2012年2月26日日曜日

FREDO SANTANA - "GANG BANG" *NEW 2012*


Young Chop on the beat. Fredo definitely my third favorite Chicago rapper next to Keef and 40 Boi. DJ KENN ALLORNOTHING on the visuals. This is a street banger for sure. #KETCHUP


http://mywhiteboypain.blogspot.com/2012/02/fredo-santana-gang-bang.html?spref=tw

2012年2月25日土曜日

FREDO SANTANA - GANG BANG


DIR BY DJKENN ALLORNOTHING

PROD BY YOUNG CHOP

BOOKING INFO
847-702-4805

FREDO SANTANA
https://www.facebook.com/fredosantana300?ref=ts

YOUNG CHOP
https://www.facebook.com/youngchopbeatz

DJ KENN
https://www.facebook.com/djkenn.allornothing

2012年2月18日土曜日

Chief Keef, “3Hunna” MP3

When listeners on the national stage first discovered Chief Keef through his obsessed fan’s unexpected WorldStar appearance, most of the attention was focused on his track “Bang.” This was because, thanks in part to DGainz cinematography and a beat from DJ Kenn, “Bang” had become his most-viewed YouTube video. The catch is that Keef isn’t a one-hit-wonder by any stretch; in fact, the young fan on WorldStar had actually been rapping lyrics from another track, “Aimed At You.”
Keef is apparently no longer on house arrest (punishment for an aggravated unlawful use of weapons charge from early December), but when he was, he was incredibly productive. He might be young and still developing as a rapper, but in the few short months since his release, he’s dropped several tracks that exemplify his potential to be a major artist. “I Don’t Know Dem,” “Winning” with King Louie, and “3hunna”—an incredibly catchy earworm that you can download below—are a strong run of singles, and it’s difficult to think of many artists, of any age, who’ve dropped tracks this replayable back-to-back-to-back in the past two months.


Read more: http://www.thefader.com/2012/02/17/chief-keef-3hunna-mp3/#ixzz1mgaxD4NM


2012年2月8日水曜日

Video: DJ Kenn and 40 Boi, “Intro”


Rumors are flying that Chicago producer and videographer DJ Kenn was arrested yesterday. Antonio Strong of TKO Radio was able to confirm that Kenn was picked up by law enforcement, and that his current status is uncertain. Kenn, a Japanese-born producer, had been living in the United States for five years. He has worked with Chief Keef for the bulk of that time, as well as rising Chicago artists Fredo Santana,DappSasha Gohard and Lil Reese, amongst others.
This past Friday, Kenn released a self-shot video (above) for “Intro,” the first track of his excellent 2011 mixtape More than Music, featuring rapper 40 Boi. The tape also included Kenn-produced tracks by Chief Keef (“Bang”“It’s Crackin” and “John Madden”) Dapp (“Headache”) and Lil Reese (“Letz Do a Drill”). Kenn’s arrest could be a big blow to the nascent new-Chicago hip hop scene—Kenn is one of its most promising producers and a key creative force behind some of the city’s younger artists. Below, download the Pack Boyz “Gun Show,” which is an incredible beat from Kenn that best captures his aggressive-yet-hypnotic production style.


Read more: http://www.thefader.com/2012/02/07/video-dj-kenn-and-40-boi-intro/#ixzz1ljePfOrO

2012年2月4日土曜日

40 Boi - "More Than Music Intro" *NEW VIDEO*



Chicago rap is it right now. That's what I've been saying for about 2 weeks, ever since I first heard "Bang!", the breakout hit by Chief Keef. "Bang!" as well as every other song on Keef's mixtape was produced by one DJ Kenn aka All Or Nothing. He deserves just as much credit as Keef does for putting Chicago on the map lately; his futuristic production takes all the best parts of Lex Luger-esque trap music, boils them down to their essential ingredients and then abstracts them. The final effect is as brutal and crushing as any great 808 Mafia hit, but with an element of pent-up aggression that never lets up, making it even more threatening.

40 Boi is one of a handful of Keef's associates who has enlisted DJ Kenn's skills. This song is culled from a mixtape of incredible DJ Kenn-produced joints called More Than Music which is available for free download here. It features hits by all the big Chicago names including Chief Keef, Fredo Santana, Lil Durk, Lil Reese and others. On the intro, 40 Boi establishes himself as the highly-capable underdog of the crew. When 40 drops a solo tape I hope it generates just as much hype as Keef did with "Bang!" because he possesses a lyrical edge that really makes him stand out in the scene.

40Boi - More Than Music Mixtape Intro


Prod & Dir By Djkenn Allornothing

40Boi
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=655323192

Djkenn
https://twitter.com/#!/DJKENN_AON

2012年2月2日木曜日

Lil B - Bang Remix



 

Chief Keef's "Bang" blows up #CHICAGOREADER


The track "Bang," by young south-side rapper Chief Keef, has been floating around the Internet since August, accruing fans at a steep rate the whole time—in some parts of the city it qualifies as a full-on smash hit. At the moment it sits right at the spot where a successful regional single can make the quantum leap to nonregional sensation if the right variables line up. It always helps to get a cosign from a higher profile MC, and it's even better when that cosign comes in the form of a guest appearance on a remix—which is what "Bang" got over the weekend, when Bay Area swag rapper Lil B jumped in on it.
Hip-hop listeners who value traditional mike skills will likely be aghast at Lil B's rap, which follows an MO I once described in the Reader as "slurred freestyles delivered with all the focused intensity of someone checking mike levels while distracted by several other tasks." Listeners who value audio fidelity of any sort will likely feel similarly, given that it sounds like Lil B just recorded himself rapping over the YouTube video for "Bang," which honestly he might have, knowing how that guy works. (The track's after the jump.)

Lil B, a self-described "Historical Online Figure," commands a huge and massively Internet-connected fan base among young listeners who don't share those concerns—not to mention the attention of more than a few grown-up music writers—and in the areas of Twitter under his control, "Bang" is the biggest thing that's ever happened to music, just like every new song Lil B releases. A couple hundred thousand rabid swag-rap fans ready to go bananas at the click of a button is a pretty nice thing for an up-and-coming artist to have.