Tampilkan postingan dengan label Mixtapes. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Mixtapes. Tampilkan semua postingan

Rabu, 18 Mei 2011

Batman Mixtape Is An Instant Classic

DJ Emir Batman Mixtape is An Instant Classic!


Wow! what can we say? DJ Emir has done it again! Another hot mixtape project that shows why DJ Emir is a true mixtape genius. The DJ Emir Batman Mixtape is a wild ride through the depths of Gotham City as Batman rises from the ashes of Bruce Wayne's tragic past. Re-experience Batman like never before in this epic 80 minute mixtape CD. A thoughtfully put together mixtape featuring cool quotes, great music and a strong mix of the best Hip Hop, Reggae and remixes automatically making this this yet another classic mixtape to add to any collection from the mixtape master himself, DJ Emir!


DJ Emir Batman Mixtape

DJ Emir Batman Mixtape Back Cover







DJ Emir Batman Mixtape Sample by djemir

Check out the preview and get your copy of the Batman Mixtape at www.djemir.com/batman-mixtape.html TRUST ME! YOU WANT THIS MIXTAPE! 
*Be warned though unlike many of his other mixtapes, this one is dirty and has some curse words in it and may not be appropriate for young children.*


- Trenton W. 
Writer at The Great Hip Hop Blog

Selasa, 28 Desember 2010

DJ Scene Mixtapes and Remixes

DJ Scene of Seattle Washington & Las Vegas has been on our radar for a minute. Before clubs and radio, Scene made a name for himself in the DJ battle circuit, becoming the 2002 Northwest DMC Champion. He now consistently tours throughout the United States with a distinct style that incorporates scratching, live remixes and blends of party anthems that span all genres of great music. He creates hot remixes that get major play by many of the top DJs in the world (like the Wiz Khalifa Black & Yellow DJ Scene Remix posted below)








DJ Scene currently has a weekly mixshow every Saturday on WILD 94.9 FM in San Francisco, a podcast that reaches 95,000+ subscribers weekly and coutless mixCDs distributed throughout the US. Originally from Seattle, he mixed 5 days a week on air with KUBE 93.3 FM, while prerecording for XM Satellite Radio 67 ‘The City’. Scene has also reached plenty of ears through Myspace where his 200,000+ friends have accounted for over 1.5 million plays of his exclusive remixes and live recordings. He has an Iphone app available for download on I-tunes and on his website DJ-Scene.com that streams various DJ Scene DJ Mix podcasts and mixtapes. The Mixtapes are also available as direct downloads on his website DJ-Scene.com

DJ Scene's website has several hot Mixtape Series that are worth checking out including his popular 2080's mixtape series which incorporate hot remixes and blends of 1980's tracks with todays hot club tracks. Another of his mixtape series to check out is his Epic Shine Mixtape Series based on the styles of music played at his Las Vegas Pool parties which feature Electro House and House Music occasionally laced with hip hop and R&B vocals.





Pick up these mixtapes and podcasts at DJ-SCENE.com

DJ Scene spends most of his time in Las Vegas spinning at various Las Vegas Nightclubs and Pool Parties including MGM's Studio 54 and Liquid at Aria. He is an extremely versatile DJ that always puts it down hard at every party.

DJ Scene is available for booking thru Josh Donaldson LVjoshD@gmail.com or Ricky Greenstein ricky@moodswing360.com

Selasa, 25 Agustus 2009

Email Came in Stating: How White People Destroyed Mixtapes

This email arrived in our in-boxes this morning and had us outraged. I mean seriously, Bad mixtapes and bad mixtape DJs isn't a race issue it's a global issue and a personal issue. The guy is blaming White people for ruining mixtapes. That couldn't be further from the truth...

