Archive for the Tara Grover Morrissey Category

Snoop: The Chronic issue

Posted in Music, Tara Grover Morrissey with tags , , , on February 2, 2011 by The Chief

Permission to gripe for a moment?

My usually enjoyable early morning date with rap-up.com was somewhat soured when I stumbled upon the latest offering from Snoop Dogg: he of the alarming Katy Perry/Jessica Mauboy/Pussycat Dolls features. Rap-Up gives us a sample of some of the lyrical delights brought forth by the self-declared ex-pimp of Long Beach:

“My life is like a movie/ I was thuggin’ in the Beach when I lit my first doobie/ In the same city when I got my first piece of coochie/ Where I sold my first dime and I held my first Uzi.”

Snoop, how can I put this delicately? When I read these lyrics I honestly forgot that it was 2011. Don’t get me wrong, there’s very little more disturbing in this world than the sight of one of hip hop’s bonafide legends dressed in a three-piece gummy bear suit, prancing his gangly ass around in lollipop land. You should be making killer rap records, not playing second fiddle to pop princesses. But songs about how you were raised in the hood? Open your eyes! Squint through that retro kush smoke fogging your vision! Gangsta rap, when it was good, was ridiculously so. And you will never hear me utter a word against the game-changing greatness that was Doggystyle (not to mention The Chronic, Original Gangster, Straight Outta Compton…). But hip hop is not just revolutionary, it is evolutionary. The gangster thing is so tired, particularly when packaged more as an act of self-reassurance on the part of now comfortably mainstream Snoop than as a genuine articulation of inner-city life. If rap is the CNN of the people then “Raised in da Hood” makes painfully evident just how far Snoop’s mansion sits from the street.
We all know where you came from, Snoop. It’s time to tell us where you’re going.

Review: Lupe Fiasco @ BDO

Posted in Music, Reviews, Tara Grover Morrissey with tags , , on January 29, 2011 by The Chief

It’s been a week of full-blown no holds barred ridicaliss-ness in Sydney. Not least at the Big Day Out, where as you cannot fail to see, Mr Lupe Fiasco attracted an impressive crowd despite the insane Sydney heat. The motley audience of rockers, hip hoppers, indie hipsters, and those shirtless guys with sombreros, were blessed with one of the most energetic and euphoric sets this long-time festival head has ever seen, complete with crowd sing-alongs, shirt-ripping, slamming guitar solos, and of course a dose of hip hop flavoured moshing (this was the Big Day Out, after all). Read more »

New Music

Posted in Music, News, Tara Grover Morrissey, Video with tags , , , , , , , , , on January 5, 2011 by The Chief

So Channel V et al are still running through their baffling countdowns of 2010 (really, guys? Was there REALLY that much “good” indie music this year, or do you have an agenda?) but instead of rehashing what was, nonetheless, a pretty sweet year for music, I thought I would present some of the tantalizing titbits I am looking forward to munching on as this 2011 thing gets underway. In no particular order…

Drake’s sophomore album, “Take Care.”

I know what you’re thinking – we only just stopped listening to “Thank Me Later,” which came out in such swift succession to “So Far Gone” that we still confuse the tracks at times, and anyway, didn’t he just drop “An October’s Very Own” and inundate the radios with various apparently effortless features? However, if the career trajectory of Mr Degrassi’s one-time lover Rihanna is anything to go by, inundating the airwaves with perpetual releases is the new taking-a-break-to-work-on-my-craft. As someone who still can’t let a day go by without sneaking a listen to the Timbaland collaboration “Say Something,” I might be somewhat biased in my assessment of the much hyped Drizzy. But mark my words. For better or for worse, “Take Care” will be one to watch for in the coming months.

Lupe’s excruciatingly belated third album, “Lasers.”

Oh, it’s happening! I hardly dared dream it, but there it was, in writing (tweet-ing?) for all the world to see. The album that has been heartbreakingly and, dare I say, outrageously shunted around the seedy basements and back alleys of uninterested record companies (what were they smoking? For real.) is finally going to hit the stores on March 8th of this year. Read more »

M.I.A. & B.D.O. c/-T.G.M

Posted in Music, Tara Grover Morrissey with tags , on December 17, 2010 by The Chief

 

Speaking of BDO, there’s another super unique and exciting individual set to rock the stages this January: none other than Ms Paper Planes herself, M.I.A. This London based, Sri Lanka born artist has earned the respect of hip hop heavyweights the world over for her commitment to socio-political commentary and, naturally, for her quirky and infectious beats. What makes her imminent visit even more of an oh-my-god moment is that, as both a musician and a visual artist, her performance style is nothing short of ridic-a-liss (insert Kanye, Swizz Beatz, Jay Z, Pusha T or CyHi da Prynce here.) This recent Letterman performance (chosen for its superior picture quality) showcases just a smidgen of what M.I.A is capable of in terms of rocking out – and in a festival setting she is in her absolute element. I think it safe to say that everyone from the die-hard fans to the less hip hop-inclined BDO festival heads will be not merely entertained but indeed gobsmacked by M.I.A’s set. The question is, will you be one of them?

-Tara Grover Morrissey

Festivals and Lupe

Posted in General, Music, Tara Grover Morrissey with tags , , on December 15, 2010 by The Chief

A truly devastating side effect of loving hip hop and living in Sydney is that a great portion of your time and energy is spent desperately trawling the internet for rumours, hints, whisperings, murmurs, that your favourite artists might just possibly be gracing your shores. More heartbreaking still are the occasions on which said artists do make the journey – and you don’t see them. (Kanye, you’re here and you’re not performing? Make with the goods!) The good news is that patience pays off, and if the line-ups of the first of 2011’s festivals are anything to go by, the next few months are going to deliver in a way we never dreamed possible. Read more »

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