Mit ‘HipHop’ getaggte Artikel

Beastie Boys Remixed; 100% Reggae Riddims, Dancehall, Roots, Digital Dub.
Mixed by DJ i.e. of Up-Cut Sound. Giving proper respect to the legendary B-Boys,
inna Reggae flavor. Bridging the two powerful sounds of the Beastie Boys with the Power and Sound of the dub backbeat. All remixes were performed live and mixed down in a ‘dubplate style’ with a hope to give an organic mash up without making it glossy and overproduced. House party style! It’s been a rough year with the passing of Adam Yauch so I found it necessary to celebrate life in the Rasta way, with Music.
R.I.P MCA

1-Root Down x Water Scale Interigation- Prince Jammy
2-Looking Down A Barrel of a Gun x Drifter Riddim- King Tubby
3-So What Cha’ Want x Bonx It Version- Ganglords
4-Pass The Mic x Turtle Riddim- MAFFI
5-UNITE x Bronshoj Riddim- MAFFI
6-Body Movin’ x Killer Beez Riddim- Keepleft Records
7-Super Disco Breakin x Action Riddim- JAM2
8-Intergalactic x Yellow Monkies Riddim- Equiknoxx
9-Sure Shot x School Bell Riddim- Keepleft Records
Shake Your Rump x Bam Bam (the sequel) Riddim- Cliff Ray
10-Stop That Train x Stop That Train Riddim- Raggedy Joe
11-Car Thief x Hell Ago Come- Ottey’s All Stars
12-No Sleep Til Brooklyn x RDF Dub- Ragga Dub Force
13-The Move- Regentropfen Riddim- Soul Force
14-Don’t Play No Game That I Can’t Win x Cosa Nostra Riddim- Ward 21

Nice exclusive interview with Salaam Remi by Large Up.

“Most people didn’t even know I exist, and I don’t want them to,” Salaam Remi says. “‘Know my name if you gotta write it on a check’ has been my motto for a long time.” Readers of album credits know the low-key Remi as the guy who put the Fugees, Amy Winehouse, Jasmine Sullivan and Miguel on the map with career-launching hits, and as Nas’ most reliable collaborator for the last decade. The son of Trini-Bajan music producer and veteran promotions man Van Gibbs, Salaam is also behind the most artistically successful hybrids of hip-hop and reggae, from his 1992 remix of Super Cat’s “Ghetto Red Hot” to his recent work with Spragga Benz, and his sublime flip of vintage Super Cat track “Dance Inna New York” on Nas’ “The Don.” His catalog is stacked with remixes so definitive that the originals are no longer even a thought (see Ini Kamoze’s “Here Comes the Hotstepper,” a U.S. No. 1 single after Salaam got his hands on it).

Raised in New York City, Salaam has, since 2001, been based in Miami. He recently invited LargeUp to the private studio he calls Instrument Zoo for a rare look at the creative den where he laid the foundation for Back to Black with Amy Winehouse, and crafted the tracks that make up the heart of Nas’ Life is Good. Head over to Okayplayer today for even more of our interview with Salaam, and get back with us tomorrow for the stories behind his most classic records.

Head over to Large Up to read the interview.

RepJA Clothing pres. Dre-Money and Kardinal Offishall.

Tune kinda sucks, but Kardi’s on point as always.


DJ Meska & Shotta Paul, of Sentinel & KingstonHot Fame, brought back this Live Promo Mix from Gothenburg, Sweden where they played alongside our friend Lady Louise a while ago.

This Mix should promote their new eclectic Party series called Jugglerz at Schräglage in Stuttgart on the 3rd of December.

Check it.

Download-Link

OSF Sound from Austria just linked me with their brandnew anniversary Dubplates on HipHop Riddims Mix called One City One Sound.

Walshy Fire & Willie Chin did this Live Mix on BBC Radio, hosted by Seanie B.

(Rightclick the cover, save as …)