After trying (and failing) to trim this review down, I finally just said whatever and I'm going to post it. So here it is, my (late) full track by track album review of The Root's How I Got Over album. It's pretty lengthy, but hopefully someone will enjoy it.
Originally set to retire with Rising Down as their last album, The Roots have come back with their ninth studio album, How I Got Over. They’ve brought in some lesser known names along with a few familiar faces for this record. Much like their previous two records, they’ve stuck with dark content matter, revealing the reality of today’s dented world, only this time the messages are backed by a more organic sound. Is this their best work to date, or should they have stayed on their original path into retirement? I highly disagree with the latter.
The album starts with an echoy and piano backed group of females humming, on A Peace of Light. I already get the feeling this is going to be a more organic sounding album than their past several albums. 3/5
The title itself on Walk Alone sounds dark and depressing. This book’s cover matches its content. Truck North, P.O.R.N. and Black Thought talk about an independent life and being in one man wolf packs. It definitely sets the tone for the rest of the album. 3/5
Next we catch Black Thought deep in prayer in Dear God 2. He questions God’s motives and intentions when he wonders why we’re more worried about celebrity beefs than real war and poverty. They’re topics often talked about in discussions, blogs and articles, but rarely covered in hip-hop songs. Black Thought is on point as usual as he paints a gloomy picture of today’s world. 4/5
I was really happy to see Blu on Radio Daze. He’s slowly picked up steam online and I hope this record helps him out. However, this track is just average to me for some reason. I can’t seem to point out anything special about this track, but I also won’t skip it if it comes on. 3/5
Now Or Never discusses the need and want for change. Change in personal life, change in what’s going on in the world, and change in today’s society. This could’ve been the theme song to Obama’s Presidential campaign (Or the revival of a new marketing campaign). After recently (and finally!) graduating college, I hold this particular track closer to me than others. Now on the hunt for a job, I feel the hunger for change in my own life. Black Thought, Phonte and Dice Raw all deliver, each one taking a slightly different point of view. The only thing I would’ve liked to see different on this track was Common on the guest list. 5/5
Up next is…Black Thought singing? I’ve seen it on Late Night, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen it on a Roots record. Regardless of the setting, I don’t mind it. It was an unexpected change of pace when they dropped How I Got Over, and one that I gladly welcome. By no means is Tariq anywhere near the level of Michael Jackson, but he can carry a tune and I’d choose him over someone telling me they can take me to the Candy Shop any day. Like the previous track, this title track and first single too talks about the need for change. Black Thought (backed by Dice Raw) properly discuss the harsh realities of growing up in Philly (and society in general), without the marketing hook claiming they f*** with Dre, now they wanna show them love. 4/5
DillaTude: The Flight of Titus is a short tribute interlude to the late great J. Dilla and Slum Villiage member Baatin (Titus Glover). Not too much to say about this except I’m glad it’s there. 3/5
The Day is another song about change. However, this time it’s more positive. Black Thought is again joined by Blu and Phonte on this relaxing, summer sounding song filled with storytelling about living life and truly enjoying it. If I smoked, I’d roll a fat one to this while laying outside in the sun on a warm summer day. 5/5
I wish Black Thought really got his write on with this next track, Right On. (Sorry, I couldn’t help the poor wordplay) This is a more upbeat track than the first half of the album. Money Making Jam Boys member, STS, brings a lot of energy, but half way through his verse it feels like he’s running out of steam and his lyrics are getting slightly ahead of him. I would’ve preferred a cleaner recording, but it’s not a bad verse. Black Thought just barely fell short on really making this track shine. I’d love to see B.o.B. hop on a remix of this track and really set it on Fire. On a side note, whenever I hear the snare roll at the end I immediately think of 75 Bars. 3.5/5
John Legend hops on the hook of Doin It Again with a live recording. At first I wasn’t sure how I felt about this compared to a studio recording, but I think the recording works well. Black Thought talks about how he’s unsung, underrated, under-appreciated, The one them underachievers had underestimated. He’s standing here to let the haters know that he Finally graduated and is one of the most hated, Something that's so sacred, nobody gon' take it. I see this track as a preview of the duo Doin It Again on one of my favorite tracks of the album, The Fire. 4/5
I have a lot to write about this next track, The Fire. First off, this is an amazing track. The song is about the fire inside of you, and how you really need to push for achieving what you desire. It’s a lyrical, soulful, motivating and uplifting track. Leading up to this song I felt as if the tracks were missing something that I couldn’t put my finger on. This song has that X-Factor. John Legend encapsulates what the song is about perfectly when he sings, You don’t say good luck, you say don’t give up-it’s the fire. I love this line and will take this line with me for a long, long time. If Now Or Never was Obama’s campaign theme song, this is his in-office theme song. Everything about this song is perfect. You have John Legend with The Roots talking covering relevant and positive issues and a music video directed by Rik Cordero with a budget. There’s nothing else to ask for. 5/5
Nothing that is, besides a remix. In between changing his name from B.o.B. to Bobby Ray and back again, B.o.B. dropped several mixtapes leading up to the release of his first solo album. After talking to beautiful girls all over the world and teaching people how to wish on airplanes in the night sky, B.o.B shot to number one on the Billboard charts. After that he did what I feel is possibly one of his greatest musical achievements thus far: he hopped on a song with The Roots. There aren’t many people who manage to do studio work with The Roots. Countless artists have performed with them (especially now with them on Late Night), but few have joined them in the studio. Only recently have they started to venture out of their group of regulars. But what’s even rarer than a non-regular guest on a Roots track is a remix, which B.o.B was able to get on. He fits in well with the group, holding his own on the first verse of the song. While his content isn’t anything too original, he talks about the fuel for his own fire and brings a nice change to the song.