The people ruining mixtapes are the weak DJs that don't mix. Weak DJs that simply throw songs on and shout over them adding nothing of themselves back into the music but their egos. It doesn't matter whether the DJ is White, Black, Mulatto, Hispanic or Asian, what matters is if they have skill, creativity and the ability to make us enjoy music we would otherwise pass up. there are many songs I never gave a second thought to, until a DJ made me hear it in a different way. These good DJs remixed it, blended it or simply made it hotter by juggling it back and forth with the hardest lines from the song etc... A good DJ makes and breaks records. A good DJ can create mixtapes that can be listened to long past the music's popularity phase. A good mixtape isn't just about the music that is on it, it's also about the DJs themselves and how they put it all together.

The guy doesn't even have the balls to sign his name to the email. Which to me totally discredits his entire argument in and of itself. And all the spelling mistakes, the not understanding the difference between "There and Their" non spaced words and bad punctuation and grammar don't help his argument much either, basically he calls himself out as uneducated. But worst of all , he is blaming One race for what I personally see happening with a multitude of DJs from every race and background.

Lets get it straight: It's not white people or white DJs, it's WHACK DJS that are ruining mixtapes. And to be fair as the guy states, it's not entirely their fault. If we as educated music consumers simply did not support these weak DJs and their extremely whack mixtapes, there would be no reason for them to continue making whack mixtapes. Lets be honest, if you only picked up mixtapes that had some degree of skill in the way they were mixed, produced and created, there would only be a handful of mixtapes out there. But because people bought drop style mixtapes, bought mixtapes without any mixing, any degree of DJ skill and any kind of creativity, there was a huge surge of new DJs trying to come up by doing the same thing.

There was once a time when mixtapes were out there to highlight a DJs ability to rock the turntables, to rock the crowd and to show the diversity and music choices they make. Now it's all about dropping the newest tracks and most exclusives as fast as possible with no creativity or originality.

I posted the email below so you can see how ignorant this guy is, and how ignorant racism is, no matter which direction or angle it comes from. Basically whenever you try and blame an entire race, an entire industry, or an entire generation for a general problem, you are not looking at all the facts and you are missing the bigger picture. Many ties people don't see the entire picture and only focus on the first thing that draws their attention.

Email sent to us by "Anonymous Music Guy"
"My name is Anonymous Music Guy. I do this for no personal gain or benefit ofself. This is just a personal weekly view of the music industry. Please pass this on:

Let's face it, white people today have destroyed the mixtape scene. Theyhave pilfered off of the black generation since the days of slavery, but nowit's a new era. An era of musical slavery. Mixtapes were once an outlet foryoung people with musical energy to put out a product with out enduring thecosts of putting out an album. Mixtapes were a way for DJ's to broadcast newand upcoming talent to the underground market with fans patiently waiting tosee who is next to blow. Now it's nothing but a pure bootleg market, wherenon Black/Urban DJ's basically steal peoples albums and music and put themout solely for profit and reputation.

We have guys like The Evil Empire, The Empire, DJ Smallz, Trapaholics, BigMike, DJ Drama and etc that are fucking the game to hell. These people haveno urban roots. They never lived in a "hood" and likely never endured a real"struggle". They have no real care for this culture. All they care about isthere fat white pockets getting bigger and bigger off of each new "nigger"that comes out. They don't break artist. They break artists banks. Literallyand figuratively. They put out mixtapes with no names to identify themselveswhich is basically considered bootlegging. I even heard of one certain "DJ"having a "hacker" on his team who goes into peoples Gmail accounts to steal"exclusive" music. This one DJ recently took GRANDHUSTLE rap artist YOUNGDRO's new album and put it out on a mixtape..... WHAT KINDA SHIT IS THAT?How could you profit off of someones hardwork you did not pay for? You didntbuy the beats. You did not cover the studio time so what makes you think youcan go out and bootleg there whole album and someone be cool with that? Whatkind of shit is that? What has the game come to?

Then you have the supposed "Big Shots" like DJ Drama who give nothing backto the black community. But it makes sense since he is not* BLACK*. I erk atthe sound of him saying "*NIGGA*" constantly. This guy has been supported byso many artists and in return to the community he charges outrageous pricesto the people he supposedly supports. Homie does nothing but scream all overmusic, I don't know how that makes you an "icon" that deserves 20 thousanddollars to make a "mixtape". I'm sorry sir I'll pass. His last album didnothing and went by quickly *with good reason*. Go back up north. Goodriddance.


