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HI! I AM SHABAZZ PALACES - ASK ME ANYTHING. - HipHop

HI! I AM SHABAZZ PALACES - ASK ME ANYTHING. - HipHop


HI! I AM SHABAZZ PALACES - ASK ME ANYTHING.

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 11:48 AM PDT

Daily Discussion Thread 04/29/2020

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 12:51 PM PDT

Welcome to the /r/hiphopheads daily discussion thread!

This thread is for:

  • objective questions with right/wrong answers (e.g. "Does anyone know what is happening with MIXTAPE?", "What is the sample in SONG?")
  • general hip-hop discussion
  • meta posts...e.g. ideas for the sub

Thread Guidelines

  • Do not create a separate self post for these types of discussions outside of this thread - if you do, your post will be removed, as stated in the guidelines.

  • Please be helpful and friendly.

  • If a question has been asked many times before, provide a link to a thread that contains the answer.

Weekly/Monthly Threads

Other ways to interact

There are a number of other ways to interact with other members of HHH:

New to /r/hiphopheads or hip-hop in general?

Check out these:

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Breaking: Judge signs off order to allow 6ix9ine to go outside in his backyard for 2 hours per week to record music videos and also to go to his basement for 8 hours per day to record music.

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 12:10 PM PDT

UPDATE: He just posted on his InstaStory: MAY 8TH.

source

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Shia LaBeouf's Movie Script About Brockhampton Rapper Kevin Abstract's Life Wins Screenplay Competition, Possible Movie in the Works

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 03:44 PM PDT

[FRESH] Megan Thee Stallion - Savage (ft. Beyoncé)

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 12:08 PM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] Chief Keef - Hate Bein' Sober (feat. 50 Cent & Wiz Khalifa)

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 08:19 PM PDT

[FRESH] Yung Lean - Pikachu

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 07:07 AM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] Boogie, SiR, Guapdad 4000 - Rona Raps 7

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 06:02 PM PDT

Offset has teamed up with fellow hip-hop artists Young Thug, Rich the Kid, and SAINt JHN for a performance to benefit the Atlanta Community Food Bank.

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 04:41 PM PDT

A new Little Simz EP is dropping May 6th

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 08:33 AM PDT

Yung Lean announces his new album Starz dropping May 15th

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 08:06 AM PDT

Ka shares tracklist and production credits for his upcoming album

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 12:16 PM PDT

Source: https://twitter.com/BrownsvilleKa/status/1255570605631393793

  1. Every Now and Then
  2. Unto the Dust (prod. Preservation)
  3. Patron Saints
  4. My Brother's Keeper (prod. Animoss)
  5. Solitude of Enoch
  6. The Eye of a Needle
  7. P.R.A.Y.
  8. Land of Nod
  9. Sins of the Father (prod. Roc Marciano)
  10. Old Justice
  11. I Love (Mimi, Moms, Kev) [prod. Preservation]

The rest of the songs are produced by Ka himself.

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[FRESH] Punch - Pay No Attention To The Man Behind The Curtains ft. Nick Grant & Lyric Michelle

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 09:02 AM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] KAYTRANADA - Need It (Official Video) ft. Masego

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 10:51 AM PDT

Pi’erre Bourne Talks Leaks, Playboi Carti, Kanye West, and Drops “Feds” Video

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 08:19 AM PDT

[DISCUSSION] Rico Nasty & Kenny Beats - Anger Management (1 Year Later)

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 10:48 AM PDT

it still slaps

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[FRESH VIDEO] MIKE - fortune teller

Posted: 30 Apr 2020 12:33 AM PDT

Pink Siifu's new project Negro is now on streaming

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 02:29 PM PDT

Spotify

Apple Music

You can still support him on BandCamp

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A rapper mourns his father and the injustice of a supply chain [CNN piece on Heems' father]

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 10:00 AM PDT

[Fresh Video]Prof - Squad Goals

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 09:20 AM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] Jack Harlow and G-Eazy - Moana

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 11:19 AM PDT

Logic - Lord Willin’

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 12:15 PM PDT

HHH Essential Album of the Week #115: Eminem - The Slim Shady LP

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 03:44 AM PDT

Every Wednesday we will discuss an album from our Essential Album List

Last week: Westside Connection - Bow Down

This week: Eminem - The Slim Shady LP

All previous posts: Here

Stream/purchase Spotify

Tidal

Background/Description

The year was 1999 and rap music was coming off of the back of its 'shiny suit' era: think Puff Daddy and Ma$e dressed in tin foil, shaking their way around a wind tunnel, or Missy Elliott parading around in a foil garbage bag. Then a snot nose white boy from Detroit, armed with a quick wit, battle rap credentials, a controversial sense of humour, unbelievable lyrical capabilities and a mischievous alter ego named Slim Shady, made a grab for his slice of the pie.

"Hi, kids! Do you like violence?/ Wanna see me stick nine inch nails through each one of my eyelids?"

Everyone remembers hearing those words for the very first time. How could they not? They were funny. They were different. And who, in their right mind, would think to rhyme violence with eyelids?

More a wake up call than a hit single, even though at the time it did sell over three million copies worldwide and earn him his first Grammy (of an eventual 15) Eminem's 'My Name Is' put hip hop on notice with the now iconic Labi Siffre sample and zany, self deprecating lyrics and accompanying music video. With super producer Dr. Dre riding shotgun, things were about to change in a very big way.

Released in January 1999, a month before 'The Slim Shady LP' hit stores, the hilariously controversial single 'My Name Is' was like nothing rap had ever heard before. Em talked about abusing his teacher, which Spice Girl he wanted to impregnate, driving under the influence, and even put his mother on blast for doing more drugs than him – which she later sued him for (to the tune of $10 million).

The Slim Shady LP was predominantly produced by Jeff and Mark Bass, a Detroit production duo who were responsible for grooming Eminem's sparse soundscape during his early recording years. The album was made up of mostly new cuts, but also a couple of random songs and a few reworkings of tracks from the previously released 'Slim Shady EP'.

