Christmas, all rapped up.

Screen Shot 2014-12-05 at 13.27.58Christmas is coming fast, and if you are anything like us, you’ll leave the present buying until the very last minute. At that point you’ll panic buy, and your loved ones will get the same old shit you got them last year. Again.

For those that like to get in nice and early, here’s some present ideas for the classic hip-hop fan in your life. And by that we mean you, because these are the things you should be asking Santa for this year. You’re welcome.

Check the Technique 2: More Liner Notes for Hip-hop Junkies, by Brian Coleman

Screen Shot 2014-12-05 at 13.25.58

The first Check the Technique book from hip-hop writer Brian Coleman was certified classic, bringing us the story behind some of the best albums in the history of rap. The follow up is just as good, with in-depth analysis and interviews covering the creation of 24 milestone albums, including Lord Finesse’s Funky Technician, DJ Polo & Kool G Rap’s Wanted: Dead or Alive, The Beatnuts’ Intoxicated Demons, Ice Cube’s AmeriKKKa’s Most Wanted, KMD’s Black Bastards and 3rd Bass’ The Cactus Album. It is well written and nicely put together, and if you buy from Rap and Soul Mail Order, you even get a special Smif-N-Wessun 7″ thrown in too.

Order from Rap and Soul Mail Order in Europe, or Get on Down in the US.

Dust & Grooves: Adventures in Record Collecting (Second Edition), by Eilon Paz

Screen Shot 2014-12-05 at 13.05.34

With vinyl sales back on the rise, interest is getting bigger. True hip-hop heads never actually stopped buying records of course, and we like nothing more than snooping through the vinyl collections of our favorite artist via shows like Crate Diggers. Dust & Grooves is a coffee-table book exploring the collections of hip-hop artists and beyond, with interviews covering how each library has grown, and its best gems. The updated Second Edition features new contributions, including a chance to see what Questlove has in his many crates. It’s by no means cheap, but is beautifully illustrated and presented.

Buy from the Dust & Grooves website.

Limited Edition J Dilla figure

Screen Shot 2014-12-05 at 13.01.47

Dilla Dawg was one of the greatest to ever do it, and a personal favorite of ours. Ma Dukes has been overseeing the release of several special products recently, and this one is nicely timed for the Holiday Season (although it may not arrive until the New Year!). The figure comes complete with Detroit cap and Stussy tee, and miniature Dilla is even holding his beloved sampler. There have only been 2,000 made, and they are already selling like hot cakes donuts.

Pre-order yours from Rappcats.

Album Review: Royce da 5’9″ and DJ Premier’s PRhyme

Prhyme-DJ Premier and Royce da 5’9″ have been steady working together since 2002’s Rock City, an album that featured the certified banger Boom. There have been hits and misses since, but when they announced a few months back that a full length collabo was in the works, it got everyone’s attention. After weeks of teasers and videos, the PRhyme album is now finally here, and its dope.

What hits you straight away is the production, and how Premier has managed to adapt to rappers with a style not typical of the artists he tends to work with. He’s produced for a range of different artists before of course, from west coast groups like Compton’s Most Wanted, to southern acts like Bun B and Ludacris, but the beats for those still had that classic Primo sound. What impresses most here is how easily the music changes to suit an eclectic mix of unique artists that includes Mac Miller (on Dat Sound Good), and Killer Mike and Schoolboy Q (on Underground Kings).

In fact, the entire album is a bit of a change of pace for Premier. There are still classic bangers, like U Looz and Courtesy, but also rich compositions that you wouldn’t necessarily know were Primo beats if you heard them out of context. It’s a refreshing new direction for a producer who, while unquestionably one of the greatest of all time, does tend to get stuck in their own signature sound. This is new-era DJ Premier, holding his own amongst the modern beat makers, with a little help along the way from Adrian Younge.

As for Royce, he’s stepped his game up, with the same sense of purpose and aggression we saw glimpses of on 2011’s solo album Success is Certain, and on his Bad Meets Evil side project with Eminem.

Other standouts include the Common-featuring Wishin, and To Me, To You, where PRhyme team up with the over-hyped but always-impressive Jay Electronica.

There’s a moment on U Looz when Royce points out how stupid it would be to suggest that by joining forces with DJ Premier, he’s trying to be the new Guru. The Gang Starr days are long gone for sure, but PRhyme is shaping up to be a group that over time could well end up achieving similar levels of critical acclaim.

PRhyme is set for release December 9.

Album Review: Wu-Tang Clan’s A Better Tomorrow

A Better Tomorrow CoverHype is one thing, but deep down we all knew that the long-awaited Wu-Tang Clan album was never going to be classic. Now that A Better Tomorrow is finally here, its even more of a disappointment than we feared.