The young black musician of today, with music dreams and major labelaspirations has to hope and pray that one day the BWM(*Big White Man*)sitting in his chair will cut him a budget and give him the time of day. If he ever gets that time of day, it's very much short lived for the simplefact of the corruption placed in the music industry today. It has spiraledand regressed into a piece of shit where young black people will sell there souls for a little dollar. The white man who profits will never care about the damage that is done, I don't blame him. I blame the enslaved black youth for not waking up. Don't be a slave to your music, be a owner!!!

Artists have totally devalued there music and self worth in the music world. Is there any coming back?? better yet, going forward?

Call me racist, call me what you want but WHITE PEOPLE have destroyed mixtapes.
Next week, how WHITE WOMAN have destroyed the Urban Magazine Industry
please pass this along.
Sincerely, Anonymous Music Guy"


So that was pretty much his letter blaming white people in general for everything the music industry and the mixtape industry is going through. Knowing damned well that the issue is much bigger than One race. The same can be said about the RIAA blaming mixtapes for the decline in music sales, look a little more internaly and realize that music in general has been dumbed down a few knotches. Produce better music and you'll get better sales, it's that simple. You can tell the "Anonymous Music Guy" is on a whole racial war rampage cause his supposed next email is labelled "How White Women (oh sorry Woman, singular LOL) have destroyed the Urban Magazine Industry." Come on now, this is straight up right up there with Hitler using the Jews as scapegoats to blame for his whole county's troubles then unite his German people through a manufactured common hatred and distrust as a means of seizing total political power.

Racism is a double edged sword and cuts both ways. Don't buy into any kind of racism or bigotry, always look into the issue deeper and find the true causes of strife. - Trent Williams

PS:
You can all hit this dude up with your response.
or just post your comment on it here on our blog.
here is his email address:
anonymousmusicguy@gmail.com

On second thought: Even though we'd love for him to receive so many letters he gets flooded everyday I realize now come to think of it, he'll probably just start spamming your inbox if you ever send him a letter. So you may want to just comment here on this blog instead.

- Trent Williams (Annoyed Black Music Guy Who Actually Signs His Posts!)

Senin, 13 Juli 2009

DJ Big Spade Ear Candy and White Party Mixtapes

DJ Big Spade Ear Candy Volumes 1 & 2
Story by: Trent Williams


DJ Big Spade has been busy all summer Deejaying for Denver's hot celebrity parties and nightclub events at Club 303, Theorie, Sutra, and other locations as well as doing Fly Magazine's special event parties and Fly Girl of the month calander parties.

With DJ Big Spade's busy nightclub schedule and his pursuit of yet another College degree it's hard to imagine him finding the time to produce some hot mixtapes. Yet DJ Big spade does accomplish just that, producing several hot mixtapes each year the most memorable being the White Party mixtape, his Obama Mixtape and the Ear Candy Mixtape.




Now who could ever forget the cover on DJ Big Spade's Ear Candy Mixtape? Made a brother start wondering how the hell can I hook up with this bad CGI model chick other than in my fantasies! LOL




In any case, DJ Big Spade put out a hot R&B mixtape called Ear Candy Vol. 1 (Unwrap the R&B) which featured a really hot album cover design and a great mix of R&B hits and blends mixed by DJ Big Spade. A special blend remix of Jamie Foxx's mega hit "Blame it on the Alcohol" is featured on this hot mixtape as is Bobby Valentino and Lil Wayne's "Miss Officer" and Keri Hilson's "Turning Me On"

