
Rap @ MindSay 
[Mc'M]
Une jetoj kuq e zi marr frym ship
shoh kuq e zi gjaku m'rrjedh shqip
jetoj ktu me fis me tradit e bajrak
me kanun e me ligj me fis e me gjak
[Groph Monte]
Ku dhe guri osht i amel ku dhe vendi ka fjal
dhe ku nihet pushka kur ke na ka lind djal
dhe ku shtrohet sofra fillon nxehet votra
ku dhe pika ma e dobt ne moral osht motra
[Chorus 2x: Lyrical Son]
Red n'black i dress eagle on my chest
It's good to be an ALBANIAN
Keep my head up high for that flag i die
Im proud to be an ALBANIAN
[Groph Monte]
Yo,yo,yo,yo kuq e zi me rrjedh gjaku neper vena
e ne çdo qelize gjall shpendi me dy krena
vend i bekum tona senet ktu i gjen
mos te folim vese edhe guri ketu vlen
vjetersina e gurina malet plot me barot
det e bregdet fusha te ujituna me lot
me fisnik e fise me lahuta e çifteli
me nje emer te madh te shenjt shqipni
[Chorus 2x: Lyrical Son]
Red n'black i dress eagle on my chest
It's good to be an ALBANIAN
Keep my head up high for that flag i die
Im proud to be an ALBANIAN
[Mc'M]
Une shoh kuq e zi ,jetoj vdes kuq e zi
marr fryme kuq e zi besoj kuq e zi
jetoj ku kanga jepet si kushtrim
si ne fushebetej si nje lindje e varrim
ku shqiponja ulet i ngul thonjt e ulet ne toke
ku fjala ka peshe qe nuk matet me "ok"
ku vijat e dores thojn njetin tregim
ku rrudhat ne ball flasin per mundim
[Groph Monte]
Flas kuq e zi ,godas kuq e zi
une degjoj kuq e zi ,shenoj kuq e zi
nji dashni me vlon per ket fis e ket far
pra zemra jeme Im proud to be Shqiptare
[Chorus 2x: Lyrical Son]
Red n'black i dress eagle on my chest
It's good to be an ALBANIAN
Keep my head up high for that flag i die
Im proud to be an ALBANIAN
The song is called "TickleeNancy" and it comes from a phrase my father always says when he talks about a good looking woman getting a lot of attention in the club.
Click here to listen to TickleeNancy
(Song name - Artist)
1. Doomsday of Rap - Hijack the Terrorist Group
2. Micheal Jackson - Fatboy Slim
3. Dirty Beatniks - Latinhead
4. Body Mechanic - Quadrant Six
5. Breakers Revenge 93 - Zeb-Rok-Ski
6. Doo Doo Brown - 2 Hyped Brothers and a Dog
7. Born to Get Down - Muscle Shoals Horns
8. Night of the Wolf - Al Foster Band
9. Electricity - Anon
10. Bongo Rock - Micheal Viner's Incredible Bongo Band
11. Me and Baby Brother - War
12. Soul Makossa - Manu Dibango
13. Rock on Ya'll - African Islam
14. Don't Stop the Rock - Freestyle
15. Play at Your Own Risk - Planet Patrol
16. Lords of Cardboard - DJ Format and King Aroe
17. Tango Hustle - The Kay Gees
18. No Parking on the Dancefloor - Midnight Star
19. Funky Nassau - The Beginning Of The End
20. Na Na Hey Hey (Kiss Him Goodbye) - Steam
This is the link:
http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?omgtjrxzjso
It's about 45 minutes long, so it's the perfect thing to listen to on, say, your drive to work. It's also pretty Break-dancey so it could be used for your next session. Whatever the case, enjoy and spread the love.
Fun facts? Not too many with this one. There isn't much tying these tracks together save that most sounded good when played one after the other.
I can think of only a few points:
"Doomsday of Rap" Samples "Apache", but so much rap samples "Apache" it's hardly worth mentioning.
"Na Na Hey Hey"was performed by Steam, but when the song was recorded the band didn't actually exist yet. Steam was the name that they eventually used, but the original recording was released under the pseudonym Steam, which at the time was just a filler name.
Next up? Maybe more disco, maybe more Hip Hop, maybe more Jungle. You'll just have to wait and see!
