Ghetto Gary Neal
Blair and Mills showing off their stage presence. You could never have imagined the Spurs rapping on stage with Bun B before SJAX came back. CoJo there too.
Stak5 Bonner Blair Neal and Bun B at sxsw rappin
Ghetto Gary Neal
Blair and Mills showing off their stage presence. You could never have imagined the Spurs rapping on stage with Bun B before SJAX came back. CoJo there too.
Last edited by BatManu20; 03-15-2013 at 02:27 PM.
yes, Mills and Joseph are also in that video
Diaw was there as well.
Saw him leave with a huge piece of cake.
And lol at the shout out to Bonner for being the reason the whole thing took place.
I know most people do, but in case anyone doesn't know what SJAX is referring to about his song with Kevin Durant, enjoy:
photo gallery from spurs.com
http://www.nba.com/spurs/photos/130315_sxsw
that song could be so much better. the instrumental is amateurish and the hook is terrible. i like the verses, stak is cool, he just needs a better producer haha
I think the hook is the fault of the instrumental tbh. While I suspect they might've known what they wanted talk about (they were choosing between basketball, women, money, or "hip hop"), it sounds to me like he sang the hook over the pre-made beat.
I find that I'm more pleasantly surprised by the music basketball player's make when I lower my expectations.
the instrumental picks up after the intro, but there's no fluid continuity, it sounds like a 10 year old playing with fl studio. but then again, cheap and tacky is kind of "in" with hip hop lol. was the hook actually sjax though? thought it might be an unnamed guest
Bonner did set up the whole event, with his brother. He invited Jackson to be the headliner.
FL Studio is exactly what I thought of when I heard that bass actually haha. Just be thankful there's no seams![]()
Honestly though, my guess is that the producer/composer doesn't have a strong musical background. The voicings used in the song's (only) chord progression sound very basic to me and while listening I couldn't help but notice that the majority of the instruments seem to draw primarily from, you know, the notes found within those chords. The bass might do something different for a couple beats or the synths might go a little higher up the scale, but the instruments as a whole don't really stray from that main progression and the producer relies mostly on using different synths (can't wait for this trend to end) and changing up the volume or the instruments to signal what's going on.
Except for those parts where the synth is riffing off of that main sequence, the other instruments don't seem to really swing so it comes off a little bit unpolished overall imo.
I thought the hook was Durant, but it could've been the producer or another singer I suppose. Definitely not Sjax imo though I could be wrong.
indeed Skep, i'm impressed. another music aficianadoagree though, many producers, even big name main stream producers don't exactly have an extensive music background and to someone who has an ear for it, it shows. I almost feel like a keen ear to sound is becoming a lost art. they seem to have the concept of rhythm down, but away from that, many times melodies are simple, and you may catch chords and pad notes from a variety of keys. producing music overall seems to be more accessible and easier than ever for joe to throw together a song because of fl studio, reason, and even pro tools becoming more accessible to the public. it's kind of sad but it makes the hunt for good music kind of a challenge and all the sweeter when you find an artist who's truly about the music
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Awesome.I think it's cool to see guys from the team out and about doing things together. I don't think there are many teams out there that enjoy being around each other like the guys on this team do....
If only I'd known where it was, I spent all day there today. I'd been doing the Patty towel wave.
Amateur sounding instrumental, for an amateur rapper.
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