It’s not terrible, and still better than 8 Diagrams, but hardly vintage Wu. We didn’t expect them to make the same kind of album they did 20 years ago; hip-hop has moved on since then, and with the average age of a clansman now around 45, so have they. We did expect it to be a better tomorrow than this though, especially having had to wait so long, and after so much in-fighting to get it done.

The biggest problem is a lack of enthusiasm, with none of the group member’s hearts seemingly in it. Even verses from the four best rappers in the group – Ghostface Killer, Raekwon, GZA and Inspectah Deck – sound phoned in, with lyrics that do nothing more than go through the motions.

It would be naive to think that all of the members were in the same room at the same time when they recorded, but its this lack of coherence, both emotionally and geographically, that stops A Better Tomorrow from sounding like a genuine group album. The only rapper that still sounds fresh and energized is Method Man, but its hard for one man to keep the excitement levels up when everyone else around him is flat.

Ironically, considering how passionate he seemed to be about making the album happen, the best beats are those not produced by RZA, with standouts including 40th Street Black/We Will Fight and Keep Watch (both produced by Mathematics), and the Adrian Younge produced Crushed Egos. RZA does put in some good beat work, especially on Hold the Heater, but there’s a sense of laziness and self-indulgence in sampling/riffing on Dusty Springfield’s Son of a Preacher Man on Preacher’s Daughter.

Not the return to glory we’d hoped for then, but not quite a complete trainwreck. There’s some life left in the Wu, and the likes of Ghostface will no doubt keep on making good music forever, but its difficult to predict just how much further these legends of the game can make it as a team.

A Better Tomorrow is out December 2 on Warner Bros.

Watch Raiders of the Lost Art: Part 2

RaidersThe second installment of Raiders of the Lost Art is now available. This time the focus is on DJ Premier, with footage of the master at work in the studio. We don’t get to see too much though, as Preem makes it clear he doesnt like to let people know a whole lot about how he works that magic behind the boards.

Adrian Younge also makes an appearance, explaining his involvement with the PRhyme project, and how working with the duo has helped him see his own previous work in a whole new light. See below for the full clip (pun intended).

PRhyme is out next month, and available for pre-order from iTunes in some regions now.

Review: Joey Bada$$ live in London

Joey Bada$$Lets be really honest for a moment. Most live hip-hop shows are disappointing. Late arrival from the artist, too much crowd hyping and not enough rapping, bad mic quality, short set lengths. We’ve experienced them all, even from some of our favorite acts.

We still had high hopes for the Joey Bada$$ tour, and on the whole it didn’t disappoint when we caught one of the shows in London. The set-up was classic no frills hip-hop: Joey on the mic, with a deejay out back. No more flash or flair required. For a rapper like Bada$$, still just 19 but making the kind of hip-hop that throws back to the classic era, its an environment that suits him well. When the deejay also happens to be Statik Selektah, its even better.

It turns out Joey knows how to rock a crowd too. Full of energy but without the unnecessary and over-the-top swagger of other acts, he lets his music do the talking, giving us proper versions of his biggest tracks.

Obvious standouts included Waves, truthfully one of the finest hip-hop tracks of all time (yeah, we said it), and the DJ Premier produced Unorthodox. There was also the obligatory heartfelt tribute to fallen Pro Era member Capital Steez, reminding us all just how tragic it is to lose a talented rapper at only 19 years of age.

With a decent live show, teaser trailers and documentaries, the hype over Joey’s debut album B4.Da.$$ just keeps on getting stronger. It drops January 20, 2015.

Go behind the scenes with Joey Bada$$ on tour

Screen Shot 2014-11-23 at 23.12.56It’s been a good week for Joey Bada$$ fans. First up was a new cryptic teaser trailer that finally gave us a solid release date for B4.DA.$$. The highly anticipated debut album will drop January 20, 2015, and although full details are yet to be released, its expected to include singles Big Dusty and Christ Conscious, and feature production from DJ Premier, J Dilla and Statik Selektah amongst others.

A new video has also now emerged, documenting Joey as he travels around Europe on the latest leg of his tour. He talks about why he loves performing more than being in the studio, how to give the fans what they want, and the inspiration he’s taken from seeing Jay-Z and other major artists on stage.

We’ve been itching to hear B4.DA.$$ for months and months, and its nice to hear the young Mr Badas$$ stay humble and grounded as he prepares for what will surely at last be his breakout year.

Watch the mini documentary below, and the album teaser further down.

Why a multi-million dollar contract probably won’t change Mac Miller

Screen Shot 2014-11-22 at 11.22.00Mac Miller recently featured in an interview with Fader, talking about his signing to a major label for a rumored eye-watering $10M. It’s a decision likely to split opinion, but at the end of the day, you can’t really fault him for making the choice. And just because he’ll now have a shit load of money, it doesn’t mean his music will all of a sudden turn pop.

