Get Him To The Greek

Events, Fly Spots, My Dudes, Stan Ipcus

Get Him To The Greek, the highly anticipated Forgetting Sarah Marshall spin-off starring Russell Brand and Jonah Hill (see above), finally released its official trailer.  Looks like quite an adventure.  I’m very excited about this movie for a few reasons.  One, I’m a big fan of Judd Apatow movies, and FSM is a classic.  Two, my boy Nick Kroll is in it, as is his boy Aziz Ansari (they popped up together briefly in I Love You, Man too).  Check them both out in the first couple seconds of the trailer with Diddy.  Yes!

My third and final reason why I’m excited about Get Him To The Greek is because I’ve performed there!  Ahh, the summer of 2006.  Check the pic of me rocking with Matisyahu at the Greek Theatre…

Finally, a movie I’m looking forward to seeing.  Anything else good coming out?

Verses From The Ipster

Stan Ipcus

Hello, this is Fitz Winkleman.  You may have heard my distinguished voice on Westcheddar Radio, a program I co-host with my good buddy Stan Ipcus.  Today, I’m here with Ipcus to discuss his latest project, Verses From The Ipster, which is an 80 minute onslaught of verses spanning his entire rap career from 1999-2009.  I had the privilege to preview the project last night, and I must say it’s quite incredible.  For those of you like me who have been Stan Ipcus fans since the beginning, it is certainly a trip down memory lane.  So Ipcus, where did the idea come for this project?

IP:  I guess I was thinking about how long I’ve been rapping, and realized it had been 10 years since I recorded my first album.  Dirty Jax and I put out a Best of Stan Ipcus mixtape last April, and it was hot because it had a bunch of new stuff on it as well as some of my older songs.  But I really left a lot of songs off that, especially my stuff from when I was in college.  It was more of a way to put out some new music while simotaneously introducing some of my new listeners to some songs that were a couple years older they probably never heard before.  But with Verses from the Ipster, I’m taking it all the back to the very first album and going right up to the end of last year.  It’s a complete retrospective.

FW:  Why did you decide to put the verses in chronological order?

IP:  It just made sense that way.  It’s kind of my evolution as a rapper.  You can hear my voice change, and how the flows progressed, and kind of see how I grew as a rapper.  Plus, it made it easier to put together.  I kind of sat down with all my albums and went through them in order searching through my favorite verses.

FW:  But there’s some stuff on there that never popped up on any of your albums.

IP:  Yeah, well I have a file of unreleased songs I’ve done over the years, and I mixed those in too.  Some of my favorite verses on this project come from songs I never officially put out.

FW:  Was it overwhelming to try and tackle your whole catalog at once?

IP:  Not too bad.  I have a pretty good grip on my discography.  Once I started I just kind of got rolling and was excited to get to the end.  The hard part was fitting everything in I wanted to use.  I was pretty selective though, and really stuck to my personal favorites.  Some things I thought were hot I ended up pulling off or skipping over, especially if I wasn’t really digging the beats.  And also, I noticed that a few of my favorite songs actually didn’t even have a verse that really stood out to me.

FW:  Like what?

IP:  Umm, “Dan Dynamite” was one.  I mean, that’s one of my absolute favorite songs I ever recorded.  We even made it the first song on the Dirty Jax mixtape.  But it’s more the beat and the chorus and the concept that’s hot.  It’s not really my most lyrically crazy verses.  I also like my voice on that song.  But I skipped over that one.  Same thing with “Rap Video” and “Let’s Walk”.  Two of my favorite beats and songs, but there just wasn’t one verse that really jumped out at me.  It’s more the song as a whole.  I really tried to reach for verses that stood out for this project.

FW:  Your voice has changed a lot over the years.  But it’s not like it started as one voice and progressed to another.  You kind of hop all over the place with it.

