1. Henry Nearly Killed Me (It's a Shame)- Ray LaMontagne
- "All my life I've been a poor boy son, scratching for my meat, I have been kicked in my teeth till the blood run hot and sweet, seen a lot of living my friends and this I will repeat, just because you knock a man down don't mean that you got him beat." Most Ray LaMontagne songs are a laid back affair. Ray's vocals and lyrics are often what brings the intensity. In the case of "Henry Nearly Killed Me (It's a Shame)" from the "Gossip In the Grain" album, the music is just as heated as the lyrics. The song is a good example of modern roots music....aside from the quality production it sounds like something that could have been recorded about a century earlier. When LaMontange sings about getting kicked in the teeth and being "down but not out" it's like a battle cry...and one I can relate to.
2. They Say (feat. Kanye West & John Legend)- Common
- "They say 'dude think he righteous', I write just to free minds from Stoney to Rikers. They say 'the crochet pants and the sweater was wack', seen 'the corner', now they say 'that n*gga's back', uh." Collaborations are a dime a dozen in hip-hop but this one is special. These guys sound like an established group. Common and Kanye rhyme over a great jazz loop and a funky drum beat (samples of "Ghetto Child" by Ahmad Jamal and "Papa Wings" by Stanley Turrentine) while John Legend provides great vocals for the chorus. On the fashion side there is nothing wack about crochet. In fact the great college and NFL football legend Rosie Grier published "Rosie Grier's Needlepoint for Men" in 1973. You tell a 6'5 300 + pound man that you have problems with his crocheting.
3. Hate It or Love It [G Unit Remix]- 50 Cent
- "Daddy aint' around probably out comittin' felonies, my favorite rapper used to sing check-check out my melody. Hate it or love it the underdog's on top and I'm gonna shine homie until my heart stop." As far as I remember the original version of this song was a vehicle to introduce the rapper known as "The Game" to the masses. Yes it was released on his album "The Documentary" but the collaboration with 50 Cent ensured a wider audience. The Game spits some nice rhymes but I have to give a "tip of the cap" to 50 on this one. The "check out my melody" nod to legendary emcee Rakim is simply fabulous. The remix version is much like the original but with appearances from additional "G-Unit" rappers. The Game has certainly come a long way since a 2000 appearance on the dating show "Change of Heart" where a then-girlfriend referred to him as "a scrub". It turns out that girl was probably a "pigeon".