Igazi szupersztárt igazolt a Sziget: Billie Eilish is fellép a fesztiválon
Igazi szupersztárt igazolt a Sziget: Billie Eilish is fellép a fesztiválon - https://metalindex.hu/2022/12/01/igazi-szupersztart-igazolt-a-sziget-billie-eilish-is-fellep-a-fesztivalon/ -
Majd’ három tucat 2023-as fellépő nevét dobták be ízelítőként a Sziget Fesztivál szervezői a köztudatba, de már a lista eleje nagyot durran: korunk egyik legnagyobb sztárja, az Oscar-, Golden Globe- és sokszoros Grammy-díjas Billie Eilish lép fel jövőre a fesztivál Nagyszínpadán – olvasható a közleményben.
Csütörtökön délelőtt bejelentették a Sziget Fesztivál szervezői a 2023-as rendezvény első fellépőinek sorát. Az előadók között olyan nevek szerepelnek, mint az Oscar-, Golden Globe- és sokszoros Grammy-díjas Billie Eilish, de érkezik az Imagine Dragons és David Guetta is.
“Amikor felmerült a lehetősége, hogy Billie Eilisht meg tudjuk hívni a jövő évi fesztiválra, olyan döntést kellett hoznunk, amit nagyon ritkán teszünk meg: egy nappal eltoltuk a Szigetet, és most örömmel mondhatjuk, hogy az utóbbi évek talán legnagyobb sztárja a Sziget Nagyszínpadán lép fel 2023-ban” – jelentette be Kádár Tamás fő szervező Billie Eilish fellépését és egyben azt, hogy a jövő évi fesztivál augusztus 10-én, csütörtökön kezdődik és 15-ig tart majd.
A szervezők közleménye szerint a most bejelentett nevek közül persze a Magyarországon először látható Billie-n túl is van mit szemezni. Vannak, akik már korábban hatalmas koncertet adtak a Szigeten. Így például a friss dalokkal visszatérő David Guetta, a Florence + the Machine, miután megjelentette a kritikusok által is elismert Dance Fever című albumát, és szintén idén rukkolt elő új anyaggal az oxfordi legenda, a Foals.
Rengeteg új zenével érkezik az Imagine Dragons és sokak örömére pótolja a tavaly betegség miatt lemondott első hazai fellépését Sam Fender. A Szigetet is érinti majd a One Direction zenekar feloszlása után szólókarrierbe kezdett énekes, Niall Horan első fesztiválturnéja. Az elektronikus szcéna aktuális sztárjai közül a Szigetre várjuk a Major Lazert (is) alapító Diplot, vagy itt lesz Jamie xx, de érkezik majd a német elektronikus zene ikonikus alakja, Sven Väth is. És bizonyára felfigyel majd a Sziget közönsége, mint ahogy felfigyelt rá a hiphop-R&B szcéna kanadai szupersztárja, Drake is, a szváziföldi származású Uncle Wafflesre, aki a szupertrendi, Dél-Afrikából induló, de már az európai klubokban hódító Amapiano egyik feltörekvő csillaga.
A nevek láttán tehát már most erősen kirajzolódik a Sziget zenei arculata, mint mindig: aktuális sztárok, nagy közönségkedvencek és feltörekvő, izgalmas előadók, a műfaji sokszínűség jegyében.
Íme felsorolva a most napvilágot látott első körös lista:
Billie Eilish, David Guetta, Florence + the Machine, Imagine Dragons, Sam Fender, Niall Horan, YUNGBLUD, Foals, Diplo, Jamie xx, M83, Moderat, Sven Väth, Mimi Webb, Nothing But Thieves, Two Feet, Viagra Boys, Amyl And The Sniffers, 070 Shake, TV Girl, Dixon, Uncle Waffles, Frank Carter & The Rattlesnakes, Baby Queen, The Comet Is Coming, Easy Life, Youngr, Los Bitchos, Destroy Boys, Kelly Lee Owens (DJ set), Mall Grab, Partiboi69, Parra For Cuva, Jungle By Night, yuné pinku (DJ set) és Hannah Grae.
A Igazi szupersztárt igazolt a Sziget: Billie Eilish is fellép a fesztiválon bejegyzés először a On Stage jelent meg.
