Would be nice to finally hear Preem set the record straight. What are your thoughts? And where does Gang Starr rank among your all-time favorite groups?
Posts Tagged ‘guru’
The Real Reason Gang Starr Broke-Up?
Wednesday, January 11th, 2012Random CDS Drops: Guru – Lifesaver (1996)
Monday, May 16th, 2011
This CD single is European release.
Enjoy!
01. Lifesaver (Radio Version) 02. Lifesaver (DJ Premier Remix) 03. Lifesaver (Crazy Toones Remix) 04. Lifesaver (Album Instrumental) 05. Lifesaver (Acappella)–Markshot
DJ JS1 – One Of The Best Yet-Guru Tribute Mix
Saturday, May 7th, 2011“DJ JS-1 is a member of the world famous ROCKSTEADY CREW. He has been touring the world with RAHZEL for over a decade. JS-1 has released numerous albums, 12″ singles, mixtapes, battle records and data discs. His album’s have featured some of history’s greatest MCs with the backing of JS-1′s beats, scratches and original production. Most don’t know DJ JS-1 is also a graffiti artist at heart and has also put in much work rocking peices all over the world. Also Check out his website, http://www.djjs1.com/ as well as his You Tube page and other links provided below for more info. Thank you for visiting, enjoy the FREE DOWNLOADS of exclusive and classic DJ JS-1 mixes and original productions!“
Check for a ton of dope mixes at http://djjs1.blogspot.com/
**Tracklist is inside of the zip file
Enjoy!
–>Download Guru Tribute Mix by DJ JS1<–
–Markshot
Nice and Smooth w/ DJ Premier-DWYCK Live at Brooklyn Hip Hop Festival 2010
Monday, July 12th, 2010Gang Starr Video Mix by DJ 33 1/3
Wednesday, May 19th, 2010
Sounds Like The 90s Vol. 14 (May ’10)
Tuesday, May 11th, 2010
Back again on that Tribe shit. Props to Dirt_Dog for cookin’ up another dope cover for this series. This is the 14th installment of SLT9s and as I promised last month we don’t plan on stopping anytime soon. We got new music by J-Live, Celph Titled, Jay Electronica, Capone-N-Noreaga, Truck North and Andre Nickatina. Speaking of Nickatina (Dre Dog), if you’re a fan of his music definitely check out Khan! The Me Generation, which happens to be one of the more enjoyable releases of ’10. While “Blind Genius” might not appeal to everyone, I do my best to diversify my bonds on these compilations. My goal is to have something on here for everyone, so whether you like one track, half the tracks or grow to like them all, then this compilation has served its purpose. Peace and enjoy! –Philaflava
T.R.O.Y. Presents – Sounds Like The 90s Vol. 14
01. J-Live – The Way I Rhyme
02. Ras Kass – Release Yourself
03. Celph Titled – Styles Ain’t Raw feat. Apathy & Chino XL (prod. Buckwild)
04. Ellis – Hardcore feat. Legin
05. Meyhem Lauren – Animal Science feat. Roc Marciano
06. Roc Marciano – Thugs Prayer
07. Jay Electronica – Ghost of Christopher Wallace feat. Puff Daddy
08. U-N-I & Ro Blvd. – Pulp Fiction Part 1 feat. Fashawn
09. Little Brother – Revenge feat. Truck North & Meridian
10. Truck North & 3rd – Out There (prod. DJ Premier)
11. Vado – Kick In The Door
12. Joell Ortiz – Project Boy (prod. DJ Premier)
13. Capone-N-Noreaga – The Reserves feat. Raekwon
14. Diaz Brothers – Gone Too Soon (Guru Tribute)
15. Brother Ali – Breakin’ Dawn Boys feat. Fashawn
16. MURS – I Used To Luv H.E.R. (prod. 9th Wonder)
17. Andre Nickatina – Blind Genius
Mark 563′s Guru Tribute Sketch
Friday, May 7th, 2010Almost two months ago, we presented you the great hip hop sketches done by Mark 563.
The Real Story Between Solar & Guru
Tuesday, April 27th, 2010HipHopDX just put up a must read interview from Tasha Denham, who just happened to be the only other employee at 7 Grand Records besides Solar and Guru, as well as Solar’s babys mother.. If there was anyone close to them it was her. The interview is simply astonishing.
