Tag Archives: allegiances

Trouble Does The Time On His 431 Days Mixtape

‘This is one of my biggest mixtapes that I dropped in a long time,’ host DJ Bigga Rankin tells Mixtape Daily. By Rob Markman, with reporting by FLX Trouble Photo: MTV News Mixtape Daily Main Pick Headliners : Trouble, DJ Bigga Rankin, DJ Teknikz and DJ Frank White Representing : Atlanta Mixtape : 431 Days Real Spit : Time waits for no man. It’s an age-old adage that Atlanta rapper Trouble is fully aware of. On December 17, 2008, the Duct Tape Entertainment MC was jailed on aggravated assault, and exactly two years later, in 2010, he was released. The date holds so much significance for Trouble that he went on to name his debut mixtape December 17th and then his latest tape 431 Days, signifying the amount of time between his release from jail and the tape’s March 27 release. “This is one of my biggest mixtapes that I dropped in a long time,” DJ Bigga Rankin, one of 431 Days ‘ three hosts, told Mixtape Daily. “When he speaks, he speaks the truth.” While some rappers choose to focus their attention on the club or big radio hits, Trouble specializes in emotive street material. It isn’t that he simply raps about his experience in the trap; the Zone 6 spitter takes things a step further and explores the feelings that surround his harsh realities. On “Never Understand,” Trouble teams with Bun B to explain what makes him different from his rap contemporaries. “Confused ass, little bustas bussin’, all over nothin’/ Catch a case and then turn state, who can you trust in,” Trouble raps about so-called hustlers who are ill-prepared for the drug game’s consequences. The entire 431 Days tape is peppered with this type of analysis. “All I’m Worried About” is a dedication to the rapper’s family and closest friends. With his very first line, Trouble makes it clear where his allegiances lie: “Every plate I get with food on it, I take it to my moms/ Not just crumbs, you n—as really bums.” Gucci Mane also shows up for “Hustle Ambition,” Verse Simmonds on the female-friendly “Would You” and, of course, Alley Boy and Big Bank Black from Duct Tape contribute as well. Throughout the 17-track mixtape, Trouble displays an overwhelming sense of urgency. There isn’t a wasted song, as the MC paints a focused picture with each track. Here’s to his next 431 days! Joints to Check For

Kate Nash Covers All The Bases On My Best Friend Is You

‘I don’t really stick to one thing,’ singer/songwriter says about the eclectic sounds on her new album. By James Montgomery, with reporting by Kelly Marino Kate Nash Photo: MTV News Kate Nash is an extremely verbose 22-year-old British singer/songwriter who just released her second album, the extremely verbose My Best Friend Is You, an album that’s long on lyrics (most of them exceptionally funny, tender and/or biting) and even longer on musical influences. Here, in her own rapid-fire way, is her take the album: “How would I describe in a few words? Erratic, in the sense that I don’t really stick to one thing, because as a human being I go through different mood swings. Sometimes I want to do something raw and a bit more punk-y, like ‘I Just Love You More’ to ‘I Hate Seagulls,’ it’s a big difference … and fun, like, I like to have a sense of fun in what I write, and passionate, because I can only really do stuff I care about.” The follow-up to Nash’s 2007 debut Made of Bricks (an album that was a hit in her native U.K. thanks to the success of her single “Foundations” ), Best Friend explores the same lyrical themes as her first album — love, sadness, mean girls, mean boys, her various imperfections and insecurities, BBQ — but it’s the music that’s undergone a drastic transformation. Working with Suede guitarist Bernard Butler, she’s crafted a collection of songs that are delightfully raw, rambunctious and ragged. It’s very much a portrait of a pop princess growing beyond her boundaries, and Nash isn’t too worried about who she alienates because of it. “I think it’s good when people slag you off a bit. … I feel like I’m sort of a bit like Marmite , like, people either really love my stuff or they really hate it,” she laughed. “And I never want to be bland … so this is just sort of the record I wanted to make. It was really how I wanted to express myself and what I was listening to — a lot of riot grrrl, Bikini Kill and Bratmobile and Sleater-Kinney and also, like, ’60s girl groups like the Supremes and the Shirelles.” And all those influences — and a whole lot more — are readily apparent on Best Friend. Whether it’s the first single “Do-Wah-Doo,” the media-baiting “I’ve Got A Secret” (which hints at a lesbian encounter and thumbs its nose at “uneducated people,” according to Nash,) the snarling, strutting “I Just Love You More,” or even album-closing ballad “I Hate Seagulls,” Nash proudly and loudly displays her allegiances. But for all the sounds she packed on the album, perhaps the most stunning moment features nothing more that her voice — it’s the spoken intro to “Mansion Song,” a raw, profane rant against rock-and-rollers and the girls who love them (sample line: “I fancy the hip, rock-and-roll scenester/ I wanna be f—ed and then rolled over, ’cause I’m an independent woman of the 21st century”) that not only shocks, but hints that Nash has a whole lot more to say — and she’ll be saying it for a long time to come. “Well, it’s a reflection on groupie culture, and these young girls selling themselves short and using sex as a way to empower themselves — I don’t know what they’re searching for; they must be feeling insecure to allow these men to disrespect them like that,” she said. “And then at festivals you see them and everyone thinks, ‘Oh, they’re a slag,’ or, ‘Oh, they’re dumb,’ and I think that’s sad, because there is a brain in there and there probably is someone who can do something really interesting and have an opinion and be smart and funny, but that’s the only way the world sees them … or something like that.” Are you excited for Kate Nash’s new album? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Kate Nash

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Kate Nash Covers All The Bases On My Best Friend Is You