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Messages - TNGlive

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16
Media / Re: Official PODCAST Thread
« on: July 13, 2009, 10:53:25 AM »
Not black enough for (BEE)? Well blame it on "world n*gga laws" (Mr. N*gga). (Black Music) has always told you to be aware of (Politics As Usual). True hiphop fans know this & also know the feeling of being a (Baby in the cradle of the mic stand). For example, remember what it felt like when (I got 5 on it) came on? That was the jam, "messssin' with that endo weeeeed!" M.A dollar was switching things up, rocking a suit, trying to juggle 2 dates & pulling a Mr. Cheeks by forgetting his girl's name, & still had every girl singing along (Tell me what you want from me).

Good times

Download Link (25.9MB):  http://tiny.cc/MlHwF

TNGlive Podcast Episode 14

BEE - Slikour
Mr. N*gga - Mos Def
Black Music - The Federation
Politics As Usual - Jay-Z
Baby in the cradle of the mic stand - Zubz
I got 5 on it - Luniz
Tell me what you want - Mase

17
Media / Re: Official PODCAST Thread
« on: June 05, 2009, 10:39:22 AM »
TNGlive Playlist this week

Download link (26.8MB): http://tnglive.mypodcast.com/2009/06/TNGlive_Podcast_Episode_11-211509.html

The Other Side- Real Elements
Radio - Sasha Fierce
Ready for Whatever - T.I.
Love Blind/My Girl's a...- Zubz
Mood - Pronounsir
Chemistry - Blewnote
Blue - Blindfold
Show Me Love - Rhythmath

Enjoy!


18
Media / Re: Official PODCAST Thread
« on: May 14, 2009, 05:11:30 PM »
HIPHOCALYPSE Fort-Knights Episode 20 is a special all-star, nearly 1hr long, bumper edition. We feature 8 of the best hip hop show hosts from all over the world showcasing the best in African Hip Hop.
 
http://hiphocalypse.podomatic.com/entry/2009-05-10T16_04_07-07_00



Tracklisting-

Damn this was one of those cla**ic episodes no doubt. Everyone really did their thing. Was listening last night.

Rob One 2020 segment:
Kreeper & X-Nasty - live HIPHOCALYPSE freestyle (South Africa)
Ewok - National Arts festival freestyle (South Africa) Visit: http://2020.mypodcast.com/

TNGLive Segment:
Zubz - The Entertainer/ Smoke Screen Bounce (Zambia/ Zimbabwe/ South Africa) Rage, Yung D, Mode 9, Snazz, J Town - Emcee Africa (Tanzania, Nigeria, Angola, South Africa)
Visit: http://tnglive.mypodcast.com/

MJ XBC Jumpoff segment:
J Vince - "Gonyet" (Zimbabwe)
DKR - "Hand Grenades" (Zimbabwe/ UK)
Visit: http://www.xbcjumpoff.mypodcast.com/

Msani XL Beneath Da Surface segment:
Orthello, Kel, MI - "Naijas Hardest" (Nigeria)
Juliani - "Stori Hii" (Kenya)
http://bnts.mypodcast.com/

DJ PeeWee Zambian Hip Hop segment:
Street Bangaz - "Slow Flow" (Produced by Illustrate)
[Zambia] Zone Fam - "The Cut" (Produced by Jay Rox) [Zambia] Dominant1,The Holstar & Illuminate - "Don't Stop Playing" (Produced by Apprentice) [Malawi/ Zambia/ Zimbabwe/ Nigeria]
http://www.myspace.com/djpeeweeproductionz

Mzansi Mamela segment:
Pangaea - "Dancing in the rain" (South Africa/ USA)
ETC Crew - "Three kings" (South Africa)
Papa Zee - "Ke starring" (Lesotho)
Visit: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/group.php?gid=11402837578&ref=ts

Naturelle segment:
Driemanskap - "2000 We Shine" Ft. Black Dillinger (South Africa)
Rennis - "I" (South Africa)
Visit: http://naturelle.mypodcast.com/

Many thanks to all of the contributing hosts. Be sure to visit all the hosts' sites for more from their great shows. PAMBERI!

