coldbrain + rap   8

A Tribe Called Quest: The Time They Nearly Kicked It | The Awl
There are some great moments in the new documentary Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest: Q-Tip revealing the drums he sampled for “Can I Kick It?”; Black Thought of The Roots clowning Tribe’s early fashions (“They were wearing some real questionable-type shit,” he said, referring to their dashikis); and Busta Rhymes’s smile when reminiscing over “Lyrics to Go,” his favorite Tribe song. There is also a slew of rare archival footage from the late ‘80’s and early ‘90’s. (Check out the mullet on Dennis Miller!) Even though the documentary occasionally sinks into VH-1 “Behind the Music” territory, the director Michael Rapaport did a fine job chronicling the group’s history, its dynamic and what made them so loved. He got lucky too, filming during the group’s tense 2008 reunion tour.
atribecalledquest  qtip  rap  hiphop  documentary  michaelrapaport  music  from instapaper
january 2012 by coldbrain
Rude Boys
An oral history of the Beastie Boys.
music  hiphop  rap  hardcore  beastieboys  1980s  from instapaper
may 2011 by coldbrain
YouTube - Tech N9ne Teaches You How To Rap With Incredible Flows
Tech N9ne explains how he comes up with his incredible flows and how he manages to deliver them on stage.
video  hiphop  improvisation  flow  rap  from delicious
february 2011 by coldbrain
A Crash Course in Rap Lyrics Through 'The Anthology of Rap' -- New York Magazine
Normally I don’t mind being out of the pop-cultural loop—I’ve even learned, over the years, to wear my ignorance with a certain musty old-man pride. Given, however, that I am a professional studier of words, my hip-hop blind spot has come to seem indefensible: I am clueless about one of the culture’s most vital fronts of verbal artistry. It would be like an art critic who’s never seen a comic book, or a choreographer who’s never heard of Michael Jackson.
music  culture  rap  hiphop  literature  language  lyrics 
december 2010 by coldbrain
Biggie Smalls: The Voice That Influenced A Generation : NPR
He recorded as The Notorious B.I.G. People knew him as Biggie Smalls, or Biggie. He was murdered when he was only 24 years old. Yet he's one of the most revered, emulated and biggest-selling rappers in the game.
notoriousbig  christopherwallace  rap  hiphop  culture  murder 
august 2010 by coldbrain

Copy this bookmark:



description:


tags: