Outro álbum de um grupo importante que acabou de vazar. Rising Down é o décimo álbum da The Roots, banda de rap mais famosa e elogiada da história, liderada pelo emcee Black Thought e o baterista ?uestlove. Segundo o baterista, o álbum tem um som que eles nunca procuraram fazer antes, tentando mudar um pouco os instrumentos, buscando novas sonoridades. Perguntando sobre o tema do álbum, ele afirmou ainda: "Junte aos altos níveis de criminalidade e evasão escolar da Filadélfia com estar com seus trinta e poucos anos, trabalhar 300 noites por ano, além de ser um ano de eleições presidenciais. Este álbum é sobre tudo isso".

O disco conta ainda com várias participações. Os convidados mais expressivos são Mos Def, Styles P, DJ Jazzy Jeff, Saigon, Talib Kweli, Common e Chrissete Michelle. Além destes, ainda estão no álbum Dice Raw, Malik B e Peedi Crakk, caras que já têm uma história de trabalhos anteriores com a banda.

Juntando o fato de o álbum ter temas bem políticos e ser o décimo da carreira da banda, é fácil perceber o quão madura é a música dos caras. Musicalmente, ?uestlove é o protagonista, mais uma vez impecável na bateria. Os beats em Rising Down estão muito mais sombrios e minimalistas, deixando de lado o jazz que marcou o início da carreira do grupo. Exemplos disso são as faixas Rising Down, com uma guitarra seguindo o ritmo puxado por ?uest; Get Busy, ainda mais pesada, remetendo ao boom-bap nova-iorquino dos anos 90; e Black's Reconstruction, guiada por uma linha de baixo nervosa. Os momentos mais calmos do disco também merecem menção, como em Criminal, um clima mais nostálgico, embora as caixas continuem pesadas; e Rising Up, um batidão estilo anos 70, acentuado com a bela voz de Chrissete Michelle no refrão.

Quanto às letras, Black Thought dá um show de versatilidade. Como prometido antes, os temas são sérios e inteligentes. Em Rising Down, ele, Mos Def e Styles P falam sobre a situação da sociedade atual, sob três perspectivas diferentes; a situação dos negros é explorada em I Will Not Apologize; o emcee rima ainda sobre problemas sociais em Criminal e Lost Desire, mas não esquece dos tradicionais battle raps, em Get Busy e Black's Reconstruction, esta última uma seqüência de 75 linhas gravadas de uma só vez.

Como sempre, a banda acaba não decepcionando. A mescla de um som mais turvo com conceitos criativos e conscientes se mostrou bastante acertada. ?uestlove continua um monstro na bateria, e Black Thought, no microfone. Mais um álbum que poderia ser classificado como Hip Hop adulto, como diria Buckshot. Talvez esteja nascendo uma nova vertente no rap. A julgar pelos álbuns saindo com esta proposta, é possível que esteja aí o caminho para a renovação do gênero.

Playlist

1. The Pow Wow
2. Rising Down (Hum Drum) (featuring Mos Def, Styles P & Dice Raw)
3. Get Busy (featuring Dice Raw, Peedi Crakk & DJ Jazzy Jeff)
4. @ 15
5. 75 Bars (Black's Reconstruction) (featuring Tuba Gooding Jr.)
6. Becoming Unwritten
7. Criminal (featuring Truck North & Saigon)
8. I Will Not Apologize (featuring Porn, Dice Raw, & Talib Kweli)
9. I Can’t Help It (featuring Malik B & Porn)
10. Singing Man (featuring Porn & Truck North)
11. Up There (Unwritten) (featuring Mercedes Martinez)
12. Lost Desire (featuring Malik B & Talib Kweli)
13. The Show (featuring Common)
14. Rising Up (featuring Wale & Chrisette Michelle)
15. Live at WPFW, 1994 (Hidden Track)



Dois grandes nomes do rap atual dando seqüência ao trabalho iniciado com o álbum Chemistry. Dessa vez, o ex-produtor do Little Brother, 9th Wonder, e o cabeça do Black Moon e da gravadora Duck Down, Buckshot, se reúnem para trazer aos fãs The Formula.

Este disco novo confirma que a dupla realmente tem uma química muito boa e encontraram a fórmula certa para fazer boa música. 9th Wonder está absolutamente impecável no álbum, com o tradicional arsenal de samples vocais, caixas e bumbos pesados e um clima totalmente soul. Já Buckshot também mantém seu estilo, mas soa aqui muito mais interessado no projeto: seu flow continua preciso e a voz mais empolgada.

Ready(Brand New Day) é o maior destaque do álbum, com um vocal acelerado e um loop bem tranqüilo, dando o clima da faixa, além do tradicional boom bap na bateria. Os dois singles - Go All Out e Hold It Down, este com Talib Kweli - também merecem menção: o primeiro tem um grande sample de sax e um quê jazzy, enquanto o segundo, mesmo com um refrão fraco, tem dois grandes emcees rimando sobre um beat mais acelerado e complexo. Shinin Yall é um dos melhores beats do disco, com um sample de strings cortado de forma perfeita por 9th Wonder, e grande participação de Yarafat Yates e Big Chops, dois desconhecidos para mim. Por fim, Man Listen recorre a samples vocais e de soul para fechar com chave de ouro o trabalho.

O disco, entretanto, não está livre de erros. Alguns refrões não funcionaram e alguns temas não casaram bem com a proposta de "Hip Hop adulto" da dupla, como por exemplo a faixa Just Display, falando sobre mulheres que são apenas para serem exibidas. Apesar desses pequenos deslizes, The Formula é um grande álbum, graças sobretudo aos instrumentais de 9th Wonder, que parece ter voltado à boa forma, depois da decepção de Dream Merchant. Juntando isso à performance sólida de Buckshot, temos a fórmula ideal para o bom rap.

9th Wonder & Buckshot - The Formula
1. Intro / The Formula f. The Formula Crew
2. Ready (Brand New Day)
3. Be Cool f. Swan
4. Go All Out (No Doubt!!!) f. Carlitta Durand
5. No Future
6. Hold It Down f. Talib Kweli & Tyler Woods
7. Whassup With U?
8. One For You (Big Lou)
9. Just Display
10. Here We Go
11. Throwin' Shade
12. Shinin' Yall f. Arafat Yates & Big Chops (of M1 Platoon)
13. Man Listen (Cause Ummm) f. Carlitta Durand






These are the transcripts of an interview with Phonte from Little Brother. The interview was conduced by MVRemix on February 20th, 2003.
Little Brother hail from North Carolina, and have been highly credited for bringing back "real" hip-hop, even being compared the likes of ATCQ and The Roots.




MVRemix:To start off, just for the record, how did you come up with the name Little Brother?

Phonte: The name Little Brother was just, um, it just means, the artists we grew up listening to, you know, I'm saying the Tribe, De La, P.E., you know what I'm saying… they were like our big brothers in the game so now we are the little brothers of that movement. They were like our big brothers in the game, now they got a little brother following in their footsteps and carrying on the tradition of good music.

MVRemix: It says in your bio that the three of you met in 1998 while attending North Carolina Central University. How exactly did you guys discover that you all had that mutual passion for hip-hop?

Phonte: Just from hanging out, you know what I'm saying? I met 9th (Wonder) in '98 and he was carrying a Source magazine, and so I asked to see it. We were just looking at it and saw that we liked a lot of the same cats so we just formed a bond from there. A couple of weeks later I met (Big) Pooh, you know what I'm saying, and I spit a rhyme that I had written earlier that day and he thought it was dope so we just hooked up from there. And basically, you know, just a friendship-type thing where we just shared a common interest.

MVRemix: Okay, well being relatively new to the scene, what do you feel Little Brother has to offer to modern-day hip-hop?

Phonte: Um, I think the main thing we have to offer is just straight, no-frills music, you know what I'm saying? We are the exact same people that you hear about on record, that you hear on the album. We're the exact same people; you know what I'm saying? We're just trying to have fun, you know? We're just real down to earth so we try to put that in our music. We take our music, but we don't take ourselves seriously, you know what I'm saying? I think a lot of the problem with hip-hop is like, cats they really take it too seriously and don't really have no fun with it, so we just want to bring some fun back to the game.

MVRemix: Definitely, that's long overdue. How would you describe Little Brother's style to those who may never have heard of you?

Phonte: Soulful. You know what I'm saying? Funky. And fun. Just those three words. A lot of "underground" rap I think is just kinda soulish; you know what I'm saying? It's like there's a lot more style… well not necessarily style, but more technique over emotion, you know what I'm saying? A lot of mother fuckers out there can rap, and can say dope shit, but you know, there's no real emotion behind it. So with us, we just wanna bring the soul back into it, you know? The meaning of the music. Having soulful music and soulful production, and also just soulful rhymes. You know, meaning you listen to our rhymes and you hear us as people, you know what I'm saying? It's like, 'Ok, I get it.' You walk away from the album with a better understanding of who Pooh and Phonte are as people. So that's how I would describe our sound.

MVRemix: That's dope. How do you feel about the whole "ATCQ comparisons" and "save hip hop" labels people are placing on you?

Phonte: It's cool. I mean, you know. A lot of people think it puts pressure on you or whatever, but you know, we just gonna keep doing the music we gotta do, you know what I'm saying? And you know, whatever people want to call it, it's cool. As far as the Tribe comparisons, we welcome that because you know Tribe was a big part of our foundation. We grew up listening to that shit, you know what I mean? So uh, you know, it's fine. We don't have a problem with it. As long as I'm being compared to legends, then fuck it, you know what I mean?
MVRemix: Yeah I feel ya. So who else are you feeling out of North Carolina that won't spin a shirt over their head like a helicopter?

Phonte: I like Petey (Pablo). People kinda get the wrong idea, but I mean I do actually like Petey, you know what I'm saying? He's got a good club style of rap. He's a funny mother fucker too; you're gonna have to interview him or whatever, or meet him. He's a funny ass dude. He adds a lot of personality to the game. So I fuck with Petey. Also, of course our team the Justus League, that goes without saying. My man Supastition. He's real dope, he's got a record out. Yeah, 7 Years of Bad Luck.

Phonte: Yeah, 7 Years of Bad Luck. He's real dope.

MVRemix: What would you say your biggest challenge was, trying to put this album out?

Phonte: The biggest challenge, I guess, was… I don't know. As far as putting it out, I mean, we can't really say there was a challenge because from the jump, our overall plan was, 'yo, we're gonna do this ourselves,' you know? We turned the album in to ABB; it was done. By the time ABB came and hollered at us, the album had been done for like 3-4 months already, you know what I'm saying? So it wasn't really a challenge in getting it out, thank God. Luckily, we found a label that believed in our vision and wasn't asking us to compromise nothing because we damn sure weren't gonna compromise nothing, you know? The album's done, motherfucker, this is it. So we found a label that believed in that and we didn't really have a problem with getting it out. Doing the album was a lot of work, but getting it out wasn't too bad.
MVRemix: Tell me about the Justus League.

Phonte: The Justus League is our crew. That's our fam, of eight emcees and four producers. The emcees are - (someone in the background yells "Hi!") Oh word up. Nah, we riding through this town in Virginia man. We been here for 20-30 minutes we just saw two black people. No actually, we saw one black person! We waved at his ass. Uh, back to the Justus League.

Phonte: Yeah, back to Justus League though, Justus League is, as I said, eight emcees and four producers. The emcees are myself, Big Pooh, my man Cesar Comanche, who also has a record out, [entitled] Paper Gods, and you can check it at his website PaperGods.com. Uh, Cesar Comanche, Median, L.E.G.A.C.Y., Sean Boog, Chaundon, and Floe. Then the four producers are 9th Wonder, Big Doh, Eccentric and Yorel. We all met running the same circles in our area, going to freestyle battles, going to shows, and you just see the same cats all the time. So it's like, yo, we just kinda formed a bond. I guess that was in like '99. And so you know, just a team of cats.

MVRemix: Alright, so production-wise, I gotta say that 9th Wonder is absolutely incredible. I know he relies heavily on computers to create beats, but specifically, what equipment/programs does he use to produce?

Phonte: The programs we use are Cool Edit Pro and Fruity Loops. Those are the two programs that we use, and that's what we did the whole album on.

MVRemix: Personally speaking, I think regardless of what you create beats on, it's the finished product that really matters, and The Listening's is absolutely incredible. But what do you have to say to people out there that are quick to criticize computer-generated beats?

Phonte: Yeah… All beats are computer generated, man, you know what I'm saying? 9th had caught some slack from motherfuckers who are like, 'Oh, he's on a computer,' you know. Man, all beats are computer-generated, nigga. Unless you playing every goddamn instrument by hand, and you know, playing bongos and shit, all beats are computer-generated. An MPC is just a computer in a box, you know what I'm saying? The SP1200 is just a computer in a box. It has a hard drive, it has memory, you know what I'm saying? So that's the thing. The only thing that matters is the end product. When I first met 9th and found out that he made beats on the computer, I was more amazed than anything. I was just like, 'I just wanna see how you do it.' And then I saw how he did it and I was like, 'Yo man, stick with what you do.' You know? As long as me and Pooh, as long as we believe in his beats then other cats can say whatever the fuck they wanna say.
MVRemix: Alright, cool. On a lighter tip, I'm gonna play a little word association game with you right now. I'm gonna say a word and I want you to say the first thing that comes to mind, okay?

Phonte: Word association game? Alright, let's do this. You pumped for this? Phonte: Yeah, let's go.

MVRemix: Alright. 50 cent.

Phonte: 50 cent? Hilarious. Fucking funny. Very entertaining.
MVRemix: Underground.
Phonte: Underground? Uh… overrated! [laughs]

MVRemix: Overrated? That's ironic.
Phonte: [Phonte looks out the window at a woman] Ohhhh, no bro, I saw the look in her eye! I saw the look in her eye, nigga! I saw it! I saw! I ain't lying!
MVRemix: Hmmm…

Phonte: Nah, sorry, I saw this girl… she was walking… and she looked at the van and kinda smiled and shit. Yeah, I see that look in her eye… she sees something she likes over here. I saw that shit.

MVRemix: [Laughs] Alright, interview, buddy!

Phonte: Oh yeah, well, I just saw, ya know. I saw that, that's all. Go ahead.
MVRemix: Alright. Commercial.

Phonte: Commercial? Uh… underrated! Hell, fuck it! [Laughs]

MVRemix: Okay. Joe Millionaire.

Phonte: Joe Millionaire? Dry as fuck! I mean, come on, man! That dude's personality? Come on, man! That nigga has the charisma of a fucking brick, man!
MVRemix: [Laughs] Yeah, I feel ya. Dumb as hell, man.

Phonte: You know who I really liked? That Melissa girl. She had a great smile, great personality. My God, that shit sucked. That shit sucked so bad.
MVRemix: Okay… Jennifer Lopez.
Phonte: Jennifer Lopez? Fat ass. Hell, what else is there? Don't sing! How about that? Stop singing! Stop singing, stop acting, just… yo… you know what I'm saying? Just be a goddamn booty dancer.

MVRemix: [Laughs] George Bush.

Phonte: George Bush? Oh my God… Uh… George Bush… Fuck, man. I don't know. Fuck up. Gonna lead this country into fucking ruins.

MVRemix: Michael Jackson.
Phonte: Michael Jackson? Aw, he's such a freak. Very talented, you know what I'm saying, a legend, but man, come on, yo… dude ain't right, man. Joe Jackson fucked that dude up. Joe Jackson really scarred Mike out there.

MVRemix: Yeah I feel ya.

Phonte: Joe got Mike shook out there in the game, that's all it is. You know it's the real deal when one nigga get beat and the whole house collapses!
MVRemix: Eminem.

Phonte: Eminem? He's a dope emcee. Dope.

MVRemix: Little Brother.

Phonte: Little Brother? Uh… disposable. We'll be gone in a year. One-hit wonders. Oh come on!

