Sunday, September 20, 2009
Q&A with JC Poppe on Sleep Therapy
This new project from JC Poppe, Sleep Therapy, bangs! Laced with dope tracks and a progressive flow, JC Poppe definitely delivers with Sleep Therapy! His project touches on a few social issues, including sex education, while paying homage to his family. He also takes a hard look at mainstream music and pushes at other artist to put out better music.
His sound? Unique.
“I guess alternative hip-hop,” JC Poppe said when asked to describe his sound. “Big influences on me are Public Enemy, M.O.P. and Rage Against The Machine, so I usually keep it aggressive.”
With Sleep Therapy, he definitely keeps it aggressive.
JC Poppe has rhymed since 1995 but it wasn’t until 2004 when he first started putting out music.
“The very first project I completed was called The Anger EP,” he said.
On that first project, it included four tracks, one of which being Give it to Em.
“I was blessed to have been able to work with a guy named B. Reith who is actually a Christian artist and signed to Toby Mac’s label, Goatee Records,” he said. “We are both Brown Deer guys (a diverse blue color suburb north of Milwaukee) so it was nice to have that hook up before I moved into the Milwaukee scene a few years ago.”
JC Poppe’s Sleep Therapy is just another example that there is a dope hip-hop scene in Milwaukee.
“I've been active in the Milwaukee scene since late 2006 as a fan but have only now really thrown my hat into the ring as an artist.”
As his new project was being uploaded to CD Baby (now available), we decided to reach out to JC Poppe for a Q&A about his latest project.
The Mad Bloggers: Why Sleep Therapy as the title?
JC Poppe: I literally have a sleeping disorder and I was always struggling to stay awake. The only way I could keep myself up was to keep my mind or body occupied with something and vibing to the beats I got made the creative juices flow so that I could be awake and productive. It's also a commentary on the pop rap heard on the radio. There is a lot of awful stuff out there and it would keep me up as an artist, striving to destroy the music that is killing the culture of hip-hop.
TMB: How would you describe your sound?
JC: I would say that my sound is fairly aggressive and passionate, and lyrical. I have beats that are generally sample heavy and I love heavy guitars as much as the sound of a soul groove. I try to be as forward as possible with what I do while still leaving things enjoyable to listen to.
TMB: Who did you collab with on this project?
JC: I was fortunate enough to work with some really amazing national artists as well as some of the best that the city of Milwaukee has to offer. 88-Keys out of NYC was gracious enough to allow me to rock two of his beats. Guilty Simpson out of Detroit and Naledge of Kidz in the Hall also have guest verses on the album. It was really awesome of those guys to work with an unsigned indie artist that they've never heard of before the day I contacted them. As far as Milwaukee talent goes I have production and/or vocals from several members of The House of M (Raze, Dana Coppafeel, Dylan Thomas), a verse from Speak Easy who is a monster of a rapper and my manager Jank One did the beat for A Saving Sound.
TMB: What was the driving force behind putting this project together?
JC: I've been spinning my wheels for years on putting together a proper album and not just a few loose tracks here and there. In my mind it became one of those things that it was either time to put up or shut up and with the support of my wife and the help of some really great people in the Milwaukee hip-hop scene, I put up. It has always been a dream of mine to accomplish the task of making an album.
TMB: What track on the album says the most about who you are as an emcee?
JC: My verse on the song Trampin which features Naledge, I think really speaks to who I am as an emcee. It has a very focused rhyme scheme and a message that is delivered with passion.
TMB: Mixtape Epidemic is fire but it seems to call out people. What does the track mean from your perspective? What message are you trying to get across?
JC: First, thank you for the compliment. The track certainly has the real potential to be very incendiary to some people. My perspective is that the Internet era of hip-hop is a double-edged sword. The good is that people like myself can be heard around the world and can gain opportunities like doing this interview. The bad is that every single person in the world can put together a song and put it out regardless of whether they have talent or not. I feel that rap/hip-hop has been bogged down by talentless people flooding the Internet with horrible music and that usually manifests itself in the form of the mixtape. What better way to invest as little time and money into yourself as to steal other people's beats, rhyming over them with your computer mic or whatever and then uploading it to mediafire or zshare or whatever. I get that it's a promotional tool that people like 50 Cent had huge success with but most people making them are not 50 Cent no matter how much they'd like to be. I get that it's a way to keep your name out there for people in the industry so that you don't get forgotten or left behind by new talent because we all know that a rapper's relevance is based on everything but talent now-a-days. However, everything that we as artist write is not great or even good. I've heard tons of verses from guys that I love as artists that are complete stinkers because they are over exerting their talent. The message that I'm trying to get across is to be smart about what you do because if you waste your talent on a mixtape and then come up empty on your album ... when the money is invested ... you are worthless to the landscape of sound and have effectively crushed yourself out of being important. I know these are strong words but it's what I believe in ... right or wrong.
TMB: What does your music really mean to you?
JC: My music is the most important thing to me after my family. It has helped to keep me sane over the years and it kept me out of a lot of trouble. Instead of fighting somebody physically, I did it by writing verses. I was always a step away from getting kicked out of school until about my junior year of high school when I finally woke up ... so I used music to cope with everything. Later on, music served as a sounding board for introspection and social commentary as well as once again trying to cope with issues, though the issues were different. There was a six year period where I lost a lot of people in my life to suicide, murder, drugs, etc. and a good four of those years I spent drinking really hard and had issues with it. If it wasn't for my writings, my music, I have no idea where I'd be.