The first volume of Ear Candy has been out on the streets making the rounds for a little while. Now DJ Big Spade is scheduled to release another hot R&B mixtape, the second volume in the series which features a Spearamint Green Mint Version of the original mixtape cover. We eagerly await the arrival of this mixtape and will also be looking forward to even more hot mixes by DJ Big Spade.
DJ Big Spade mixtapes are available at DJBigSpade.biz
and at most DJ Big Spade nightclub events and special parties.
You can catch DJ Big Spade in some of Denver's hottest nightclubs or touring around the US in Cities like New York and Atlanta. for tour dates visit DJ Big Spade's Website DJBigSpade.biz or his myspace page http://www.myspace.com/djbigspade1


To Book DJ Big Spade Call 303-257-3033


The Graphic Design for the mixtapes and poster were created by the Graphic Design Teams at www.djemir.com/design-services.html call 303-995-0875 for graphics


To Book DJ Big Spade Call 303-257-3033

For Album Cover Designs, Flyer Designs and Graphic Design Call 303-995-0875

- Trent Williams Contributing Journalist

Selasa, 23 Juni 2009

Superstar DJ of Epic Proportions

DJ Emir Santana, A Superstar DJ of Epic Proportions



One of the worlds most sought after DJs, Superstar DJ Emir Santana makes a huge splash wherever he goes. His larger than life DJ performances enliven every nightclub venue he plays at. With a keen sense of taste and a huge variety of music and unique remixes, DJ Emir captivates the crowd and energizes the dancefloor. DJ Emir's fans can be found in all corners of the world thanks to his travels, performances and his world famous mixtapes. Very few Deejays in the world can match Emir's energy, enthusiasm and overall skill and performance. A true artisan of the turntables, DJ Emir has earned the respect of his fans, the media, nightclub owners, colleagues and DJs around the world. He truely is a Superstar DJ of Epic Proportions.

We caught up with DJ Emir in Las Vegas where he put on an amazing show. His mixes were so crazy that we danced the whole night, alternating between dancing on the dancefloor, the mini stages and our table service booth. Everyone knows we here at the offices are all huge fans of DJ Emir's mixtapes. But as good as his mixtapes are, whenever we see Emir live we are always amazed at the much higher level of performance. There's definitly something about his live performances that just blows us away and subsequently also blows most other DJs out the water as well. He is a true DJ and a true performer always concentrating on delivering the best performance possible and providing nightclubs with the hottest most memorable parties.

We let Emir know we were in the building and had travelled from our Los Angeles offices to Las Vegas just to see him play. He thanked us for the on going support and offered to take us out on the town if we were free the next few days. Despite being a superstar DJ, DJ Emir was a gracious and very humble host, making sure we all had a great time. Knowing we were huge fans of DJ Emir's Transformers Mixtape, Emir got us in to see a premier of the New Transformers 2 Movie.

We had a great time hanging out with DJ Emir Santana, our favorite DJ and we really enjoyed his mixes and his company in Las Vegas. If you ever get a chance make sure you catch DJ Emir when he's in your City, He's a great DJ that always delivers!

With the new surpluss of weak DJs it is important to remember the great DJs that are still out there, the ones that are worth going out to see everytime they are in your town: DJ Craze, Serafin, DJ AM, DJ Kid Capri, DJ Emir, Riz and Sizzahands, Serge Sniper, and others from various cities.

Puerto Rican Born, New York raised DJ Emir has become Denver's Number One Nightclub DJ. DJ Emir, Denver's best DJ is available for bookings in Denver Colorado and all around the world with an amazing blend of Hip Hop, Reggae, Electro House and personal mashup remixes, DJ Emir blazes nightclubs like no other DJ. His amazing skills on the turntables elevate any nightclub's events to epic proportions. Don't settle for regular DJs, put this superstar DJ up in your club today and hear the difference for yourself. DJ Emir is one of the worlds top nightclub DJs for a reason. He puts his all into every mix, with personal live remixes and a love for the turntables his energy carries through and revitalizes every nightclub crowd leaving them wanting more. A Real DJ with no boundries, no specific genre and no limits. Just real turntables, real mixes, real skills... Real DJs Do Real Things.