19
Media / Re: Official PODCAST Thread
« on: May 08, 2009, 11:49:56 AM »
Just upped the new podcast:

Download Link (28.3MB): http://tnglive.mypodcast.com/2009/05/TNGlive_Podcast_Episode_10-206475.html

TNGlive Podcast Episode 10

Ego remix - Beyonce, Kanye
Best I ever Had - Drake
Love of my life - Holstar
Ol' Time Sake - Eminem, Dr. Dre
Lost- Bring you back - Zubz
Slide Show - T.I., John Legend
Silky - Cam'ron
Throw it in the Bag - Fabolous, The Dream


Other Recommended Podcasts:
http://hiphocalypse.mypodcast.com
http://xbcjumpoff.mypodcast.com
http://streetkast.mypodcast.com
http://2020.mypodcast.com
http://naturelle.mypodcast.com
http://bnts.mypodcast.com
http://hiphop2rockurblock.mypodcast.com


http://TNGlive.blogspot.com

20
Media / Re: Official PODCAST Thread
« on: May 08, 2009, 11:46:40 AM »
^^ Been dropping some gems there. Heard that heat from Outspoken on the last episode.


21
General Discussion / Re: Goddamn russell's child support
« on: May 04, 2009, 03:28:02 PM »
i must say tho mr simmons seems a timid dude for real..b e t rap city  ...def jam...the dude just says "thank you"...and his off....

Dude...This is THE Russell Simmons. You got the wrong impression from his signature speech there that's all.

Anyway guys he blogged about this months ago: http://tinyurl.com/auou6o


22
Media / Re: Rap, Theatre, Bawse
« on: April 24, 2009, 04:45:28 PM »
Hmm, okay.

How would you cla**ify the following;

> Ice T - Cop Killa: did he really put on a ski-mask and was literally ready to kill a particular cop?

> Wu Tang - Liquid swords: was one of them really a "heartbeat stopper," a criminal roaming free.

>L.L. Cool J - Hey Lover: was he really keeping all his "dreams alive until the right time," because she has a man, so he was really going to cheat on his wife for years with this 'crush.'
 
When you say "authenticity doesn't matter in pop." What you may not realize is that when you sing pop, your delivery still needs to be believable. You don't just record and it's a hit. The connection I spoke of earlier still needs to be present for the record to work.

If you're saying Ross is irrelevant because it's the chart followers supporting that don't care about authenticity, you have to agree these same people are not trendsetters or tastemakers, they're just followers,,,following. Who are they following?

Rap has always allowed for MCs to be able to narrate someone else's thoughts/experiences without them having experienced every aspect of that particular story being told.

If Sci-fi is not your taste, it doesn't automatically follow that the The Matrix is "wack." It's just not for you. That doesn't take away from it being a good trilogy.



23
Media / Re: Rap, Theatre, Bawse
« on: April 24, 2009, 02:27:42 PM »
DJPeewee, it's on heavy rotation, production value is incredible...it's Deeper Than Rap ;D

Panic;
1. Yes it was.
2. Concur.
3. I think you may have missed the point. He did respond, but what's being said is that someone like myself & other music lovers have quickly forgotten about that side of things & we're appreciating the quality of the album -i.e. it's all about whether the music is good or not.

So the question being asked is, does authenticity matter anymore in rap music? Or is it back to how effectively does the character presented connect with his targeted audience?

I personally think the same person who - as a matter of automatic behaviour - can't look past the references to "cocaine" & get the real human story that you can relate to e.g. trying not to get consumed by your environment, is the same person who could just as easily -as a matter of automatic anti-sci-fi behaviour - switch off when Neo gets "unplugged" & fails to get the real human story behind the whole trilogy e.g. in life there's more than what meets the eye if you look hard enough.

24
Media / Re: Rap, Theater, Bawse
« on: April 24, 2009, 01:30:37 PM »
What say you? Rap, like all good pop is theater at it's heart?

25
Media / Rap, Theatre, Bawse
« on: April 24, 2009, 01:28:53 PM »
Taken from NY Times

It’s hard to say when, exactly, 50 Cent crossed the line in his feud with the Miami rapper Rick Ross. The more apt question might be: How many lines are there? He tracked down the mother of a Ross a**ociate, DJ Khaled, at work, filming her sleeping on the job. He taped himself taking the mother of one of Mr. Ross’s children to buy a fur coat. He acquired and posted to the Internet a pronographic video starring another of Mr. Ross’s ex-girlfriends.

