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Charlie Sloth

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Archives for February 2007

Timbaland vs Scott Storch

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Mistajam | 19:38 UK time, Friday, 23 February 2007

Go 3:00 in to this video. Timbaland's definitely got some fighting talk for Scott Storch! The beef stems from Scott feeling he didn't get his just dues for Justin Timberlake's 'Cry Me A River' - claiming that he not only wrote but also produced the majority of the song. Timbaland has remained quiet about it...up until this interview and his verse on 'Give It To Me' - his new single.

Personally, this one is an interesting one for me - they can't go at it like rappers (Scott don't rap!!) so this one has to be contained to interviews. What do you think? Who's better? Who will win?

Camron's at it again...

Richard Crompton | 15:37 UK time, Friday, 23 February 2007

In case you haven't heard it yet... Cam talks 50, Jay, Nas, Mase to Kay Slay.

It's not only Black History...

Mistajam | 07:49 UK time, Tuesday, 20 February 2007

...it's all our history.

200 years after slavery was abolished by the British government, we're all still feeling the legacy.

Oscar Fever

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Mistajam | 07:18 UK time, Sunday, 18 February 2007

The Oscars Are Coming

As it's the Oscars this coming weekend, this week on the HipHop M1X Show, I'm gonna be playing 4 HOURS (yes, the whole 4 hours) of the biggest tracks either from films or inspired by films.

I need help though. I need help filling those 4 hours so what are your biggest tracks either from a movie, sampling a movie or inspired by a movie?

K-Ci + JoJo + Lots of alcohol =

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Mistajam | 19:57 UK time, Friday, 16 February 2007

Badman

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Mistajam | 16:46 UK time, Friday, 16 February 2007

Just seems oh so relevant.

Aggressive Competition just took a step up...

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Mistajam | 19:08 UK time, Thursday, 15 February 2007

*Contains language some people may find offensive*

Hmmm. You comment cos I think I'm speechless. Ignant. Please don't let Bill O'Reilly see this, he'll have a field day...

Happy Valentines Day?

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Mistajam | 07:25 UK time, Wednesday, 14 February 2007

Hate it?

Or Love It?

Minority Report

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Mistajam | 09:28 UK time, Tuesday, 13 February 2007


. Reminds you how powerful this HipHop music can be.

Notorious BIG - Greatest Hits

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Mistajam | 18:47 UK time, Monday, 12 February 2007


"...cos the greatest rapper of all time died on march 9th" - Canibus, 2nd Round Knockout

So it's coming up to 10 years since the great Christopher Wallace aka The Notorious BIG passed and to commemorate, Bad Boy are putting out his Greatest Hits. Here's the tracklist:

1) Juicy
2) Big Poppa
3) Hypnotize
4) One More Chance Remix
5) Get Money
6) Warning
7) Dead Wrong
8) Who Shot Ya
9) Ten Crack Commandments
10) Notorious Thugs
11) Notorious
12) Nasty Girl
13) Unbelievable
14) Niggaz Bleed
15) Runnin Ya Mouth*
16) Wan't That Old Thing Back*
17) Lovin You Tonight

*unreleased tracks (that honestly sound like out takes from Duets)

I love me some BIG. If I became decisive enough to have a single favourite rapper, Biggie would be in close contention and it is about time that he had a greatest hits but if I were compiling it, we'd have 'Sky's The Limit', 'Kick In The Door', the version of 'Me and my B**ch' from The Show soundtrack and some of his earliest verses a la Big Pun's Endangered Species. What would be on your BIG Greatest Hits?

Why Should I Be Embarrassed? By Yungun

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Mistajam | 21:53 UK time, Sunday, 11 February 2007

Shout out to - through them I found , a great piece done by British Rapper Yungun for the Commission for Racial Equality:

"Like many British people I’m essentially quite reserved. I have a regular office job and although I work in a friendly atmosphere I like to keep my personal life and my working life at a comfortable distance.

I repeatedly find myself a reluctant spokesperson for hip hop culture in Britain

Every now and then, however, a colleague will catch wind of my ‘extra-curricular’ activities and probe me on an area of popular culture with which they are unfamiliar. Thus, I repeatedly find myself a reluctant spokesperson for hip hop culture in Britain. This reluctance, I am almost ashamed to say, stems from embarrassment.

COLLEAGUE: What’s this I hear about you being a DJ in your spare time?!
ME: Well, I’m not a DJ actually but I do make music.
COLLEAGUE: Really? What kind of music?
ME: hip hop.
COLLEAGUE: No way? Seriously? What do you do then?
ME: I do the lyrics. I write songs, perform them, release records. I’m an MC, a rapper.
COLLEAGUE: Wow! What, like 50 Cent? Where’s all your bitches then?! Where’s your chain?! You’re not a gangsta! Are you from ‘Da Hood’ then, eh?! Ha ha!

