TrackBlasters Radio: 25.03.15

Da Wednesday Underground Flava – Underground & Old School Hip Hop Non-Stop Host: DJ P.R. Today’s show includes a shit load of new music from the likes of Nine, Sean Price, Earl Sweatshirt, Ludacris, Action Bronson, Kendrick Lamar and Red Pill. Enjoy! Record Of The Day: Nine – Watch Me Playlist Method Man – The Oath **Record Of The Day** Nine – Watch Me Sean Price feat. Havoc – Anderson Silva Jay Electronica – Road To Perdition Earl Sweatshirt feat. Vince Staples – Wool Earl Sweatshirt feat. Wiki – AM Radio Fashawn – Out The Trunk Ludacris – Charge It To The Rap Game Action Bronson feat. Chauncy Sherod – City Boy Blues Joey Bada$$ feat. Action Bronson & Elle Varner – Run Up On Ya Kendrick Lamar feat. Rapsody – Complexion (A Zulu Love) Kendrick Lamar – Hood Politics Rapper Big Pooh feat. Jalen Santoy, Novej & Lute – Kings PRhyme feat. Dwele – You Should Know JR & PH7 x Chuuwee – Save The Last Dance (For Someone Who Cares) Red Pill – That’s Okay BADBADNOTGOOD & Ghostface Killah feat. Elzhi – Gunshowers Download here (right click and save as…)

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Rapper Big Pooh – Words Paint Pictures [EP]

Rapper Big Pooh and Detroit’s Apollo Brown officially released their dope new collabo effort, “Words Paint Pictures”. Support! Lao Tzu claimed that, “Music in the soul can be heard by the universe.” Occasionally, the universe can also stir music from the chambers of the soul. These are the songs tattooed into our memories, torn from headlines and unsettling encounters, intense anthems of immediacy. Soul music. You can hear these eternal truths on Words Paint Pictures—Big Pooh’s debut release for Mello Music Group. Over seven songs and two remixes, the North Carolina MC captures the complex agonies of the human condition—specifically the black experience in America over the last several centuries. These are tales of racial profiling and corrupt politicians, reality TV distractions, thieving preachers and rapacious exploitation—all offset by tremendous strength. They are uniquely American stories, chronicling both the damned and hopeful. From bleak circumstances, a profoundly durable human spirit emerges. While Pooh sketches in vivid detail, Apollo Brown supplies the canvas. The Detroit-via-Grand Rapids alchemist chops classic soul samples and scratches hooks into bangers—head nodding and hard, but still beautiful. The holy trinity of DJ Premier, Pete Rock and J. Dilla supply divine inspiration. As Pooh spits on “Candlelight:” “this is what they call boom-bap/when they try to find what’s in that backpack.” What’s in that backpack is as intangible as the light in the briefcase in Pulp Fiction. It’s a main vein of discontent and mother lode of inspiration. Over a gorgeous antique loop on “Augmentation,” Pooh sketches

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