Tunnel Vision is a short little interlude. Unique, yet not something I feel is necessary for the album. It kind of ruins my high I was running off of from the previous track, but provides a nice transition into the final track. 3/5
Web 20/20 has a lot going on in it. There are scratches, beeps and blips doused over this track. I’m partially biased towards this track because of it being How I Got Over’s Thought@Work. Although these songs seem hard to fit into albums, I love when they show up. Two thirds of the Money Making Jam Boys go in and don’t let up until the record is over. Again, my only complaint about this track would be not having the full Jam Boys lineup on it. 5/5
STS makes a second appearance on the bonus track, Hustla, with a herd of lambs ‘bahhing’ on the background vocals. I like Right On more than this STS featured track. I can see why it’s a bonus. It’s not a bad song, but it’s not a selling point of the album either. The track flips the stereotypical image of hustling into a more positive image. Daughter of a Hip-Hopper, hustla like her grandpapa, Her destiny done been determined so you can't stop her, from being independent, earning paper and proper, More like a lawyer or a doctor, not a man watcher. 3.5/5
The End: This is definitely one of the best Roots albums to date. Smooth transitions paired with excellent lyricism and organic beats help make this album deserving of an Album of the Year nomination. The Roots are back to their old selves and still keeping themselves current and relevant. I impatiently await their next tour to experience Now Or Never, The Fire and Right On live, front and center. 4.5/5 overall.
LAST NIGHT I HAD A DREAM, THOUGHTS WAS RACING THROUGH MY HEAD..
FELT SO REAL TO ME, THIS IS WHAT IT SAID..
Monday, August 16, 2010
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
I'm back.
I've decided to hop back onto this thing, and hopefully update it (at least fairly) frequently.
Coming soon: The Roots - How I Got Over album review.
Friday, October 23, 2009
Jay-Z's Blueprint 3 Tour Videos
Videos from the Jay-Z concert in Seattle, WA. Pics & Review coming soon:
Wale - W.A.L.E. D.A.N.C.E & World Tour:
N.E.R.D w/ Rhea Opening Sequence:
N.E.R.D. - Lapdance Drum Solo:
N.E.R.D/Pharrell - Beautiful:
N.E.R.D/Pharrell - Drop It Like Its Hot:
Jay-Z Entrance + Run This Town:
Jay-Z - Jigga What Jigga Who:
Jay-Z ft. Bridget Kelly - Empire State of Mind:
Jay-Z - A Star Is Born:
Jay-Z - So Ambitious:
Jay-Z - Thank You:
Jay-Z - On To the Next One,Venus Vs. Mars, Lucifer Swagger Like Us, Can I Get A and Big Pimpin:
Jay-Z - Encore + What We Talkin Bout:
Jay-Z - Forever Young:
Wale - W.A.L.E. D.A.N.C.E & World Tour:
N.E.R.D w/ Rhea Opening Sequence:
N.E.R.D. - Lapdance Drum Solo:
N.E.R.D/Pharrell - Beautiful:
N.E.R.D/Pharrell - Drop It Like Its Hot:
Jay-Z Entrance + Run This Town:
Jay-Z - Jigga What Jigga Who:
Jay-Z ft. Bridget Kelly - Empire State of Mind:
Jay-Z - A Star Is Born:
Jay-Z - So Ambitious:
Jay-Z - Thank You:
Jay-Z - On To the Next One,Venus Vs. Mars, Lucifer Swagger Like Us, Can I Get A and Big Pimpin:
Jay-Z - Encore + What We Talkin Bout:
Jay-Z - Forever Young:
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
One hand in the air for the big city, Street lights, big dreams all looking pretty
I hope you two grab the #1 spot on the charts with this one.
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Blueprint 3 Review
I feel like in order to appreciate this album and this (accidentally insanely long) review, there are several things which you have to know coming into it:
-All these interpretations could be completely off..I wrote this while being bored and haven’t fully taken in the album yet.
-Jay-Z has matured as a person, which is reflected in his raps; he’s not the Reasonable Doubt Jay-Z anymore. He’s gotten more mainstream sounding (or refined, in his terms), and the OG Jay-Z fans may hate on this album because of that sound change.
-Reasonable Doubt was made for his friends and family. Blueprint 3 was made for the fans, and casual fans make up the majority of any fanbase, whether it’s for a sport, art, food, or person.
-Artists have to progress in order to stay relevant.
-Kanye West had a heavy influence on this album, and it’s very apparent in his production and Jay-Z’s overall style on this album.
Onto the massively lengthy review!
What We Talkin About (ft. Luke Steele) Produced by Kanye West & No.I.D.
Jay opens up the final chapter of his Blueprint Trilogy with heavy synthesizers in front of an airy, spacey sound, much like Pray on American Gangster. I like this style because the beat sounds much more open and less structured ie. 2 bars repeated 8x for verse 1, one bar repeating 8x for the hook, etc. It sounds more like a continuing song that’s progressing, usually. This track is all about what people talk about in their songs, and what they should be talking about, himself included. We are welcomed to the Blueprint III with Jay letting us know we truly are in a special time, and history was made when Obama took a seat in the White House. He addresses e-thugs, letting them know they can either 'shoot YouTube up' or progress with him. It’s goodbye to the gang/drug content/lifestyle and hello to the now, with the line, 'Peace out Medusa, welcome to tha, blue-ah, print-ah-, tre piece-Jay-Z.” The people yearning for the ‘old’ Jay-Z are in for a disappointment, as he raps, “’Hov take ‘em back,’ I’m doing better than before, why would I do that?” There’s a small shot at Jaz-O in here which is unnecessary on a track like this. He did the same thing in 'No Hook' on American Gangster, and it just feels out of place. As usual, he lets us know how baller status he is with the line, 'I don't run rap no more, I run the map.’ One re-occuring annoyance lately he’s recycle his lines, even in the same song. Overall the beat isn’t anything special, but it’s nothing bad. Content is good, but can go over some people’s heads if you’re not paying attention. 3.5/5
Thank You Produced by Kanye West & No.I.D.
This is a weird track, content-wise. He talks about the haters, and also talks about how nice his life is. Just as the title says, Hov says thank you to everyone-well, the haters anyways. “Who would’ve thought by making birds migrate for the winter I’d be fly all summer, might I say.” The beat is relaxed and has a lounge/jazz feel to it, much like an upbeat Party Life from American Gangster with a horn trio(?) throughout the song. Jay sounds happy while rapping, as weird as that sounds. He continues on by talking about how he could’ve ended a few careers, but they did it to themselves, so thanks for doing the work for him. I believe he’s also talking about how he doesn’t try to bring on all of the attention he gets, it just happens. This hook sounds like he’s telling us that this is your song, because you’ve helped him become the person he is, and get to the point he’s at in his life. Overall this is a decent track, but nothing mind-blowing…but confusing. Just like What We Talkin’ About, this track has residue on is from American Gangster, and something makes me think this track is an AG leftover. 3.5/5
I’m skipping DOA and Run This Town, because they’ve been out for so long and pretty much everyone knows what they’re about already.