Rick Ross must have seemed an especially easy mark — it had already been a tough few months for his fourth wall. Before he was Rick Ross, the drug boss M.C., he had been William Leonard Roberts, and last summer a photograph surfaced of him from the mid-1990s, graduating from a corrections officer academy. He denied its authenticity — until The Smoking Gun got hold of his Florida Corrections Department personnel file, which included a certificate for perfect attendance.

The facts of Mr. Roberts’s life were getting in the way of Mr. Ross’s career.

To all this upheaval, Rick Ross — who, while he has been popular, has never quite been great — has replied, improbably, with art. “I see no reason to run to the dark,” he said in a recent interview in the Manhattan offices of his label, Def Jam. His songs aimed at 50 Cent have, hands down, been sharper and wittier than those of his rival. And the just-released “Deeper Than Rap” (Maybach Music/Slip N’ Slide/Def Jam), his third album, is unexpectedly fantastic, by far his best.

If albums were all that mattered, that would be that. But Mr. Ross’s persistence and the fact that though over the last nine months he’s been all but stripped bare, he’s emerged from the fray relatively unscathed, which indicates something much more noteworthy. Impenetrability of image, that old signal of hip-hop authenticity, somehow no longer seems to count.

And what a relief that is. Like all great pop music, rap is theater, and Rick Ross, now 33, is one of its most ambitious characters. He arrived fully formed in the summer of 2006: the busting-out gut, the outsize presence, the scratchy voice, the always-there sungla**es. At worst he was a Young Jeezy clone, spewing empty drug talk in comically repetitive fashion. At best he was an utterly believable and improbably charming exponent of the cocaine-rap making the rounds at the time. Clipse may have done it with more technical precision, and Jeezy with more magnetism, but Mr. Ross sounded in charge, his voice a gravelly threat.

“Deeper Than Rap” is just as certain as his first two studio albums, “Port of Miami” and “Trilla,” but reflects the view from the top, not the bottom. Now, instead of climbing up to success, he’s achieved it. Produced largely by J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League and the Inkredibles, this album is lush, erotic, entitled, a stunning leisure-cla** document of easy wealth and carefree sex. It’s a throwback to a time of sonic and attitudinal ambition in hip-hop — the Bad Boy era of the mid- to late ’90s, with its warm soul samples connoting the new hip-hop luxury comes to mind. Few rap albums have sounded this a**ured, this sumptuous, in years.

Also, unlike before, Mr. Ross can now rap, impressively: either he’s been studying or is having his hand held. It’s the only thing at odds with this album’s casual ethic; rapping well need not be a priority, but Mr. Ross seems to take his newfound affinity for polysyllabic rhyme schemes as a point of pride.

On “Usual Suspects” he raps:

“Seventeen, trying to man up

Feed the fam, boy, I put that on these canned goods

All I got was diabetes and a damn hug

People talking down, calling me a damn scrub.

What’s also notable about “Deeper Than Rap” is what’s not there. 50 Cent is a target on at least three songs, but Mr. Ross doesn’t belabor the battle nor does he touch on the aspects of his personal life that have lately haunted him.

In an age of routine tabloid invasions and the microrevelation as celebrity news, it’s become commonplace to expect access to all aspects of the lives of the famous. But in the hip-hop world, the stories behind the stories can be too grave to tell.

“Right now as we speak, I got two of my best friends that’s on the run from two separate cocaine conspiracy indictments,” Mr. Ross said. “This is a reality that I can’t glorify. The relationship I have with these people is deeper than rap.

“When I say something like ‘deeper than rap,’ that’s possibly death involved. That’s possibly prison time involved.”

The idea of “deeper than rap” has become a hip-hop touchstone of late. When the rapper Crooked I was shot, or not, earlier this year — he wouldn’t confirm or deny reports — he demurred from discussing the situation, saying, “It’s deeper than rap.”