Here is a glimpse. –Philaflava
DX: As a close associate, an employee, all these things. When was the first time you started to notice that things were not normal or healthy?Tasha Denham: [Pauses] I think it came pretty early on, really. One of the defining moments to me when I knew something was…it was the way Solar spoke to Guru. It was always down to him. He really belittled him, and would do it in front of other people. This wasn’t something he just did in private. He is a member of The [Five Percent] Nation of Gods and Earths, as is Guru. He would use that against him, to bring him down. It was important to both of them, very important. I believe Guru’s a pleaser; he liked to make people happy. [Solar] would tell him that the Nation of Gods and Earths are ashamed of him, they’re disappointed in him. That he doesn’t live up to their teachings. I can’t think of the word that they used. There was a lot of times they’d get into arguments over it. He’d sit, and Guru would try to defend himself, and Solar would just get more and more irate over it.
There was one night we were at Guru’s house. I was about three months pregnant at the time. Guru kept defending himself. Guru actually stood up and kind of got in Solar’s face about it. Next thing I know, Solar punched him in the face. From that point in time, he just started kicking him and hitting him. Guru was fighting back, he wasn’t just sitting there being a punk, but at the same time, Guru had severe asthma. He didn’t have his inhaler. He started really hyper-ventalating and really having a hard time, and Solar kept beating him. It wasn’t a fight anymore, it was beating him. I felt that it was so bad that I got in between the two of them and broke it up, because I knew he wouldn’t hit me of course. At that point in time, I was pregnant with his child.
Instead of stopping and making sure his partner, friend, “brother” – as he calls him was okay, Guru was sitting there saying, “I’m having an asthma attack. I need to go to the hospital. I think I’m gonna have a heart attack.” He’s bleeding, really shaking. Instead of stopping and calming himself down, [Solar] told me, “We’re leaving,” and goes and gets in the car and drives me back to the city. [He] didn’t call and check on Guru, didn’t make sure he was alright. That’s probably one of the first times I was like, “Wow, this relationship is really unhealthy. It’s a really sick relationship.” After that, if I didn’t physically see it myself…I saw [Guru] punched in the face numerous times with no provocation. It [would just be] that he’d get upset with something Guru would say and punch him in the face. I know he knocked a tooth out of Guru’s. I know he gave him a black eye [so Guru would] have to wear glasses for photo-shoots and concerts.
My brother, Guru
Sunday, April 25th, 2010
Harry Elam Jr., Harry Elam Sr., and Keith (“Guru”) Elam on Cape Cod in the 1970s.Source: Boston.com
(EDITOR’S NOTE: Boston-born Keith Elam, who rose to fame as Guru, founder of the rap group Gang Starr and a person who sought to merge rap and jazz, died earlier this week. His brother, Harry, a distinguished professor of drama at Stanford, has written this remembrance).
“Positivity, that’s how I’m livin..’†So goes the lyric from my brother’s early hip-hop song, “Positivity.†My brother Keith Elam, the hip-hop artist known as GURU—Gifted Unlimited Rhymes Universal—died this week at the too-young age of 48 because of complications from cancer. ‘Positivity’ was what he sought to bring to the music and to his life, and for me that will be a large part of his legacy.
In February of this year, my brother went into a coma, and I traveled across the country from my home in California to see him. At his bedside, I stood and stared at his overly frail frame, his head that he had kept clean-shaven for the last 20 years uncommonly covered with hair, his body connected to a sea of tubes and wires. I listened to the whirl of machines around us and took his hand. As I did, my mind flashed back to now-distant times, so many memories. And I saw us as teenagers at the beach on Cape Cod playing in the water together. And I saw us as boys, driving to school. My brother was five years younger than me, so we attended the same school only for one year — my senior year, his seventh-grade year — at Noble and Greenough School, and I would often drive us both to school. Invariably, I made us late, yet my brother, never as stressed as me, was always impressively calm. At school he endured the jests and teasing from the other boys about being my “little brother.†I was president of the school and had charted a certain path at Nobles. But my brother found his own creative route at school, as he would throughout his life. His journey was never easy, never direct, but inventive. Through it all he remained fiercely determined with a clear and strong sense of self.