Should I force him to take me seriously by listing the far-away countries I’ve toured in, the accolades I’ve received from critics and the radio stations I’ve appeared on? Should I try to show that there’s more to hip hop than these tired stereotypes? Should I explain that actually what I do is more similar to artists like Mos Def, Talib Kweli and others labeled as ‘conscious’ rappers? Or should I just accept that the only other rapper he’s heard of is Eminem, offer a half-hearted laugh and go about my business? But the most burning question of all is: why do I feel so embarrassed?

Although it amounts to little more than innocent curiosity or harmless office banter, this awkward exchange tells us something about the common perception of hip hop in 2007. My colleague’s reaction is entirely predictable.

I was born in 1980 into a middle-class family in an affluent area of North London. The son of a black Nigerian man and a white English woman, I received an expensive private education and went on to study law at a red-brick university before starting working life as a trainee solicitor in a city law firm.


rap’s influence has long extended far beyond the black ghettos of America

It would be an understatement to say that this is not an average background for a rapper. But rap’s influence has long extended far beyond the black ghettos of America where it began some thirty years ago.

Anybody who grew up in London as teenager in the 1990s could only have missed the rapid surge in the popularity of hip hop music by hiding under a rock. It should come as no surprise, then, that a man of my age should be a fan. So is it really that strange that I like making hip hop music? My colleague’s reaction suggests that, for some reason, it is.

Perhaps that reason has something to do with the public image of hip hop. The successful modern rap star is often marketed as young, black and dangerous. To be described as ‘ghetto’ is to be hailed as authentic. John McWhorter has convincingly argued that ‘the nastiest rap sells best’, and indeed, every time we turn on a television we are presented with the familiar hip hop stereotypes: aggressive scowls and macho posturing.

Much has been made of the inappropriateness of ‘thug’ rappers as role models, the glorification of violence, misogyny and homophobia and the resulting self-perpetuated alienation of black people from mainstream society. To pursue an education and work a nine-to-five job has become uncool compared to the seductive glamour of a life of crime.

Everybody sang along with 50 Cent when he proclaimed 'I’m a mother****ing P.I.M.P.', but if his initials of choice were G.P. or Q.C, it’s unlikely he would have dominated the charts like he did. So perhaps it is understandable that the ‘thug’ image springs to mind when we hear the words ‘hip hop’.

a nine-to-five job has become uncool compared to the seductive glamour of a life of crime

But this is an oversimplified view. It does not take into account the huge commercial success and cultural influence of artists who have never sought to market themselves as ‘thugs’, such as the Black Eyed Peas, Will Smith, Outkast and more recently Kanye West.

And while 50 Cent’s story of being shot nine times formed part of his marketing campaign, rap mogul Sean ‘P Diddy’ Combs went as far as changing his name in order to distance himself from the negative attention surrounding his legal battles over gun charges.

Rap’s biggest star, Shawn ‘Jay-Z’ Carter, has origins that may at first cast him as another poor role model, but it is his unparalleled business savvy that has made him the hero of millions of young fans and the darling of corporate America, with leading brands such as Hewlett-Packard, Budweiser and Coca-Cola falling over themselves to be associated with him.

Violence can no longer compete with the all-conquering lure of materialism as the dominating theme in rap music. A glance at popular hip hop based shows Cribs and Pimp My Ride instantly demonstrates that it is money, not violence, that rules the rap world.

So we could argue that, rather than leading young black people towards the margins of society, hip hop music is in fact encouraging them to align their goals with those of the white middle-classes: the so-called ‘American Dream’. Certainly, in my own experience, it is the most ‘ghetto’ of hip hop fans that have praised me the most for embarking on a career in the legal profession.


the stars of rap are among the most prominent icons of the black community

Moreover, although the ability of hip hop music to educate or empower young black people has often been treated with suspicion, the stars of rap are among the most prominent icons of the black community.

When black people were outraged at the lack of support for the sufferers of hurricane Katrina, the words of Kanye West (who said that George Bush ‘doesn’t care’ about black people) resonated the loudest. Through the megaphone of rap music, the voice of the black ‘ghetto’ seems to drown out that of the black middle class.

Perhaps black doctors, teachers, businesspeople and lawyers have felt an embarrassment similar to mine. Perhaps they struggle to relate to the image of blackness that entertainers have made most prominent and have sought to distance themselves from it.

But the danger of this approach is that in distancing themselves from the ‘rock-stars’ of the black community, they risk alienating themselves from the young people who are inevitably in awe of that glamour.

The worrying conclusion is that mainstream culture has become more comfortable with a distorted perception of blackness. It is difficult to tell whether this belies some form of institutionalised racism or whether it is simply the result of over-exposure to a single limited and essentially flawed perception of blackness.

I should not be embarrassed to proclaim in the same breath that I am both a young, black lawyer and also a hip hop artist. I should, rather, be proud that I am in the unique position to be able to challenge preconceptions of what either of those should be. The fact that I have encountered difficulty when displaying that pride is an embarrassment to us all."

I agree with Yungun but what do you think?

Back in the Day...