While great music can prick up your ears and touch the soul, most of The Slim Shady LP can hit you in the face and "get knocked the fuck out like Mike Tyson." Think 'Role Model' and the lyrics: "I'll strangle you to death, then I'll choke you again/And break your fucking legs 'til your bones poke through your skin."

Full of 'did-he-really-just-say-that?' moments and harsh reality raps, what helped the album stand out the most was Em's extreme sense of humour, and the off the wall antics and drug induced musings of the juvenile, violent alter ego Slim Shady.

Outrageous at the best of times – on 'I'm Shady' he spits: "My baby mama's not dead, she's still alive and bitchin'/And I don't have herpes, my dick's just itchin'/It's not syphilis, and as for being AIDS-infested/I don't know yet, I'm too scared to get tested" – you'd be forgiven for thinking you were listening to a Richard Pryor and Chevy Chase collaborative stand-up album. The track would also throw lyrical jabs at Canibus and Cage, the former of who would go on to trade several tracks back and forth culminating in "The Ballad" and "Canibitch". Interestingly, the radio edit of the track featured the further barb:"Six mics in The Source - they borrowed one from LL's arm."

A witty back and forth with complex wordplay and explosive punchlines that hears them rhyme "Vietnamese people" with "Steve Seagal," 'Bad Meets Evil' was an early introduction into what Eminem and Royce's lyrical tag team was capable of. And that's precisely why Dre wanted it on the album.

Another standout moment on the album was 'Guilty Conscience', Em's first official collaboration with Dr. Dre. With a clever narrative that felt like it could have been written for a rap version of 'Tales From the Crypt', it would be accompanied by yet another creative and unique music video that would propel Eminem even further into worldwide stardom and critical acclaim.

97 Bonnie & Clyde, a reworking of Just the Two of Us from the Slim Shady EP, finds Eminem dumping his ex-wife, Kim Mathers' (a lyrical punching bag who would appear on many albums) corpse in the lake with his then-infant daughter Hailie. The sounds played at the beginning of the song, including the jingling of keys and the slamming of a car door, imply that Eminem put Kim's body in the trunk of his car. These are the same sounds played at the end of the song "Kim" which featured on The Marshall Mathers LP.

Littered throughout the 20 track album are skits and interludes, several of which would become staples throughout Eminem's 20 long year career (Public Service Announcement: an introductory forewarning to the listener that the following music would be a violent, expletive laden listening experience; Ken Kaniff: a man lusting for homoerotic relations with Eminem, and Paul, Eminem's attorney, who pleads with Eminem throughout his aforementioned 20 year career to halt any and all activities which result in legal action).

He was young, restless, hungry, relatable, anti-establishment in a Sex Pistols kinda way, and someone who regularly challenged societal norms. It was a thing of beauty. But would he get away with it and be as successful doing so as a new artist releasing his debut album today, in a world where everyone seems to be a lot more sensitive and has a platform to share their opinion thanks to social media?

Aside from blowing the doors off of Hip Hop and expanding its reach commercially, something else 'The Slim Shady LP' did – for better or worse – was open the door for other white rappers to enter the game without coming under as much fire as those that came before Em. For a very long time rap was mostly a spectator sport for caucasian fans, there weren't many white rappers who were accepted within the black art form. Of course there were the Beastie Boys and MC Serch from 3rd Bass, who before Eminem were probably the most credible, and at the other end of the scale you had pop-leaning manufactured acts like Vanilla Ice and Marky Mark and the Funk Bunch. Then sprinkled somewhere in-between there were names like Everlast of House of Pain, Milkbone, Cage and a few others.

"I know for a fact that a lot of black people were like, 'Yo, I fuck with him because he's not trying to be us, he's being himself and he's dope as fuck at it'," Denaun Porter (one-sixth of D12 and producer on the album) explained. "He changed the way people looked at a white person in the genre. He opened the door for every white rapper period. It was bigger than 3rd Bass and Vanilla Ice and Everlast, and all the others that came before him. He opened the door that much wider. He became a storyteller for white people and changed the way everybody looked at their own lives."

It's obvious, even to someone who isn't a rap fan, that 'The Slim Shady LP' changed music in so many ways. It may be 20-years-old but it sounds as fresh now as it did when it landed. It has now sold over 18 million copies worldwide.

Guidelines This is an open thread for you to share your thoughts on the album. Avoid vague statements of praise or criticism. This is your chance to practice being a critic. It's fine for you to drop by just to say you love the album, but let's try and step it up a bit!!!

How has this album affected hip-hop? Why do you like this album? What are the best tracks? Do you think it deserves the praise it gets? Is it the first time you've listened to it? What's your first impression? Have you listened to the artist before? Explain why you like it or why you don't.

DON'T FEEL BAD ABOUT BEING LATE! Discussion throughout the week is encouraged.

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Clipse - I m Not You feat. Jadakiss Styles P Rosco P. Coldchain

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 04:31 PM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] AJ Tracey - Dinner Guest (ft. MoStack)

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 11:36 AM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] RUSSELL! - sucker

Posted: 29 Apr 2020 07:06 PM PDT

Throwback Write-Up #6: Aesop Rock - Labor Days - HipHop

Throwback Write-Up #6: Aesop Rock - Labor Days - HipHop


Throwback Write-Up #6: Aesop Rock - Labor Days

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 05:27 AM PDT

Artist: Aesop Rock

Album: Labor Days

Label: Definitive Jux

Date Released: September 18th, 2001


Artist Background

Ian Matthias Bavitz was born in Long Island, New York in June of 1976. After graduating high school, he attended Boston University from 1994 to 1998 where he studied visual arts. During his time at BU he met Tony Simon, who would go on to become the legendary producer Blockhead; the two quickly became close friends. At the time, Tony was also an aspiring MC. After meeting Ian, however, he decided to refocus his aspirations towards his production career.

