B-Boys.com and Hip-hop.net have merged!
We are excited to announce that Hip-Hop.net and B-Boys.com have merged.
We’ve joined the two sites to provide you with an active online hip hop community where you can promote your music, network, connect and easily communicate. We have undertaken a complete overhaul of the site and have tons of new and improved features.
Hip-Hop.net is owned and operated by the same group who built and managed the community at B-Boys.com since 1999, so you can rest assured that your personal information isn’t going anywhere.
Hip-Hop.net’s new services include:
- Easier photo gallery management
- Easy profile customization
- Submit news, stories, and fresh hip hop content
- Voting and commenting on articles
- Social networking services
- Your own inbox and ability to message other users
- Blogging and podcasting
- Account edit/admin features to block users or remove your profile
- Easy to use audio upload and management feature
and much more…
The B-Boys.com forums will continue to exist as a vBulletin forum and hip-hop resource site under the b-boys.com domain name.
If you have any questions or concerns, just drop me or my friend theory a note.
Miles Davis - Doo Bop Album Review
Jazz and Hip-hop are two of the great African American musical traditions that have gone on to be adopted worldwide. Over the years there have been several interesting songs and albums that blend the two. In this series of articles I’ll be talking about some of the ones I find most interesting. Feel free to suggest any albums or songs you think should be included in my upcoming posts.
“Doo Bop” by Miles Davis
Watch out for licks from my big fat stick
The stick is real thick call me Easy Mo Bic
But this Bic can't be flicked like a lighter to a joint
I'm easy not wider get the point?
In other words the Mo ain't a joke
And something like the trumpet I'm dumpin on the difficult folk
Miles in the style of the hip-hop bugle
Not your ordinary, or even Chatanooga the train that goes choo-choo
Like Norton saying Lulu
The horn casts spells like some witch doctor's voodoo
The notes from his trumpet make ladies get freaky like sex
Reach a climax - what's next?
Two hunkie dories just tickled your fancy
Not in your panties but up in your mind - That's where we stand, see?
That's why you seek for the need of a chance to be
Part of the Easy Mo Bee and Miles Davis Fantasy...
Jazz legend Miles Davis was constantly breaking new ground; from his transition from hard bop to cool jazz in the mid 50’s, his orchestral recordings with Gil Evans in the late 50’s to early 60’s, moving from chordal to modal jazz with his second great quintet in the mid 60’s, and finally bringing electric instruments into jazz in the late 60’s to mid 70’s.
Davis’s career took a downturn in the mid 70’s due to problems with drug addiction and two arthritic elbows that made playing the trumpet excruciatingly painful. For several years he retired from all performances and recording. However he recovered from his personal and health problems in the early 80’s and went on to release several more recordings. Although he never reattained the acclaim of his earlier career – he was often criticized for setting lower personnel standards – there were a couple of bright spots, including an improbable and now famous recording of Cyndi Lauper’s “Time After Time,” and a collaboration with Quincy Jones at the Montreaux Jazz Festival.
Always looking to break down barriers between jazz and other genres, Davis became interested in hip-hop in the early 90’s and began looking for artists to work with, eventually settling on Easy Mo Bee. Though a capable emcee, Mo Bee at the time worked mostly as a producer, having worked with Big Daddy Kane on “It’s a Big Daddy Thing.” He eventually went on to fame as the producer of Notorious B.I.G.’s “Ready to Die.”
During their recording sessions in 1991, Davis told Mo Bee that he was checking in to a hospital “for a tuneup” and died suddenly and unexpectedly at age 65. I remember watching the opening show of Saturday Night Live that night with Public Enemy as the musical guest, and Chuck D asked for 10 seconds of silence in memory of Davis – I was just crushed. In the end Mo Bee put together what he could, and the recordings were released as “Doo Bop” in 1992. The album went on to win the 1993 Grammy Award for Best R&B Instrumental Performance.
Doo Bop is really a disappointment in many ways – though Mo Bee was an excellent producer, one can only wonder what it could have been had Miles elected to record with one of the more creative and talented emcees connected to Easy Mo Bee, like Big Daddy Kane, instead of the putting Mo Bee on the mic. What would Doo Bop have become if he had survived to complete it to his own liking and standards?
Much of Doo-Bop has an acid jazz feel, with thick, danceable breakbeats, Fender Rhodes-like synthesizers and Miles’s heavily reverberated trumpet cutting in, playing short licks between the empty space. Mo Bee only raps on three of the tracks: The Doo Bop Song, Blow and Fantasy; and only for a few short verses. The album is more about Davis than Mo Bee, which is how it ought to be given the circumstances under which it was ultimately released.
In the end, this album is more intriguing for what it could have been than for what it ended up being, though there are some decent tracks, of which I consider “Fantasy” my favorite. Easy Mo Bee deserves a great deal of credit for the way in which he was able to put together a cohesive album with this material after Davis’s death, and in so doing gave us a taste of where Davis might have gone musically if he had been given a few more years on Earth.
His trumpet can’t be played with, tampered with or picked up and thrown to the pavement.
Coming up in my next installment: “Hand on the Torch” by US3.
Blogging functionality updated again
I just released a ton of changes to the blogging interface on b-boys, to make it more like a “real” blogging system.
The changes are basically the following:
- Save as draft / publish / unpublish
- Save post and keep editing
- Cleaned up editing interface
- Improved link structure (added some breadcrumb navigation so people don’t get lost)
- View blogs by tag, both globally and within a your blog
- Reworked top-level tab and menus navigation to make them more user-friendly
- Added more user-friendly messages on the login page, and the submit a link page
- Fixed a few small bugs
A friend drew it to my attention that it’s not obvious to users that they can submit their own articles; I’m working on a solution to that to see if we can make the site a little more obvious and user friendly. Today I reworked some of the messages here and there to try to explain things better; as always your feedback is welcome if you have any idea about how we can improve things more.