El Da Sensei – Show Stoppa (J57 Remix) [Stream]

In lieu of the one year anniversary of Coalmine Records’ decennary compilation album, ‘Unearthed,’ mixed by DJ Revolution, the Brooklyn-based indie is pleased to present the J57 Remix of the El Da Sensei featured favorite, “Show Stoppa,” which boasts Sweden’s DJ Devastate and Young Pacino on the hook duties, over J’s head nodding remix. To further celebrate the milestone, Coalmine’s pleased to release a limited edition run of Unearthed on cassette. Dubbed the ‘Green Slimes’ for being pressed on green shells, the hour long mix serves as a who’s who of today’s independent Hip-Hop scene, packed with features from both veteran and burgeoning emcees such as Pharoahe Monch, Kool G Rap, Large Professor, The Artifacts, Blu, Sean Price, Billy Danze (of M.O.P.), Big Noyd, One Dae, Skillz, Guilty Simpson, Rah DIgga, Maffew Ragazino, El Da Sensei, and Fashawn, among others. Producers tapped include Diamond D, Nottz, Ayatollah, Marco Polo, Khrysis, along with the Grammy Award Winning, M-Phazes, among others.

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V’Don – Lost Gemz [Beat Tape]

“#LostGemz is a collection of some of my best beats I made for artist over the last 2 years . All the beats on here have a related feeling to them .. This is something for everybody that ask me to put out Instrumentals or asks who produced that??? Production credits from this tape includes 2 chains, Willie The Kid, Smoke Dza, Bodega Bamz, and many more.” – V’Don Bonus: Dave East – By Any Means

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De La Soul: “We Denounced Hippy Image With Smashed Flower Pot Cover” [Video]

De La Soul’s classic lyricism has enriched Hip-Hop memories, and this section of their VladTV exclusive interview delves into the deeper meaning of the symbolism behind their second release, ‘De La Soul is Dead.’ The ensemble speaks on how they refused to allow a manufactured image to eclipse the importance of their music, and how their “hippie” image led many to believe they were “punks.” The trio offered their personal insight on why the smashed flower pot from their sophomore album cover held significant importance. A collective agreement resounded that the “Hippie” image was not relevant to their overall art, with Maseo adding, “It was definitely denouncing the image, because the overall image of the group is about creativity and the music. And the message, I think, the message was misconstrued.” Picking up on that train of thought Trugoy explained, “It was also about taking control as well. We had to take the control out of the media’s hand, and out of the label’s hand, and I think crushing that flower pot was like, ‘Now what y’all got to work with; we’re in control now.’” Working to emphasize that point Pos chimed in with, “We wanted to let you know that it’s about De La Soul, regardless…It’s the words, it’s the music that is what’s more important.”

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