Aesop began his rap career during his college years, releasing his first mixtape Music For Earthworms in 1997. It only sold 200 copies, as each copy was burnt and each cover was cut by Aesop himself. He followed up his underground buzz in 1999 with his Appleseed EP, which featured Blockhead production. It sold a whopping 2,000 units; an impressive feat for an unsigned student recording music in his dorm room.

Shortly after, Aesop was approached by indie label Mush Records for a one album contract. Aesop already had twenty tracks ready for release, so he saw the one album deal with Mush as a way to get his album packaged with color artwork, something he couldn't afford previously. This lead to his debut studio album Float, which was released in 2000. This album was the first stepping stone for Aesop's rap career, as his debut album saw him gain the attention of legendary underground MC El-P, of Company Flow fame. Aesop's publicist at the time, Biz3 began to work with El-P as he was ramping up to launch his own label, Definitive Juxtaposition, also known as Def Jux. Aes had become close friends with Vast Aire through the NY underground show scene, which furthered the connection between himself and El-P. Eventually, El-P asked Aesop to join him on their quest to conquer New York. He brought Blockhead along with him to lay the beats down, and began working on what would become Labor Days.

After being released early to major publications, his sophomore album Labor Days began to receive positive media buzz. At the time, Aesop was still working as a server in a Manhattan diner, when he received a call from El-P in late August, 2001 inviting him on the Definitive Jux "Who Killed The Robots" 2001 North American Tour. The idea of touring and giving up his job was a huge mental undertaking for Aesop, who had recently ended a several year relationship. This culmination of stresses, and the support from his Def Jux family eventually inspired his 2002 hidden track "One of Four", in which he opens the track "In August of 2001 my seemingly splinter-proof brain bone scaffolding exploded…I'd be lying if I said all of this made even the slightest fragment of sense to me/That's real/Simply put, I don't know what happened or what's still happening/I literally feel like I'm teetering on the blunt edge of my sanity".

Aesop did two shows in New York City for the "Who Killed The Robots" tour in early September, before digging through a drawer to find a prescription for antidepressants that had been collecting dust for months, in an last-ditch attempt to give him the edge he needed to continue the tour. As he walked into the pharmacy to hand over the script, he glanced up at the television to witness yet another event which would forever alter his life's perspective. The date was September 11th, 2001, and he was standing approximately 10 blocks from ground zero. Aesop never made it on tour.

One week later, on September 18th, 2001, Labor Days became the second full length album to be released through the Definitive Jux label.


Album Review

Despite being over an hour of music, sitting at 61 minutes spread between 14 tracks, Labor Days does not feel as long as it's runtime implies, thanks to Aesop's meticulous grooming. While the majority of the production is handled by Blockhead, Aesop tasks himself with a handful of beats, as well as Omega One tackling the beat for "Coma". Labor Days consistently pushes the listener forward, in lieu of dragging them along for over an hour; an issue many artists face when attempting an album of this length, largely due to Aesop's stunning technical skill and ability to feel completely at home over any multitude of beat styles and tempos.

Sonically, Blockhead and Aesop's carefully crafted beats take on a subdued, yet crucial, backseat position for this album. The fluttering woodwind melodies of "Daylight", the droning bassline leads of "Coma", and the chanting string sections of "Bent Life" fastidiously set the stage for Aesop's lyrical prowess to shine, while opened flat snares and muted high hat patterns dig the album into a meticulous, marching groove. This slowly driving, yet never faltering production approach is eerily reminiscent of a long day at the office; where monotony is anticipated and dreaded, yet simultaneously found comforting and welcomed. The repetitive, yet undeniably catchy, bassline grooves lull you into a dreary state of unease; where Aesop then unleashes his flurry of intricate rhymes, in which his nasal tone and complex flows abruptly awaken you to the belief that you've uncovered the truth of existence, if just for a brief, fleeting moment, only to be returned to your slumber until the next punchline.

Lyrically, Labor Days exists within the shadows cast by a mega-corporate skyscraper obfuscating your entire field of view; where focusing too much attention on details is remunerated with legal jargon purposefully designed to disorient you, eventually leaving you further away from a clear answer than where you began initially. Aesop spits witty one-liners, sandwiched between brilliant analyses of the corporate wasteland we have been forced to exist within, drenched in metaphor, further layered beneath obscure literature and science fiction references.

Critics of Aesop's work have harped on the fact that his lyrics are dense, some even going as far to say they are nonsensical, referring to his verses as "word soup with no real meaning". While it's easy to dismiss lyrics such as, "Jiggy-jabberjaw vitamin idol and primal rages when bible page verse tidal waves begun, water won" as unintelligible, Aesop has maintained that his lyrics aren't nonsense, he simply wants you to engage in what he's saying. Yes, his lyrics are confusing. This is intentional, and honestly, part of the fun.

Attempting to analyze and fully comprehend every bar and metaphor used in the duration of this album is a fool's errand in every sense of the phrase; quite literally impossible to do. The ambiguity of Aesop's lyrics has always been an integral discussion point surrounding his music, and for good reason. With his breakout record Labor Days, his lyrical obscurity is without question at it's most potent. Throughout the years, Aes has provided varying insights into his writing process and how, or why, he writes the way he does. In a 2003 interview, Aesop commented on the ambiguity of his lyrics on Labor Days.

Interviewer: Well, your lyrics seem pretty unorthodox, even though you mentioned that you're not interested in poetry, they seem put together like poems, they have that same atmosphere of ambiguity and opacity that a lot of poetry has – you know, the tradition in hip hop is to be very clear about what you're saying…

Aesop Rock: Yeah, being very immediate… actually I think that I am immediate, it's just that what's immediate in my life is pretty cryptic, and I really think that that's more real than people who make their stuff more accessible – that stuff's not really realistic to me. Life isn't that easy, and people really don't see it the same way. So, if my shit's considered cryptic, then it can't really get more real. It's what's in my head, and I do my best to transfer what's in my head to my music. It being strange and hard to figure out, is only a fraction of how strange it is in my head, and of how reality is. You can say: 'Johnny got shot on the block', or you can try to decipher the actual feeling behind that, and figure out a way of saying it, which is true to what that really means.

