Official Nas Thread

prophecypro

Hollywood North
Joined
May 6, 2012
Messages
28,004
Reputation
2,496
Daps
60,013
Reppin
LDN

L. Deezy

Veteran
Joined
May 25, 2012
Messages
37,344
Reputation
4,470
Daps
82,782

mson

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Sep 10, 2012
Messages
53,034
Reputation
6,781
Daps
100,840
Reppin
NULL
Bout to download that Dave East mixtape ASAP.. that shyt goes innnnnnnn

How we just hearing about this nygga on the board?? Oh I forgot they busy checking for Thugger Thugger:ld:

Talent is talent right:skip:
 

Big Mark

All Star
Joined
Jul 28, 2012
Messages
3,128
Reputation
220
Daps
4,353
Reppin
NULL
I look forward to Mass appeal music but I sincerely hope that Nas doesn't have these artist all over his solo album
 

ISO

Pass me the rock nikka
Joined
Mar 12, 2013
Messages
60,875
Reputation
8,167
Daps
193,960
Reppin
BX, NYC
I wouldn't mind a Nas and Killer Mike track on some knowledge shyt, but other than that I don't
wanna hear it. Maybe one big Mass Appeal cut on some cypher shyt other than that I don't want to see like Nas ft. Bishop Nehru.

Dave East is nice though :leon:
 

Big Mark

All Star
Joined
Jul 28, 2012
Messages
3,128
Reputation
220
Daps
4,353
Reppin
NULL
I wouldn't mind a Nas and Killer Mike track on some knowledge shyt, but other than that I don't
wanna hear it. Maybe one big Mass Appeal cut on some cypher shyt other than that I don't want to see like Nas ft. Bishop Nehru.

Dave East is nice though :leon:

I hope they get all the posses cut and Mass Appeal reppin out of their system on the Mass Appeal album.
 

prophecypro

Hollywood North
Joined
May 6, 2012
Messages
28,004
Reputation
2,496
Daps
60,013
Reppin
LDN
http://www.theupcoming.co.uk/2014/10/02/london-film-festival-2014-nas-time-is-illmatic-review/

London Film Festival 2014: Nas – Time Is Illmatic | Review
Thursday 2nd October 2014


Thursday 9th October, 8.45pm – Ritzy Cinema, Screen 2

Saturday 11th October, 6.15pm – Odeon Covent Garden, Screen 2

This documentary celebrates the 20th anniversary of the release of one of the most revered and influential hip-hop albums of all time, Illmatic, released in 1994 by the then 20-year-old rapper, Nas. We meet Nas’ friends, family and some of the influential icons of the scene, exploring the musical, social and historical influences that birthed the album.

The fear, brutality and violence that characterised life in the Queensbridge projects of Nas’ youth, are brought vividly to life in the stories, photos and videos from that time. Nas’ childhood friend Ill Will was shot and killed two years before this album was released, as drugs tore apart African-American communities. There’s a poignant scene where Nas’ brother Jabari “Jungle” Jones, looks at the photo from the liner notes of the album. It shows Nas and his friends in a Queensbridge park back in 1994. He points at the faces in turn, telling us their fates. Most of them are now dead or in jail and it’s a bleak reminder of the life that could have awaited Nas, if not for his escape through music.

The filmmakers have managed to track down most of the people involved with the record, from the collaborators and producers to the cover photographer. The music itself is mainly heard live, with clips of Nas performing at various shows. The lyrics are helpfully subtitled during these performances, and the subsequent dissection of the intricate and careful rhymes throughout every song show off Nas’ lyrical dexterity, and help demonstrate to the uninitiated why this album is so highly regarded.

Nas’ father, jazz musician Olu Dara, features throughout. He appears playing cornet on the album itself, and he has much to say about the social ills of the New York projects. When Nas and his brother dropped out of school, he was supportive, encouraging them to better themselves and seek their own paths, comparing the public school system at that time to “enrolling them in hell”.

It’s a thorough exploration of the album and its genesis, but at only 75 minutes, it doesn’t overdo it. It’s unapologetically laudatory and reverential, but it never gets cloying. The sight of an eighth grade dropout having a scholarship named for him at Harvard University is a tribute to Nas’ vision and prodigious talent, and this film does him, and the album, full justice.



Verdict:
star-active.png
star-active.png
star-active.png
star-active.png
star-inactive.png
 
Top