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Top Albums of 2020
1. After Hours - The Weeknd (Favorite Track: After Hours)
2. grae - Moses Sumney (Favorite Track: Me In 20 Years)
3. RTJ4 - Run The Jewels (Favorite Track: Walking In The Snow)
4. Descendants of Cain - Ka (Favorite Track: Sins Of The Father)
5. Black Habits - D Smoke (Favorite Track: Seasons Pass)
6. Untitled (Rise) - Sault (Favorite Track: Free)
7. Circles - Mac Miller (Favorite Track: Everybody)
8. Ordinary Man - Ozzy Osbourne (Favorite Track: All My Life)
9. Lianne La Havas - Lianne La Havas (Favorite Track: Bittersweet)
10. Andy - Raleigh Ritchie (Favorite Track: Aristocrats)
11. Heaven To A Tortured Mind - Yves Tumor (Favorite Track: Kerosene!)
12. Untitled (Black Is) - Sault (Favorite Track: Eternal Life)
13. BETTER - Deante’ Hitchcock (Favorite Track: I Remember)
14. Spilligion - Spillage Village (Favorite Track: Baptize)
15. A Written Testimony - Jay Electronica (Favorite Track: A.P.I.D.T.A)
16. The Slow Rush - Tame Impala (Favorite Track: Borderline)
17. Starting Over - Chris Stapleton (Favorite Track: Cold)
18. Hey u x - BENEE (Favorite Track: Happen To Me)
19. Mordechai - Khruangbin (Favorite Track: Pelota)
20. Sin Miedo (del Amor y Otros Demonios) ∞ - Kali Uchis (Favorite Track: Fue Mejor)
21. Ohms - Deftones (Favorite Track: The Spell Of Mathematics)
22. Anime, Trauma & Divorce - Open Mike Eagle (Favorite Track: Death Parade)
23. 3.15.20 - Childish Gambino (Favorite Track: 53.49)
24. From King To A GOD - Conway The Machine (Favorite Track: Juvenile Hell)
25. New Beginnings - REASON (Favorite Track: Stories I Forget)
26. The New Abnormal - The Strokes (Favorite Track: At The Door)
27. Alfredo - Freddie Gibbs & The Alchemist (Favorite Track: Frank Lucas)
28. Limbo - Aminé (Favorite Track: My Reality)
29. Modern Dread - Denai Moore (Favorite Track: Motherless Child)
30. Sawayama - Rina Sawayama (Favorite Track: XS)
Honorable Mention:
I Disagree - Poppy, Modus Vivendi - 070 Shake, Heaven Or Hell - Don Toliver, In Another Life - Active Child, Underneath - Code Orange, Cape God - Allie X, how i’m feeling now - Charli XCX, BRAT - NNAMDI, Innocent Country 2 - Quelle Chris, It Was Divine - Alina Baraz, Good To Know - Jojo, Superstar - Caroline Rose, We Were Sent Here By History - Shabaka and the Ancestors, Set My Heart On Fire Immediately - Perfume Genius, Petals For Armor - Hayley Williams, Consummation - Katie Von Schleicher, Ungodly Hour - Chloe x Halle, Love, Death & Dancing - Jack Garratt, A Muse In Her Feelings - dvsn, It Was Good Until It Wasn’t - Kehlani, Punisher - Phoebe Bridgers, Women In Music Pt. III - Haim, WILL THIS MAKE ME GOOD - Nick Hakim, It Is What It Is - Thundercat, Odd Cure - Oddisee, New Me, Same Us - Little Dragon, No Pressure - Logic, folklore - Taylor Swift, Eddie - Busty and the Bass, SuperGood - DUCKWRTH, Cool Tapes Vol 3 - Jaden, Celia - Tiwa Savage, Renaissance Boy - Galimatias, ENERGY - Disclosure, The Ascension - Sufjan Stevens, Aguita - Gabriel Garzon-Montano, ANNIVERSARY - Bryson Tiller, Fake It Flowers - beabadoobee, Burden Of Proof - Benny The Butcher, As Long As You Are - Future Islands, Man Alive! - King Krule, Detroit 2 - Big Sean, Nectar - Joji, ELE 2: The Wrath Of God - Busta Rhymes, Chip Chrome & The Mono-Tones - The Neighbourhood, Wake Up! - Hazel English, Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez - Gorillaz, Shabrang - Sevdaliza, Ultra Mono - IDLES, Future Nostalgia - Dua Lipa, Man On The Moon III: The Chosen - Kid Cudi, Three Mile Ditch - The Wytches, That’s What They All Say - Jack Harlow, Hiding - Michael Christmas, CINCORIGINALS - Tobe Nwigwe
