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Blurryface by Twenty One Pilots
Blurryface by Twenty One Pilots
2015 | Rhythm And Blues
Once everything is taken into consideration, it’s safe to say that Twenty One Pilots have officially crafted their breakthrough record. Although they may not have invented the concept of fusing rock and hip-hop, it’s a refreshing change
Critic- Sowing Season
Original Score: 3.5 out of 5

Read Review: http://www.sputnikmusic.com/review/67156/Twenty-One-Pilots-Blurryface/
  
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Ross (3284 KP) rated Raising Hell by Run-DMC in Music

Jun 22, 2020  
Raising Hell by Run-DMC
Raising Hell by Run-DMC
1986 | Rhythm And Blues
8
9.0 (2 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 123rd greatest album of all time
Brilliant early hip hop album. The music, drum beats and sampling is a little more basic compared to the likes of Erik B and Rakim, NWA and Public Enemy. Features It's Tricky and Walk This Way as well as lesser known hits like Peter Piper and You Be Illin.
  
Man on the Moon: The End of Day by Kid Cudi
Man on the Moon: The End of Day by Kid Cudi
2009 | Rhythm And Blues
7
7.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 459th greatest album of all time (2020)
While this hip hop is a lot better and more listenable than a lot of the more aggressive examples, there wasn't quite as much substance or character as the likes of Eminem or Kanye. It just felt like there was something missing for quite a lot of it.
  
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Ross (3284 KP) rated Blueprint by Jay-Z in Music

May 29, 2020  
Blueprint by Jay-Z
Blueprint by Jay-Z
2001 | Hip-hop, Rock
7
7.4 (5 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 252nd greatest album of all time
Decent hip hop album, though a fair amount of filler in my mind. "Izzo (HOVA)" was by far the best track on the album. I find it annoying that every single song includes the record label "Roc-a-fella" for no apparent reason, like some odd trademark or copyright watermark.
  
Low End Theory by A Tribe Called Quest
Low End Theory by A Tribe Called Quest
1991 | Hip-hop, Rock
8.6 (5 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"When I was a teenager, I was an avid Smash Hits reader - all through the 80s, that's what I read. So when the Beastie Boys and Run DMC came along, I was all over it. We were nicking VW signs from cars, skateboarding. That was a really big thing for ages. I was into that stuff for a while but the one hip hop album I listened to the most was this one. It's another one that doesn't ever fade. It's got this depth to it, and it's easy. But it's also serious and it's bumping. Obviously there are loads of other really important hip hop albums for me: Notorious B.I.G, Dr Dre, Jay-Z. I get a similar feeling from listening to really good hip hop that I get listening to Nubian music. The whole way of writing with loops really appeals to me. It was weird because I was listening to a lot of this kind of music, and playing and listening to a lot of jazz but they were two separate worlds. I was really into guitar music as well. When I was a kid I was really into Van Halen, heavy metal and all that stuff. Those two worlds never quite joined together. It wasn't until A Tribe Called Quest, and Galliano, Joyful Noise of the Creator. That Tribe Called Quest album, for me, joined those worlds. They mined a lot of old Lou Donaldson records, and other things, but it sounded really current as well. It pulled a lot of things together. And obviously, it branched out to lots of classic 90s hip hop: Guru, Jazzmatazz, Nas. It was a really amazing time."

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Enter the Circle by Shahmen
Enter the Circle by Shahmen
2010 | Alternative, Hip-hop, Indie
10
10.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Amazing music for free (0 more)
Deserves to be billboard top ten (0 more)
The best free thing ever
Look, I'm just going to say it like it is. This is free to download and it's absolutely incredible.

This is dark brooding Hip Hop, imagine world folk music instruments crafted in a blend of shadows that's work so perfectly. Then there is Shahmen himself. There are poetic lyrics delivered in his laid back bass of his voice. His voice is as bassy as the bass. Then to top it off he writes songs. Songs that are amazing.

It's hard to think this guy isn't huge but he isn't. He could be if everyone reads this and downloads it. ITS FREE. You won't regret it. Even though it's hip hop, indie and metal fans love this too. Awesome.
  
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Jonathan Higgs recommended 2001 by Dr Dre in Music (curated)

 
2001 by Dr Dre
2001 by Dr Dre
1999 | Hip-hop, Rock
8.5 (10 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"This was a huge album amongst me and my friends. It was kind of the soundtrack to ten years of my life. From high school, through uni and then right out of uni was all soundtracked by that record really. It was the Bible in terms of hip-hop. It was one of the first introductions to hip-hop of mainstream appeal. It was so full of bangers. It's overly long and the production… well, it's Dre, isn't it? Anything from it is so ingrained in my generation. I'm always happy to hear this album which I think is the true sign of a good album. Although I wouldn't be so pleased to hear Kid A, because it doesn't have that same mood. 2001 has that 'all moods covered' thing going on."

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Dean (6927 KP) rated Honey (2003) in Movies

Dec 24, 2018  
Honey (2003)
Honey (2003)
2003 | Drama, Musical
5
5.8 (5 Ratings)
Movie Rating
Not bad for a dance film fitting in around the hip-hop scene. It has a good cast, some good dance scenes but not with any real wow factor. Unfortunately it becomes all a bit predictable and it's not as dramatic as I think they hoped for. It's no Save the last dance, but still not bad for a dance flick.
  
The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill by Lauryn Hill
The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill by Lauryn Hill
1998 | Hip-hop, Rhythm And Blues, Soul

"I love this album! This is truly the epitome of that time in my life as a young artist dying to become known in the music world. This album really gave me tremendous inspiration! It is heartfelt, innovative...where soul meets hip-hop in the most organic way. Lauryn Hill is incredible and this album holds a beautiful place in my conscious."

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Alexis Taylor recommended Hard to Earn by Gang Starr in Music (curated)

 
Hard to Earn by Gang Starr
Hard to Earn by Gang Starr
1994 | Rock
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"When I was growing up, hip-hop was pretty new. My oldest brother was really into it. Also, we had MTV from about 1990 onwards, so you'd see all these different people - A Tribe Called Quest, Public Enemy and Gang Starr - just became a soundtrack to whatever we were doing. I picked that one because I love DJ Premier's production, but also Guru's voice. I'm a big fan of the experimentation within hip-hop. Nowadays, people feel hip-hop has gone mainstream or whatever, but at that time, people were making records that were sampling very out there, experimental music, but combining them with parts from classical or jazz recordings, resulting in this very dense collage of sounds that is at times not even very melodic, but it's always got an amazing groove to it. It was those aspects in combination with Guru's voice, I just found it really inventive and exciting. Also, I would listen to it, and want to know where the samples had come from, and then I would go on missions to try and track things down. I think there was a Monk Higgins sample used on the track, 'Code Of The Streets', and that's just very alien-sounding. It's very basic, but it uses this beautiful violin part all the way through the track. They must have just been listening to such a wide variety of music, and what they've come out with is much more interesting that what came out post that era of hip-hop. You get some songs where there's a whole song taken, with just new lyrics added on. Back then though, there would have been as many as forty songs sampled in one song sometimes."

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