Last month, on the MTV show “T. I.’s Road to Redemption,” that rapper calmly detailed the criminal activities that led to his arrest in 2007 on weapons charges. Coming from T. I. himself, it was shocking, an alternative history of his career that had nothing at all to do with music. (He is scheduled to begin serving his year-and-a-day sentence next month.)

Though his life beyond rap has been used against him, Mr. Ross still teases about an unknowable dark side. On the new album he name-drops Harry O, a Los Angeles drug dealer (who claimed to have provided the seed money for Death Row Records), and Big Ike, a Miami street kingpin.

Mr. Ross took his name from Freeway Rick Ross, a Los Angeles drug lord, and was mentored by Kenneth Williams, known as Boobie and now serving a life sentence. On “Gunplay,” from the new album, Mr. Ross raps “Boobie Boy still/ Boobie Boys real/ You can name a lot of lames that the Boobie Boys killed.”

Perhaps he’s overcompensating. Mr. Ross’s outing as a former corrections officer was the most spectacular and public implosion of a rapper’s self-styled tough-guy image — the hip-hop blog NahRight.com gleefully refers to him as Officer Rawse — since The Dallas Morning News picked apart the looser sections of Vanilla Ice’s biography during his rise to fame in 1990.

But Vanilla Ice’s songs weren’t filled with homage to the drug trade and its leading lights. And no one expected unvarnished truth from him. Mr. Ross must submit to a different standard.

Or at least he still acts as if he must. Of his stint on the side of the law, Mr. Ross said, “The truth is more sinister than the obvious,” suggesting an undisclosed layer to his time there.

Miami, he said, is a city where young go-getters “sell dope, buy Lamborghinis and get buried in them.” This month he filmed a video for “All I Really Want,” a collaboration with The-Dream, in Medellín, Colombia. In footage from the trip, available on YouTube, he stands outside the house where Pablo Escobar was killed, sungla**es off, soaking in history.

Whether it’s a validation of Mr. Ross’s extramusical credibility or an elaborately staged pose might not matter: creating this scene allows for a productive ambiguity in how he is perceived by outsiders. All the revelations about him get dwarfed by the question of who Rick Ross might be when he steps away from the microphone.

Asked how he’d explain to his children the more insidious of the ex-girlfriend videos 50 Cent has disseminated, Mr. Ross was philosophical: “I’d say she was an actress for a day. I love actresses.” In other words, an acknowledgment that sometimes it’s acceptable to just be playing a role.

26
Media / Re: Official PODCAST Thread
« on: April 24, 2009, 12:25:25 PM »
TNGlive Playlist this week

Download Link (27.0MB): http://tnglive.mypodcast.com/2009/04/TNGlive_Podcast_Episode_9-202061.html

Kinda like a big deal - The Clipse, Kanye West
It's my time - Fabolous ft Jeremih
Drake speaks
Best I Ever Had - Drake
On my own 2 - Snazz D, Africa
Mizchivius Bizness - Mizchif
Maybach Music 2 - Rick Ross, Kanye West, Lil Wayne, T-Pain
Gotta Love it - Tek Neek
Meagan Good - Star Struck

TNGlive is also a global simulcast airing Thursdays at 15:00hrs/22:00hrs CAT (Central African time) on TransAfrica Radio DStv Audio Channel 172.

Online streaming for overseas listeners at the above mentioned times, as well as Fridays 01:00hrs GMT/Universal Time on the link > www.streamovation.com/transafricaradio

Recommended Podcasts:
http://hiphocalypse.mypodcast.com
http://xbcjumpoff.mypodcast.com
http://streetkast.mypodcast.com
http://2020.mypodcast.com
http://naturelle.mypodcast.com
http://bnts.mypodcast.com
http://hiphop2rockurblock.mypodcast.com


http://TNGlive.blogspot.com

27
Media / Re: Official PODCAST Thread
« on: April 03, 2009, 03:49:58 PM »
New TNGlive Podcast Southern Girls/Zone4 Appreciation

Enjoy!