IP:  It’s weird like that.  I definitely had more of a high pitched voice in my early recordings, and it got lower over time.  But I still revisit the high pitched voice a lot.  Like on “My Ferris Buellers”, that’s almost like my old voice.  Then there’s some songs where I have the raspy voice like on “Dan Dynamite” or “Wifey Material”, which seems to come out on more laidback cuts.  And then there’s the aggressive voice, when I’m just going in, like on “Brainiac” or “Hammer”.  And then sometimes, it might just sound like my normal speaking voice.  I can’t control it, unless I purposely use a different voice on a chorus or something, like on “Brainiac”.  But it’s usually the microphone or the feel of the song or what time of the day I’m recording that changes the tone though.  Like I said, it’s weird.

FW:  Any favorite old verses that you forgot about that popped out at you while you were putting this together?

IP:  Yeah.  One of the first verses on there is over this old Cypress Hill interlude, and it’s really slow, but I love it.  I’m talking about being in class with my old roommate Apo, and I’m just kind of observing what’s going on around the room.  It brought me back to my college days.  At the end of the verse we both get up and give our teacher dap in the middle of class and leave to go smoke pot.

Halloween on Knox Road in College Park, 1998

Stan Ipcus rapping on WMUC in College Park, Fall 1998

FW:  Hilarious!  Any others.  I mean, there’s 80 verses on there.

IP:  Another old one that cracks me up is this verse I put on there that I spit on the Sports Junkies radio show down when I was living in D.C.  My boy told me they were having this contest around the time 8 Mile came out for white rappers, so I went up there just for fun.  I spit this quick style verse over an old Jay-Z beat.  I really thought I should have won that contest.  There were mad dudes up there, and I can’t front some of them were pretty nice, but cockiness aside no one was touching that verse, and they all knew it, including the hosts of the show who were bugging out when I finished.  But I don’t think the judges wanted to give me first prize because I was from New York.  It was a fun event though, and they gave us all free passes to an early screening of the movie.   And the recording still puts a big smile on my face.

FW:  Me too.  That verse is crazy good.  You’ve got a bunch of Jay-Z beats on there actually.

IP:  Yeah I realized that too.  I don’t know, he’s one of my favorites, and I always liked his beats.  There’s a couple strings of like three or four that I put together that are pretty fun.  My favorite is probably the one over the “Squeeze First” instrumental.

FW:  There’s a lot of original beats on there too.

IP:  When I was living in College Park and D.C., I used to work with my boys Max B and Bless a lot.  A lot of the the early stuff is produced by them.  Of course, we’re all still friends and collaborators even though they both live in Maryland.  I recorded a bunch of songs for Bachelor Party down there that Max actually co-produced and played instruments on.  In fact, if you listen closely to “Wifey Material” you can hear Bless talking in the background through the whole song.  Those are my dudes.  I do a lot of production myself too, but it’s mostly just looping up old records.  I don’t really program drums.

Stan Ipcus flyer, College Park, Summer 2000

FW:  What’s with the breaking glass in between each song?

IP:  I wanted to drop Funkmaster Flex style bombs to transition between each verse because I don’t know how to scratch and I wanted it to flow from one verse to the other without any breaks for choruses, but I couldn’t find a bomb sound that had the right impact.  I thought the breaking glass was cool and more original and it had a good sound to it that wasn’t annoying.  I tried to have each beat kind of fit with the next one, but also keep it chronological order for the most part, so that was a little tricky.  And the volumes of the verses fluctuates a bit throughout the 80 minutes, which I tried my best to control.  But I think the overall flow of the project is pretty seamless.  It works.

FW:  I have to agree.  So you’re having a baby.  Are you still going to rap when you become a Dad?

IP:  Probably, but not as much as I used to.  It’s really just a hobby at this point.  I rarely perform.  Five years ago, I was doing shows all the time at lots of major venues in NYC and Westchester.  Now it’s maybe once or twice a year that I touch a stage.  I like to come out and perform “WP” with Matisyahu when he’s in town.  But I enjoy keeping up my blog Westcheddar, and I’m working with Up North Trips now too, which is a cool site that kind of merges old sports and hip hop pics from the 80’s and 90’s together, and that’s really fun to contribute to because that’s my zone.  And every once in a while I still get the urge to write or record songs.  I actually just did a new song that Max B produced.  I’m always working on some sort of project, and this is evidence of that.  I like being creative, and it’s fun to have such a lengthy discography to play with.  Right now I think I’m most excited about Westcheddar Radio and us recording our next episode.  Have you been enjoying co-hosting that with me?