Over the years I had proudly watched my brother perform in a wide variety of contexts. While at Nobles, we had a black theatre troupe known as “the Family.†In 1973, we put on a play entitled ”A Medal for Willie,” by William Branch, and because he was only in the seventh grade, Keith played only a small role, but even then you could see his flair for performance, his comfort on the stage. At home, our older sister Patricia would teach him the latest dances, and he would execute them with verve as I watched from the sidelines, impressed with his moves, and not without a few twinges of jealousy since I’ve always had two left feet. As a teenager he raced as a speed skater. I do not remember how he became involved in the sport; I only remember traveling with my family to watch his meets in the suburbs of Boston. I do not remember if he won or lost, I do know that he always competed with great ferocity and commitment.
When he announced to me that he was dropping out of graduate school at the Fashion Institute of Technology to pursue a career in rap, I thought he was making a grave mistake and warned him against it. But as always he was determined, and in the end he would succeed beyond perhaps what even he had imagined. Early on in his rap journey, he visited me in Washington., D.C., over a Thanksgiving weekend. I was teaching at the University of Maryland then, and we went to what was perhaps the most dreadful party we had ever attended. As we hastened out the door, I apologized for bringing him to this party. My brother replied “let’s write a rap song about it,†and we did. The lyrics made us laugh as we collaborated on the rhyme scheme and rode off into the D.C. night. It is one of my fondest memories, this spontaneous brotherly moment of collaboration and play.
Keith’s big break came with Spike Lee’s film ”Mo’ Better Blues,” with his song “A Jazz Thing†underscoring the credits. I watched that film over and over again just to hear my brother at its end. Soon he was on to creating his first Jazzmatazz album with others to follow, and he became credited for creating a fusion between jazz and hip hop. To be sure, that fusion owes something to our grandfather Edward Clark and Keith’s godfather, George Johnson, who introduced Keith to jazz by playing their favorite albums for him. He credits them both on his first Jazzmatazz. That first Jazzmatazz album featured musical heroes of my youth, Roy Ayers, and Donald Byrd, and here was my brother featuring them on his album. And with this success, came tours. I have seen him perform all over the world, and each time he would give a shout out from the stage to his brother and my wife, Michele. And I was so proud. It sometimes struck me with awe that all these people were there to see my brother. I watched him deal out magic; he was in his element feeling the crowd, and them responding to his groove. This was my baby brother, the kid with whom I once shared a room. The kid whose asthma would cause him to hack and cough and wheeze at night keeping me up. But when I would complain, my parents would send me out of the room. The message was clear: Love your siblings, whatever their frailties. Shorter than me and slighter of build, my brother suffered from asthma and allergies his whole life, but he was always a survivor
Back in 1993, when he played at Stanford University, I was in perhaps my third year as a professor there. As I walked into the auditorium that night, the assembled audience of students looked at me with a new awareness, “that’s the Guru’s brother,†not that’s Professor Elam, but the Guru’s brother.
And I was, and am, the Guru’s brother. I admired and loved him deeply, my little brother. And I was and am so proud of him, and how he made his dreams reality . And with the outpouring of love that has crowded my e-mail with his passing, I know that he touched so many with his music. My brother cared deeply about family. He raps of my parents in more than one song. They are featured on his video “Ex girl to next girl.†It was one thing seeing my brother on MTV; it was another seeing my parents. His son K.C. was the joy of his life.
The doctors told me back in February that there was not much chance of my brother recovering from the coma. But my brother has always been a fighter, always been one to overcome surprising adversities, so this seemed just one more. We prayed that he would again prevail. But it was not to be. Still his drive, his spirit, his energy, his positivity will live on, and so will his music. “that’s how I’m livin…â€
Harry J. Elam Jr. is the senior associate vice provost at Stanford University and the author of several books, including “The Past as Present in the Drama of August Wilson.”
DJ Premier Live from HeadQCourterz – A Salute 2 Guru
Saturday, April 24th, 2010R.I.P. – Gurizzi