- V. Vanguard Great Music Blog Spot

Jumat, 20 Maret 2009

Jadakiss & DJ Green Lantern Bury Their Beef and Are Back in the Lab



Jadakiss & DJ Green Lantern Bury Their Beef and Are Back in the Lab
This week was supposed to see the release of Jadakiss' The Last Kiss album, and since that project has been pushed back until April 7, your boy couldn't leave you without any stimulants. He has a mixtape out, so pucker up — Jadakiss is going to tell you to kiss his ass and there's just no escaping that. Although he had to change his official album's title to The Last Kiss, the Yonkers monster mouth used his original title idea for his latest mixtape, the sequel to his classic 2004 mixtape with Big Mike and Green Lantern, The Champ Is Here.



"Green is impeccable with blending and mixing, taking an acappella of a record that had a previous track to the next level," Kiss said of reteaming for Kiss My Ass: The Champ Is Here Pt. 2.

"A lot of DJs just want a couple of freestyles [when you make mixtapes]. Green wants some freestyles, a cappellas. He wants to do his thing and he wants some drops or whatever," Jada continued. "And he presents you with records. When you're working with him, you know what you're getting, and he's bringing some things to the table. He's really in there working. He's making it like a real album. He's gonna master it. It was definitely a good thing getting back with him."

To the dismay of fans — not to mention the two gentlemen involved themselves — Kiss and Green had a serious falling out on the heels of making the first Champ, one of the all--time great street CDs (no gas here, it was that damn good. A phone conversation between the two popped up on a street DVD. They were discussing Jada's then brewing battle with 50 Cent. In the aftermath of the footage going public, Green stepped down as Eminem's DJ.

Green Lantern has since gone on to spin at shows for the likes of Nas and Jay-Z. In fact, it was during an American Gangster tour stop in NYC that Kiss appeared onstage as Jay's special guest, but the Yonkers ripper and the Evil Genius had no synergy onstage. Kiss wanted to rock one of his hits, but Green Lantern only had "It's All About the Benjamins."

"I reached out to Green," Jadakiss said of how the two came to put this current mixtape together. "He kept 100. He came to Y.O. by himself. We sat at a restaurant and just kicked it. Ventilated. He said what he wanted to say, got off his chest how the whole thing went down."
As for the concert, Jada explained, "A lot of people thought it might have been some funny money, but one of the things we talked about at the table, he was like, 'Don't think I was doing you greasy.' He didn't have none of my music in his replay. I can't get mad at that. It's a Hov show. Hov made him put 'The Benjamins' in there. I just didn't want to perform 'The Benjamins.' "

Now on the same page, the two are already plotting to drop another Kiss My A-- CD. And if you're wondering why this current Kiss My A-- CD is a little shorter than expected, Jada said he's just looking out for his official release in April. The potency of the first Champ Is Here mixtape hurt sales of his official The Kiss of Death album.
"That's why I had to make this one tight, but not too much a full-length album, because [fans] will just sit with that and not want to get your album. ... Interscope spent a lot of money on that Champ Is Here [and it ended up hurting The Kiss of Death]. They made a lot of copies and put it in every region in the world. It was good and bad. That's why I went light. But we got volume two of the Kiss My Ass. I got more music I'm gonna let go in a couple days for you."
Jada said after his album drops in April, fans can expect a D-Block compilation followed by a LOX album at the end of the year.

Jadakiss' dropping even more new joints too
"Child Abuse." "That's a beat that Swizz used before," Jada explained. "I heard a lot of people that rocked over it. [Lloyd] Banks rocked to it. Ransom, Stack Bundles — rest in peace — before he passed, he ripped something on there. I said, 'This is a beat for MCs. I wanna get on that, let them know I got my ear to the streets.' 'Child Abuse'! Just some lyrical fun, smackin' the track around."

