Friday, April 22, 2011

Slim Thug ft Devin The Dude And Dre Day - Caddy Music -2011-

Monday, April 18, 2011

Chamillionaire Releases "Major Pain 1.5," Tracklisting Included

Chamillionaire Releases  

After splitting from Universal in January, Chamillionaire is embracing a return to independence with the digital release of Major Pain 1.5. In lieu of his shelved Venom album, the tech savvy Houston-based rapper has been releasing free digital offerings such as his recent batch of Playlist Poison tracks. On April 18, Cham is offering another free digital album entitled Major Pain 1.5.

Taking an approach similar to Radiohead a few years ago, fans will be offered the option of paying for a physical copy of the album. However, this is not a “name your own price” affair, as interested parties will have to pay $12. In return, the first 500 people to purchase the album get signed copies, while the remaining 500 still get a physical copy. Chamillionaire’s digital expertise led major labels such as Universal to initially seek him out. And he was rewarded for his early adoption of the digital realm in 2006 by having the most downloaded ringtone to date at the time. Ringtones of his song “Ridin’” were downloaded over 3 million times, usually at $.99 each.

“I promised that once I got out my label situation I was gonna give you more material and that’s’ what I’m gonna do,” Chamillionaire wrote on his website. “Almost everyone knows Venom is not coming out anymore, but Major Pain 1.5, Major Pain 2, and The Playlist Poison album will. Major Pain 1.5 will be the first release of mixtape material that will lead up to a real Playlist Poison album release. All the info about The Playlist Poison album will be inside Major Pain 1.5 when you get it April 18. I'll release more Playlist Poison tracks leading up to the full album, but just know that the album will be A FULL BODY OF NEW PLAYLIST POISON MATERIAL. Nothing but quality all the way through. I know its been a rough road but just know that I've had all my REAL fans in mind during every decision that I have made and now we can finally get back on track. Looking forward to the future. Salute.”
(March 4)


UPDATE: Chamillionaire's Major Pain 1.5 is now available here

The tracklisting is as follows:

1. Already Dead Intro.
2. War To Your Door.
3. Slow City Don
4. Slow it Down
5. Next Flight Up
6. Never Come Down BREAK***
7. This My World Feat. Big K.R.I.T. (Produced by VMAN Productions)
8. King Me
9. Chandelier Ceiling (Produced By Big. KRIT)
10 Livin Better Now
11.Gotta Be The Baddest
12. Naked Man Skit (Roy Wood Jr)
13. When Ya On Feat. Nipsey Hussle (Produced by Andrew Dawson)
14. Think About it.
15. My Toy Soldier
16. Stay Screwed N Chopped
17. Forever Be A King Break.
18. Tone For Life (Famous)
19. Wake up Outro.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Bun B & Lupe Fiasco Debate a Schoolteacher - Are Rappers Role Models?


Click here to find out more!
Ozone Magazine Sits In On Bun B's Religion and Hip Hop Culture Class with Lupe Fiasco

Bun B and Lupe Fiasco field questions at a recent panel discussion for the university class taught by Bun.
Ozone Magazine was recently on hand to tape the latest public panel session hosted by Bun B for his Religion and Hip Hop Culture class at Rice Univeristy. The event, which featured guest panelists Lupe Fiasco, Talib Kweli, Malice of the Clipse, Trae Tha Truth and Tre9, focused on religion's place in Hip Hop and emcees's personal responsibility to the community.
At one point in the discussion, a school teacher questioned Bun as to why more rappers aren't conveying a positive message to the youth. Bun responded saying that while some rappers are to blame for not doing more for their communities, Hip Hop is not completely at fault. The problems that many people face stem from larger issuest and government neglect.
"I think the problem is...we as artists, we're not obligated to [give a postive message]," replied Bun. "It's only if we personally feel the obligation to do that. if you go to McDonald's, the person behind the counter [is] not obligated to tell you how bad McDonald's is for you; their obligation at work is to sell you McDonald's. Now, me as a person, I personally know that there's other things going on, so when I'm not at work, I go out in the community and try to do what I can to rectify that. But that being said...we go back to the point that if a child is at home listening to me at night with their parents...I understand that [many parents are working]. I was latch-key kid, my brother, and look where I'm at: I'm a...co-professor at Rice University and I was raised on Hip Hop. I was raised on Ice Cube and all of these things. I came home from school at 4 PM [and] my mother was gone. I made some good decisions, and I made some bad decisions.
"As a person in my community, I try to speak into peoples' lives. But you can't hold me or Hip Hop accountable for the fact that a person hears what I said and chooses to do that, and specifically a child. Now, when I say it's not my responsibility to raise your child, I meant that primarily. Now, does it take a village to raise a child? Yes, it does, but you've got to stand up and point at all the things that are creating these circumstances. You point to the government just as much as the rapper."
Lupe Fiasco then took the microphone to respond to the teacher's question. During his answer, Carrera Lu related his experiences visiting his former school in Chicago, where he said students depended upon school for meals more than education. He went on to lambast the education system for failing to teach their students something meaningful during the tenure of their education.
"I was principal for a day a school," he said. "It was the school I went as a kid...on the west side of Chicago...the kids would come into this school to eat...not to learn, to eat breakfast and lunch. The principal of this school...is trying to institute a third meal, so that he knows when those kids go home, they're going to have had something to eat...I come to the school, Lupe Fiasco...[and] none of these kids knew who I was, and I was on the radio everyday. None of these kids knew who I was and the problems they had still existed...they weren't coming to school to learn, they were coming to eat.
"There's some very serious problems even within the school system itself...the way you were taught how to teach kids, the system that you came up under, they're archaic and ancient, 60 to 70 years past their time. You should go into school and take all of those antiquated text books and those meaningless tests...that you sit over and watch these kids take, you know that they're not going to use 95% of that information at all...I challenge you, throw away all of them books, all of the tests, and teach them something meaningful...you're just as guilty as Lil Wayne. Miseducation is miseducation, no matter how you put it, whether it's coming through the radio station or it's coming out of a book or a teacher...just because I can make it rhyme and you can't doesn't make you better than me, pimp."

