Friday, August 22, 2008



Large Pro - Main Source - @@@@ 1/2

In an age where today’s audience and run of the mill record labels are looking for the next catchy sensation, many previously established veterans continue producing material reflecting an undying love for an era where authenticity reigned supreme. For nearly two decades now, Large Professor has made it his mission to carry New York’s spirit through Hip-Hop’s various dominant pop phases such as jiggy and crunk to name a few. Despite industry setbacks Large Pro has kept his name present with guest appearances and production credits spanning both the underground and major releases. His latest album Main Source finds inspiration coming from his career’s original essence as Large Pro is continually determined to keep his legend alive.

The album finds Large Pro refusing to compromise his sound as he has always strayed far from convention and taken care to uphold his own set musical standards. He shows no care or desire for a presence on today’s radio as he employs his tried but true method of boom-bap aggression on "Hot: Sizzling, Scorching, Torching, Blazing", and stays in tune with the plight of the everyman as "Maica Living" details the rat race of the daily grind. Artistic purity has been a long running theme in Large’s work and he continues rolling with the “If it aint broke…” mentality as "Hardcore Hip Hop" and "Classic Emergency" both unleash fury in response to the culture’s present state of endangerment. While fully intent on staying rooted in the sounds of old with "Pump Ya Fist" and the funky "In The Ghetto", he also shows he can come up to speed with today’s scene on "Frantic Barz".

With Main Source Large Pro manages to prove that long standing pillars can remain relevant as he succeeds where other legends have failed to make marks of substance in this day and age. While the album’s only drawback is the lack of structured hooks, that doesn’t nearly take away from his concise understanding of the everyday Hip-Hop traditionalist’s need for music that serves of a reminder of when quality was far easier to come by.

1 comment:

IB said...

Whats good… I didn’t see any contact info for your blog so I thought I would leave a comment to try to try and get in touch with you. My name is Ian Weisz. I am an MC and the music director for hip-hop group The Higher Concept and The Projectivity Movement. We have spent the past coupled of weeks trying to grow our online presence and as such we are reaching out to as many hip hop related blogs as we can find. We have started offering tons of free downloads and other things to get people involved with our movement and would love to get involved with your blog, either by sending you all of our free promo material when it is released or highlighting your blog for our fans. We always have a lot going on…
Right now, for example, we have a contest going on for a new song we did with JDV Productions, an up and coming Montreal Producer. ‘94 Style goes through ’92, ’93, and 1994 in an attempt to chronicle where that ’94 style came from. We are asking listeners to send us a list of all the music, news, and events we talk about from those years. The first 20 people with correct lists get a Projectivity gift package.
So, if you have some spare time, check out our music, our movement, and our websites. We are really just looking to get involved with anyone doing what they love, especially those passionate about hip hop culture. Let us know if we can send you some free music, an album for a review, or our digital flyers for this promotional contest. Hope to hear from you soon.


-IBProfyn
http://thehigherconcept.blogspot.com
www.thehigherconcept.com
www.myspace.com/theprojectivitymovement
www.myspace.com/thehigherconcept