In a 2015 interview on Open Mike Eagle's podcast "Secret Skin", Aes revealed that he wrote a lot of his earlier music with the intention of being as cryptic as possible. He claims that he was working through many personal issues during the time he was writing Labor Days, so to cope he would look inward at his experiences, decipher the truth beneath his emotions, and then intentionally bury that truth beneath multiple layers of deeply coated metaphors; allowing him to get the truth off his chest, while simultaneously removing the layer of accessibility that inherently comes with speaking your truth. It's a writing technique that is used very rarely in the scope of hip-hop, a medium where being direct and braggadocios is not only expected, but lauded. However, to Aesop, he is being more honest and direct than any rapper flexing their status. He knows the meaning behind his bars; it's simply that he's chosen to express them in ways that purposefully diminish their accessibility.

Since he's speaking in such intricacies and his lyrics are so thoroughly coated in metaphors for the duration of Labor Days, Aesop has essentially subverted the need to understand everything he's talking about. I've spent many, many hours reading the lyrics to this album in my quest to further my understanding of it, and there are still plenty of lines that continue to confuse me more with every read through. Due to this, I've found one of the most rewarding things to do while listening is to relax your focus. While this may seem counterintuitive to do with a hyper-conscious rapper, one of the true stand out aspects of Labor Days are Aesop's flows and intricate rhyme schemes.

I find the appeal of Aesop's sound akin as to why people have so heavily gravitated to the new wave of trap, which intentionally puts little emphasis on lyrical content. People like it because it's pleasing to the ears and critical thinking is not required. If you missed what Playboi Carti said on a bar, you haven't really missed anything. The emphasis is on the vibe. The same principle applies to Aesop's lyrics, but on the other side of the spectrum. While he spits puzzling enigmas intended for only himself to solve, Aes further demonstrates his bewildering technical skills by fitting multi-syllable words and complex phrases into up-tempo meters with absolute grace and stunning precision, while simultaneously packing a flurry of internal rhymes into the highly detailed bars; combined with his nasal tone and voice sitting in the upper register, his flows quickly become hypnotizing. Since grasping all the content he spews is not feasible, one of the best things you can do is simply loosen your brain and allow yourself to be berated by a cascade of syllable-dense, technical flows paired with detailed rhyme schemes.

While many rappers find themselves falling into a comfortable flow and re-using it for the duration of their album, an understandable conundrum, Aesop does not allow this to occur on Labor Days. Each track has its own distinct flow, acting as a thumbprint for the song, designed to emphasize certain one-liners and details he wants you to pick up on.

While full comprehension of this album is impossible, listening carefully slowly begins to reveal the two major themes Aesop so delicately approaches throughout the record. Subtly detailing the day-to-day physical struggles associated with being forced to work in the wasteland that is American Capitalism, and the multitude of coping mechanisms we utilize are depicted on tracks like "Labor", "Battery", and "9-5ers Anthem". Simultaneously, and arguably most importantly, Aesop emphasizes the necessity of the never ending struggle to create good art as an act of rebellion against the system which has forced you into a box, acting as "the crooked spoke adjacent", as shown on cuts such as "Save Yourself", "No Regrets", and "Daylight".

Opening with a devastating one-two punch, Labor Days features two of Aesop's biggest commercial successes, "Labor" and "Daylight". The former of which millennial fans will likely remember from the legendary soundtrack of Tony Hawk Pro Skater 4, a video game which I personally played into the ground as a kid. To say the Tony Hawk Pro Skater series had an impact on my musical taste would be a massive understatement. These games defined my musical taste. Well before I was even remotely interested in hip-hop as a genre, these games were subconsciously laying the foundation for me to (re)-discover the right artists when the time was right.

"Labor" sets the lyrical tone of the album right off the bat, with Aesop posing a rhetorical question:

Who put the monkey wrench in well-oiled perfectionist emblem

Just to watch these monitors spit white noise through your office space

Automater, I infect jolly gene pool descendant clown-clusters

Brushing dust mites off your starving art revolution sound jugglers

These opening 4 bars are truly indicative of the concepts Aesop dives into throughout the album. Take the labor-based system that many of us are forced to exist as cogs within, and destroy it with awakening an art renaissance. This topical concept about the work force is expressed throughout the track with multiple beautiful metaphors, even ending the song on an apt low-note about the necessity to continue working until we reach the grave.

I work on what I love, I work to service all my burdens

And I'll work until this here little flat line closes the curtains

This concept of working for the sake of working is continually tapped on throughout the album, including the following track, "Daylight". This Blockhead produced beat samples 1976's "She Is My Lady" by Eric Gale. Layered atop the string section and opened wooden clap snares rests a flute melody, fluttering over a chopped and screwed version of a rare Digital Underground song, which was only released via a cassette version of their debut album Sex Packets, in which Shock-G shouts, 'YES Y'ALL, AND YOU DON'T STOP, I KEEP ON, 'TILL THE BREAK OF DAWN'. This classic hip-hop phrase from a legendary underground hip-hop act has now found new life, being repurposed into another underground legends smash hit. Blockhead's ability to blend the different aspects of these two songs into a new beat which sound as if they were never meant to be apart is a truly spectacular feat.

As his biggest hit, "Daylight" has cemented itself in Aesop's live catalog forever. This was one of three songs from his earlier work that he performed in early 2017 when I saw him play on his "Hey Kirby" tour. "Daylight" continues on themes about the struggles of people working in today's society, while meanwhile dreaming of the work that people would prefer to do during the time they spend working for someone else. Ending the track with a prophetic line, Aesop again concentrates his brilliance into an amazing quotable:

This cat is askin' if I've seen his bit of lost passion

I told him: "Yeah," but only when I pedaled past him

While Aesop continues to work on what inspires him, he responds to someone stuck in their place asking if he's seen their passion; replying that he has, but only as he continues on his way. This gorgeous metaphor is spit with pure confidence and braggadocio, yet somehow doesn't sound like Aesop is talking down to you. Instead, it inspires you to break out of your place and run after him, in an attempt to see if he can give you further directions.