Notable EPs/Mixtapes:
The Circus - Mick Jenkins, OTHER WAYS TO VENT - iyla, Unlocked - Denzel Curry & Kenny Beats, Meet The Woo 2 - Pop Smoke, Take Time - Giveon, Lulu - Conway The Machine & The Alchemist, GANG - Headie One & Fred Again, Dark Lane Demo Tapes - Drake, She Already Decided - Smino, 6pc Hot EP - 6LACK, Sis. - KIRBY, Dinner Party - Terrace Martin, Robert Glasper, 9th Wonder & Kamasi Washington, Lewis Street - J.Cole, The Light Pack - Joey Bada$$, V TAPE - Vic Mensa, Floor Seats II - A$AP Ferg, Self:Care EP - Lil Røcket, When It’s All Said And Done - Giveon, Before - James Blake, ALIAS - Shygirl, QUARANTINE PACK EP - Meek Mill, Hues - Fana Hues, EP! - JPEGMAFIA, I can’t go outside - Channel Tres
Good/Great Songs on Decent or Bad Albums:
“Today” by Mura Masa x Tirzah
“Whiplash” by Theophilus London
“Affluenza” by Conan Grey
“Darkness” by Eminem
“Mahogany” by Lil Wayne
“Out Of The Blue” by Katie Pruitt
“Bit Of Rain” by Empress Of
“That’s What Love Is” by Justin Bieber
“New Gods” by Grimes
“Wash & Sets” by Princess Nokia
“Practice” by Princess Nokia
“Prices” by Lil Uzi Vert
“Yessirskiii” by Lil Uzi Vert x 21 Savage
“One Way St.” by Jhene Aiko x Ab Soul
“Fried For The Night” by Tokimonsta x Earthgang
“I Lied” by Joyner Lucas
“The News” by PARTYNEXTDOOR
“itkanbe[sonice]” by Knxwledge x Anderson .Paak
“I like the devil” by Purity Ring
“Speaking Of The End” by Lapsey
“George Bondo” by Westside Gunn x Conway The Machine x Benny The Butcher
“Figures” by Jessie Reyez
“CAN’T STOP” by DaBaby
“Chattin Shit” by Kari Faux
“Snitchin” by Pop Smoke x Quavo x Future
“Nu World Burdens” by KeiyaA
“Life Is Good” by Future x Drake
“Things Change” by Asher Roth
“T.D.” by Lil Yachty x A$AP Rocky x Tyler, The Creator x Tierra Whack
“This Is What They Say” by Carly Rae Jepsen
“If You’re Too Shy (Let Me Know)” by The 1975
“Rubber Sky” by LA Priest
“Toxic Eye” by Choir Boy
“Let Us Rave” by Naeem x Velvet Negroni
“Babylon” by Lady Gaga
“Ooh Laa” by John Legend
“Still” by Teyana Taylor
“Free Porn Cheap Drugs” by G-Eazy
“The Sun” by KYLE x Bryson Tiller x Raphael Saadiq
“Borderline” by Brandy
“Karma” by Kaash Paige
“Love Never Dies” by Kiesza
“Deep End” by Lecrae
“Double Negative (Skeleton Milkshake)” by Dominic Fike
“When Dreams Run Dry” by The Killers
“Blue Benz” by Nas
“ZZZ’s” by B.o.B.
“Latin Grammys” by Action Bronson
“Jealous” by YG
“Runnin” by 21 Savage & Metro Boomin
“Ishkabibble’s” by Westside Gunn x Black Thought
“Run & Hide” by Jay Electronica x The Bullitts
“Chemicals” by The Vamps
“Diagnosis” by Alanis Morissette
“BLQLYTE” by Zeroh
“Deep Down” by Sen Morimoto x AAAMYYY
“Like A River” by Joyner Lucas x Elijah James
“The Moment” by THEY.
“WOODGRAIN” by Asha Imuno
“Vampire” by 2 Chainz
“Circles” by Megan Thee Stallion
“Track 6″ by Ty Dolla $ign x Kanye West x Thundercat
“Shut Up” by Ariana Grande
“Let It Out” by Rico Nasty
“Everybody’s Mother” by Kacy Hill
“Paranoia” by Shamir
“Fallin” by Common
“1993″ by Oliver Tree x Little Ricky ZR3
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***The Top 10 Rap Albums/Projects of 2019*** are...