Phonte: I'm serious. I'm dead serious. You really think that? Why is that? I mean, with all the attention… and your album's not even out yet…
Phonte: In a year it's gonna be over, man. We already got it planned out. We already got our behind-the-music joint planned out. You know what I'm saying? In another year we're gonna quit due to creative differences. 9th is gonna go on to produce gospel plays, Big Pooh is gonna become a Mormon, and fucking, you know, I'm gonna direct pornographic films. That's basically the plan. Little Brother's gonna be over in a year tops. Enjoy The Listening cuz that's it. It's over. [laughs] You know I'm gonna see you blowing up in a year and I'll have words with you! Phonte: Yeah, yeah, you can talk to me about it. It's cool.

MVRemix: Can we expect any videos from you guys?

Phonte: Uh, I don't know. Honestly, we probably won't have any videos for this first record. I don't know, of course, that changes. As of right now, no. [Looking out the window again] Man, this nigga's out here practicing the trombone and shit… Hell no, this nigga's coming out here with a Virginia Tech sweatshirt on, playing the damn slide trombone. Man, you have got to be kidding me! [Laughs] Listen to this nigga, listen!

[Unimpressive trombone playing]

MVRemix: [Laughs] Who the hell is that?

Phonte: Just some student! He just straight made an entrance! Came outta nowhere!

MVRemix: Alright, last thing: anything you want to say to current or prospective fans out there?

Phonte: Anything I want to say to what? Current or prospective fans.

Phonte: Current or prospective what?

MVRemix: FANS! Anything you want to say to FANS!
Phonte: Anything I want to say to fans? Uh, thank you so much for supporting us, you know what I'm saying. We really appreciate it. Thanks for listening. Buy the album. If you got a copy of the album, buy another copy for the car. If you got a copy for the car, buy another copy for the bathroom. Got one for the car and bathroom, buy one for the living room. You know what I'm saying? Buy some copies, pass them out to some little kids, you know what I'm saying… on the street. Just keep supporting us. As long as you keep supporting us we'll keep making dope shit. Thanks a lot for the support, we really appreciate it. We feel blessed. Alright, and you know I'll be talking to you again next year!
Phonte: I'm telling you, in a year it's gonna be over! Like I said, 9th is gonna produce gospel plays. He's currently talking to Alexander O'Neil to star in a gospel play. And then, uh, Pooh, he's gonna do some charity work at the prison for the blind. And it's over. And I will go on to produce pornographic films! Like I said! And Little Brother will be done!

MVRemix: You gonna play hip-hop in your films?

Phonte: Yeah! The first one I'm starring in is gonna be Mighty Joe Hung. That's gonna be my first joint. Then Forest Hump, that's gonna be my second. Then it's gonna be a trilogy… the third one's just gonna be called The Firm. Just Firm. Firm. Yeah, nigga. That's what I'm gonna do. Then we're gonna do a throwback joint on DVD called Bone With The Wind. 'Oh yeah, Scarlet.. Smack my ass, Scarlet! Just tickle my balls right now, just tickle them with a feather.' [Laughs] Are you recording that all on tape, yo? Uh… do you want it to be? Phonte: You gonna sell it on E-Bay or something? Definitely. Infomercials and all. 900 numbers. Phonte: Yeah, no doubt.


© 2005 MVREMIX MEDIA

Brevemente Updates Por aki, OcupaÇoes nos levarao a deixar o blog sem Updates. Tamos ja no final do semestre academico, estaremos disponiveis de corpo e alma pra este blog e pela causa nos fez criar este blog de HIPHOP. MUSICATECA

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Somos 2 jovens estudantes nomeadamente(Primo SparazZa & Denny MOs). Somos amantes da cultura Hiphop nos seus varios Elementos, por isso e mais alguma coisa criamos este Espaco. Neste Espaco iremos postar: * Entrevistas no "Passando a Palavra" * Downloads de musica naciona & Estrageira * Agenda de Eventos Culturais " Onde Se Curte esta Semana" * Divulgacao de Singles de varios arstistas * E Outros

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