That's what I'm looking for - Da Brat, JD, Missy
Diva remix - Beyonce, Ciara
Turnin' me on - Keri Hilson, Lil Wayne
Throw some D's TNGlive megamix - Andre 3000, Rich Boy, Jim Jones, Polow The Don, Nelly, Murphy Lee, Game
Good Things - Rich Boy, Polow The Don, Keri Hilson
Knock you down - Keri Hilson, Neyo, Kanye West
Love, Sex, Magic - Ciara, Justin Timberlake

Download link: http://tnglive.mypodcast.com/2009/04/TNGlive_Podcast_Southern_GirlsZone4_Appreciation-196323.html

Also available here: http://tnglive.podomatic.com/entry/2009-04-03T06_08_39-07_00

TNGlive is also a global simulcast airing Thursdays at 15:00hrs/22:00hrs CAT (Central African time) on TransAfrica Radio DStv Audio Channel 172.

Online streaming for overseas listeners at the above mentioned times, as well as Fridays 01:00hrs GMT/Universal Time on the link > www.streamovation.com/transafricaradio

Recommended Podcasts:
http://hiphocalypse.mypodcast.com
http://xbcjumpoff.mypodcast.com
http://streetkast.mypodcast.com
http://2020.mypodcast.com
http://naturelle.mypodcast.com
http://bnts.mypodcast.com
http://hiphop2rockurblock.mypodcast.com


Recommended time-burner:
http://TNGlive.blogspot.com

P.S. Is there anyone alive not digging Miss Keri??

28
Media / Re: Official PODCAST Thread
« on: March 30, 2009, 11:40:29 AM »
^^Shad. Whoa. Whoa.

29
HIPHOCALYPSE Fort-Knights Episode 18 "The Hustle Edition" features a compilation of African Hip Hop tracks discussing uniquely African "hustles". Even if you have never been to any of the countries represented here the this music paints a vividly accurate picture that has you right in the middle of all the action.

http://hiphocalypse.mypodcast.com/2009/03/Episode_XVIII_The_Hustle_Edition-194518.html



Tracklisting:
M3nsa - Ajuma (Work Hustle) (Ghana/ UK)
Abbas - A Million Rhymes (Kenya)
Makho - A Zilli (Zimbabwe)
Chosan - This is my America (Sierra Leone/ Canada/ UK/ USA)
DKR - Maricho (Hustles) (Zimbabwe/ UK)
Methodik - Hip Hop f. Daara J (Gambia/ Senegal)
Rattex - Cape Town remix f. Driemanskap (South Africa)
Carl Prit & Metaphysics - Zim's Finest (Zimbabwe/ Germany)
Cri$i$ - Where I'm From remix (Zambia)
Wanlov - In Ghana (Ghana)
Shad - I Don't Like To (Rwanda/ Canada)

also available at: http://hiphocalypse.podomatic.com
http://myspace.com/hiphocalypse
http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/The-HIPHOCALYPSE-MOVEment/73248907175?ref=ts
thehiphocalypse@yahoo.com

Catch the HIPHOCALYPSE LIVE on TransAfrica Radio DSTV Audio bouquet channel 172 every Wednesday 1500hrs; 2200hrs; 300am CAT.
Live streaming: http://www.streamovation.com/transafricaradio/

PAMBERI!

Chosan...whoa. I really dig that. That's that joint. I seen the other thread homes, I caught that siren and laughed. Word!!!
Enjoyed that milli/zilli/ Ajuma mix...that was hot.
Have always dug that DKR joint. You seen the vid? Again, DKR is one of those that should be all over our t.v. & radio stations. Real talent. That "Cape Town" remix bumps. I hear you've been o'ding on "Get money!!!" beat [Polow The don voice] "Wait a minute"...did he just say...lol!

30
Media / Re: Official PODCAST Thread
« on: March 30, 2009, 10:26:52 AM »
@rob_one...hearing Mr. Ortiz was a surprise.
@Msanii_XL...thanks.
@TATEguru...Thanks for listening. Yeah, Cam can bring. Next surprise for you should be Chamillionaire's sentiments on the latest.

Why? He's dope.

Nah B, just differences in taste. When I think someone is really really really dope, you're calling them wack. But here, we agree.

Yeah, but that's 'cos I'm a backpackin', straight-hatin', new-era-fitted-wearin', broken-headphone-rockin', Jedi-Mind-Tricks-lovin', Canibus-worshippin' urban a**hole. Next question?  ;D

Hahaha. You see, even in agreement you can't just say "I agree."

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