At the end of the decade, the rap music genre finds itself with a more splintered and diverse fanbase than ever before. What did that mean for 2019? A push towards different styles which was balanced out by a strong grassroots revival of jazzy, soul-inspired sounds that echoed back to the heyday of the mid-to-late 90′s underground hip-hop scene.
In 2019, the lanes that travel more closely to what most would consider “mainstream” rap, struggled to find new inspiration without as much artistic direction to act as a template. This created a bit of a hole for some, as the absence of new material from Kendrick Lamar or Isaiah Rashad, or the disappointing reception to highly anticipated releases from the likes of Chance The Rapper, Schoolboy Q or Kanye West, left the gate open just wide enough to allow more Young Thug disciples, more aspiring Futures, and more cookie cutter “want to be the next Drakes” to flood your streaming platform.
But let us be clear: 2019 was still a great year for rap music because the underground feasted. Scroll further, and you will see that point made by my list of the best rap projects released in 2019 (and in some cases, releases that are amongst the decades best). I used the following criteria for this year’s list:
- the album/mixtape/EP/project/WHATEVER you want to call it had to be released by Dec. 20th, 2019 (arguably still way too soon to craft a well-informed review of an artists’ project)
- the project must have at least 6 songs (arguably still too small of a sample size to compare to lengthier projects)
- these rankings are a *combination* of my own personal preference, overall quality, and how the final product compares to other work from the artists’ peers that occupy the same lane/”sub-genre” of rap music
Regardless of how you feel about this list, I hope that you visit (or re-visit) any one of these pieces of strong work and find the same level of enjoyment that I did. I loved so much rap music this year and I could not be more excited about what the future holds. On a personal note, in 2019 I found myself even more in love with my wife, feeling luckier than I have in a long time, more satisfied with my hobbies and passions, and above all else, more in awe of my child (and anyone that ever raised a child) than ever before. I became a father for the first time in 2019, so as my baby daughter continues to fill my heart, I am beginning to wonder what she will think of her father’s love for this art form that has brought him so much joy over the years...I suppose time will tell.
Salute to these artists below and so many, many others. 🙏🙏🙏
Much love to all,
Jason, THE Rap Pundit
10. It Wasn’t Even Close - Your Old Droog
Your Old Droog is a unique, stand alone artist - I want to make that larger point perfectly clear - but after I finished listening to Droog’s trio of terrific projects in 2019, and sat down to right this blurb, on It Wasn’t Even Close, I thought of three people (and not the one you think I’m going to say!): Royce Da 5′9″, MF DOOM, and Joe Pesci in Goodfellas.
I thought of Royce because more than any other artists, I think Royce and Droog both get dismissed as “punchline rappers” because of their punchline-heavy rhyme styles, but both make incredibly personal, perspective-driven music (not their fault you’re not listening closely enough). I also thought of DOOM because YOD is able to create an insular rap world with his projects that incorporate fantastic production ranging from off-the-wall to bleak as hell, paired with hard rhymes that can be both dope af and laugh out loud funny - but without the gunplay and drug dealer talk. And why Pesci?? Because it’s not always clear when Droog is going to come off with a well crafted joke, or a painful reveal of the dark thoughts behind the man...but that is what makes him such a compelling MC.
Of his three 2019 albums (Jewelry is not being acknowledged here because in the holiday shuffle I haven’t had any time to sit with it yet, but I like what I have heard thus far), the transportation themed and appropriately titled Transportation might show the most range as a song-maker, but it’s the relentless thump of It Wasn’t Even Close that lands a top 10 spot on my list. His recent work with Mach-Hommy seems to foster a free-wielding spirit in Droog, from surprise project releases to unpredictable themes. The bars come in great abundance throughout IWEC, and most of the finest moments from Droog come when he his dropping brilliant one-liners over production that does indeed point to the world being about to end (perhaps all too appropriate for the bizarre news feed that was 2019).
Your Old Droog has too much to say, too many thoughts to simply dumb down his lyrical content to create a focused song that just addresses one singular idea, so he makes the right choice on It Wasn’t Even Close to touch on as many of his manic thoughts as possible. Droog is like a great stand-up comedian that knows his audience and will do whatever he wants with his material because he knows that is one of the things that keeps his audience coming back, but within each joke is a revealing kernel of truth that should be taken seriously. Because whether you see it on stage or not, working stand-up comedians often dedicate themselves to comedy because there is no other way to harness all of the fast moving, often dark and uncomfortable thoughts in their head. I can’t say if that’s the case with Your Old Droog, but he is certainly an artist that raps with the sense of humor - and unexpectedly deep thinking - of a great stand-up.
