrive on calculated simplicity, and Bounce is no exception, relying on MC work that is based on simple call and response chants, straightforward rhyme schemes/patterns, and repetitive dance refrains. My buddy Noz has helped me learn a lot about this music and several years ago (right after Katrina), he put together a really great collection of earlier Bounce songs that you can download here. Also, the first podcast on New Orleans rap has got some good stuff on it as well.
In contrast to Noz’s collection of songs, I made my mix as an effort to put people onto some more recent New Orleans Bounce songs and artists that they likely aren’t very familiar with. As you’ll notice pretty quickly, I’ve kept the mixing and DJing to a real minimum and tried to move pretty quickly from song to song to fit in as much stuff is possible. There isn’t a real rhyme or reason for most of the selections on here. They’re mostly just a bunch of Bounce songs I really like, and I’m hoping some of y’all will enjoy this stuff enough to go and support some of these artists. I’ve provided links wherever possible to help make that search as easy as I could because a lot of these folks have a pretty strong presence on Myspace. Please hit these dudes up on their Myspace, support their events, and buy whatever you can from them.
Tracklisting:
1. Intro
2. DJ Jubilee “Get Ready, Ready!” (1997)
3. Chev “Picture This” (2004)
4. 5th Ward Weebie “5th Ward Weebie Part 3” (2003)
5. Peacachoo “Get High” (2004)
6. Kilo “Pop Dat Tattoo” (2008)
7. Peacachoo and Blaza ft Hot Boy Johnny “Danity Kane Remix” (2007)
8. Kane and Abel featuring 5th Ward Weebie and Hot Boy Ronald “Toot It Up” (2003)
9. 5th Ward Weebie “Dip It” (2008)
10. 10th Ward Buck “Drop & Gimme 50” (2007)
11. 9th Ward Tea “Pull A Muscle” (2008)
12. Peacachoo and Gotty Boi Chris “Cut It Up” (2006)
13. Sissy Nobby “Snake” (2008)
14. De Ja Vu “Abracadabra” (2005)
15. Peacachoo and Gotty Boi Chris “Blocka Blocka” (2007)
16. South Rakkas Crew and Emynd “Mad Again (NOLA Bounce Remix)” (2008)
17. Dime Gyrl Drell “They Mad” (2005)
18. Gotty Boi Chris ft 5th Ward Weebie “Where She At” (2005)
19. Gotty Boi Chris “She Make Me (Laaard!!!)” (2005)
20. Faster Boyz “I Ain’t Had Sex In A Long Time” (2004)
21. 10th ward Buck “Buck Hop” (2004)
22. Naughty “Walk With It” (2003)
23. DJ Jubilee “Where Y’all From” (2004)
24. 2 Sweet “Do Like I Told Ya” (1997)
25. Katey Red “Melpomene Block Party” (1999)
26. Willie Puckett “Doggie Hopp” (1997)
27. Partners n Crime “We Don’t Love Them Hoes” (1994)
28. DJ Jubilee “Back That A** Up” (2000)
29. Ricky B “Y’all Holler” (1996)
30. Lil Wayne & Curren$y “New Orleans Classic” (2007)
Track by track details after the jump.
Emynd & Young Chris “We Don’t Give A …” Digital 12″
(Originally Posted November 9, 2008. Re-Upped April 20, 2010)
REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE-UUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUPPPPP!
I’m re-posting this because many of you may have missed it when I posted it back in November of 2008, but it still sounds fresh as hell and I’m pretty sure the sharebee link below still works. This shit hard as fuck!
Today, Crossfaded Bacon is mighty proud to present the digital release of Emynd‘s newest Bmore Club track *We Don’t Give A …” with Rocafella and Def Jam recording artist Young Chris. A member of the Philly super group State Property and the hit-making duo The Young Gunz, Young Chris is one of Philly’s most versatile rappers, fully capable of making certified street shit as well as forward-thinking club jams. Emynd set out to make a contemporary sounding track that linked Philly’s tradition of percussion heavy club anthems (think Tuff Crew “My Part of Town”, Cool C “Glamorous Life”, Freeway “Flipside, and the Young Gunz “Can’t Stop Won’t Stop”) with Philly’s city-wide obsession with Bmore Club (often colloquially refered to in Philly as “Club” or “Party Music”). Chris wound up being the perfect rapper to effortlessly make that link a reality. Already getting support from a variety of DJs all across the globe, we fully expect this track to do big things both within Philly and elsewhere, and we encourage you all to distribute this track as freely as you like: post it on your blog, add it to your Myspace player, send it to your girl friend, remix it, or whatever.
And, as always, please feel free to hit us with your comments on it.