-Killerjunglist
This was the first successful mix I ever made using software instead of turntables, so it may sound a little haphazard. Well, it sounds that way to me, but this one is a perennial favorite amongst my friends, so maybe I'm just being to critical on myself.
Description: Well, it's a mix of mostly old skool Hip-Hop with a few other little extras thrown in. I basically just took anything that sounded good and put it all together, so it's a little experimental. Honestly, I think pretty much all my stuff is experimental, but some more than others. Experimentally speaking, on a scale of 1 to 10, this one rates about a 4.
Enough about experiments! Here is what you came here to find out about!
Title: HipHop+
Music that goes for approximately one hour
Located here: http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?bnmdnw2vzzt
Using the following tracks:
- Hip-Hop Junkies - Nice and Smooth
- Insane In The Brain - Cypress Hill
- Don't Sweat The Technique - Eric B. and Rakim
- Express Yourself - NWA
- Mr.Big Stuff - Heavy D & The Boyz
- Me And The Biz - Master Ace
- Hey Ladies - Beastie Boys
- 911 Is A Joke - Public Enemy
- Throw Ya Gunz - Onyx
- Real Hip Hop - Das EFX
- Bedtime Story - Slick Rick
- We Know Something - DJ Format
- Droppin' Science - Marley Marl feat. Craig G.
- It's My Beat - Sweet Tee
- What I Got - Sublime
- Streets Of New York - Kool G Rap & DJ Polo
- Sound of Da Police - KRS1
- Subculture - Styles of Beyond
- Explosive! - Diverse
- Straight out the Jungle - Jungle Brothers
- They Want FX - Das EFX
- Mistadobalina - Del the Funky Homosapien
- Serious (remix) - Steady B
- Punks Jump Up to get Beat Down - Brand Nubian
- Here We Go Again - Poor Righteous Teachers
- Funky Child - Lords of the Underground
- Knight Rider - Punjabi MC
- Bill Cosby Gangsta Rap - Studged
"Express Yourself" uses a sample from the James Brown song of the same name. "Mr. Big Stuff" uses samples from the song of the same name by Jean Knight. If you haven't noticed, I used a lot of tracks that used samples.
But to reverse that pattern for a moment, "It's My Beat" by Sweet Tea was subsequently sampled for the JS16 track "Stomp to My Beat". In fact, all the lyrics for the JS16 song are taken directly from "It's my Beat" and simply Sped up and pitched down.
Das EFX shows up twice mostly because for me, when I think of kick ass old skool, Das EFX is probably the first group that comes to mind. "They Want FX" is one of my all time favorite hip hop tracks.
"Explosive!" is almost a crossover track between pure Breakbeats and Hip Hop. Diverse is from Chicago so they have a special place in my heart.
Lords of the Underground were a pretty revolutionary Hip Hop group for their time (early 90's). The style of both lyrics and music that they used became more popular around 2000. The music video for this track is pretty hilarious too, plus it shows that the Lords of the Underground didn't take themselves too seriously.
Punjabi MC is an Indian MC that has some pretty cool tracks. He isn't really Bhangra, although he definatly takes many cues from it. This track in particular is a cover from the Busta Rhymes track "Fire it Up", which in turn is uses a sample from teh 80's TV show. So it's a cover of a cover of a sample.
"Bill Cosby Gangster" Rap by Studged was featured on You're the Man Now, Dog! for quite some time. Hilariously, it does not contain one real sample of Bill Cosby's voice, only impressions of him from the TV shows "The Simpsons" and "Family Guy". the music is from Dr. Dre's "What's the Difference Between Me and You?"
Hope you like it... next up is a little 70's ditty that I threw together. It's got some great disco and funk, so get those platform shoes ready, sucka!
-Killerjunglist
Economist Nouriel Roubini has been right the whole way along, and he's been too "pessimistic" for most. The recent stock market rally has me more worried than I was before. In the words of Jay-Z ("U Don't Know," The Blueprint):
So it goes -- the black market for drugs is more stable than the stock markets nowadays. And the media narrative will continue to be that the world economy has been "saved."
I'm from the streets where the
hood could swallow a man, bullets'll follow a man
There's so much coke that you could run the slalom
And cops comb the shit top to bottom
They say that we are prone to violence, but it's home sweet home
Where personalities crash and chrome meets chrome
The coke prices up and down like it's Wall Street homes
But this is worse than the Dow Jones your brains are now blown
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