9. Guns - Quelle Chris
Circling back to my comment about 2019′s depressing news cycle in the above Your Old Droog post (can’t be a coincidence, given that Quelle, Droog and Hommy are all frequent collaborators), can you think of a more to-the-point and overdue rap album title for this moment in America’s history than Guns?
Quelle Chris can stake a claim as having one of the greatest under-appreciated catalogues in rap history. The gifted rapper and producer has blessed us with many great projects over the years, and he tends to excel at making a point without sacrificing the enjoyment factor of his music. Much like last year’s Everything’s Fine (his brilliant collaboration with fellow dope artist and wife Jean Grae), it’s his use of satire on Guns that prevents the project from dipping a toe too deeply into the gloom of the subject matter. Guns is a wonderfully scored portrait of how the United States’ connection to violence fosters increasingly more violence, and the symbiotic relationship between violence and the tools that wield it. Quelle is not a gangsta rapper, and he does not support violence, but as a black man in this country and a rapper, he is pulled into a wide set of false assumptions. An artist like Quelle doesn’t avoid false assumptions or challenging subjects, he tackles them with a great deal of thought and care. Sure, Guns has some light-hearted moments, but at the rate that people are being shot and killed by guns in this country (especially the rate of black men and women, as wells as members of other minority groups), a successful satire is often one that leaves the audience sitting in reflective silence rather than uproarious laughter.
8. Hitler Wears Hermes 7 [HWH7] - Westside Gunn
2019 was such a triumph for Griselda Records’ journey of doubling down on their sound rather than adapting, and reaching even higher profile success by doing so. While providing less controversial cover art on the 7th installment of his Hitler Wears Hermes series may be seen as a bit of a (increasingly necessary) compromise, the collective continues to sustain a steadily growing fanbase by keeping their music honest and gritty.
While not as grounded in the traditional as Westside Gunn’s FLYGOD, HWH7 provides a highly satisfying glimpse into the world of Griselda's impresario, the best example since Supreme Blientele. That means an indulgent dose of dusty soul samples, fashion trends, wrestling references, impeccable guest verses, and a general sense of fun-loving mayhem that could only be characterized by a representative of a shining underdog of a city with a scrappy chip on its' shoulder like Buffalo. Anyone that knows Buffalo New York knows that it's a city as filled with love as it is cold during frequently brutal winters. That's the type of town needed to shape a raw diamond like Gunn, who is as unpredictable with his rap cadence as he is respectful of the great MCs around him.
Westside Gunn and the whole Griselda gang provide a vibe that brings the best out of even the most experienced rap veterans (for example, I haven’t heard Fat Joe rap this well in years). Whatever their secret recipe for success has been (besides a relentless hustle and fresh talent), Hitler Wears Hermes 7 is another great example of how the collective’s energy is so contagious that established artists are eager to fall in line with their vision, Griselda doesn’t adapt to their guests. And can we finally end this ridiculous notion that Westside Gunn isn’t a dope MC in his own right? Don’t let the sharp rhyme skills of Conway and Benny distract from the fact that Gunn brings a real outside the box approach to how he attacks a beat, he’s as fly with his word choice as his fashion rep.
7. Eve - Rapsody
Rapsody is a great rapper.
Not a great “female MC”, not a “good for a woman” rapper...so knock off that bullshit right now, it’s 2019 people (well, technically 2020 - but I meant to finish this whole post before the ball dropped, but I dropped the ball). :-/
Rapsody has been an underground darling for so long that I am not sure if you can technically refer to her as underground hip-hop artist anymore? Check the discography and you will see that the North Carolinian has quite an impressive list of good projects to her name - all of which helped build the revere that her peers feel towards her when they say her name. While she did not ask for cult status, she certainly inherited cult status as the MC that snippy underground heads like to point to whenever they feel like Nicki Minaj or Cardi B are receiving too much too soon. Of course this sentiment is completely unwarranted - and almost always driven by angst against a fanbase rather than the more famous artist his/herself - but it doesn’t stop the conversation from coming up again and again...so why doesn’t Rapsody have more mainstream success? Should she be mentioned in more conversations as one of the best rappers in the game? And should she be receiving more credit as a woman in a male-dominated genre of music that managed to build a fanbase without pumping more graphic sexuality into her music, or showing off her body?