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Snoop Dogg - I Don't Need No Bitch f. Devin the Dude: Album In Stores As Well




Once again....let this album serve as another smack in the face to the people that stay crying about music not being good these days. My dawg Heazy Boi called me a week ago and told me about Bootsy Collins being on the intro and I was sold just from that. Snoop's albums have been on a super winning streak if you ask me, so I was going to check out his new one off GP. I do want to go back to actually purchasing physical copies, but the Amazon App on my phone makes it real hard, especially when new releases are as low as 2.99 for the first week. I mean what am I supposed to do ya know? Haha. So today I'm riding to Sumter today and its song after song after song...no skips...the production is amazing and Snoop is truly a master of his style...he has improved as a song writer from working with song writers...there are features on the project but they fit in well, and you still get a healthy dose of Snoop Dogg. I hate it when you get more features than the actual artist (Jay-Z - Vol 2 Hard Knock Life). And to speak on the production again Snoop picked some super Soul/Funked out jams from some instrumental beast (Jake One, Battlecat, Fredwreck, Mr Porter, DJ Khalil to name some). Here are the credits pulled from Wiki also. In a nutshell..MIDIMarc says PUT SOME DOLLARS DOWN ON THE DOGGUMENTARY!

1. "Toyz N Da Hood" (featuring Bootsy Collins) Calvin Cordozar Broadus, Jr., George Clinton Jake One 2:40
2. "The Way Life Used to Be" Brian Holland, Broadus, Edward Holland, Jr., Lamont Herbert Dozier, Luther Ronzoni Vandross, Samuel Cook Battlecat 3:43
3. "My Own Way" (featuring Mr. Porter) Broadus Mr. Porter 3:05
4. "Wonder What It Do" (featuring Uncle Chucc) Broadus Battlecat 3:43
5. "My Fucn House" (featuring Young Jeezy & E-40) Broadus Rick Rock 5:07
6. "Peer Pressure" (featuring Traci Nelson)
Fredwreck 4:07
7. "I Don't Need No Bitch" (featuring Devin the Dude & Kobe) Broadus DJ Khalil 3:59
8. "Platinum" (featuring R. Kelly) Broadus, Robert Sylvester Kelly Lex Luger 4:29
9. "Boom" (featuring T-Pain) Broadus, Scott Storch, Faheem Rasheed Najm Scott Storch 3:50
10. "We Rest N Cali" (featuring Goldie Loc & Bootsy Collins) Broadus, Larry Troutman, Roger Troutman Mr. Porter 4:10
11. "El Lay" (featuring Marty James) Broadus Scoop DeVille 4:06
12. "Gangbang Rookie" (featuring Pilot) Broadus Jake One 3:46
13. "This Weed Iz Mine" (featuring Wiz Khalifa) Broadus Scoop DeVille 3:43
14. "Wet" Broadus, David Benjamin, Niles Hollowell-Dhar The Cataracs 3:45
15. "Take U Home" (featuring Too Short, Kokane & Daz Dillinger) Broadus Meech Wells, Soul Mechanix (co.) 3:55
16. "Sumthing Like this Night" (featuring Gorillaz) Broadus Damon Albarn, Gorillaz (co.) Jason Cox 3:37
17. "Superman" (featuring Willie Nelson) Broadus
2:05
18. "Eyez Closed" (featuring Kanye West & John Legend) Broadus, Kanye Omari West Kanye West, Jeff Bhasker, Mike Dean (add.) 5:02
19. "Raised In da Hood" Broadus, Troutman Warryn Campbell, DJ Reflex (co.) 3:39
20. "It's D Only Thang" Broadus David Banner, THX (co.) 3:16
21. "Cold Game" (featuring LaToiya Williams) Broadus Rick Rude 3:49


Friday, April 8, 2011

Big K.R.I.T - Return Of 4 Eva (Free Album)

With artist like Big K.R.I.T. around how dare anyone say that music is lacking. Mainstream radio lacking will never mean that Hip Hop isn't where its supposed to be. I know that it can be argued, but remember that MIDIMarc says that music is right where it needs to be. If anything its now up to YOU, US, the fans to search for what we need to hear and its up to the independent artist to make what they feel. The revolution will not be televised or broadcast. We can't sit around and wait for "The Man"..lol to tell us what we should be listening to. There is no excuse with the internet now. I won't sit around man and complain. If I see it fit to complain I should see that I don't have a reason to complain anymore. Who knows...maybe you're reading this blog and you aren't familiar with Big K.R.I.T. And if that's so, then I have done at least part of my job and have informed you. I present to you his latest free album





1. Return Of 4Eva (Intro)
2. Rise & Shine
3. Return Of 4Eva
4. Dreaming
5. Rotation
6. My Sub
7. Sookie Now (ft. David Banner)
8. American Rapstar
9. Highs & Lows
10. Shake It (ft. Joi)
11. Made Alot (ft. Big Sant)
12. Lions & Lambs
13. King’s Blues
14. Time Machine (ft. Chamillionaire)
15. Get Right
16. Amtrak
17. Player’s Ballad (ft. Raheem DeVaughn)
18. Another Naive Individual Glorifying Greed & Encouraging Racism
19. Free My Soul
20. The Vent
21. Country Shit (Remix) (ft. Ludacris x Bun B)