July 30, 2008

Puffy Amiyumi

Look at my PUFFY, all grown up and sexy-like. Perhaps they'll never regain their girlish charm, but they're a lot more mature and sexy sounding on this album. It's a fair trade off- I don't want the police catching me, so I guess I've got to like some legal girls, eh?
The album's great, stand out tracks being the singles Boom Boom Beat and Kuchibiru Motion.

www.megaupload.com/?d=HRQRLXVB

July 23, 2008

Thin Lizzy

Tonight there's gonna be a jailbreak
Somewhere in the town

Tonight there's gonna be a jailbreak

So don't you be around


Thin Lizzy are a totally fucking awesome hard rock band from Ireland. Their lead singer, Phil Lynott, was a rad dude but he was just too rad. In fact, he was so rad that he died. In Dublin they remember him as the raddest black dude ever to be Irish and built a statue of him and everything. Everyone agrees that the statue is hella rad.

This album is a selection of live recording made for the BBC, and were originally aired by John Peel. John Peel was also so rad that he died of over-radness. All of these songs are hella rad, especially Emerald, Bad Reputation and Vagabonds Of The Western World.


Maybe if you download this and listen to it you might be able to learn some pointers on how to some day be as rad as Thin Lizzy.




Artist: Thin Lizzy
Album: The Peel Sessions
Genre:
Hard Rock, Heavy Metal

Track Listing:

1. "Whiskey in the Jar"
2. "Rosalie"
3. "Suicide"
4. "Emerald"
5. "Cowboy Song"
6. "Jailbreak"
7. "Don't Believe a Word"
8. "Little Darling"
9. "Still in Love With You"
10. "Vagabonds of the Western World"
11. "Little Girl in Bloom"
12. "Killer Without a Cause"
13. "Bad Reputation"
14. "That Woman's Gonna Break Your Heart"
15. "Dancing in the Moonlight"


Download

July 15, 2008

The Protomen

Apparently their songs are about Megaman, which is fucking retarded. Also I listened to some songs on MySpace and hated them, but whatevs.

(I think Herr Kaiser Matthelm will shit himself if I don't post this already. You owe me five blowjobs, HKM.)



July 13, 2008

Bob Marley & The Wailers

Good friends we have, oh, good friends we've lost
Along the way.

In this great future, you can't forget your past;

So dry your tears, I say.

The classic Marley album, the one that any fair-weather reggae fan owns, Legend contains 14 of his greatest songs, running the gamut from "I Shot the Sheriff" to the meditative "Redemption Song" and the irrepressible "Three Little Birds." Some may argue that the compilation shortchanges his groundbreaking early ska work or his status as a political commentator, but this isn't meant to be definitive, it's meant to be an introduction, sampling the very best of his work. And it does that remarkably well, offering all of his genre-defying greats and an illustration of his excellence, warmth, and humanity. In a way, it is perfect since it gives a doubter or casual fan anything they could want. Let's face it, the beauty and simplicity of Marley's music was as important as his message, and that's captured particularly well here.
--Review courtesy of AllMusic.com

More essentials. This is a great introduction to one of the greatest artists of all time, the legendary Bob Marley. Every song is a classic, every song is beautiful. I urge everyone to buy this CD, you can't have a music collection without it.




Artist: Bob Marley & The Wailers
Album: Legend (Greatest Hits)
Genre: Reggae

Track Listing:
1. "Is This Love" – 3:52
2. "No Woman, No Cry" – 7:07
3. "Could You Be Loved" – 3:55
4. "Three Little Birds" – 3:00
5. "Buffalo Soldier" – 4:17
6. "Get Up, Stand Up" – 3:16
7. "Stir It Up" – 5:33
8. "One Love/People Get Ready" – 2:51
9. "I Shot the Sheriff" – 4:41
10. "Waiting in Vain" – 4:15
11. "Redemption Song" – 3:49
12. "Satisfy My Soul" – 4:32
13. "Exodus" – 7:36
14. "Jamming" – 3:31

Download

July 11, 2008

A Tribe Called Quest

If you can't envision a brother who ain't dissin',
Slingin' this and that, 'cause this and that was missin'.
Instead, it's been injected, the Tribe has been perfected.
Oh yes, it's been selected, the art makes it protected.

One year after De la Soul re-drew the map for alternative rap, fellow Native Tongues brothers A Tribe Called Quest released their debut, the quiet beginning of a revolution in non-commercial hip-hop. People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm floated a few familiar hooks, but it wasn't a sampladelic record. Rappers Q-Tip and Phife Dawg dropped a few clunky rhymes, but their lyrics were packed with ideas, while their flow and interplay were among the most original in hip-hop. From the beginning, Tribe focused on intelligent message tracks but rarely sounded over-serious about them. With "Pubic Enemy," they put a humorous spin on the touchy subject of venereal disease (including a special award for the most inventive use of the classic "scratchin'" sample), and moved right into a love rap, "Bonita Applebum," which alternated a sitar sample with the type of jazzy keys often heard on later Tribe tracks. "Description of a Fool" took to task those with violent tendencies, while "Youthful Expression" spoke wisely of the power yet growing responsibility of teenagers. Next to important message tracks with great productions, A Tribe Called Quest could also be deliciously playful (or frustratingly unserious, depending on your opinion). "I Left My Wallet in El Segundo" describes a vacation gone hilariously wrong, while "Ham 'n' Eggs" may be the oddest topic for a rap track ever heard up to that point ("I don't eat no ham and eggs, cuz they're high in cholesterol"). Contrary to the message in the track titles, the opener "Push It Along" and "Rhythm (Dedicated to the Art of Moving Butts)" were fusions of atmospheric samples with tough beats, special attention being paid to a pair of later Tribe sample favorites, jazz guitar and '70s fusion synth. Restless and ceaselessly imaginative, Tribe perhaps experimented too much on their debut, but they succeeded at much of it, certainly enough to show much promise as a new decade dawned.
--Review courtesy of AllMusic.com

Some essential hip hop for you today. This, along with
Nation Of Millions and Licensed To Ill, is a masterpiece and a record you need to listen to before you pass judgement on the genre. If one more person says 'can't spell crap without rap lol!' I might just have to cut a bitch.

Go ye and listen.




Artist: A Tribe Called Quest
Album: People's Instinctive Travels And The Paths Of Rhythm
Genre: Hip-Hop, Alternative Hip-Hop
MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/atribecalledquest

Track Listing:
1. "Push It Along" – 7:42
2. "Luck of Lucien" (featuring Lucien Revolucien) – 4:32
3. "After Hours" – 4:39
4. "Footprints" – 4:00
5. "I Left My Wallet in El Segundo" – 4:06
6. "Pubic Enemy" (featuring DJ Red Alert) – 3:45
7. "Bonita Applebum" – 3:50
8. "Can I Kick It?" – 4:11
9. "Youthful Expression" – 4:52
10. "Rhythm (Devoted to the Art of Moving Butts)" – 4:01
11. "Mr. Muhammad" – 3:33
12. "Ham 'n' Eggs" – 5:27
13. "Go Ahead in the Rain" – 3:54
14. "Description of a Fool" – 5:41

Download

Apologies for the rapidshare, megaupload has been giving me shit lately.