Saturday, July 23, 2011

"Night Train"

MAKEBATHEARTIST

I go by the alias… or nom de plume (I like the way that sounds… and looks)“M.BODDi,” and I have a confession to make: I used to listen to Z100. WHAT??!!!!! I know, riiiiight… I’m ashamed to admit because I LOVE hip hop and I HATE [most] pop music. And get this, before Z100 all I listened to was Doo Wop because that’s what my grandmother listened to.
I wince when my little brother reminds me of my embarrassing past. He’ll be like, “you remember when you used to jump on the bed singing that song, ‘I’m Blue (da ba dee)’ or ‘Boom boom boom boom… I want you in my room?’” And I’d reply, “You did it too.” But apparently he’s excused because he was like 3 years old at the time or something… whatever.
https://www.facebook.com/makebatheartist

So, yes, I grew up in the boy-band/girl-group era… Nsync, The Backstreet Boys, 98 Degrees, the Spice Girls, etc. My taste in music hadn’t matured yet, just like me, it hadn’t even hit puberty.
I also grew up in the notorious “golden era” of Hip Hop. Aside from the Hip Hop sing-a-longs to “The Message” by Grandmaster Flash while walking home with my mother and oldest brother, my earliest and fondest memory of Golden Era Hip Hop was constantly hearing Jay-Z’s “Ain’t No Nigga” blasting from car stereos in the summer time. That coincides exactly with the memory of my mother giving birth to my youngest brother, even though he was born three years earlier. Don’t think too hard about that, I have a pretty shoddy memory and things don’t always align when I think back.
Anyway, my next Golden Era Hip Hop memory doesn’t happen again for another 4 years… after the Doo Wop and immediately after Z100. I think, after hearing this one classic song, I made the switch to Hot 97… “all day that’s my word!” (At least, that’s how I like to picture it.)


http://www.saatchionline.com/Mrainey

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

NEW YORK SOUTHERN STATE OF MIND



If you are available tonight and you mess with slaughter house, Brooklyn Is the place to be. Check out this dope event presented to you by  emtheories.com/  for recording artist Joe Buddens at the public assembly. Be there!




Coming live from the empire state with a southern state of mind Philthy Rich Recording artist and get Familiar Boy Severe release his debut mix-tape title New York southern state of mind. The Harlem artist who put the juice back on map while asking you to watch him work  drop 16 tracks of heat on July 4 claiming his independence in Hip-Hop. King Adida Severe is on top of his game, establishing his get familiar entertainment brand and also teaming up with Floyd Mayweather’s phility rich record label to take their movement to the next level. Check out sever at severeworldwide.com



DOWNLOAD NEW YORK SOUTHERN STATE OF MIND AVAILABLE NOW ON www.hotnewhiphop.com