THE GOD HOP MIXTAPE: DJ SOL MESSIAH

May 10, 2013 in Sa-Roc

intro
1.Sa-Roc Scarlet
2. The Ritual- Ahkil Heru
3. Atom Anthem- D. Prosper featuring J. Electronica
4. Hookless 2.5 – Narubi Selah (sol messiah remix)
5. Sheik Ron- Moslem of The West
6. Isis the Savior – Street Chronicles
7. Immortal TechNique- Sign of The Times
8.Big K.R.I.T – REM
9. Ptah Ra Tehuti ft. Kektet – Lyrical High
10. Lupe Fiasco- Around My Way (Freedom Aint Free)
11. Stahhr – Microphone Fiend 2013
12. Quadir Lateef- Whos Gonna Save My Soul (Sol Messiah Mix)
13.Planet Asia and Elemental Rhymes – Reflection
14..Amun Ra – Ancestral Magic
15.Nas- Chain Glow
16. Ab Soul – The Book of Soul
17.2Pac- UnChained (The Payback Untouchable)
18. Chop – School is in session
19.Red and Blu Pill- Transform
20. Dynasty- Stay shining
21.Mighty Kalipssus – Supreme Elohim
22. Obi1 – Doing It
23. Pharoahe Monch featuring Denaun Porter- Haile Selassie Karate
24. Aisha Sekhmet- Iggin
25. Thaahum Mst3k- (My Soul Transcends Creating Perfect Kingdoms)
26. Kil Ripkin- Timeless
27. Iron SHeik – The Real Active Moor
28. AA Rashid – Racist
29. Kiiler Mike – Regan
30. Jasiri X feat. Brother Ali – Pillars
31. Abiye – Blind Man
32. Scarface – Rain
33. Labratz- On the Air
34. Jay Z- Open Letter
35. Methuzelah Gem ft. Boog Brown – Pay Homage
36. Ekundayo -Light Writer
37. Translee Ft Raheem DeVaughn- Does Anybody Love Anymore
38. Zayd Malik, , El Sun, Ekundayo, Methuzelah Gem, Mike Flo, Great Scott, Flux Wonda, IsReal, Sa-Roc Chosen, Stahhr – Wrath of Siafu

NEW VIDEO! SA-ROC: “711 A.D.” PRODUCED BY: SOL MESSIAH

February 17, 2013 in Sa-Roc


BUY THE CD AT: http://godhopmovement.org/?p=131
DOWNLOAD THE ETHER WARZ ALBUM AT THIS LINK: http://sarocthemc.com/music/

Kanyi – Ingoma

April 25, 2012 in Food Clothing &Hip Hop, Hip Hop, Music, Sa-Roc, Video Blogging


south afrikan lyricist shows off her skills in her mother tongue, xhosa. i love to see passionate mcs spit. get me a translator, STAT!

the conscious rapper-i stay woke

March 13, 2012 in Food Clothing &Hip Hop, God Hop Movement, Hip Hop, Music, Sa-Roc


i was raised in an afrikan centered household. literary works by steve biko and frantz fanon resided on the bookshelves and the last poets and gil scott heron were in perpetual rotation on the record player. at five years old i made my first ghanaian flag out of felt fabric, paste, and yarn, which proudly hung on my bedroom closet that my sister and i shared for years even after i upgraded to my own room. i learned how to meditate as a child and read the autobiography of malcolm x at 9 years old. and yes, i celebrated kwanzaa every december.

i was born into a microcosmic world that fostered intellectual growth and analytical critique of the status quo. already marginalized on the world stage by our skin tone, we were further pushed past the fringe by our family. they never quite understood our natural hair, why my father always wore a colorful dashiki amidst a sea of somber black at funerals, or how to properly pronounce the word kwanzaa, even after years of seeing us celebrate the holiday. my parents railed at the societal norms that kept us complacent and unquestioning. in lieu of acceptance they took on pride and never looked back. and inside of that cocoon i was nurtured to become- a conscious being.