Well, all the answers to these questions snake up to the same problem, because apart from gender, Rapsody, Nicki, Cardi, and Megan The Stallion all share something else in common: they’re all just trying to get their piece of the pie in a sexist industry (more like society - but that’s a much larger convo) and it’s 100% not their fault. Please try to understand that Rapsody is going to do what she does on a record, and Nicki will do the same, and to expect either artist to do the same type of record is as absurd as expecting Conway The Machine to make a Drake album. Whatever your gender identity may be, you are entitled to craft your sound to be as mainstream or underground as you want it to be, just do you.
So in a way, it would make sense that Rapsody would drop the best album of her career in a year where the mainstream rap scene was shallow, mostly unremarkable, and full of holes. I’m not at all saying that that’s the reason why she received more press off of Eve than on most of her previous works, but in a rare twist, industry trends did provide a bit of an assist in the publicity department. However, the acclaim for Eve has less to do with industry trends, and a lot to do with just how good the music is on this album.
Eve is a celebration of black women, but not as a “ladies night at the bar”, one time only rap album gimmick, but as a personal and informative album where every track is named after an influential woman of color, and the star of the album just happens to be a black woman that also hopes to be remembered as an influential woman of color. Eve is as much a braggadocious claim for respect from a dope MC as it is a humble diary of a veteran rap artist that’s still very much in her prime. The production choices range from intentional reinterpretations of the familiar, to fresh takes that successfully ride the line between what we would traditionally call “mainstream” or “underground”. At the end of the day, Rapsody’s Eve manages to start a conversation about the importance of black women in the history of the world, but while filling in the details with reminders that she deserves the respect of being treated as just another great MC.
6. Zuu - Denzel Curry
There may not be a more important album reflecting the sound of a specific city in 2019 than Denzel Curry’s Zuu.
His ode to the Carol City neighborhood of Miami, Florida was a long time coming. Zuu would not have been possible had he not experimented with different approaches in the past. He has dabbled in the same woozy, screaming raves of his fellow Floridian peers, and flirted with expressionism (especially on his previous album, TA13OO), but it all really came together on Zuu. A loose, more casual approach to song crafting on this album built a city on a clean slate. Much in the same way that Juvenile and Mannie Fresh’s “Ha” painted as vivid a picture of the feeling of being in the Magnolia projects of New Orelans as any city homage in rap history, Denzel Curry deserves a ton of credit for collaborating with perfectly selected producers to capture a sound that feels as sweltering as Curry’s place of origin.
While Zuu could stand on atmosphere alone, Curry is also at his best as a MC on this album. His pen is hard at work here (even though he claimed this album did not come with much actual writing), and he showcases a control over his flow and a charisma that proves that he is a stand alone artist to stay glued to moving forward. While the production aesthetic may be providing the broad strokes of color, his lyrics are adding the finer details throughout, discussing his father’s life and in general, the anxiety of growing up in a Miami neighborhood where sunny days are never promised. Zuu is a great album start to finish.
5. Marcielago - Roc Marciano
Roc didn't technically *need* to drop an album this year. His 2018 was one of the most prolific in his career, and for his increasingly less niche core fanbase, the impact on his respective lane is crystal clear, be it by open shout-out from his peers, to more subliminal homages. But it's that last point that inspires Roc Marciano to suit up and dramatically emerge from the gate every year or two. He has that Jordan/Jay-Z gene that suggests that no matter how many accolades are racked up over the years, any internet troll has the potential to get Roc's blood up. Which is why it should come as no surprise by this point that the man that gave us Marcberg, Reloaded and a stack of other revered projects, still felt the need to remind his "sons" that he is one of the Masters of his art form.
As an exercise in word choice and turn of phrase, Marcielago is more of a flex than an attempt to push new boundaries. But as a display of Roc Marci's (somehow) still understated skill as a producer, it's so much more - possibly his best work behind the boards. While less experimental with his production choices than on his acclaimed Rosebudd projects, Marcielago finds Roc doubling down on his ability to color within the lines of a gritty, soulful soundtrack to a world of seductive criminal activity, occasionally swerving outside of the lines with great intention, like a record skip, reminding the listener that this world is part autobiography, part fantasy - but the imagination of the man at the center is scary real. The piano sample alone on "I.G.W.T." is enough to provoke a smokey zone out, and the beat switches on that track as well as others (such as "Tom Chambers") are captivating because the switch-ups drive focus, not a choice derived from an overindulgence in production or onset boredom.