"Save Yourself" is one of my personal favorite songs off Labor Days. At the time this album was released, one of the major talking points in hip-hop culture revolved around the idea that "hip-hop is dead". Many artists felt that the genre was becoming too commercial and had strayed too far from the gangster roots it originally emerged from. Dance trends became the norm, lyrics were watered down in order to garner radio play, and beats were becoming more glitzy and flashy by the day. Many spoke about how some revivalists were coming to "save hip-hop" from its current state. Aesop sees these complaints as a waste of time. As hip-hop as a genre evolved, there have always been cats making dope stuff. If you don't think so, then you're just not paying attention. The hook to "Save Yourself" acts as a moment for other hip-hop artists to self-reflect, begging the question, "What are you saving?".

It's difficult to relay how absolutely perfect this song is, acting as a wake-up call for whack MCs, without quoting the entire song. In three lines, Aesop constructs a metaphor comparing these haters to the story of Rip Van Winkle, and likens New York City's evolving hip-hop scene to a gauntlet which will end anyone who views themselves as above it. Wondering where he fits within the scope of this ever changing scene, he labels himself a "Jabberwocky Superfly". Referring to the nonsense poem written by Alice in Wonderland author Lewis Carroll, "Jabberwocky" features a multitude of words which have no meaning in the English language, however while reading the poem, their meanings become evident through context clues and syntax. Superfly refers to the 1972 blaxploitation movie of the same title, essentially designating himself a "nonsensical gangster". This is the perfect description of Aesop and his style, as his lyrics can be interpreted in multiple different ways, intentionally.

This is just me picking out a few of my favorite lines from a single verse on this song. "Save Yourself" is truly one of the best-written and note-worthy tracks from Labor Days. It makes it abundantly obvious that people who believe hip-hop needs saving need to wake up and save themselves; because they're not only the ones who are causing the most damage, they're also the ones who need it the most.

Keep me posted as to when you grasp something mature to sit and sulk about mister

And I'll consider picking up your record

"No Regrets" is an obvious stand-out in the tracklist, as the lone straight forward story-telling track. Focusing on the life story of a woman living in NYC with a passion for visual arts, it's easy to interpret this track at face value. However, learning a bit about Aesop's life allows you to see this story for what it really is: an extension of Aesop's self. As mentioned earlier, he went to college at Boston University to study visual arts; painting and drawing were big focuses during his time at BU. Lucy represents the small piece of himself where he lives the career path he imagined himself living; spending his life dedicated to his dream, eventually being fulfilled enough to leave Earth with a smile.

The song features three verses, each detailing a different time period in Lucy's life. First, as a seven year old child, then as a thirty-seven year old adult, and lastly as an eighty-seven year old on her death bed. The first two verses tell stories of how Lucy has consistently bucked trends and has chosen to focus on her art in lieu of her social life. She ignores school children inviting her to play in order to work on her sidewalk chalk art, and politely declines lunch requests with neighbors in order to work on her charcoal drawings with a simple, "I'm busy, thank you much."

Finally, Lucy is depicted in a senior home, where her arthritis has rendered her unable to create her art. She simply sits alone in her room, staring at her life's work. Before departing her mortal coil, she imparts a small bit of wisdom that she believes to be true with a nurse.

She said, "Look, I've never had a dream in my life

Because a dream is what you want to do, but still haven't pursued

I knew what I wanted, and did it 'till it was done

So I've been the dream that I wanted to be since day one"

This is one of the most profound statements I've heard a rapper depict through their lyrics. It's a truly beautiful sentiment about pursuing your passions and why doing so is so important. If you didn't follow your dreams during your lifetime, at least a little bit, then you will leave this Earth with regrets, something Aesop believes to be a nonstarter.

The consistent themes of working for the man while you would rather be pursuing your passions displayed throughout the album are fully culminated on the second to last track, "9-5ers Anthem". Aesop spits two, hyper-dense verses meticulously detailing what it's like to exist within the nine-to-five work environment; a space where conformity is lauded and your personal identity is stripped away, leaving only a shell of a human intended to be a cog in a machine that creates for others, while you are rewarded only with the bare minimum, as allowed by law.

Sandwiched between Aesop's destruction of our comfortable lifestyle(s) is a chanting chorus that truly encapsulates the concept that he's been attempting to drill into your brain over the past hour. Stating that American's are tired of "chasing the dreams of someone that isn't us", and that while we might not explicitly hate the jobs we have now, we would much rather be working to "perfect the pastimes that we have harbored based solely on the fact that it makes us smile if it sounds dope". Aesop imagines a society where people are free to pursue their passions without the constant need to worry about money. If people could be paid solely to pursue what makes them happy, then not only would we have a more fulfilled society, but we would launch an art renaissance the likes of which the Earth has never seen prior.