Empire State of Mind ft. Alicia Keys Produced by Al Shux
I’m biased on this track because of my love for Alicia Keys, but I think this song is amazing. Just like the first several tracks, Jay jumps right into the song after a few instrumental bars. We get no hook to lead us in, and I like this. He gives props to New York throughout the whole track while on top of a great upbeat instrumental. The beat doesn’t even sound like a track someone would rap over, which makes it unique. I can hear Alicia on the keys all over this track, with a live drummer backing her and Jay. This is a must-see-live track, making me love it even more. I’m not from New York, but I can appreciate someone giving props to the place they came from, the place they live in and the place they love. New York has countless negatives about it, but Alicia and Jay let you know this is the home of Frank Sinatra, the Statue of Liberty, home of the WTC towers, the Yankees, a sea of taxi cabs in the streets, the City of Dreams, and endless possibilities. My only gripe about this track is that as usual, Jay must put his stamp on it, telling us he helped make NY more famous. From what I read, Nas was suppose to be on this track, but I’m glad he wasn’t. His aggressiveness wouldn’t have fit in with the melodic and positive sounding vibe this track gives off. Oh yea, Alicia on the bridge that leads us into the third verse gives this track even more bonus points. 5/5
Real As It Gets ft. Young Jeezy Produced by The Inkredibles
Jeezy jock’s Hov, coming in with, “Allow me to re-introduce myself-.” This track isn’t off to a good start. Jeezy’s verse is typical, talking about guns, money and girls, and nothing else. To me, not much goes on in this track and it isn’t needed on the album. Hov talks about being baller status, taking care of people close to him, and Jeezy talks about nothing. This track is 4:13 minutes too long. The only reason I’m giving it a 2/5 is because it’s semi-catchy. 2/5
On To The Next One ft. Swizz Beats Produced by Swizz Beatz
Whoever titled this song got it 100% correct. Go straight On to the Next One. I don’t like this song at all. Swizz put a half-assed beat together, sampling an already popular and already sampled Justice track. I could’ve made this beat, but I would’ve made it better. Content-wise this is typical post-retirement Jay-Z. We get to hear about how far he’s come along and how much money he has. I do like how he took a jab at Cristal though, which made me smile. Sadly, that’s just about the only thing that made me smile on this track. To anyone not –in-the-know and if memory serves me right, Jay used to rep Cristal, til they said they won’t let any rapper endorse them or use their drink (Including inside Jay’s 40/40 clubs). The track dies by someone hitting the stop button on the turntable. If only they had gotten to the one’s and two’s 4:17 sooner. The .5 comes from it just being a Jay-Z track and me being a Jay fan. 1.5/5
Off That ft. Drake Produced by Timbaland
Timbaland’s scent is doused all over this track, from his drums, claps and techno-influence sound, to his adlibs under Jay. Sadly, Drake is on this track as well. I don’t hate Drake, but I think he’s highly overrated and doesn’t deserve to be on The Blueprint III. You’re gonna put Drake on here, but not Eminem? Come on Jay. Don’t abandon your roots completely with this new Mainstream-Jay. Your homies for life Beans, Memphis Bleek and Freeway aren’t on here once, but overrated and overhyped Drake is? I didn’t know it was gonna be like this. Anyways, back to the song. This track is upbeat and pretty mainstream sounding, especially with Drake on the hook (and thankfully, only on the hook). It reminds me a bit of Throw It On Me from Timbaland’s Shock Value album. Any fan of Timbaland’s sound should enjoy this track. I might play this in the club to see how it goes. This track doesn’t seem to be about much, except that Drake and Jay-Z are ahead of everyone else, and by the time people catch up to what’s ‘in,’ he’s already ‘off that.’ In a more mainstream sounding way than in his opening song, he tells us he doesn’t care about the past, because it’s just that-the past. Timbaland’s adlibs and cowbell carry us out of this track, with the beat leaving more of an impression on me than the lyrics. Catchy song, but not much goes on inside. 3/5
A Star Is Born ft. J Cole Produced by Kanye West & No.I.D.
Finally! After several forgettable and wasted tracks on what’s supposed to be a classic album, we get something with content again. The entire song is comprised of Jay-Z giving props to everyone in the rap game, past, present and possible future. Jay’s sound has matured away from the grimey underground sound and into much more melodic and simple sound. He paints a mural over this entire song, comprising of all of the artists he respects. I don’t want to give away any lines because I think part of the enjoyment of this song is listening to who he’s going to name drop, and what he has to say about them. One line I do have to mention, however is where Hov informs Wayne that if he continues his hot streak, he’ll pass the torch onto him..Please don’t, Jay. This seems like it was a fun track for Jay to exercise his mind lyrically by seeing what comparisons he come up with and do it tastefully and not on every track *cough*Game*Cough* J. Cole, Jay’s newest signee, jumps into the song asking if he can be a star. Judging by this verse, he’s might be in contention. He sounds hungry and aggressive and manages to not get completely stepped on while standing to the powerhouse that is Jay-Z. I guessed before looking that Kanye did this beat, and yes, Kanye I hope you take this style over into your next album in terms of using more live horns and keys again. 4/5
Venus Vs. Mars Produced by Timbaland