Many rap artists can claim to have made a great impact on their respective lane of traffic, but not many can claim that they paved their own. Roc did not invent the New York underground sound by any means, but when most of the New York crew abandoned ship, the captain stuck with it. ✊
4. The Plugs I Met - Benny The Butcher
Let's make this perfectly clear: Griselda Records has been dope af for years now, and nothing changed about their game plan in 2019 except that they had significantly more press to help continue pushing their brand forward. That press helped them put a ribbon around a tremendous year of music for them, along with a rapidly growing bandwagon of websites and online influencers that were previously asleep at the wheel.
That all being said...in 2019, the rap world really learned about Benny The Butcher. The Buffalo lyricist and Griselda & BSF rap capo has been spitting for years now, but word has finally reached his peers that he is pretty close to untouchable when it comes to this game called rap. Benny took things to another level with his short but potent dose of an album, The Plugs I Met. Much like Pusha T (an appropriate guest here on “18 Wheeler”), please do not dismiss Benny as just another street hustler rapping about cocaine dealing. It’s not the subject matter that’s special here, it’s the attention to detail. Benny’s ability to describe the life he leads/has lead, and what he has been through with his writing is nothing short of brilliant, and he is able to rattle off astute observations/descriptions with his rhymes about the world he knows at a level that I would only compare to B.I.G., Nas, Jay-Z, Kool G Rap, Push, Beanie Sigel, and other legendary MC’s that have a unique way with words when it comes to tales of crime life.
But what more can I say about Benny the rapper/warrior poet that I haven’t been saying for years? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
https://therappundit.tumblr.com/post/143774514306/neighborhood-watch-benny
3. We Grown Now - Tree
Tree is a legend. If he’s not a legend in the conversations you are currently having about the best rap projects of 2019, then you need to remedy that. Perhaps you can downgrade him to “just” a Chicago legend, but I would disagree on the grounds that musically, he’s a legend when it comes to who he is as a rap artist, and I don’t really care that this album isn’t on anyone else’s top best of lists, it’s AOTY worthy material...
Tree is a veteran rapper/producer that seems to have a love-hate relationship with the rap business (well, maybe it’s strictly hate when it comes to rap as a business, but he raps with too much conviction for me to believe that he doesn’t love rapping - even when he’s jaded by it all). Why he isn’t heralded as an icon across every rap website today isn’t exactly clear to me (and I have already made too many assumptions on the intents of the artists on this list), but after being in a bit of a slumber, the purveyor of “soul trap” seemed to rise high once again in 2019, striking his fanbase with numerous projects that read as autobiographical diaries, including a dope collaboration with Vic Spencer, producer Parallel Thought, and this amazing album, We Grown Now.
Whether it’s attempting to find closure from fallen friendships, an ode to his sons, a declaration of his love for travel, or an olive branch to the past loves of his life, Tree touched on so many personal moments on his work in 2019 that it’s hard not to think that it’s all part of his final victory lap. It feels that way because Tree comes across as an old Blues man at heart, his greatest works of art often his most painful ones. While he may travel outside of music to get away from it all, put a mic, beat and writing pad in front of him, and he puts himself out there, warts and all. Give this one a spin in the New Year if you missed out:
https://soundcloud.com/mctreeg/sets/wegrownnow
2. Retropolitan - Skyzoo & Pete Rock
The definition of a dope New York album with no skips. Skyzoo shows that one can revel in nostalgia and positivity at the same time, that reflecting on how your home has changed can be a loving experience, even when it's clear that you would love to turn back the clock to an older, impactful time of your life.
Retropolitan is the sound of a music Mecca that thrives today because of its' past, and even when you don't hear that sound of the city within the city walls as often as you used to, it’s that sound that still propels it forward every day. By all means, you can criticize the sounds coming from "these kids today", but know that new sounds still trace back to their source material (whether you can hear it or not, the influence exists), and there will always be enough room for different rap styles to to co-exist, just as Classical music and Rock 'n Roll continue to inspire the world around us without any genre/sub-genre diluting the pool...in fact, the pool only continues to expand because of it.
