Tag Archives: Harlan & Alondra

Buddy Starts 2019 By Showing Why He Was 1 Of 2018’s Best

Buddy’s Harlan and Alondra was named one of Ambrosia For Headsfavorite albums of 2018. The Compton rapper and singer showed off his appreciation for Funk and Soul on his debut full-length project, which paired him with everyone from Snoop Dogg to Khalid. Though rooted distinctly in Rap music, the album was more musical than it was lyrical, which makes Buddy’s style easily translatable for on-stage live performances.

A marker of the critical acclaim he continues to garner, Buddy recently appeared on NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series, where he showed off his dynamism. There, the preacher’s son performed renditions of four Harlan & Alondra cuts: “Legend,” “Trouble On Central,” “Hey Up There” and “Real Life Sh*t.” In what NPR’s Rodney Carmichael calls “one of the most dramatic Tiny Desks in recent memory,” Buddy kicks off his show as musical director, instructing the audience member to contribute their voices to “Legend.”

Buddy Becomes The Robin Hood Of Compton In Another Great Music Video

The song is an interesting choice for Tiny Desk, considering the album version of “Legend” is only a 46-second interlude. But that aforementioned musicality of Harlan & Alondra makes it work, and it’s extended into nearly twice its original length, thanks to the talent of Buddy’s backing band, “The Big Homies.”

After that, it’s off to one of the album’s groovier stand-outs, “Trouble On Central,” which includes an indirect salute to another West Coast song about yearning for more, Skee-Lo’s “I Wish.” Here, Buddy gets to show off his vocal abilities (and his South Central dance moves).

It’s hard for Buddy to hold back his relaxed, Los Angeles sensibilities while performing “Hey Up There,” the original version for which features Ty Dolla $ign. As Carmichael reports, “[S]ometimes being a nonconformist works both ways. So when Buddy proceeded to fire up a blunt midway through his set, we had to stop the show and ask him to put it out before re-recording his song.”

Buddy Is A Potent Example Of Why West Coast Hip-Hop Is Still So Great (Video)

Buddy and The Big Homies close out Tiny Desk with the album’s opening track, “Real Life Sh*t.”

Buddy will continue to have an impressive 2019. Yesterday (January 8), he announced via Twitter that he’d been invited to participate in the recording sessions for Dreamville’s forthcoming compilation, Revenge of the Dreamers III.

Buddy’s Harlan and Alondra was named one of Ambrosia For Headsfavorite albums of 2018. The Compton rapper and singer showed off his appreciation for Funk and Soul on his debut full-length project, which paired him with everyone from Snoop Dogg to Khalid. Though rooted distinctly in Rap music, the album was more musical than it was lyrical, which makes Buddy’s style easily translatable for on-stage live performances.

A marker of the critical acclaim he continues to garner, Buddy recently appeared on NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series, where he showed off his dynamism. There, the preacher’s son performed renditions of four Harlan & Alondra cuts: “Legend,” “Trouble On Central,” “Hey Up There” and “Real Life Sh*t.” In what NPR’s Rodney Carmichael calls “one of the most dramatic Tiny Desks in recent memory,” Buddy kicks off his show as musical director, instructing the audience member to contribute their voices to “Legend.”

Buddy Becomes The Robin Hood Of Compton In Another Great Music Video

The song is an interesting choice for Tiny Desk, considering the album version of “Legend” is only a 46-second interlude. But that aforementioned musicality of Harlan & Alondra makes it work, and it’s extended into nearly twice its original length, thanks to the talent of Buddy’s backing band, “The Big Homies.”

After that, it’s off to one of the album’s groovier stand-outs, “Trouble On Central,” which includes an indirect salute to another West Coast song about yearning for more, Skee-Lo’s “I Wish.” Here, Buddy gets to show off his vocal abilities (and his South Central dance moves).

It’s hard for Buddy to hold back his relaxed, Los Angeles sensibilities while performing “Hey Up There,” the original version for which features Ty Dolla $ign. As Carmichael reports, “[S]ometimes being a nonconformist works both ways. So when Buddy proceeded to fire up a blunt midway through his set, we had to stop the show and ask him to put it out before re-recording his song.”

Buddy Is A Potent Example Of Why West Coast Hip-Hop Is Still So Great (Video)

Buddy and The Big Homies close out Tiny Desk with the album’s opening track, “Real Life Sh*t.”

Buddy will continue to have an impressive 2019. Yesterday (January 8), he announced via Twitter that he’d been invited to participate in the recording sessions for Dreamville’s forthcoming compilation, Revenge of the Dreamers III.

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

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Buddy Becomes The Robin Hood Of Compton In Another Great Music Video

Simmie Sims III, aka Buddy, is a Compton, California MC with one of 2018’s best albums under his belt. An artist who worked with Pharrell, DJ Quik, Snoop Dogg, and Suga Free early in his career, he is now an especially bright spot on RCA Records’ roster. Buddy has only released one full-length to date with 2018’s Harlan & Alondra. A cohesive blend of genre and personal reflection, the LP

After releasing three singles and the music video for “Trouble On Central,” in promotion of his debut album, the 25-year-old MC/singer reveals yet another page to add to his catalog with visuals for the Guapdad 4000 assisted cut, “Shameless.”

Buddy Is A Potent Example Of Why West Coast Hip-Hop Is Still So Great (Video)

The video itself features Buddy and his sidekick Zini working as a counter clerk and a cashier at a convenience store while Guapdad 4000 and his cronies look to cause trouble by stealing food from the back of the store, or so it seems at first. Settled over a wet and wavy West Coast production from Mike & Keys and Jake One, Buddy raps about ballin’ without a budget, becoming both the host, the party, and the soundtrack to an all out hometown celebration. While the video follows these meat mugging MC’s as they ball out on the court and all the way up into outer space, the viewer realizes that Buddy and the gang become modern day Robin Hoods as he and Guapdad open up the back of a truck and give away their spoils back to the community that raised them.

Buddy raps, “Countin’ my money in hundreds / Trackin’ my money to double / Poppin’ all around the bubble / I’m ’bout to fly out to London / I’m wylin’ all out in public / I need my pay in advance / Amsterdam with me and my friends / Then I might head out to France / I got a b*tch in Berlin / Get paid, set trends / Matsuhisa on a hump day / Jon & Vinny’s on a lunch date / I need Jordyn Woods on my dinner plate / In the game and I’m makin’ plays (damn) / Made a millie before I dropped the tape / Twenty K before I hit the stage / Ni**as only live one way / Shameless, shameless.”

Buddy – You Good ft DJ Quik & Suga Free (Audio)

Last year, Guapdad 4000 released Scamboy Color.

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