FW:  Of course!  Yeah, it’s been fantastic.  I’m looking forward to our next episode too.  Now Ipcus, I wanted to ask you, do you have any favorite rap verses from other artists that you listen to?

IP:  The Nas verse on “Verbal Intercourse” might be my favorite verse of all time.  It’s so good.  The whole song is amazing, but that actual verse is bananas, and historically it’s so important too.  For Nas to be the only non-Wu member on that album says a lot about how much he was respected back then by his peers.  I have a couple high school kids I work with who are really into hip hop and writing raps and making beats.  Me and this one kid in particular have a very similar taste in rap music, so I put him on to a lot of stuff.  Right now, ever since I played him “Exhibit C”, all he listens to is Jay Electronica.  I made him a CD of all Jay Electronica songs, and he loves it.  And he’s really into 90’s hip hop too, especially Biggie and Nas.  I was giving him a ride one day and I had some mix CD in my car and when “Verbal Intercourse” came on he started bugging out!  He kept rewinding it over and over.  Somehow, he had never heard it before, which blew my mind.  But then again, he’s still in high school, so that’s an oldie to him.

FW:  Who are you checking for right now?

IP:  Jay Electronica.  He’s dope.  I like his flow, his voice, the way he pronounces his words, and he has that thing about him where every verse I hear from him has that classic sound.  People keep saying he reminds them of Nas, but I think he’s kind of a mixture of Nas and Biggie.  He’s ill.

FW: Well thanks for your time Ipcus.  I guess I’ll see you for the next episode of Westcheddar Radio.

IP:  Thanks Fitz.  And to everyone out there, enjoy Verses From The Ipster.  It’s a doozy.  Perfect for your Ipod, and it will fit on a CD if you want to bang it in your car.  Thanks for all the support.  Peace!

DOWNLOAD/STREAM STAN IPCUS VERSES FROM THE IPSTER

*Bonus*

DOWNLOAD/STREAM STAN IPCUS “PLUG ME IN” PRODUCED BY MAX BEE

Johnny Honesty

Interviews

John Mayer is who everyone was talking about yesterday after his already infamous March 2010 Playboy “tell all” interview was published online.  I read the interview, and I’m not sure why everyone is so upset with the guy (other than Jenny).  I guess anytime a white dude publicly drops an “N Bomb”, in whatever context, he’s gonna be scrutinized for it.  But really, he was just being truthful about his life, just as he did in the other interview I recently read with him in Rolling Stone.  He’s obviously going through some shit, but also having lots of fun being a celebrity.  I mean, he grew up a regular guy in New England who wanted to be a rock star, and his dream came true.  Now he has mad money, dates A listers, and has to deal with the paparazzi and the press and everything else that comes along with stardom.  But he’s also a 32 year old guy, like alot of guys out there, who has a fear of marriage and getting older, likes to party and have his freedom, and sometimes would rather just get stoned and/or watch porn and jerk off than deal with his future (not me I’m married hahaha).  Oh, and he prefers white girls.  And he’s not afraid to pop off his mouth, crack jokes, and talk about it all in enormous detail (a little too much information on the wacking off bud).  The only problem is, he cares what people think of him, unlike someone like Tupac who said whatever he was feeling and probably didn’t give a shit what anyone thought of him.  So he has to go back on his words and fix them or apologize for them so that people don’t take what he says the wrong way.  I’m explaining all this because I’m a John Mayer fan.  He’s a guy I admire, a guy like me who grew up playing music and actually made it in the industry.  He’s my age, represents my generation, makes great songs, and plays a mean guitar.  Sure, he’s a bit cocky and arrogant, and as funny as he is sometimes, his jokes aren’t always told in the best taste.  But whatever.  That’s who he is.  At least he’s being honest.  Stop apologizing Johnny Boy.  Keep telling it like it is.  That, or just shut the fuck up, and keep your thoughts and feelings to yourself.  One or the other.  Your call.  Either way I’m still going to listen to your music.