Miller is one of the most interesting artists to emerge in the last few years. Crazy, fucked-up, addicted to lean. He’s been all of those things, but he’s also a talented kid both on the mic and behind the boards.

Underneath the persona there’s also an ultra-smart brain with a clear idea of how the modern music industry works. Like others making a comfortable living at a time when most musicians aren’t making any money, Miller has put in work and built up a solid empire. He also has the respect of his peers, which is harder than it should be when you happen to be a young middle class white boy from Pittsburgh.

When you’ve got talent, savvy business skills and a solid idea of what your fans want, then a big contract can mean better music rather than a watered-down, overly-commercial offering.

The candor of the interview alone is telling. Whereas a chat about a contract as big as that with a mainstream artist would usually consist of them bragging about what they’ll do with the money, Miller talks of how it will allow him to have enough budget to do things musically he couldn’t before, all the while keeping laid back about it.

Time of course will tell, but can you really see the man they also call Larry Fisherman in a flashy video dancing with Chris Brown? Us neither. Here’s to hoping we are right.

Watch the video from Fader below:

Mac Miller’s latest mixtape Faces is out now.

Meet the genius bringing you Meow the Jewels

sly jonesThe name Sly Jones probably doesn’t mean that much to you, but he’s the part genius, part madman who worked hard as hell to make Meow the Jewels a reality. He recently got to hook up with El-P and Killer Mike before their show in his hometown of Phoenix, and broke down how the project came about.

Bored one night on Twitter, he read El-P’s tweet about remaking Run the Jewels 2 with cat sounds, and took it upon himself to take it seriously. It’s shit like this that the internet was invented for, and we can’t wait to hear how it turns out.

Considering how money from the project is going to the families of Eric Garner, Michael Brown and the fight against Police brutality, Run the Jewels take time in the interview to remind us that this whole crazy project also has a serious side, and will hopefully help to raise the profile of the issues at stake.

Watch the clip below, including shots of Sly Jones joining the group on stage – surely the ultimate experience for any music fan.

RTJ2 is out now on Mass Appeal. Read our review here.

Watch DJ Premier and Royce Da 5’9″ documentary Raiders of the Lost Art

Primo StudioRaiders of the Lost Art is a documentary about Royce Da 5’9″ and DJ Premier’s new group PRhyme, and its pretty damn good. Short but sweet, Part 1 gives us an interview with Primo, talking about how he first got noticed in NYC all those years ago with Guru, and about how he’ll never stop making that boom bap sound, no matter what the younger generation is doing.

Hearing that alone is worth it for us Preem fiends. But even more special are the parts with Royce. He opens up about his alcohol abuse and the effects it had on his kids, including a scene where his shows how his car won’t even start until he’s taken a breath test.

Its a rare insight into the real life of a rapper, far from the fake lifestyle we’ve come to know from so many flashy videos. We see Royce spending precious time with his wife and kids, making sure he doesnt pull into his driveway too fast, and telling his young daughter to go back inside to get a jacket. There’s no posturing and no ego, just a man who works hard to give his children a life that he never had.

Of course, the flick is also part of the promotion trail for the upcoming PRhyme album, which hits stores next month. It’s safe to say we are excited as fuck, and you should be too. Watch Part 1 of Raiders of the Lost Art below, and keep them eyes peeled for the next installment coming soon.

We salute Tyler, the Creator for crying like a baby

TylerWe’ve all seen that clip of Tyler, The Creator crying at the sight of N.E.R.D.  on stage (haven’t seen it? Wake the fuck up), and how star-struck he was in a recent interview with Pharrell.

Funny shit, but at least the guy clearly has some genuine passion for the music and its biggest stars.

In a music fueled by egos and trash talk, its all too rare for a young hip-hop artist to show mutual respect for their peers. Its even common now to hear modern rappers talk about how they don’t even listen to rap at all, not even hiding how they are in the game solely to get money.

Compare this to the veterans and older artists and its a completely different story. They have no trouble shining a light on others, and acknowledging the history of the music. Take Run the Jewels, currently the hottest property in the game. El-P and Mike not only have a detailed knowledge of hip-hop, but also have no issue singing the praises of the legends and other artists. Same goes for Common, Talib Kweli, Pharoahe Monch and others. As for the legends themselves, like DJ Premier, they are forever paying respect to others and the masters of genre.

Its perhaps unfair to say all young artists are ignorant to other rappers (Freddie Gibbs frequently points to Drake as being the best there currently is, as contentious as that may be), but a little acknowledgment that they at least like hip-hop and appreciate others would be nice.

Tyler himself has stated he doesnt intent to make hip-hop for much longer, but this is still a man with a deep-rooted respect for the music. And for that, despite all the other crazy and stupid shit he does, we salute him. It was his party, and he can cry if he wants to.