Timbaland’s 2nd of three beats on the album. Sounds like a modern Ludacris – Potion. Jay slows his flow down, but still manages to keep it fairly creative with his word play. Beyonce is on the hook (I think)…and sounds hot as hell. I don’t know if he’s directly talking about Beyonce in this track, or if there’s a deeper reference here. At times it sounds like he can be talking about him vs. the music game or something like that.. If I knew exactly what he was talking about, it’d make the song a little better. This track is fairly short, and not bad, but again, nothing spectacular. 3/5
Already Home ft. Kid Cudi Produced by Kanye West
More new-school people on the album. I’m still not sure how I feel about this, even if they’re only on the chorus. Kanye truly has had a heavy influence on this album. Once again we get to hear Jay-Z address more haters, who call him a camel, but he’s mastered the drought-what the F$#@ he’s an animal! Beat is alright, verses are okay, but I’ve grown tired of entire songs dedicated to this topic about 2 albums ago. 3/5
Hate ft. Kanye West Produced by Kanye West
Didn’t we just talk about this subject in the last track? The main difference between this track and the last is this track is one is executed much better, partially cause Kanye steps to the mic next to his big brother. Kanye has two short verses and they’re nicely done in a clever manner. His second verse is pretty catchy and it sounds like Kanye had fun writing it. Jay-Z takes a page from Kanye’s rhyme book with the structure of some of his flow, and I like it. It’s a mainstream sound, but still manages to be aggressive and grimy sounding at the same time. This track is short and to the point, which makes it even more likable. Instead of having to suffer through four minutes of the same topic like in the last song, we get a nice and short 2 minute track. My only wish on this track is that they would go back and forth, D-Block style, trading lines back and forth like they were having a conversation about this topic. To me, this would’ve been an instant classic if that happened. For some reason I can also see Pharrell rapping on this track and it sounding good. If you wanna know how to make better tracks, get at me Jay & Ye. :) 4/5
Reminder Produced by Timbaland
Gah..Really Jay..? Three in a row? I’ll give it a chance. The track is what its title says, a reminder about what and who Jay-Z is, incase you forgot. This beat comes pretty grimy, and out of the tracks where he brags, it might be one of the better ones. It sounds like Jay’s trying to create a mix of oldschool-Jay-Z tracks and New-Baller-Status-Jay-Z tracks, and this is a hybrid track with Timbaland on the beat. The beat and flow style take us back, but the topics are definitely new. I consider myself a pretty big Jay-Z fan, but sadly, Hov: Men lie, women lie, numbers don’t. Ain’t nothing changed for me ‘cept the year it is, I think I have to send you a reminder-here it is: People grow tired of being re-gifted the same present over and over, even if it’s in a new package. (Is that Rihanna on the hook?) 3/5
So Ambitious ft. Pharrell Produced by The Neptunes
Pharrell, you always manage to get on a track, and it never seems to 100% fit in with the album. Jay comes out and says this song is dedicated to his teachers, who said he should either be dead or a reefer head. This track takes one of his overused concepts for a track, but flips it slightly, making it more appealing. He talks about his motivation and how the massive pool of haters he’s acquired over his years have only been fuel for his fire. The beat is alright, typical Jay-Z & Pharrell collaboration sounding beat. One thing I like is that Jay has a sense of humor, and only in this situation is it related, but has also mastered the adlib’s and little voice inserts on his tracks and in his performances..The motivation for me, is them telling me what I could not be..oh well..-F#@!* off. :) 2.75/5
Young Forever ft. Mr. Hudson Produced by Kanye West
Kanye’s camp is on the mic again with Mr. Hudson. This is Jay’s own version of Usher – Best Thing, even reusing part of his second verse on from that song…did you purposely jack the title from Usher too? :/ This track is a pop sounding track that disuses what the title says..staying young vs living forever. Hov lets us know we need to enjoy life, have fun with it, and reminisce on good times while still moving forward. He also talks about staying young, and making an imprint on the world, which will live on forever. This track definitely feels like a closer for the album, and although its not a typical Jay-Z track, it suits this specific album well. 3/5
Closing Thoughts
To me, if you’re going to continue the Blueprint saga, it has to be a classic album. I don’t think this album met that expectation. That title also comes with huge expectations from people, myself included. This can definitely result in being harsher when making first impressions. It wasn’t a horrible album, but not an instant classic. For the direction Jay chose to go in I think he did a pretty good job. Also, just like Kanye West’s Graduation, this album has definitely done a good job on capturing a wider audience. The only downside to this is the artist sacrifices some of the appeal to the hardcore fans in order to expand into other audiences.
Also..where's Em!? I think this album has way too many features, especially from the 'newschool' rappers, and it should've been almost completely Hov on the mic by himself, with the exception of Eminem and Kanye. Eminem on this album makes sense in so many ways..he was on the first one, he just recently put out Relapse, then the Mariah record, then Forever w/ Drake/Kanye/Wayne, then he coulda hopped on this album, then more promo with DJ Hero, then finally Relapse 2 on Nov 17th. Continual marketing done, and its basically all free.