JOHN MAYER PLAYBOY INTERVIEW MARCH 2010

*Bonus*

PLAYBOY INTERVIEWS ARCHIVES

How To Make It In America

Interviews

HBO’s newest series How To Make It In America starts this Sunday, but you can preview the first episode in its entirety right here, thanks to HBO leaking it on YouTube.  I guess they’re trying to get a buzz brewing in the blogosphere (Green Lantern also made a promotional mixtape, get it at NahRight).  The show follows a group of young men hustling to make it in Manhattan.  Think east coast Entourage, except these boys haven’t blown up yet.  Seems like it has potential to be pretty good.  And it has a cool cast of young guys, including Kid Cudi.  Check out the first episode below…

Well, what do you think?  Any good?  Let me know…

*Bonus*

My favorite interviewer Nardwuar recently filmed a one on one with Kid Cudi, and asked him about the new TV show, as well as a bunch of other music related questions (until Cudi abruptly ends the interview and bounces).  Check it out.  And keep your eyes open for Nardwuar vs. Matisyahu, coming soon…

Larger Than Life

My Dudes

Today is the 10th anniversary of Big Pun’s death, and here at Westcheddar, we would like to honor one of the greatest rappers of all time by offering this classic mixtape to our readers for free, courtesy of my close friend and White Plains native DJ ROZ.  As you may know, Big Pun spent the last days of his life in White Plains at the Crowne Plaza hotel, where he died 2/7/00.  Back cover with tracklist, and download link, below…

DOWNLOAD DJ ROZ BIG PUN LARGER THAN LIFE

Check out more classic Big Pun pictures, videos, and music, at UP NORTH TRIPS, which is a great hip hop/sports site that I am contributing to now.  Perfect for those of you from my generation who want to take a trip down memory lane through the 80’s and 90’s, or those of you younger or older readers that want to dive deep into “our” golden era of hip hop and sports.  Click HERE for a history of all Big Pun content, including today’s #PUNDAY memorial posts.

*UPDATE*

Here’s a couple more links to check out….

Up North Trips Pun Day Complete Recap (All Links In One Post)

Peter Rosenberg’s Hot 97 Real Late Big Pun Tribute Mix

RIP BIG PUN

Making The New Sade Album

Uncategorized

Sade’s new album Soldier of Love comes out next Tuesday, and I’m definitely excited about it.  I’ve been purposely avoiding the leaks, which I never do, because I want to buy the album and listen to it the way she put it together.  The single (title track), which came out many weeks ago, has been enough to hold me over.  Check out this behind the scenes look at the making of Sade’s new album…

Did you really think that was all I was gonna give you?  Come on now!  Sade got MAD CLASSIC SONGS.  But have you ever seen the videos for them?  I haven’t.  Until now.  Here’s a couple of my all time fave Sade tracks…

“Hang On To Your Love”

(remember when me and K-Wet sampled this? Click HERE to hear)

“The Sweetest Taboo”

“Kiss Of Life”

“Smooth Operator”

Oh, you want to see her new video?  Well I posted the link last month when we played the song on Westcheddar Radio #2.  Check it out HERE.  The next Westcheddar Radio episode is coming very soon.  And go cop that Sade album on Tuesday!  Just in time for Valentine’s Day!!!!!

New School

My Dudes, Youth

My young boy Rell from the BX is still at it, writing good songs and making cool music videos for the streets.  I support this dude 100 percent, and have posted his stuff a couple times on Westcheddar (he’s one of Matty B’s students).  Here’s his latest, over Jay-Z’s “A Million And One Questions”.  It’s called “I Feel”…

Check out all his videos on his YouTube channel HERE.