Overview

I have spent the past 6 years of my life completely infatuated with this record, listening to it in full at least once a week. Upon my first listen of Labor Days, Aesop's lyrics, while cryptic and intricate were overtly brilliant, combined with the gorgeously composed production from Blockhead and Aesop himself, it became abundantly obvious that I had just experienced a true masterpiece. While this album might seem overwhelming at first, Aesop's hyper dense style rewards you more with each listen, slowly revealing the intricacies behind his lyrical enigmas, while you are simultaneously berated by cascading flows and meticulously groomed production. I quickly became aware of Aesop's critiques of the American labor system, however it took me until now and my 40-some-odd hours spent reading and listening carefully, to fully comprehend the core of the concept he's been attempting to get through to his audience. Yes, Labor Days does focus on the labor itself and the conditions that labor has been subjected to within American Capitalism, however the core concept lies beyond the title. Throughout the album, Aesop is constantly reminding you of the fact that while you waste away behind your computer screen, you could be spending your time and energy creating what brings you joy, and living your life with No Regrets. Aesop's consistent dedication to his art and craft are what truly lies at the core of Labor Days. It's a message that has become more and more potent throughout the past nearly twenty years, as American Capitalism has continued to spiral further and further out of control. Furthermore, the more I revisit this album, the more the idea of pursuing your passions has become deeply ingrained into my psyche. In fact, the 40-some-odd hours I've spent working on this review has forced me to re-evaluate how I spend my time at the job I currently have. I don't love this job, hell I barely even like it. I would much rather be spending the eight hours per day I spend here doing something that I love to do. This is what Aesop wants to see in the world. This is what we should ALL want to see in the world. Labor Days is not just the landmark work from underground hip-hop's most lyrical MC, it's a passion project about convincing society to create their own passion projects.

10/10


Favorite Lyrics

Stood innocent bystand, witness the die-hard fans turn Rip Van

In the poppy fields of N.Y.'s orchestrated brick gauntlet

Now I'm thinking, "Who am I?" Jabberwocky Superfly, bent left

Pushing war without the ten step cushion, and what? (What?)

I plan to hold this B-positive sacred in these golden veins

Until the day I die from grimace overload

It's shock (It's shock)

Treatment offered by the weekend

Dystopia getaway, let's display the sequence, it goes:

One for the heartless thievery turning my guardian angel harpless

And the rest to sweep the mess under the carpet (Under the carpet)

I drag a yellow taxi meter

Behind every measure and charge cats for labeling me shepherd

"That'll be 6.50 plus tip, darling

I take cash, credit, check, money-order, gold and cigarette cartons"

Got caught up in the universe trying to zoom in on stardom

Forgot the passion plus the hatred, both were based in Carbon

Next time you wanna be a hero, try saving something other than hip-hop

And maybe hip-hop'll save you from the pit-stop

  • "Save Yourself" - Verse 1

"Look, I've never had a dream in my life

Because a dream is what you wanna do, but still haven't pursued

I knew what I wanted and did it till it was done

So I've been the dream that I wanted to be since day one!"

  • "No Regrets" - Verse 3

You won't be laughing when your covered wagons crash

You won't be laughing when the buzzards drag your brother's flags to rags

You won't be laughing when your front lawn is spangled with epitaphs (You won't be laughing!)

Then I'll hang my boots to rest when I'm impressed

So I triple knot 'em and forgot 'em

His origami dream is beautiful

But man, those wings will never leave the ground

Without a feather and a lottery ticket, now settle down

  • "Daylight" - Verse 1

In slid rhythm, fed a cycle bound by dilemma, debt, and vendetta

Escaped briefly back to my apartment to park in front a fan

And reminisce about the day I ran a mile with your heart in my hand

Contestants get the New York home game with real life shoot 'em up-action

Thug, vagrant, yuppie and art freak game piece all included

I told this cat the Earth was flat, he walked 'till his beard grew

Long enough to strangle himself for being stupid

  • "Flashflood"

Life treats the peasants like

They tried to fuck his woman while he slept inside

Well they're merely chasing perfectionist emblems

When the clock strikes nine

I'll be waking with the best of routine caffeine team players

For the cycle of it

Under a dusted angel harp string Big Brother is watching

My odometer like buzzard to fallen elk, talking stealth

We got babies, rubber stamps, and briefcase parts

We on some door-to-door now

Order ten dollars or more, we'll shove it down your throat for free

I'll sacrifice my inborn tendencies

For copper pennies for one commanding "Gimme that"

So we can retain baby fat

  • "9-5ers Anthem" - Verse 1

Discussion Points

  • How has this album aged since its release, nearly 20 years ago?

  • What's your favorite beat?

  • What's your favorite line (or verse)?

  • How does this album compare to other Aesop Rock albums?

submitted by /u/jordanbeff
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Daily Discussion Thread 04/28/2020

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 10:51 AM PDT

Welcome to the /r/hiphopheads daily discussion thread!

This thread is for:

  • objective questions with right/wrong answers (e.g. "Does anyone know what is happening with MIXTAPE?", "What is the sample in SONG?")
  • general hip-hop discussion
  • meta posts...e.g. ideas for the sub

Thread Guidelines

  • Do not create a separate self post for these types of discussions outside of this thread - if you do, your post will be removed, as stated in the guidelines.

  • Please be helpful and friendly.

  • If a question has been asked many times before, provide a link to a thread that contains the answer.

Weekly/Monthly Threads

Other ways to interact

There are a number of other ways to interact with other members of HHH:

New to /r/hiphopheads or hip-hop in general?

Check out these:

submitted by /u/ModsLittleHelper
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Mac Miller's K.I.D.S. mixtape finally on Spotify

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 09:01 PM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] Rich Brian - BALI ft. Guapdad 4000

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 09:05 AM PDT

Tyler The Creator - She (feat. Frank Ocean)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 01:47 PM PDT

[DISCUSSION] Earl Sweatshirt - Solace (5 Years Later)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 08:21 AM PDT

5 years ago today Earl dropped this excellent EP, described as " music from when he hit the bottom and found something ". Presented as a singular 10 minute track, but structured into 5 parts, it's a really unique project.

How do you feel about Solace? How has it aged? Has the album had any impact on you? Where do you rank it in Earls discography? Comment Below!

submitted by /u/JcSimba
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KA’s upcoming 7th album to be available for purchase 5/1, streaming 5/7

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 01:19 PM PDT

Cam’ron performs powerful freestyle while counting a stack.