Jay-Z said this is his version of 808’s & Heartbreak, minus the autotune, and in certain aspects, I agree. It definitely seems more melodic than other albums..from what I can remember anyways. It’s not a classic album (yet), though it does produce a new and different sound from Jay-Z. His flow is still decent, the beats aren’t too bad, but he needs to find more outlets and inspirations for his content in his tracks…
A dedication track to Beyonce would’ve been amazing for this album, and it could’ve continued on 03 Bonnie & Clyde, but just with Jay. I understand it’s hard to find new things to talk about when you stop pushing weight and stop having to worry about making it to see the sun rise, and instead push $206 mil cash into your wallet from selling a clothing company you built, and get to see the sun rise with one of the hottest female celebrities/singers out, but that doesn’t give you a free-pass forever.
I want to call you the G.O.A.T., but without you continuing to try to strive for that title like you should and not just talking like you’re already there, it’s a moot point. I don’t mind the bragging tracks every now and then, but when a single album is littered with them and they aren’t backed by an insane flow and beats, they grow tiresome.. Especially when I know you still have it in you. Maybe you need to go spend some quality time with Talib Kweli, Common, Lupe Fiasco and The Roots (While you're at it, bring Kanye too, please). I’m sure they’ll motivate you in ways you haven’t been in a long, long time. Overall this album is just average to me, for now. Theres a few good tracks, but they're also surrounded by forgettable ones. I’m sure it’ll grow on me, but I also wonder how soon it’ll end up on the shelf collecting dust. 3.5/5
Friday, July 24, 2009
The Dave Chappelle Experience
So on Tuesday, July 14th, at about 10:15PM I get a call from a friend. He asks me if I heard about Dave Chappelle, and I told him no. He follows up by saying there's rumors flying everywhere that he's going to do an impromptu performance at Pioneer Square in downtown Portland at midnight that night. I told him I'd call a few friends to see what the deal is, and call him back. Only one of 3 people knew anything about it, and they just knew it was all rumors. Around 10:35PM I decide to hop in the 'backseat' of a pickup truck with my friend and his, and head for Portland in hopes of this twitter-fueled rumor being true..regardless of the fact that I had a midterm the very next day that I had only studied ~30 minutes for at that point.
As we're on our way North, I'm consistently staring at my phone, checking for updates, confirmations from reliable sources, or any sort of news at all. By 11:15PM I see literally over 2,000 people packed into Pioneer Square via KGW's live webcam of downtown. The clock strikes 12:00AM and there's no Chappelle. 12:15, still not Dave. 12:30..no signs of any famous comedians. We get to downtown about 12:35AM, and find parking around 12:45AM. There are probably at least 3,000 people there by that time, cops blocking off streets everywhere, and ambulances stationed nearby. By that time hundreds of people were walking away, saying it wasn't going to happen. I got up to about 5-10ft away from the stage with my friends, and we just stand wait patiently with everyone else. Around 12:55AM I see people swarming a small section, and that section is slowly making its way towards the stage.
Sure enough, it's Rick James himself. He's armed with zero bodyguards, some annoying loudmouthed girl, a girl with a guitar and mic, and another guy holding his speaker. That's right, the only sound system he has setup is a portable speaker probably about 10" tall at most, attached to the microphone by a cable. No amp, not even a power cable to plug into an outlet.
This obviously wasn't enough power to reach what was now over 5,000 people. If the speakerman pointed the speaker in your direction, and you were within the first 20 feet, and people around you were quiet, and you were listening extra hard, you could hear him. Otherwise the only thing you could hear were people's reactions to what he was saying. He said he only expected about 200 people, not over 5,000, which was the reason he didn't bring a better setup. After seeing so many people there, he attempted to get a better sound system, and so we waited patiently with Dave, crossing our fingers. They slowly pulled several speakers up onto the stage, which ended up being useless after the city shut off the power to the Square.
Next on the list of finger crossings was hoping that they would be able to get a generator up and running to power the speakers on hand. Dave was very relaxed, calm, and more than willing to work with everyone and wait patiently. During this time he took pictures, greeted people, conversed with people in the crowd, watched a girl strip naked on top of the roof of Starbucks, and thank the people and the Portland City Police for being so calm and patient. Around 2:15-2:30, he finally packed up and decided to go back to his hotel, but not before my friend could run up and say whats up to him and slap him on the back. I got home around 4:15AM, slept around 6:30AM and then woke up at 9:00AM for my classes that day.
Was it worth it? For the spur of the moment experience, and just being able to see Dave Chappelle, yes. I didn't get to see his set, and only a little of random improv, but I got to see Dave Chappelle the person, just hanging out with 5,000 people, talking casually and waiting just like the rest of us. It definitely made me appreciate him more as a person and as a celebrity/comedian. And also just going for the possibility of seeing him was fun.