when i began writing, i never questioned what my subject matter would be, i just wrote. i never thought about what my music would be labeled as because i simply wrote from my perspective. what i had learned, my thoughts, my feelings, my story. when the music began gaining popularity, i was frequently asked whether or not i considered myself to be a conscious rapper. initially, i was hesitant to accept the label. i didn’t want to be trapped inside of anyone’s box, suffocating under expectations of who and what i should be and preconceived notions of who and what i was. i saw how the politically conscious rapper was dismissed as irrelevant and maligned by blog subscribers as automatically wack and i believed the hype, like everyone else, that a conscious rapper could never make it.

i had watched for years as nas struggled with himself, oscillating between the explicit lyrics of songs like “oochie wally” and empowering anthems like, “i can”. it was almost like the smart kid in school who joins in on bullying the underdog. not because he wants to, but because he fears that by NOT doing it, he will become uncool by association. now, don’t misunderstand me, i know that a person has many aspects to their being and it’s their choice to express every part of themselves creatively. i GET it. so what was my dilemma? i grew up in the hood, but i never used the word nigga(it was like a curse word in my family), never sold drugs, and didn’t have a penchant for louis or gucci, so why should i be vilified for not rapping about it?

Being conscious is not necessarily synonymous with rocking an African centered aesthetic(even though i like to do that too), it’s just being completely and unabashedly unafraid of using your brain. you know, that 3 lb biocomputer resting above your neck? it’s being able to analyze and decode everything around you, instead of feebly accepting what’s dictated as normal, or cool, or even true. it’s about intentionally stepping outside of the margins if that’s what it takes maintain your freedom. freedom of speech, freedom of will, and freedom of thought. whether consciousness is political, cultural, or spiritual is irrelevant. it’s about being open and aware to what’s happening in this world and beyond. since when did that start being uncool? oh yeah, when the record labels recognized how powerful an influence hip hop had over the youth and decided they wanted to take it in another direction. they couldn’t have young people getting knowledge of self from rakim, political awareness from krs one, and a seething anger at the oppressive system from ice cube, now could they? and its not that these artists weren’t marketable. they ALL went gold or platinum(but i thought conscious rappers couldn’t make it).

slowly but surely, the ones who had next were watered down, drug dealing automatons who all espoused the same unthinking message: do ANYTHING to get EVERYTHING. i am among the few who remains utterly opposed to this motto. it’s by design that we are programmed through radio programming(see the connection?) to like, promote, and fan these artists who say NOTHING. i will not do or say just anything just so i can get put on. i WILL write about how we can get free, through any means necessary. i could give a damn about acceptance. if i can look in the mirror and accept and be proud of myself at the end of the day, that’s what matters. that’s what my parents taught me from birth and it’s ME. so, at the end of the day i am a conscious rapper and proud of the label. cuz like my sis E. Badu say, “i stay woke.”

lyric jones-appetizer menu

March 6, 2012 in Food Clothing &Hip Hop, Hip Hop, Music


lyric jones stay grinding! peep the visuals for the second single off her debut album, “jones st.”

Internationally Known mixtape Vol. 2 featuring sol messiah and me!

March 2, 2012 in Afrika, Culture, Ether Warz, Food Clothing &Hip Hop, God Hop Movement, Hip Hop, Music, Sa-Roc


we got asked by the fellers at nomadic wax to contribute a joint to their internationally known mix tape series. i think it’s a great project featuring some dope mcs all across the globe, including myself!! check it out.

“Rain And Sunshine” – Sa-Roc feat. Poodie The Byz & Rasheeda Ali Live at The Loft @ Center Stage

February 20, 2012 in Culture, Ether Warz, EVENTS, God Hop Movement, Hip Hop, Life Experience, Moors, Music, On the Scene, Performances, Sa-Roc, Video Blogging


this was a great performance. poodie and rasheeda are two amazingly talented sistas. AND beautiful!

SOL MESSIAH: NEW MIXTAPE “GOD HOP MUSIC” COMING SOON!

February 1, 2012 in Hip Hop, History, Incredible Findings

SA-ROC: SPEAKS ON THE ETHERZ & ENDING FACEBOOK

January 30, 2012 in Ether Warz, God Hop Movement, Interviews, Sa-Roc, Sa-Roc TV, Video Blogging

new video: “stardust”

February 5, 2011 in Sa-Roc