Another dude I’m checking for right now is my geee Killa Whale.  I’ve known this kid since 7th Grade, and he lives up to his name on the mic.  He’s ferocious.  Even as a 7th grader his bars were so ridiculous you would’ve thought some grown ass man was ghostwriting for him.  Now he’s a senior in high school, and still doing his thing.  I’m looking forward to hearing some new stuff from him (his latest mixtape cover is above and is available on his Myspace page).  Check out this two part interview with Killa Whale below.  Thanks for the shout out Whale!  White Plains stand up!

KILLA WHALE MYSPACE PAGE

Now please, download this song onto your nearest Ipod or computer or whatever the hell you listen to your music on.  These are my high school boys from Mount Kisco, and trust me, they are focused.  All original beats and rhymes.  Alon “Life With Stars”.  I fux with this hard body…

DOWNLOAD/STREAM ALON “LIFE WITH STARS”

One more.  This is from my boy Chase (from White Plains but lives in Mt. Kisco).  He is writing every day, and recording every night with me where I work.  Great kid, and he’s got some dope lyrics.  This is his newest track, which he said is one of his best, so I thought I’d leak it out here.

DOWNLOAD/STREAM CHASE “WINNER”

Who else is nice around the way that we should be checking for?  Let me know in the comments section.  Peace…

Jerk Off

Youth

If you are in tune with the youth of America right now, then you know that the biggest dance in the country is called the “jerk”.  It’s basically like a backwards running man.  Where I work, all the kids from Kindergarten and up can do it.  It’s awesome.  I think I’ve got it down too.  Check out the video above of a couple of my fly whiteboy middle school kids (Killa Cam and Fettucini) doing the “jerk”.  I join in towards the end. LOL

Now, watch the OFFICIAL tutorial of how to do the dance, by the guys who started it all.  I guess the move we are all actually doing is called “the reject”, and something else is the “jerk”.  Huh.  Well, around the way it’s all the same…

Now you try it!

Do The Right Thing

Sports

This shirt is hot.  Some random kid out of Philly is making it.  Cop it here.  He’s got it for cheap…

BUY LEBRON I LOVE NY SHIRT

He had another funny shirt that I gotta post.  Get it HERE

Do the right thing Lebron.  Come to New York.  We know you love it here.

Winter Wind

Uncategorized

D.C. Hip hop producer Oddisee (I know him from my College Park days), who is also 1/3 of the group Diamond District, is back with his latest ode to the seasons, Odd Winter.  It is as eclectic as Odd Summer and Odd Autumn, filled with all sorts of hip hop nuggets, and is definitely worth a listen, especially if you’re in to new sounds and crazy instrumentals.  There’s a few different rappers featured on there too, though Oddisee doesn’t grab the mic for this volume.  My personal favorite is “The Warm Up” featuring lyrics from underground rapper Homeboy Sandman.  Check it out below, along with the link to download the whole project.

HOMEBOY SANDMAN “THE WARM UP” (PRODUCED BY ODDISEE)

DOWNLOAD ODDISEE ODD WINTER

Oddisee also keeps a blog, where I spotted a great non-hip hop video by a group I was not familiar with, Kings of Convenience.  Turns out they’ve been around for a while and have some fairly acclaimed albums, so I am in the process of digging through their discography for more gems.  They have a Simon and Garfunkel type harmony thing going on.  Here’s the video I saw on Oddisee’s blog for their song “Boat Behind”.  I really like this.  Feels like summer on a snowy day…

This song made me think of another S & G influenced group (similar harmonies).  A bonus if you will.  Here’s This Is Ivy League’s video for “London Bridges”…

Finally, check out the legends themselves, Paul and Art, performing “The Sound Of Silence” this past fall at MSG for the 25th Anniversary of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  Legendary…

Where else could you get Paul Simon and Homeboy Sandman in one post?  It’s Westcheddar baby!  Gimme mines!