Stereogum Home
February 29, 2008

New Roots Video - "75 Bars (Black's Reconstruction)"

As we heard a few days ago, the Roots return has been heralded with a one verse/no chorus Black Thought rant over a hard bass-drum groove. If you thought that was pretty hot and raw, you haven't seen the way Ahmir and Tariq dispense with people they don't like.

Rising Down is out 4/29 on Def Jam.

Posted at 1:09 PM in
Tags:




-->

6 Comments

well dang....what are they pissed about? nobody buying their records? where's malik b? ?uest is too soft to be hard......

Posted by: maya lucia at 02/29/08 1:21 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

the Roots prove again and again why they are @ the top of the hip hop game.
REMIND ME WHY THERE IS SO MUCH BULLSHIT RAP BEING PUSHED ON THE MASSES WHEN THERE IS SUCH QUALITY BEING DISREGARDED.
....and people wonder why the industry is crashing....
Kanye, Fiddy, & Will I Am = Douchey music for douchey folks.

Posted by: Shockadow at 02/29/08 1:45 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

I'm not mad at this one....

Posted by: Safari at 02/29/08 5:21 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Damn, and I thought Game Theory was dark. I absolutely cannot wait for this album.

Posted by: Chris at 02/29/08 5:55 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

No pun intended, but that was hot. I want more snuff music videos!

Posted by: Mr. Mason at 02/29/08 7:24 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

That's why these guys are constantly on my radar. And a new album means they will be touring soon!

Posted by: Dexter at 02/29/08 10:32 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Leave a comment


 

The 'Gum Drop

Get our newsletter. MP3s and giveaways weekly.

Search




Sort by:date relevance

Information

  • Contact:
  • About
  • Press
  • Advertising
  • Stereogum RSS Stereogum RSS XML Icon
  • MP3-Only RSS Stereogum RSS XML Icon

Staff

Founder/Editor-In-Chief
Scott Lapatine
Executive Editor
Amrit Singh
Senior Writer
Brandon Stosuy
Columnist
Jon McMillan
Technology & Operations
Jim Jazwiecki
Angela Williams

The Cool Kids

All Stereogum Posts

Band to Watch logo

Band To Watch: Fredrik

Earlier this year we shined a light Swedish pop outfit the LK and their electro lovely, wintry gem "Stop Being Perfect." Had we known the band had a side project sooner, we probably would have written sooner. Instead, we came...

MORE »

Quit Your Day Job logo

Quit Your Day Job: Megafaun

Raleigh-via-Eau Clair BTW Megafaun debuted impressively earlier this year with Bury The Square. The trio nip-and-tuck experimental tendencies (tape splicing, white noise colliding with banjo, junkyard-laced spring reverb, screeching feedback at the tail end of a quiet back porch lament)...

MORE »

Premature Evaluation logo

Premature Evaluation: of Montreal - Skeletal Lamping

Skeletal Lamping is anything but skeletal. When we took a close listen to album closer "Id Engager" we mentioned it wasn't the strangest, most ambitious, or best tune on of Montreal's new one, but after absorbing the other 14 tracks,...

MORE »

Video Hangover logo

Video Hangover: Marcy Playground - "Saint Joe On The Schoolbus"

Every week, we dig in the archives for videos that we find noteworthy, memorable, or just unbelievably stupid. And then, Jon McMillan breaks 'em down for you. This week: Marcy Playground blows their one chance at video immortality.

MORE »

Oldstand logo

OldStand: Rolling Stone, September 13, 1984

Take our ink-stained hands and join us at the OldStand, where Jon McMillan goes to remind everyone what an honest-to-goodness music magazine is supposed to look like. Lots of Huey Lewis (and the News) news lately, so let's go back...

MORE »

The Outsiders logo

The Outsiders: Vol. 17: Bird Show, Hair Police, Hush Arbors

Not all of Stereogum's favorite sounds conform to what folks expect us to cover. In this space, resident Bananafish fetishist Brandon Stosuy focuses on bands, albums, singles, and villages in Sweden that may otherwise pass by unnoticed. This installment's virtual...

MORE »

The 'Gum Drop logo

Horse Feathers - "Father"

Portland songwriter Justin Ringle's evocative vocal twang and sharp lyricism are at the center of Horse Feathers' bedroom Americana. The band's second album House With No Home, which follows 2006's Words Are Dead, finds Ringle's vision fleshed out by multi-instrumentalist/composer...

MORE »