How It All Began:
So Dave Chappelle was staying in Portland for the day, for no confirmed reason. He had been in LA for the past few days, making unannounced, unplanned and unmarketed performances at small locations...with sets lasting four hours. People talked with him casually as he went around Portland going to grab a bite to eat and just explore the City of Roses. Then he went to a store and rented out speaker equipment, and when asked what it was for, he responded with 'a free show in Portland.' The entire city took to Twitter, Facebook, Myspace, local forums, and emails and the rumors started. Where was this show? When was it? How much would it cost? Would he really be there? Why was he doing this? No credible source could confirm this, even the people who manage Pioneer Square said Dave had never rented out the venue or even asked to use it. Dave was in Portland, but why? And why would he throw a show for free out of no where? People asked him about it throughout the day as they ran into him, and he said there was going to be a show at midnight, but these stories all came from unreliable sources. It seemed like a huge stretch that this was real, let alone free. Around 8:00PM something credible happened. A stage was being put together at Pioneer Square. The rumor mill had just been doused in gasoline and the internet's main topic became Dave Chappelle in Portland Oregon. It flew up to the top TWitter Trend, and the number one Google Trend. If you typed in 'Dave C' into Google, it would finish it with 'happelle in Portland' followed by 'Chappelle Pioneer Square' and finished off with 'Chapelle Free Concert.' Over 5,000 people joined in on the flash mob which was a 100% rumor, even after the rumored concert start time. That's more than the amount who attended Greg Oden's draft pick, more than the Rip City event and other events for the Blazer's being in the playoffs this past season. I've never seen that many people in Portland in such a small space before, let alone based on pure rumor courtesy of Twitter.
Randy Couture also made an appearance to do a meet and greet promo for UFC102, and Carmelo Anthony decided to throw a party in Portland of all places. Rumor is he wants to be a blazer????? Shall I cross my fingers again?
Homie Tell Me What's Good
The heavy hitters in the rap game are all coming out of hiding and announcing their return to the game for this fall. In the word's of Diddy, LET'S GO PEOPLE!
First up, formally known as Def Jam's allstar lineup, Jay-Z featuring Kanye West & Rihanna on Jay's second official single, Run This Town, from The Blueprint 3. On paper, I expected this to be an aggressive track, hard hitting beat, fairly uptempo, much like a Def Jam version of Swagger Like Us. Instead I was surprised with a slower, somber, marching beat. I can't deny that I don't like this song, but I feel like it definitely could've been better. Something on the execution of this track seems to be not quite right. It might be the tempo, it might be me not being too impressed with Jay's verses, it may be the beat itself, I'm not sure yet. Jay talks about making money as usual and being on top. His second verse comes in better than his first. Rihanna sings the hook, with Kanye closing out the song with the third verse. I think I like Kanye's verse more than Jay's. :/ I see this as an attempt at Hip-Hop's 2009 version of Queen's We Are The Champions with a twist. I expect this to get big partially just because of the lineup. I expect a good album from Jay, and this definitely isn't a bad track, but it hasn't sold me on BP3 being a classic album, or Jay's next album even holding the title Blueprint 3. To Jay's credit, I've had less than 12 hours to warm up to this track, so I might edit this and completely change my mind in a day or two. We'll see.
The Roots are back! Despite their almost daily commitment to Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, Rock The Bells, Melanie Fiona, OkayPlayer, and Twitter, they've managed to put together a new album. And with their first single, How I Got Over, it sounds like they haven't missed a step. Not only have they not missed a step, but Black Thought stepped up to the mic---to sing. He doesn't sound bad at all, and there is NO auto-tune involved, which makes it even better. They tackle raw real topics as usual. I may be semi-biased because I feel that not only have The Roots managed to outlast countless other hiphop artists, while do something no other group has done before, but they've continued to progress and get better and better with every album. After Game Theory I wasn't sure if they could put out something better than that, but they proved me wrong with Rising Down. Anyways, back on topic.. This song is a nice upbeat track, tackling the topic of the chorus 'Out on the streets, where I grew up. First thing they teach us, not to give a F***. That type of thinking can't get you no where, someone has to care.' It's 3:36 long, but for some reason it seems short to me, which isn't a bad thing. I've left the table with my stomach full of good, quality food, but wanting even more, unlike Jay's track, where I was only half-full of decent food.
This is going to be a great 2nd half of hte year for hip hop...Lupe Fiasco, The Roots, Reflection Eternal, Jay-Z, crossing my fingers for Eminem and Kanye, even 50 Cent will be coming out the same day as Jay-Z. (I'm really hoping 50 can come with another classic like his first album...but thats another topic completely)
Last but not least..
