Elfen’s Neosoul Hip Hop New Music Video Monday flying Lotus- More Feat. Anderson. Paak
I been bobbin’ my head to Flying Lotis since 2007! Adult Swim [as] featured Flying Lotus Message Situation in one of their dope bumpers. In fact Adultswim bumpers is where I have found some of my hip hop and Neosoul collection.
NYTimes Archives: News article that inspired 2Pac’s “Brenda’s Got A Baby”
A newborn baby was rescued from a trash compactor in Brooklyn yesterday morning when two maintenance men heard the baby’s cries just as they were about to start the crushing machine’s motors, the police said.
Detectives said the mother was a 12-year-old girl who admitted that she had thrown the baby down a trash chute shortly after giving birth in her apartment in the building. The 12-year-old, whose name was not released, had not been charged with a crime last night.
The maintenance workers heard the baby’s cries about 9:45 A.M. and called the police. A patrol sergeant, Philip Insardi, said he crawled through the compactor’s small metal doors and shined a flashlight onto the mound of garbage that was about to be squeezed between the machine’s walls.
“His feet were sticking out from under some newspapers,” Sergeant Insardi said. “There was the baby, lying on top of the garbage. He wasn’t making a peep when I got there.”
If the machine had started, he said, “the kid was history.”
The sergeant wrapped the infant in his shirt and handed him to an ambulance crew. The child, with his umbilical cord still attached, was taken to Brookdale Hospital, where he was treated for hypothermia, the police said.
The 6-pound 10-ounce infant was in stable condition last night in the care of nurses, who named him Trevor, said Mimi Grinker, a hospital spokeswoman. The young mother was also in the hospital for observation. No Injury Despite Fall
Investigators said the baby had not been injured by the long fall down the chute. “It’s a miracle, alright,” Sergeant Insardi said.
After the baby was rescued from the trash compactor, detectives from the 73d Precinct canvassed residents of the six-story apartment building at 37 New Lots Avenue in the East New York section and found a woman in apartment 4E, Gladys Perry, who said she believed her 12-year-old daughter was the baby’s mother. The detectives then went to Thelma J. Hamilton Junior High School at 985 Rockaway Avenue and took the teen-ager out of class.
“She denied it at first,” said Sgt. Timothy Phelan of the 73d Precinct squad. “We took her to Brookdale. The doctors examined her and said she had just given birth.”
Confronted by the doctors, the girl admitted to detectives that she had given birth in her fourth-floor apartment and had dropped the infant down the chute, the police said.
“She is not admitting who the father is or that she even had sex,” Lieut. Eugene Albright said. She would also not say why she tried to dispose of the baby, he said.
Lieutenant Albright said the 12-year-old lived with two brothers and Mrs. Perry. Although Mrs. Perry told the police that the teen-ager was her daughter, investigators said last night that it was unclear what their relationship is.
Detectives said the baby was born sometime in the early morning. The mother apparently abandoned the baby about 7 A.M., they said.
Lieutenant Albright said Mrs. Perry had told investigators that she worked at night and was not in the apartment when the baby was born. No charges had been filed against her last night, and investigators were still trying to determine whether she was culpable.
The infant will be placed in foster care when he leaves the hospital, the police said.
The boy was born in a six-story tenement on the corner of Stone Avenue, a depressed area of littered streets, empty lots and broken sidewalks. A security guard is posted at an iron gate in front of the building, and floodlights illuminate the courtyard.
None of the neighbors seemed to be aware that the teen-ager was pregnant. Several expressed shock that the police believe she tried to kill her baby.
“I was hurt because it was a baby having a baby,” said a woman who lives on the same floor and asked not to be identified. “She should have been getting the proper help. I could have taken the baby.”
Photo from video: vimeo.com
BIG PUN Documentary Terror squad
Gone to soon! RIP BIG PUN
Remi ft Jorden Rakei Lose Sleep A COLORS SHOW
MUSIC VIDEO BELOW
[Intro: Remi]
Yes-yes, today, shake-shake, hey-hey
Come on, yeah-yeah, come on
[Verse 1: Remi]
I’m just here to push limits
Shit-scared of heights
But I stay on top of the game just to say I did it
Show young black kids that you can live it
Free your mind with it, be proud of your pigment
I wasn’t for a while
Too many times vilified for being a shade different
Started hating myself and all dark skin
Playing myself, Charlie Sheen, Two and a Half Men
Remember after school, train station
Busta “Break Ya Neck” blasting from iPod Mini
Thankful class finished
So I could go and play Majora’s Mask with my little brother
When cops come up and start asking me
“Where you from? What you up to?” “Oh, from Moorabbin?”
“That’s half an hour from here, not from ’round here
Boy, what you selling? Where’s your product?”
