#DailyDrop

Black diamonds and pearls

Nas, Ms. Lauryn Hill. "If I Ruled The World (Imagine That)." It Was Written, Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment, 1996.

On Thursday evening, a friend came through with a last-minute surprise: tickets to catch Nas and Lauryn Hill perform at SF's Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. I've caught each of them perform many times over the years, and more recently have been to their double-bill shows at Oakland's Fox Theater, one of my favourite venues in the Bay Area.

These two have still got it, no doubt, and the messages in their lyrics resonate two decades after this track first dropped. Imagine that.


Who wants to love somebody like me?

Alicia Keys. "In Common." Here, RCA Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment, 2016.

2016 is shaping up to be an incredible year for music. While we've been rocked by the loss of several of our greatest legends -- from Bowie to Prince -- the next generation of artists (Anderson .PaakKaytranada and Solange, just to name a few) have been releasing some truly meaningful work that, I believe, will stand the test of time.

And it just keeps coming. In anticipation of her new album, Here, out this Friday, Alicia Keys earlier this week released her short film The Gospel, directed by A.V. Rockwell. Roam the streets of Keys' New York City as Rockwell captures everyday moments and stories, get lost in the cinematography that propels you forward, in constant motion, as the film addresses the impacts of police brutality.

I'm looking forward to all the remixes I'm sure are about to drop in the coming weeks of today's track, "In Common," bound to be a club anthem this winter.

This is a call for all you sleepin' souls, wake up and take control

Public Enemy, Steven Stills. "He Got Game." He Got Game (Soundtrack), Island Def Jam Records, Inc., 1998.

Basketball legend Ray Allen (Jesus Shuttlesworth for those of you paying attention) announced Tuesday that he would be retiring from the NBA this year. Allen wrote a beautifully written piece in the Player's Tribune as part of their "Letter to My Younger Self" series, which included these gems, among other golden nuggets of wisdom.

Listen: God doesn’t care whether you make your next jump shot. 
God will give you a lot of things in life, but he’s not going to give you your jump shot. Only hard work will do that.

Sometimes you’ll be afraid.
Sometimes you’ll think you’re out of your league.
But you’ll keep showing up every day, putting in the work.

In every locker room you’ll ever be in, everybody will say all the right things. Everybody says they’re willing to sacrifice whatever it takes to win a title. But this game isn’t a movie. It’s not about being the man in the fourth quarter. It’s not about talk. It’s getting in your work every single day, when nobody is watching.

The message in Chuck D & Flava Flav's lyrics on this track, written for Spike Lee's classic film by the same name and which samples the opening verse of Buffalo Springfield's classic "For What It's Worth," still feels appropriate today almost two decades later.

 🎶 More than your eye can see and ears can hear
Year by year all the sense disappears
Nonsense perseveres, prayers laced with fear

Beware, two triple O is near  🎶

And from Flava Flav (I never thought I'd be writing these words, but here we go)...

🎶 He-hey!!!
Aiyo, these are some serious times that we're livin in G
And a new world order is about to begin, y'knowhutI'msayin?
Now the question is - are you ready, for the real revolution
Which is the evolution of the mind?
If you seek then you shall find that we all come from the divine
You dig what I'm sayin?
Now if you take heed to the words of wisdom
That are written on the walls of life
Then universally, we will stand and divided we will fall
Because love conquers all, you understand what I'm sayin?
This is a call to all you sleepin souls
Wake up and take control of your own cipher
And be on the lookout for the spirit snipers
Tryin to steal your light, y'knowhutI'msayin?
Look within-side yourself, for peace
Give thanks, live life and release
You dig me? You got me? 🎶

Cool beans, cool beans

Anderson .Paak. "Come Down." Malibu, STEEL WOOL / OBE / ART CLUB / EMPIRE, 2016.

.Paak gave us a real nice present for Halloween yesterday: the official music video for "Come Down," a track produced by the great Hi-Tek. 

I dig the Ernie Barnes shout-out at the end of the video, with a shot of his classic "Sugar Shack" painting that graced the cover of Marvin Gaye's 1976 record I Want You. Just another example of .Paak choosing "to follow what the greatest do," as he sings on "The Bird."

Enjoy.

🎶 That's a whole lot of reefer, let me help you with the pre-roll 🎶

Operating from another world

Sevdaliza. "Marilyn Monroe." Children of Silk, Twisted Elegance, 2015.

This track feels just right for Halloween. Moody, mysterious, haunting, and sexy af.

And those lyrics.

🎶 It’s true
In this life
I’ve never been the one
In your eyes
I’ve never been the truth
All you saw
Was a broken mirror
And they told
Me to care
When tryin’ to fix your heart
It’s unfair
I’m tryin’ to fix myself
And not care
Too much about you 🎶

Thanks to one of my oldest friends, Beatrice Lee (more about her in this week's edition of #views), for putting me onto Sevdaliza, who went from playing basketball in the Netherlands at the professional level to pushing boundaries as a performing artist.

Hold me like a child, run your fingers through my hair

Hannah Georgas. "Don't Go." For Evelyn, Beetle Bomb Music Inc. Under Exclusive license to Dine Alone Music Inc., 2016.

I had the pleasure of seeing Vancouver-born and now Toronto-based Hannah Georgas perform this Friday at the Pandora offices in Oakland for our regular artist "Whiteboard Sessions."

Stripped down to just a keyboard, guitar, and her ethereal vocals, Hannah gave a hauntingly beautiful rendition of this song, which she described as being about the "unbearable pain" of losing her mother.

There's something so comforting to me about hearing a Canadian accent, especially in song. Hannah's voice reminds me of the great Leslie Feist and I simply adore the way she sings the lyrics "lying on your couch." Enjoy, SVP.

You must follow your heart

City and Colour. "Against The Grain." Bring Me Your Love (Special Edition), City and Colour, under exclusive license to Dine Alone Music Inc., 2007.

We're doing it. More Canada. It's been raining here in the Bay Area for the better part of the week, and this feels like just the thing. 

Friends and family have been feeling some loss and pain lately and there are some nuggets of wisdom in Dallas Green's lyrics that have been speaking to me as I keep them in my thoughts.

🎶 If you feel you've paid the price, and your wounds should cease to heal // And everything you love in life spins like a winding wheel // If you should wake to find you're abandoned, and the road you traveled leads to a dead end // When death creeps in to play it's part, you must follow your heart 🎶 

Don't hide yourself away, let it shine

Sloan. "Everything You've Done Wrong." One Chord To Another, murderecords, 1996.

Uh oh. Here we go down a rabbit hole of classic Canadian music videos from the late 90s.

🎶 Do your time, and then come home for good. 🎶

Bonus: just had to include this, because if it feels good, do it. Feeling nostalgic for the days of Much on Queen West.