New Hiphop 2009
New Hiphop 2009' title='New Hiphop 2009' />Daddy B. Nices New CD Reviews at Southern. Soul. Rn. BNovember 1. RASHAD THE BLUES KID Country Soul Mondo Tunes Three Stars Solid Debut By A New Southern Soul Artist. COUNTRY SOUL is the first album by a young artist from Laurel, Mississippi. Fans of grown folks, good times sounds in the vein of Lomaxs Swing It or prior to that Mel Waiters Swing Out Song may want to check him out. A nominee for Best Southern Soul Debut Artist of 2. RaShad Mc. Gill, recording as RaShad The Blues Kid, first struck pay dirt with the mid tempo Shake It. Listen to RaShad singing Shake It on You. Tube. Charting at Southern. Soul. Rn. B in August 1. Fan Review Just wanted to thank you and all of the Fatback band for such a wonderful night. The performance was absolutely fantastic and the energy was hypnotic. Hip hop or hiphop is a subculture and art movement developed in South Bronx in New York City during the late 1970s. While the term hip hop is often used to refer. World RnB Top 30 Singles on Top40 Charts. Top40Charts. com provides music charts from all over the world, like US UK Albums and Singles, Bilboard Chart, Dance. New HipHop music. Albums and Tracks with MP3 Downloads. Daddy B. Nice of vintage Lee Shot Williams in its singers casual singing style and sensual intimacy. RaShad returned to the charts in September 1. Go Get It, a duet with L. J. Echols. Listen to RaShad and L. J. singing Go Get It on You. Tube. Your Daddy B. Nice praised the great, chunky rhythm track almost like listening to reggaes archetypal rhythm section of Sly Robbie. But while giving credit for the instrumentation to Echols, the unpretentious pleasure generated by the melody and vocal were all RaShads. Meanwhile, RaShad wasted no time, parlaying his debut single Shake It into all important touring dates and networking with other like minded musicians. One such joint effort is Youre All That I Need, a duet with Miss Portia from her upcoming debut album, All In My Feelings. More at home, RaShad teams with Napoleon Demps on the zydeco tinged Saddle Up, a hit worthy track from COUNTRY SOUL with the goods to match if not surpass the popularity of Shake It. Watch the official video of RaShad and Napoleon singing Saddle Up on You. Tube. RaShad was also featured on a song from Napoleons debut album from last year, the compilation Southern Soul, Vol. Listen to RaShad and Napoleon singing Never Get It All on You. Tube. Get It All is wisely reprised on COUNTRY SOUL. Another highlight of RaShads new album is his partnering with the renowned young gun of southern soul, J Wonn, on The Blues Kids signature single. Listen to RaShad and J Wonn singing Shake It The Remix on You. Tube. In fact, what may be most impressive about RaShads first effort is the sureness of the artists grasp of southern soul. There are hardly any of the mis steps characteristic of typical debuts. A song like the mid tempo but rocking out Good Love, for example, isnt a head turner, but for what it is, its done well. And yet there is one such exception and mis step on the CD the mall generic, straight blues Dance. Dance could have been recorded by a million other blues artists. On Dance RaShad becomes anonymous. Listen to RaShad singing Dance on You. Tube. The point is that only RaShad The Blues Kid could have recorded Shake It or Saddle Up or the heartfelt I Love The Blues or the other tracks on Country Soul. Suddenly RaShad becomes one IN a million, not one OF a million. RaShad already understands this, as attested to by the rest of COUNTRY SOUL, and thats a huge step forward in his budding career. Daddy B. Nice. SampleBuy RaShads new Country Soul CD at Amazon. SampleBuy RaShads new Country Soul CD at i. Tunes. See Daddy B. Nices Artist Guide to RaShad. Product, comments, information or questions for Daddy B. Nice daddybnicesouthernsoulrnb. October 3. 0, 2. 01. MS. JODY Thunder Under Yonder Ecko Records Four Stars Distinguished Effort. Should please old fans and gain new. Your Daddy B. Nice was listening to a National Public Radio interview with an African American educator from Memphis, Tennessee coincidentally the home of Ecko Records the other day. She was bemoaning the divide between the rural culture of the black Deep South and the urbanized, sophisticated and socially progressive culture of the cities Memphis, Atlanta, etc. I was taken aback by her total antipathy and denigration of the country and small town folks not to mention lower income strata of the cities who make up the audience for southern soul music. According to her, the culture of the African American Delta, with its sins of sexual profligacy, single parenthood, economic hardship, poor diet, alcoholism and the like should be eradicated for the betterment of all. While most people would agree that her list of the black communitys woes are problematic, I couldnt help thinking how elitist her comments sounded. Exactly like the urban white progressives writing off of rural, white middle America that brought Donald Trump to power. As with the divide between white urban techies and white, mid American common folk, the black educator had absolutely no feeling for the underlying work ethic, stalwart spirit or old fashioned virtues of friendliness, loyalty, religiosity, humility, humor and respect for tradition that make the black Deep South one of the most fertile and cohesive cultural matrixes in the world. And yet, this is the social prejudice that excludes southern soul music from its own largest potential market, the urbanized African Americans and their urban children, for whom anything less hard edged and cynical than hiphop is somehow outdated and embarrassing. Enter Ms. Jody. What better avatar for the traditional culture of the Delta I see all the mens sic. Undressing me with their eyes. They want to jump this pony. And ride, ride, ride. Ms. Jodys Energizer Slide. Every song on Ms. Jodys new album, Thunder Under Yonder, embraces the social incorrectness of life and times in the Delta, and does so with a brio worthy of illustrious forbears like the just passed Fats Domino. We need our outlaws. And where are they going to come from Ms. Jodys very name appropriates the traditionally male social outlaw, Jody. Ms. Jody is the larger than life Stagolee of southern soul in this gender equal age, and all of us, her fans the mens and womens get off on her breathtaking composure in life situations wed much rather experience in our music than in our real lives. I quote at length from Ms. Jodys I Had To Lie. I got a friend whos a so and so. I been knowing him for quite some while. I stopped by his house one day. And things got a little wild. After we were through making love. I grabbed my clothes and got out of bed. He said he wanted me to leave my husband. And be with him instead. When I got home, yall. My husband met me at the door. I just received a phone call. From old so and so. I had to lie to my husband. I couldnt tell the truth. I had to lie. Yes I did. I did what I had to do. Baby, baby, just listen to me, please. Because I wouldnt sleep with old so and so. He got upset with me. I told him I got a man at home. Who loves me and treats me kind. And to cheat on him would never enter my mind. Program Za Hakovanje Sajtova. Observe the upfront eroticism of Ms. Jodys narrator, the Spock like objectivity in her telling, the lack of guilt in her act of deceiving. Outlaw stuff. You can be a woman who goes to church and is faithful to her husband and still chuckle, laugh and maybe even admire Ms. Jodys calculation and chutzpah. Ms. Jody Joanne Delapaz wrote the lyrics, by the way, along with John Ward. I Had To Lie topped the charts at 1 on Daddy B. Nices Top 1. 0 Southern Soul Singles in October, 2. Daddy B. Nices Top 1. BREAKING Southern Soul Singles Preview For. OCTOBER 2. 01. 7 . I Had To Lie Ms. Jody. This Ms. Jody written tune has it all the Ms.