Trampin featuring Naledge (of Kidz in the Hall)
Sleep Therapy is available for download @
www.cdbaby.com/cd/jcpoppe
www.myspace.com/jcpoppe
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Check It ... Shad "The Calling" feat. Jermiside and Destruments
Caught this track from one of my favorite rappers, Shad, over at www.shadk.com and the Real Frequency. New music off Ireland producer Danny Diggs Introducing Danny Diggs project. The track is dope. Check it out.
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Saturday, September 19, 2009
J. Anthony Brown - Blame It On The Jackass, Ya'll!
Caught this song on the only radio station in CT that I listen to during Tom Joyner's Morning Show on WYBC 94.3, which claims to play the best in Old School and R&B and they rarely disappoint me. Comedian J. Anthony Brown every Friday murders the hits and this time was no different. The events that happened at the VMAs gave him enough ammunition to hilariously spoof Jaime Foxx's hit "Blame It", auto-tuned and all. Check it out. It's pretty funny.
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When She Speaks, You Listen: Tha Lady Blogga on the Hofstra Rape Incident
Ya know... Not for nothing, I always tend to side with my fellow females because I feel like as a woman, we have to stick together. But there are certain behaviors that I do not co-sign. Period.
Dear Hofstra Chick,
Let me just say that I am both disgusted and annoyed with you for pulling the rape card the other day. All over the news, contacting authorities and really playing the victim role. When in fact, you consented to sex with several different people. Going out ho'ing and then crying rape the next day because you're embarassed is not acceptable behavior.
Rape is a serious allegation. How dare you take such a violent crime and try to use it to your benefit. Not only did you make a fool of yourself but you accused other people. If I were them I would sue your ass for defamation of character. There are thousands of women who have to live with that pain everyday. And you want to use it to clear your ho'ish behavior?
Women have a hard enough time in this day and age without people like you making it harder. We have to deal with a lot of shit, especially from members of the opposite sex. Doing dumb shit like this basically gives them a pass and justifies why we should be treated a certain way.
Self respect is key. If you don't respect yourself, how can you expect others to do the same?
Get yo' shit together shorty!
Peace,
Tha Lady Blogga
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Dear Hofstra Chick,
Let me just say that I am both disgusted and annoyed with you for pulling the rape card the other day. All over the news, contacting authorities and really playing the victim role. When in fact, you consented to sex with several different people. Going out ho'ing and then crying rape the next day because you're embarassed is not acceptable behavior.
Rape is a serious allegation. How dare you take such a violent crime and try to use it to your benefit. Not only did you make a fool of yourself but you accused other people. If I were them I would sue your ass for defamation of character. There are thousands of women who have to live with that pain everyday. And you want to use it to clear your ho'ish behavior?
Women have a hard enough time in this day and age without people like you making it harder. We have to deal with a lot of shit, especially from members of the opposite sex. Doing dumb shit like this basically gives them a pass and justifies why we should be treated a certain way.
Self respect is key. If you don't respect yourself, how can you expect others to do the same?
Get yo' shit together shorty!
Peace,
Tha Lady Blogga
Check full story on Hofstra Incident
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Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Alicia Keys on Lil Mama, Kanye and new music
"We can appreciate her being overwhelmed and inspired but we would have preferred if she would have did it from her seat" -Alicia Keys on Lil Mama joining her and Jay-Z on stage during VMAs. Check out the full interview.
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Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Support Real Hip Hop!
M.O.P. drops "Foundation" and KRS-ONE & Buckshot drops "Survival Skills" both today 9/15. Go cop it. Real music.
M.O.P. - Blow The Horns
M.O.P. - Riding Through ft Redman
KRS-ONE & Buckshot - Oh Really ft Talib Kweli
KRS-ONE & Buckshot - The Way I Live ft Mary J. Blige
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M.O.P. - Blow The Horns
M.O.P. - Riding Through ft Redman
KRS-ONE & Buckshot - Oh Really ft Talib Kweli
KRS-ONE & Buckshot - The Way I Live ft Mary J. Blige
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Alicia Keys - Doesn't Mean Anything
Ms. Alicia Keys releases a new single out today and the internet went buzzing. Check it out here if you haven't heard it or just want to hear it again.
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Check it ... The Messengers: Episode 3, Bob Dylan
J. Period and K'naan have been going in with their Messengers project, a remix tribute to Fela Kuti, Bob Marley and Bob Dylan. Episode #3 celebrates America’s reluctant Civil Rights song leader and poetic voice, Bob Dylan. The entire project is dope!
Check the full Episodes of The Messengers
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Check It ... Chaundon
24 Hours to Live and That N*gga featuring D-Black and produced by Mark Henry are off of Chaundon's double mixtape Black Dynamite (DJ Concept) and Black Dynamite's Revenge (DJ Mickey Knox). The tape has a tentative October release date. Check these tracks, they're dope.
24 Hrs To Live
That N*gga
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Black Dynamite,
Black Dynamite's Revenge,
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Download ... King Reign "Reign Music"
Peace to the Real Frequency for this joint! This King Reign product is dope!
After releasing the Audacity of Hope EP this year, King Reign is back to give you a full-course meal with his new project, Reign Music. Majority of the production is handled by Rich Kidd, with help from Boi 1da, Saukrates and Pharoahe Monch, in addition to guest appearances from Drake, Pharoahe Monch, Saukrates, Tona, Slakah The Beatchild, & Richie Hennessey! We’ll be hitting you with two more projects just like this from King Reign in the upcoming months, so stay chuned!Download Reign Music
One More Time feat Pharoahe Monch
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Mos Def performs Brooklyn (live)
Monday, September 14, 2009
Download ... BIGSTAT
Check it out ... BIGSTAT "DON'T QUIT YOUR DAYJOB" hosted by Redman (Click to download)
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Bigstat,
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