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Mistajam | 20:07 UK time, Saturday, 10 February 2007

50 Cent - Funeral Music (Cam'ron Diss)

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Mistajam | 16:10 UK time, Friday, 9 February 2007

By now you've heard the 50 Cent interview on Angie Martinez' Hot 97 show where Camron calls in and the pair have an argument. Well, 50 was gentlemanly at first but smelling a chance to get some press, this was inevitable from the marketing genius...

*WARNING: The clip below contains language some may be offended by*

My thoughts:
1) Nice and innovative for 50 to do a video and track rather than just a diss track. Means it's going to go further than just a track (i.e. all over blogs!)
2) Going at *just* Cam'ron rather than the whole Dipset is quite clever - will the rest of Dipset rally behind Cam?
3) If it DOES escalate, G-Unit vs Dipset could get stupid. Lets hope they keep it to just music
What do you think? Do we really care? Was this kind of beef over in 2004?

UPDATE: Cam'ron's reply: Cuuurrrttiiissss aka Look Like A Gorilla

Round 1 - 50 Cent.

Tonight on the HipHop M1X Show...

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Mistajam | 18:49 UK time, Thursday, 8 February 2007

After the success of the 1979-2006 HipHop Odyssey mix we featured on the show in December and then went on to be downloaded hundreds of thousands of times, DJ/Producer Jaguar Skills has done it again with a 1Xtra and MistaJam EXCLUSIVE:

Big shouts to Jag, he comes correct on this one - big remixes, productions and exclusives. For more info on Mr Skills, he's in

Tune in to the HipHop M1X show tonight from 2-6am live on 1Xtra or listen again anytime here

RIP Big Pun

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Mistajam | 15:04 UK time, Wednesday, 7 February 2007

7 years today - a good reason to choose some of his greatest verses & tracks...
*EDIT - there were more but YouTube must not be Big Pun fans*


John Blaze


Twinz


Off The Books (the first time I heard him)

Click below if you wanna see the documentary of his life story...

RIP Big Pun. One of my favourite (and I have been saying that since day, not just because he passed)

Read the rest of this entry

What's in a name?

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Mistajam | 17:20 UK time, Saturday, 3 February 2007

"Rap star Sean Combs has been asked in court to remove his alias "Diddy" from websites after an earlier settlement with a musician known by the same name. The rapper settled out of court with Richard "Diddy" Dearlove last year, agreeing not to use the name in the UK. Mr Dearlove's lawyer, Iain Purvis QC, told London's High Court that Mr Combs had made changes to two of his websites but "Diddy" was still used on others. He said Mr Combs had refused to make changes to sites not under his control. "We want him either to use a neutral name like P Diddy or to shut them down," he said. Mr Dearlove, best known for his remix of the Blondie hit Atomic, has traded under the name "Diddy" since 1992.

The 41-year-old wants Mr Combs to erase "Diddy" from sites including YouTube and MySpace. Mr Purvis said it could be difficult for Mr Combs to do this but that it was his responsibility. "What we say is he has given these undertakings and it is up to him to make sure they are complied with." Mr Purvis said that in keeping with an earlier agreement, Combs made sure UK visitors to his own international website www.diddy.com were diverted to a British site where "Diddy" was not used. Under the settlement with Mr Dearlove, Mr Combs is allowed to use "P Diddy" in the UK and "Diddy" outside the UK.

If the judge rules that Mr Combs has breached the agreement, Mr Dearlove will ask for an injunction barring him from continuing to do so. Mr Dearlove could then seek damages. Mr Combs, 37, changed his name from Puff Daddy to P Diddy in 2001, later dropping the "P" from his name in 2005. Sites like YouTube and MySpace have proved useful marketing tools for musicians - Mr Combs's MySpace profile has been visited 10 million times. The hearing continues."

To avoid confusion, lets use their real names here.

My problem with this one is that Sean's myspace and YouTube sites originated outside the UK and (geek time) are hosted on servers outside the UK so in all honesty why should Sean remove them? If he is allowed to call himself Diddy in the US. On the other hand, Richard has been using the moniker for years - shouldn't Sean have checked if someone else was using the stage name before he killed Puff Daddy, P.Diddy and Puffy?

The cynic in me says this is just a really clever way to promote Richard's work while he potentially earns some more money from whatever he may win in this hearing (don't forget, they've already settled out of court before) but the DJ in me can see his point. I'm sure I would be more than upset (and some lawyers would be called) if someone like 50 Cent or Jay-Z decided that they were tired of their old name and their new name was MistaJam.

What are your thoughts? Would the real Diddy please stand up?

Coming Soon...

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Mistajam | 05:26 UK time, Friday, 2 February 2007

Advice for up & coming rappers...

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Mistajam | 04:32 UK time, Friday, 2 February 2007

Rather than wasting money on cheap music videos, save up and put together your own EPK. Upload it to somewhere like youtube and send the link everywhere. That's what Joell Ortiz did and he's signed to Aftermath now...

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