You thought I was down..You thought I was gone..that I went around..thought I left you alone....But look up in the sky, just look up in the sky..see that I'm everywhere, shining down-on you...
Well well, is it our little author, coming back humming his hymns a little altered Lupe announces his return to the rap game with his first single, Shining Down, off of his upcoming album, Lasers (We Are Lasers? L.A.S.E.R.S? This album title has changed so many times I don't know what it is now..) This is the Lasers version of Superstar. Lupe uses auto-tune, then raps, "Now if we autotune that shit we can hear the songs from that opera grown fat b*tch," talking about how its the death of the game, (It's not over til the fat lady sings). I could write out this whole song and break it down and talk about the lines I like and dislike, but I'll just leave it at this: This track tackles relevant topics like he usually does, with a clever flow and good rock and electronica influenced beat, backed by Matthew Santos on the beat. It's not quite as good as Superstar, but I expect nothing but a third classic album from Lupe this fall, and I see this as just a short preview of whats to come.
First up, formally known as Def Jam's allstar lineup, Jay-Z featuring Kanye West & Rihanna on Jay's second official single, Run This Town, from The Blueprint 3. On paper, I expected this to be an aggressive track, hard hitting beat, fairly uptempo, much like a Def Jam version of Swagger Like Us. Instead I was surprised with a slower, somber, marching beat. I can't deny that I don't like this song, but I feel like it definitely could've been better. Something on the execution of this track seems to be not quite right. It might be the tempo, it might be me not being too impressed with Jay's verses, it may be the beat itself, I'm not sure yet. Jay talks about making money as usual and being on top. His second verse comes in better than his first. Rihanna sings the hook, with Kanye closing out the song with the third verse. I think I like Kanye's verse more than Jay's. :/ I see this as an attempt at Hip-Hop's 2009 version of Queen's We Are The Champions with a twist. I expect this to get big partially just because of the lineup. I expect a good album from Jay, and this definitely isn't a bad track, but it hasn't sold me on BP3 being a classic album, or Jay's next album even holding the title Blueprint 3. To Jay's credit, I've had less than 12 hours to warm up to this track, so I might edit this and completely change my mind in a day or two. We'll see.
The Roots are back! Despite their almost daily commitment to Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, Rock The Bells, Melanie Fiona, OkayPlayer, and Twitter, they've managed to put together a new album. And with their first single, How I Got Over, it sounds like they haven't missed a step. Not only have they not missed a step, but Black Thought stepped up to the mic---to sing. He doesn't sound bad at all, and there is NO auto-tune involved, which makes it even better. They tackle raw real topics as usual. I may be semi-biased because I feel that not only have The Roots managed to outlast countless other hiphop artists, while do something no other group has done before, but they've continued to progress and get better and better with every album. After Game Theory I wasn't sure if they could put out something better than that, but they proved me wrong with Rising Down. Anyways, back on topic.. This song is a nice upbeat track, tackling the topic of the chorus 'Out on the streets, where I grew up. First thing they teach us, not to give a F***. That type of thinking can't get you no where, someone has to care.' It's 3:36 long, but for some reason it seems short to me, which isn't a bad thing. I've left the table with my stomach full of good, quality food, but wanting even more, unlike Jay's track, where I was only half-full of decent food.
This is going to be a great 2nd half of hte year for hip hop...Lupe Fiasco, The Roots, Reflection Eternal, Jay-Z, crossing my fingers for Eminem and Kanye, even 50 Cent will be coming out the same day as Jay-Z. (I'm really hoping 50 can come with another classic like his first album...but thats another topic completely)
Last but not least..
You thought I was down..You thought I was gone..that I went around..thought I left you alone....But look up in the sky, just look up in the sky..see that I'm everywhere, shining down-on you...
Well well, is it our little author, coming back humming his hymns a little altered Lupe announces his return to the rap game with his first single, Shining Down, off of his upcoming album, Lasers (We Are Lasers? L.A.S.E.R.S? This album title has changed so many times I don't know what it is now..) This is the Lasers version of Superstar. Lupe uses auto-tune, then raps, "Now if we autotune that shit we can hear the songs from that opera grown fat b*tch," talking about how its the death of the game, (It's not over til the fat lady sings). I could write out this whole song and break it down and talk about the lines I like and dislike, but I'll just leave it at this: This track tackles relevant topics like he usually does, with a clever flow and good rock and electronica influenced beat, backed by Matthew Santos on the beat. It's not quite as good as Superstar, but I expect nothing but a third classic album from Lupe this fall, and I see this as just a short preview of whats to come.
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