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 07:42 AM PDT

French Montana Claims "Unforgettable" Had 'No Structure,' Swae Lee Responds

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 03:59 PM PDT

Lil Wayne - We Be Steady Mobbin (ft. Gucci Mane)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 01:40 PM PDT

Juice WRLD - Flaws and Sins (Official Audio)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 05:06 PM PDT

K.I.D.S by Mac Miller is now on streaming platforms

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 10:45 PM PDT

Three 6 Mafia vs. Bone Thugs-N-Harmony Instagram live battle on Thursday

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 08:24 AM PDT

[FRESH EP] serpentwithfeet- Apparition

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 10:19 PM PDT

Dr. Dre - For The Love Of Money (feat. Anderson .Paak, Jill Scott & Jon Connor)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 08:21 AM PDT

DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince - Summertime

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 10:32 PM PDT

Why is Kodak Black in Maximum Security Prison? (Full Interview with His Lawyer)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 11:33 AM PDT

YG, Drake - Who Do You Love?

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 10:27 PM PDT

Westside Gunn - Nxggas in Puerto Rico (ft. Flee Lord & Benny)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 02:10 PM PDT

[FRESH] Lance Skiiiwalker - In the World

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 06:20 AM PDT

Edan - Fumbling Over Words That Rhyme (2005)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 08:38 PM PDT

[FRESH] Medhane - ALLEGEDLY (Prod. Chuck Strangers)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 10:52 AM PDT

Billboard Hot 100 Discussion - April 26-May 2 2020

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 08:24 AM PDT

Billboard Hot 100 chart

Position Title Artist ▲/▼ Last week Weeks Charting Peak
1 Blinding Lights The Weeknd - 1 21 1
2 Toosie Slide Drake - 2 3 1
3 The Box Roddy Ricch - 3 20 1
4 Don't Start Now Dua Lipa - 4 25 2
5 Say So Doja Cat - 5 16 5
6 Circles Post Malone ▲+1 7 34 1
7 Adore You Harry Styles ▼-1 6 20 6
8 Intentions Justin Bieber Featuring Quavo ▲+1 9 11 8
9 ROCKSTAR DaBaby Featuring Roddy Ricch ▲+92 [FRESH] 1 9
10 Life Is Good Future Featuring Drake ▼-2 8 15 2
11 everything i wanted Billie Eilish ▼-1 10 24 8
12 My Oh My Camila Cabello Featuring DaBaby - 12 20 12
13 The Bones Maren Morris - 13 31 12
14 Savage Megan Thee Stallion - 14 6 14
15 Someone You Loved Lewis Capaldi ▼-4 11 50 1
16 I Hope Gabby Barrett ▲+1 17 17 16
17 JUMP DaBaby Featuring YoungBoy Never Broke Again ▲+84 [FRESH] 1 17
18 Memories Maroon 5 ▼-3 15 31 2
19 Blueberry Faygo Lil Mosey ▼-3 16 11 16
20 Nobody But You Blake Shelton Duet With Gwen Stefani ▼-2 18 15 18
21 Chasin' You Morgan Wallen ▲+4 25 13 21
22 Roses (Imanbek Remix) SAINt JHN ▲+4 26 5 22
23 Falling Trevor Daniel ▼-1 22 23 22
24 Hot Girl Bummer blackbear ▼-4 20 32 11
25 High Fashion Roddy Ricch Featuring Mustard ▲+4 29 17 20
26 Roxanne Arizona Zervas ▼-7 19 25 4
27 death bed Powfu Featuring beabadoobee ▲+3 30 6 27
28 Heartless The Weeknd ▼-7 21 22 1
29 Heart On Ice Rod Wave ▼-1 28 24 25
30 More Hearts Than Mine Ingrid Andress ▲+2 32 17 30
31 Dance Monkey Tones And I ▼-7 24 29 4
32 Ballin' Mustard & Roddy Ricch ▼-5 27 40 11
33 Find My Way DaBaby ▲+18 51 3 22
34 RITMO (Bad Boys For Life) The Black Eyed Peas X J Balvin ▼-3 31 22 26
35 @ MEH Playboi Carti ▲+66 [FRESH] 1 35
36 I'm Ready Sam Smith & Demi Lovato ▲+65 [FRESH] 1 36
37 WHATS POPPIN Jack Harlow ▼-1 36 11 36
38 Sunday Best Surfaces - 38 8 38
39 Break My Heart Dua Lipa ▼-4 35 4 21
40 Does To Me Luke Combs Featuring Eric Church ▲+8 48 6 40
41 10,000 Hours Dan + Shay & Justin Bieber ▼-7 34 29 4
42 I Love Me Demi Lovato ▼-1 41 7 18
43 BOP DaBaby ▼-4 39 30 11
44 PICK UP DaBaby Featuring Quavo ▲+57 [FRESH] 1 44
45 Level Of Concern twenty one pilots ▼-22 23 2 23
46 Stupid Love Lady Gaga ▼-13 33 8 5
47 I Hope You're Happy Now Carly Pearce & Lee Brice ▼-5 42 16 42
48 No Guidance Chris Brown Featuring Drake ▼-8 40 46 5
49 Hard To Forget Sam Hunt - 49 4 40
50 NASTY DaBaby Featuring Ashanti & Megan Thee Stallion ▲+51 [FRESH] 1 50
51 Beer Can't Fix Thomas Rhett Featuring Jon Pardi ▼-7 44 6 44
52 Catch Brett Young ▼-15 37 13 29
53 LIGHTSKIN SH*T DaBaby Featuring Future & jetsonmade ▲+48 [FRESH] 1 53
54 Dior Pop Smoke ▼-8 46 10 30
55 In Your Eyes The Weeknd ▼-10 45 5 16
56 After A Few Travis Denning ▼-1 55 4 55
57 Before You Go Lewis Capaldi - 57 12 57
58 Slide H.E.R. Featuring YG ▼-15 43 18 43
59 Supalonely BENEE Featuring Gus Dapperton ▼-1 58 6 58
60 Sum 2 Prove Lil Baby ▼-7 53 15 16
61 More Than My Hometown Morgan Wallen ▲+40 [FRESH] 1 61
62 BEST ON EARTH Russ & BIA ▼-10 52 20 46
63 CAN'T STOP DaBaby ▲+38 [FRESH] 1 63
64 BLAME IT ON BABY DaBaby ▲+37 [FRESH] 1 64
65 Walk Em Down NLE Choppa Featuring Roddy Ricch ▼-5 60 5 57
66 Godzilla Eminem Featuring Juice WRLD ▼-10 56 14 3
67 Heartless Diplo Presents Thomas Wesley Featuring Morgan Wallen ▲+1 68 13 65
68 Yo Perreo Sola Bad Bunny ▼-6 62 6 53
69 SAD SHIT DaBaby ▲+32 [FRESH] 1 69
70 Tusa Karol G & Nicki Minaj ▼-1 69 21 42
71 DROP DaBaby Featuring A Boogie Wit da Hoodie & London On Da Track ▲+30 [FRESH] 1 71
72 OUT WEST JACKBOYS Featuring Young Thug ▼-1 71 15 38
73 Slow Dance In A Parking Lot Jordan Davis ▼-23 50 16 37
74 TALK ABOUT IT DaBaby ▲+27 [FRESH] 1 74
75 BELIEVE IT PARTYNEXTDOOR & Rihanna ▼-14 61 4 23
76 P*$$y Fairy (OTW) Jhene Aiko ▼-6 70 14 40
77 If The World Was Ending JP Saxe Featuring Julia Michaels ▼-4 73 4 73
78 Turks NAV, Gunna & Travis Scott ▼-15 63 4 17
79 Come Thru Summer Walker & Usher ▼-13 66 17 42
80 You should be sad Halsey ▼-15 65 15 26
81 Homemade Jake Owen ▼-14 67 13 39
82 Bluebird Miranda Lambert ▼-7 75 3 75
83 Be A Light Thomas Rhett Featuring Reba McEntire, Hillary Scott, Chris Tomlin & Keith Urban ▼-11 72 3 71
84 Emotionally Scarred Lil Baby ▼-2 82 8 31
85 CHAMPION DaBaby ▲+16 [FRESH] 1 85
86 I Dare You Kelly Clarkson ▲+15 [FRESH] 1 86
87 Here And Now Kenny Chesney ▼-8 79 3 79
88 Myron Lil Uzi Vert ▼-14 74 6 13
89 In Between Scotty McCreery ▲+4 93 2 89
90 Broke In A Minute Tory Lanez ▼-26 64 2 64
91 That Way Lil Uzi Vert ▼-8 83 8 20
92 After Party Don Toliver ▲+9 [FRESH] 1 92
93 July Noah Cyrus Featuring Leon Bridges ▼-8 85 8 85
94 Die From A Broken Heart Maddie & Tae ▼-14 80 2 80
95 Ride It. DJ Regard ▲+1 96 2 95
96 Captain Hook Megan Thee Stallion ▼-1 95 3 74
97 God Whispered Your Name Keith Urban ▲+4 [FRESH] 1 97
98 PTSD G Herbo Featuring Chance The Rapper, Juice WRLD & Lil Uzi Vert ▼-8 90 4 38
99 Safaera Bad Bunny, Jowell & Randy & Nengo Flow ▼-13 86 6 81
100 Girl Of My Dreams Rod Wave ▼-2 98 2 98

