Music Reintroducing M.E.D.

November 3, 2011 - 10:20 am

How do you make timeless music in a time when trends come and go faster than artists can keep up? It’s a question sparked on the title track of Stones Throw artist M.E.D.’s latest album. To find the answer, just check the line from his opening track, “Int’l”: “I write rhymes like I might not live to see the next line.” Fitting words for an album that definitely lives up to its name: Classic.

During our conversation, I asked the Oxnard, California MC about some of his favorite LPs that carry the same everlasting quality found in his album. He mentions some of the greats: Boogie Down Production’s By Any Means Necessary, N.W.A.’s Straight Outta Compton, Lootpack’s Soundpieces, and Gang Starr’s Moment of Truth. Talking about the latter, he candidly recalls getting shot as a teenager, and how it was Gang Starr’s album that helped him cool down and put his life into perspective. What follows are M.ED.’s words on how hip-hop helped turn his life around, and what led him to create his long overdue sophomore album—his first in over six years.

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Daily Dots Daily Dots: Dr. Dre & Jay-Z, Johnny Marr, Tommy Lee, Deadmau5, Gorillaz, Erykah Badu

March 29, 2010 - 11:11 pm

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Today’s bloggin best…

- A new Jay-Z / Dr. Dre song might be dropping this week. 2dopeboyz

- Johnny Marr could play in two bands at Reading Festival. NME

- Madlibs drops bombs with Guilty Simpson and Strong Arm Steady.

- Gorillaz got an online video game. Pitchfork

- If wrestlers were rappers. Complex

- Erykah Badu gets naked and assassinated in new video. SFGate

- Deadmau5 goes Hollywood, guests on Gossip Girl, hangs with Tommy Lee. MTV

Daily Dots Daily Dots: A-Trak vs. Travis Barker, Star Warz Strippers, Erykah Badu, Beck, Plastikman, INXS, Death To Hipster

March 18, 2010 - 4:16 pm

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Today’s best bloggin…

- A-Trak and Travis Barker live from the Roxy video. Hypertrak

- Interview with sexy stripper from Star Warz. LA Weekly

- All new Erykah Badu MP3, produced by Madlib. Okayplayer

- Death to the “hipster.” Searching for a new word order. Gawker

- Beck covered INXS…uh, no he didn’t. TwentyFourBit

- R.I.P. Alex Chilton. NYT

- Plastikman unveils iPhone app for live show audience participation. URBA-A-Trak & Travis

Daily Dots Daily Dots: Madlib, Method Man, Metallica, Michael Jackson and More

March 12, 2010 - 1:33 pm

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- Madlib goes to Africa. Play

- Def Jam wouldn’t let Method Man record Wu-Massacre on “hip-hop time.” HipHopDX

- Amy Winehouse to design line of Fred Perry crack stained wife-beaters. Billboard

- Buy Michael Jackson’s (RIP) sunglasses given to living Corey. Julien’s Auction

- James Brown’s body has been snatched!!! New York Post

- 160 arrested at Metallica concert riot. Spin

interview Music Dilla Director Discusses New Stussy Doc

March 3, 2010 - 11:26 am

J Dilla

In 2004, James Yancy (aka J Dilla) moved from Detroit, the city of his birth, to Los Angeles, the place he would call home until his death in 2006. Already a famed producer of chart topping hip-hop acts such as Common, Busta Rhymes, A Tribe Called Quest, and The Pharcyde, Jay Dee reinvented himself and his sound in Los Angeles, striving for a rawer style that departed from his neo-soul roots.

Four years after his untimely passing, Dilla reputation has only grown. Last month, to commemorate what would have been his 36th birthday, legendary Los Angeles street wear company Stüssy held Dilla Day events across North America, celebrating the release of their limited edition tee shirt produced in collaboration with Stones Throw and the Dilla estate. The company also produced a mini-documentary focused on Dilla’s “second act” that took place in Los Angeles, and the connections he made with the city. Chinashop spoke with the creator of the three-part web series Adam Jay Weissman to learn more about this reverent project. Read the full story

Music DOOM – Super Hero Lyricism

May 18, 2009 - 12:14 pm

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As mainstream rappers continue to spew couplets about how much swag they’ve accrued and how many shiny gems they can fit into their Franck Muller watches, the reclusive and prolific Doom has gone ahead and dropped the best hip-hop album this year – the aptly titled Born Like This. The new LP is a masterpiece any way you look at it; from the selection of exceptional producers (J Dilla, Jake One, Thom Yorke) to the sharp collection of wordsmiths assembled (Wu-Tang’s Raekwon and Ghostface, Freddie Foxxx, Kurious Jorge). But above all, it’s the Metal-Faced Villain’s amazing, choppy delivery, Ginsu-sharp diction and unrivaled imagination that make his latest opus a certified classic.

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