I hadn’t even touched drugs at this point, except maybe a joint
But my skin fitted the description
So “oink oink” had to be deployed
Next day at school, told my friends
The facts of how they treated the boy
They said I’m being crazy
‘Cause to them, black voice is white noise
That’s the world that we’re living in
[Chorus: Jordan Rakei]
We seem to forget
The dark days of history, yeah
And time will manifest
The endless possibility, yeah
Open your eyes to see
The world is darker than it seems
So we dreaming on (Dreaming on)
Enough with the crazy, crazy talk
[Verse 2: Remi]
Dave Chappelle taught me
The worst thing to call someone is crazy
Dismissing all the pain that plagues them in one word
Just to avoid confrontation with yourself
We prefer to sit on a Chesterfield lounge, while microwaving
A meal by McCain and watching Australian Idol contestant failing
While the house that we’re in is in flames
All because it’s the routine (I dunno know about that, man)
So when they say, “Too deep”
I say, “Product of reality, you’re too deep”
‘Cause I’m just using eyes, ears and news feeds to get up to speed
Shit, only those that don’t read between the lines abuse these
Therefore I don’t lose sleep
‘Cause I’m well aware that’s the world that we’re living in
[Chorus: Jordan Rakei]
We seem to forget
The dark days of history, yeah
And time will manifest
The endless possibility, yeah
Open your eyes to see
The world is darker than it seems
So we dreaming on (Dreaming on)
Enough with the crazy, crazy talk
[Outro: Jordan Rakei]
Open your eyes
Open your eyes
Open your eyes
Open your eyes
Elfen’s EXTRA EXTRA NEOSOUL Hip Hop artist A-F-R-O
This dude has that freestyle flow like Chub Rock and Busta Rhymes
Uproxx Underground Hustle: A-F-R-O
Original article written May 21, 2018
Young L.A. rapper, A-F-R-O, is an up-and-comer who’s old school flair sets him apart from other rappers his age. He’s simply a modest, humble kid who knows hip-hop’s roots and pays respect to the greats. “When I was 9, I heard Rakim, I heard the song ‘Microphone Fiend’ and that was the one where I was like, Damn I want to do that.” One artist in particular inspired him more than others “R.A. The Rugged Man… he’s been my favorite since I was 13.” Once R.A. heard A-F-R-O’s music, the legendary rhymer took ‘Fro under his wing. Now, the two artists are working to bring back the gritty, underground strength that most modern hip-hop lacks.
R.A. spoke to Uproxx about the young rapper:
“He makes all of us feel good, because a lot of 17-year-olds only know a lot of garbage that they’re being spoonfed on the radio,” R.A. said. “They don’t know the Rakim, DJ Premier, Kool G Rap, the GZA. So, when I introduce him to GZA and Kool G Rap and Premier in person and he knows their entire biography – stuff that they’ve done 10 years before he was born – they’re like ‘Wow, there’s youth out there like this. We’re not going to be forgotten. We’re being reborn into another generation, our music will live on through dudes like this.’ ”
“What makes him unique today is he’s got a big strong bass voice from the era that I enjoy, like Chubb Rock or Chuck D,” R.A. said, lobbying for more parity in hip-hop. “Where today, all the famous rappers have got little thin squeaky cornball voices. … This kid, he’s not into that. He comes in and he’s hard with his voice. He wants to knock you over with it. His voice is strong and his flow is where he can rap faster than any rapper on the planet Earth.”
A-F-R-O’s voice is truly one of a kind and resembles that of many pioneers from the golden age of rap. His debut album’s in the works and I’m interested to see where it takes him. In a time where many of the most successful rappers have high pitch, raspy voices, I wonder if the public will embrace the vastly different sound that A-F-R-O brings to the table. If he doesn’t obtain massive commercial success, I bet he’ll still acquire a dedicated following. A-F-R-O is the type of artist that’s likely to be respected by his peers and welcomed into the rap game with open arms, much like Joey Bada$$ and Big K.R.I.T.
I’d really love to see A-F-R-O featured as one of the “9 new artists” on the new Wu-Tang Clan remake. Stylistically, I think he’d be a perfect fit.
Elfen’s Neosoul Hip Hop Saturday artist of the week Gas-Lab REVISTED
More on Gas-Lab later but here’s just a taste of his hip hop flava!
Funimation Samurai Champloo Episode 1 Full episode
This is the dopist anime of the 21st century! Lots samurai sword fighting and the music!! OMG the hip hop soundtrack is crazy sick!! ENJOY
Elfen’s Neosoul Hip Hop Oddisee Like Really A COLORS SHOW
A COLORS SHOW ODDISEE Like Really. LISTEN to what he is rhyming . There’s a message in the lyrics.