Notes

  • Nothing has moved in the top 5 this week

  • Circles has broken the record for the most weeks spent in the top 10, with 34

Billboard 200 chart

Position Title Artist Sales Change Last week Weeks Charting
1 BLAME IT ON BABY DaBaby 128,748 (11,149 pure) -- [FRESH] 1
2 After Hours The Weeknd 56,246 (9,028 pure) -20% 1 5
3 Eternal Atake Lil Uzi Vert 54,298 (495 pure) -9% 3 7
4 Fetch The Bolt Cutters Fiona Apple 45,626 (30,643 pure) -- [FRESH] 1
5 My Turn Lil Baby 39,864 (1,168 pure) +4% 4 8
6 Hollywood's Bleeding Post Malone 35,870 (1,163 pure) +3% 6 33
7 YHLQMDLG Bad Bunny 35,436 (810 pure) +1% 5 8
8 Please Excuse Me For Being Antisocial Roddy Ricch 32,588 (419 pure) -5% 7 20
9 Pray 4 Love Rod Wave 26,826 (302 pure) -16% 9 3
10 The New Toronto 3 Tory Lanez 27,248 (676 pure) -57% 2 2
submitted by /u/RobYaLunch
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[FRESH] 24kGoldn - Unbelievable (feat. Kaash Paige)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 07:34 PM PDT

[HYPE] AG Club - Memphis (East Bay rap group, RIYL A$AP Rocky, Brockhampton)

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 09:51 AM PDT

Link

From Pigeons & Planes:

Imagine what an early ASAP Rocky song mixed with Brockhampton would sound like—what you're hearing in your head might be close to AG Club's breakout song "Memphis." The Bay Area crew had no idea that from the eclectic collage of music on the nine-song project Halfway Off the Porch, that track would be the one that ended up on Spotify's Viral 50 chart, racking up over a million plays.

"No way. 'Memphis' was one of the last songs we made and honestly I wasn't vibing with it at all," says Jody Fontaine, rapper/singer in AG Club. "We never thought it'd be the most played song on the project. After it started going up though, it started to make a lot of sense."

With their small catalog so far, the guys are already proving to be more than a one-off hit, flexing different styles and skills that they've developed in-house. They handle everything from music videos and marketing to production and instrumentation on their own (read more about that at Lyrical Lemonade), and it allows them to run with any new idea they get. That's always been an advantage, but it's especially valuable right now.

The beats got like a Three Six meets cloud rap sound but I didn't wanna put RIYL "Three 6" and "Brockhampton" in the same title ppl get touchy about that sort of thing.

submitted by /u/TheRoyalGodfrey
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Tom Green's House Tonight - Tom Raps With Xzibit

Posted: 28 Apr 2020 09:50 PM PDT