Like Roc Marciano, Skyzoo is on a short list of NYC-based MC’s that kept developing a traditional east coast underground sound in their music for years, long after it was en vogue. As one of the genre’s most naturally gifted writers and storytellers, I don’t know if any MC working today is as fit to write this album as Skyzoo, a relic that survived a purging of the old guard in NYC only to emerge as part of a resurgence of underground hip-hop, sounding as spry as ever (if not, even stronger). With Retropolitan, every bit of this ode to growing up in a culture capitol feels like a child’s observation from a Brooklyn apartment window rather than a forced exaltation of times gone by.
This pairing may be the most natural for Pete Rock since CL Smooth, and no doubt the music on this album would not exist if it wasn't for timeless records like "T.R.O.Y." that continue to breathe and sound as refreshing as the day it dropped. Right now I doubt many expect Retropolitan to have the same cultural impact (as the material clearly points out, both the world and the genre are so different nowadays), but the music that derived from these two NYC legends certainly packs a wallop of quality that belongs in rotation for years to come.
1. Bandana - Freddie Gibbs & Madlib
By now it's hard to imagine that folks were skeptical of the musical union between Freddie Gibbs and Madlib. But back in 2010/2011, prior to the release of "Thuggin" (the first single to be released from the fantastic project that would eventually become Pinata) the notion of Gangsta Gibbs finding a happy union with the man that was behind classic projects alongside underground icons the likes of MF DOOM and Jay Dilla, sounded more like a fish out of water tale. Today, it would be like hearing news of 21 Savage and DJ Premier dropping.
By the time Bandana finally dropped - the much anticipated follow-up to the Pinata collaboration that many consider a modern classic - the hype had long since buried the initial questions that fans had about what the chemistry would be like between the respected artists, who once climbed the rankings within two very separate lanes. What Pinata proved was that the hard rhymes from Gibbs, when paired with Madlib's chopped up jazzy soulscapes, yield a sound that feels as beautifully organic as many of the genre's purist classic records. The biggest difference between Bandana and its' predecessor is that their chemistry has only improved.
What 'MadGibbs' achieved here was a more intimate and diverse album than Pinata, and arguably a superior one. Bandana may lack the layers of dusty underground grit which came in abundance on Pinata, but Gibbs' flow and pen game are so sharp on this album that it gave Madlib a bit more room to experiment with some sounds that don't instantly point to Madlib as the orchestrator on first listen. Lurking behind the making of this project were Gibbs' very real legal troubles, and the threat of extended prison time that not only jeopardized the completion of this project, but Freddie Gibbs' own freedom. Throughout the amazing Bandana, Gibbs does not hesitate to remind fans of how his life could very well have gone in a different direction, and that's exactly what elevates an album of bars & beats to a gripping, album of the year experience. Even with Bandana still in heavy rotation for the foreseeable future, it's hard not to salivate over what the duo could accomplish next...
***AND THE REST OF THE BEST***...
11. Emergency Raps, Vol. 4 - Tuamie feat. Fly Anakin & the Mutant Academy
12. Let The Sun Talk - MAVI
13. Wap Konn Jòj! - Mach-Hommy
14. W.W.C.D. [What Would Chine Do]? - Griselda (Westside Gunn, Conway & Benny)
15. SPORTEE - Nolan The Ninja
16. El Capo - Jim Jones (and The Heatmakerz)
17. Hiding Places - Billy Woods & Kenny Segal
18. Oofie - Wiki
19. Feet of Clay - Earl Sweatshirt
20. Hell’s Roof - Eto & DJ Muggs
21. Brandon Banks - Maxo Kream
22. 4wurd - Jay Bel
23. Revenge of the Dreamers 3 - J. Cole & the Dreamville roster
24. Sli’merre - Young Nudy & Pi’erre Bourne
25. The Wild End - Tree & Parallel Thought
26. Holly Water - Fly Anakin & Big Kahuna OG
27. Kirk - DaBaby
28. Boss Sauce - Mooch & Futurewave
29. Port of Miami 2 - Rick Ross
30. So Much Fun - Young Thug
31. Own Pace - Medhane
32. Drip or Drown 2 - Gunna
33. You Can’t Sit With Us - Pivot Gang
34. GREY Area - Little Simz
35. Transportation - Your Old Droog
36. Tuez-Les Tous - Mach-Hommy & DJ Muggs
37. May The Lord Watch - Little Brother
38. Drum Machine Tape Cassette - Kev Brown & J Scienide
39. Lil Big Man - Maxo
40. Statue of Limitations - Smoke DZA & Benny The Butcher
Honorable Mention:
Bullies - Denmark Vessey, DrxQuinnx & Azarias
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