Nas x Keyshia Cole – More Than I Can Say

Unreleased.
Well as you know I worked with a wide range of talent. One cool dude I got to kick it with was my man Nas. Nas is a talented, funny, cool individual. Actually his brother Jungle, to me is one of the funniest dudes I ever met. Don’t believe me check the N.O.R.E. skits. I must credit Jungle though, he was a visionary with A&R talent as well. This song was done in 2005 while I was recording “Press Play”. This beat was one out of many sitting around. I felt this beat was Hip-Hop and to me I pictured Nas flowing to this beat, it was NYC, Queens, and most of all had substance. Well as we know the track never made the album, however the countless studio sessions with Nas and Keyshia were priceless. They were never in the studio at the sametime. Yummy Bingham originally wrote and referenced the hook. I wish this song made it to Press Play, but it never did, I thought the world could use some blessings from Godson.Geno Sims

New Ep Wiley:The Chill Out Zone

Link

The Chill Out Zone:

01 Music Is Calling Me [ft. Meleka]
02 If I Could [ft. Ed Sheeran]
03 Seduction [ft. Alexa Goddard]
04 Walk Away [ft. Sinead Harnett]
05 But I Did..
06 Don’t Throw It Away
07 Romeo [ft. Cherri V]
08 She Might Holla
09 Out the Box
10 Random Thoughts
11 New Discovery
12 Piano Cry
13 Pengting [ft. Opium]
14 Born Into a Lie

Also DJ Whoo Kid, Creating a Buzz Vol. 1, over at FACT.

Rap-A-Lot artist Tim Smooth passed away after a battle with Cancer.

New Orleans rap legend, Mystikal mentor and one time Rap-A-Lot artist Tim Smooth passed away this morning after a battle with Cancer.

This is sort of devastating. I spoke to Tim Smooth on the phone once and very briefly a couple years ago, in an attempt to orchestrate a New Orleans Local Product conversation between him and Jay Electronica. I don’t think Tim had heard of Jay at the time, but he seemed pretty enthusiastic when I sent him his music. Jay (or whoever was pretending to be his management at that time) inevitably Jay Electronica’d and the interview never happened. But I do think it’s worth noting that, of all the more prominent New Orleans rappers, he chose Tim as his favorite local rapper.

On Youtube there’s a very low budget commercial for Tim’s Invisible Man LP that features testimonies from other New Orleans rappers and hip hop personalities. In it fellow under-heralded New Orleans pioneer Bust Down freaks out over Tim’s ”complicated sentence structures.” I think that played a part in Tim’s appeal, but maybe more than that it was a matter of presence. His biggest hit, 1991’s ”I Don’t Give A Damn About Your Boyfriend” is one of those underground rap records thats influence resonates well beyond its popularity by way of samples and interpolations (think a smaller scale “Shook Ones” or “TROY” in up north parlance). In particular its opening – ”ya’ ole man really don’t mean shit to me” – and fragments thereof became a staple of the Memphis/NO cultural exchange that was going on at the time. That happened because he starts that verse off right. I mean if he never spit another bar after that he’d still be a legend. This is an underrated skill amongst rappers – knowing how to start a rhyme with just enough bombast and the exact word choice to make it stick directly to the brain of listeners. Chuck D knew how to do this, Biggie knew how to do this and so did Tim Smooth. I just wish more people knew Tim Smooth. (via spaceagehustle)


Jay Rock – Follow Me Home (Album)

Tracklisting and download (to purchase) link after the jump.

1. Intro (Skit)

2. Code Red
3. Bout That
4. No Joke f. Ab-Soul
5. Hood Gone Love It f. Kendrick Lamar
6. Westside f. Chris Brown
7. Elbows
8. Boomerang
9. All I Know Is
10. I’m Thuggin’
11. Kill Or Be Killed f. Tech N9ne & Krizz Kaliko
12. Just Like Me f. J. Black
13. Say Wassup f. Black Hippy
14. They Be On It
15. M.O.N.E.Y.
16. Finest Hour
17. Life’s a Gamble f. BJ The Chicago Kid & Rick Ross
18. All My Life f. Lil’ Wayne & will.i.am

Download (iTunes)