320 MP3s and even higher quality AIFFs are available below. Shouts out to Young Noz from cbrap.com for the Cool C “I Gotta Habit” cover art and even bigger shouts to US Dubstep king Starkey for helping mix this record and mastering it.
Emynd featuring Young Chris
*WE DON’T GIVE A …* Digital 12″
Produced by Emynd
Vocals by Young Chris
Recorded at Studio 609
Mixed and Mastered by Starkey @ The Royal Bank of Starkville
1. Emynd featuring Young Chris “We Don’t Give A … (Dirty)” (320 kps) – (AIFF File)
2. Emynd featuring Young Chris “We Don’t Give A … (Clean)” (320 kps) – (AIFF File)
3. Emynd featuring Young Chris “We Don’t Give A … (Instrumental)” (320 kps) – (AIFF File)
-e
Ryan Leslie “Diamond Girl” Dancehall Medley
Dope Ryan Leslie blend on top of three great riddims by DJ Gunshotta. Sounds amazing over the Playground… a lil bit out of key on the Go Go and Gear Box, but will still be useful in the club
Ryan Leslie “Diamond Girl” (DJ Gunshotta’s Playground, Go Go, and Gear Box Riddims Medley):
DOWNLOAD
-e
Rihanna “Disturbia” (Emynd’s “Finally” Blend)
![]() | The whole series can be found here. |
LUNCH BREAK BEATS #9:
Rihanna “Disturbia” (Emynd’s “Finally” Blend)
I hate the OG “Disturbia,” but it’s a popular song so I wanted to make a version that I could play and not hate myself for. I realized it was in key with CeCe Peniston’s “Finally” so I re-sequenced the 12″ version of “Finally” to fit around the “Disturbia” acapella, added some extra kicks for some oomph, and voila, a useful blend for a variety of club settings. Obviously, mixing into or out of the OG “Finally” is a good luck and a great transition into some classic House.
Rihanna “Disturbia” (Emynd’s “Finally” Blend):
DOWNLOAD (Zippyshare)
DOWNLOAD (Zshare)
-e
T-Pain ft Lil Wayne “I Can’t Believe It” (“Bookshelf” Blend)
![]() | The whole series can be found here. |
LUNCH BREAK BEATS #8:
T-Pain featuring Lil Wayne “I Can’t Believe It” (Emynd’s “Bookshelf” Blend)
Brendan Bringem bitched at me the other night trying to tell me I’m just a contrarian because I love “I Can’t Believe It.” He’s WRONG! The song is really charming and fun. T-Pain rhyming words together that hardly rhyme is just so damn likable (“Wisconsin” does NOT rhyme with “mansion” but it’s awesome). Wayne’s verse is atrocious and I’m not even really sure why I left it in this blend, but if you’re riddeming this up with the other joints from the Bookshelf riddim, you really shouldn’t have much trouble mixing out before Wayne gets his horrible on. By the way, I guess I should say a few words about this blend, right? Well, it works! There’s a few sour notes here and there, but nothing anyone in the club will notice and for the most part, it’s in key and gives this song a more energetic feel. Quite frankly, the Bookshelf riddim is my favorite damn riddim ever so I love throwing stuff on top of it. Hope you find it useful and comments are welcome as always!
T-Pain featuring Lil Wayne “I Can’t Believe It” (Emynd’s “Bookshelf” Blend):
DOWNLOAD (Zippyshare)
-e
Heart Of the City: Black Urban Life on The Wire
My boy at Michigan just informed me that the Black Humanities Collective at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor is putting together a conference focused on David Simon’s excellent TV show “The Wire.” If you’re interested in submitting a paper, or attending the conference, details are here and below:
This symposium proposes a critical consideration of The Wire, which treats the show as both a topic and a model of critique. Our aim is to create a space that is open and interdisciplinary. Graduate students, professors, and independent scholars working in the Humanities, the Arts, Social Sciences, Public Policy, and elsewhere are encouraged to join this collective discussion. In this sense, The Wire can serve as a common point of discussion, as a viable vehicle of social engagement in its own right and a text worthy of careful and extended investigation.
Potential paper/panel topics include:
– Urban Renewal and Decline
– Race, Place, and Visual Culture
– The Black Family
– The City as a Transnational Conduit
– Critical Masculinities and Femininities
– Media Ethics and Issues of Representation
– Sex and Sexualities in the City
– (Counter-)Public and (Counter-)Private Spheres
– Pedagogy and Educational Practice
– City and Regional Planning
– Performance and Performativity in Urban Space[
-e
Young Chris – 30 Verses in 30 Days
My man Young Chris from the Young Gunz just started his “30 Verses in 30 Days” campagin on his blog. Head over there and listen to that ish!
I will be posting the Bmore joint I did with him by the end of the week.
-e