Okay, just checked it out. Real nice. Gotta respect a good concept album when they pull it off, and this one does. The skits are funny and relevant. Solid beats and production, and the lyricism is definitely on point. One little thing is that he falls into that really fast, choppy flow, which I don't always love as much as other peeps do-- I think he benefits from tracks that feature another MC, which breaks that up a little bit. Overall, very strong album. Good call!
And while we're on the topic, I got one for you. Have you listened to The Auditorium by Common and Pete Rock?
- John Elway“When we do find that guy, we’ve got to have the continuity on the offensive side to where we can train him and develop him and get him there. This is our fourth offense in probably three or four years. Quarterbacks need to be developed. You don’t find one ready-made. We got to have a solid system in place for when we do go after whatever guy it may be, a young guy or a trade or whatnot.”
- John Elway“When we do find that guy, we’ve got to have the continuity on the offensive side to where we can train him and develop him and get him there. This is our fourth offense in probably three or four years. Quarterbacks need to be developed. You don’t find one ready-made. We got to have a solid system in place for when we do go after whatever guy it may be, a young guy or a trade or whatnot.”
I am working on an album of originals, quite an undertaking and learning a lot. Long ways to go. Here's a playlist of a sort of album-specific inspiration. It's going to be about 8 songs but each has a different genre, maybe more than one in a song. Music is hard but I love it so much. My best effort will probably be a laughingstock, but I can't help myself.
Here's spotify playlist of vibe:
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3X...7c708dea444201
Here's where my lame ass art is about a month ago. I'm focusing on one song now and really growing at a fast clip. Wish I had done this in my twenties or earlier.
https://soundcloud.com/leon-travis-3.../album-project
Cheers not an advert just sharing, I don't actually care, the stuff speaks for itself and right now it's shite but I believe.
Originally Posted by Sting
Been listening to a lot of J.J. Cale and Leon Russell lately. I didn't know they were both from Tulsa and headed out to L.A. after high school, for J.J. Cale after a stint in the USAF. Cale was a '57 Tulsa Central grad and Russell a '60 Will Rogers High grad. I wonder if Abe already knew this.
Both are unsung heroes of rock music. J.J. Cale gave Clapton a boost on Clapton's solo debut album with his biggest hit, "After Midnight," which coincidentally featured Leon Russell on keys. Later, Clapton used Cale's song "Cocaine." Some folks know Lynyrd Skynryd covered Cale's "Call Me the Breeze." Leon Russell, a wrecking crew OG, was called a "mentor" by Elton John, who campaigned to have Russell inducted into the Rock and Roll HoF (finally, in 2011). J.J. Cale was never inducted in the HoF, which might be fitting, given that he turned down the invitation to be on Dick Clark's American Bandstand when his star was rising after his first album--Cale didn't want to lip-sync and couldn't bring a live band.
Originally Posted by Sting
I've become obsessed with the band Failure over the past year. Missed out on 'em in the 90's. This may be their best, and with a brilliant triple-entendre. The song could be about bad ear-worm music, or a really mediocre relationship, or (probably IMO) drug addiction
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXvthgkZ2yQ
Rick Beato does a great breakdown of the song as well
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tIMqq8qi2w
“What fresh hell is this?”
"A man who picks a cat up by the tail learns something which he can learn in no other way." - Mark Twain
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