"Hard Times" featuring Barrington Levy. "That should be on the LP," Jada said. "I don't know. It's in the batch. It rings off in the club and I get a good look from all the yardies. They love the boy Kiss, respect. Barrington is raw. They call him 'The Mayor' over there [in Jamaica]. He's a real dude. ... He's making real music. He's trying hard to get me [to do the video] over there in Jamaica. I might pay for a video — shoot half over there, shoot half in Jamaica. It was a good look. I never did a reggae joint, and I did it with Barrington. I'm supposed to be hooking up with Beenie Man too this week while he's in town."

"The People" featuring Styles P. "We were just spazzin' on the Common beat," Jada explained. "I'm a big fan of Common. You probably wouldn't know, since we're [such] different artists, but Common's a spitter since back in the day. He gets it in with anybody, any type of song. I was big fan of that single when he dropped it, 'The People.' The cadence is crazy. Green had thrown SP on there in the middle of the track. I said, 'That ain't gonna work, Green. You can't just chop them verses up like that. You gotta let the whole thing rock, then let P come after that.' It came out tremendous."
All and all this will be a big year for Jadakiss and we wish him the best.
- The Great Hip Hop Music Blog Spot

Selasa, 10 Maret 2009

DJ Ty Boogie and Mistarello.com Blend Brothers 2008 Mixtape

DJ Ty Boogie and Mistarello.com Blend Brothers 2008 (Blends 101 Class In Session) Mixtape www.mistarello.com


This is a really good example of a classic Blend mixtape. These two DJs really did a great job mixing and selecting their songs on all the blends. There are a ton of really great classic cuts that they remixed for this blend mixtape and most of the blend beats they chose worked well with the tracks they chose to remix.

We ran through quite a few blend mixtapes before choosing this one to let you al know about. Most of the blend mixtapes we found were simply compilations of remixes and not One hot continual mix. Not only that but many of the other blend mixtapes also had bad song choices and bad beat choices that didn't really blend well together. The whole point of a remix afterall is to make the remix at least as hot if not hotter than the original song. So many of the blend mixtapes were a bit of a disappointment. So when we found this one we were really happy to hear a continual mix of really great blends and mixes.

This mixtape was pretty much a heater from start to finish. Most of the blends were done really well and the overall vibe of the mixtape was excellent. This is a great mixtape for bumping in your ride, especially if you like some oldschool remixes. We'll be looking for more from these two DJs in the future, and we'll keep you posted on other hot mixtapes as well.
Check it out at www.mistarello.com

Iron Man Mixtape Review 2 by Jay

Review 2 of The Ironman Mixtape CD by DJ Emir



Like its predecessor, The Transformers Mixtape, DJ Emir's new monster hit mixtape, the Iron Man Mixtape is making a huge splash in the mixtape circuit. After going all out on the previous mixtape and recieving several awards including the honor of VIP Nightclub Magazine mixtape of the year, DJ Emir simply had to go all out and try to out do his previous Nine mixtapes.




The monster mix session known as The Iron Man Mixtape is a monumental movement to bring back the true essence of real mixtapes, that is bring back mixtapes that are actually mixed. Real scratches, transforms, mixes, juggles, remixes, blends and dope overall DJ skills, yes folks, that's what real mixtapes are made of. Gun Shots, excessive yelling, lack of creativity and compiling songs just to get them out faster than the other guy... That's what fake mixtapes are made of.

Time and Time again DJ Emir manages to put out some of the best Real mixtapes we've ever heard. He mixes so fast and hard that Emir plays, as KRS One put it in his song the DJ "Only One to Two verses, just keep the party moving" Emir's mixes are hard fast and smooth, the entire mixtape flows from one song to the next with dope transitions and even tighter remixes. How else do you fit 62 tracks on One CD?!

Some of the remixes are so much better than the original songs that they actually became our new favorite songs of the moment. For example, DJ Emir's remix of 50 Cent Get Money was straight fire especially the spots where Emir caught the accapella and cut up the track with his scratch skills. Dude seriously was killing it on that remix! Same with his crazy intro.DJ Emir's Iron Man Mixtape is a 10 as far as DJ skill and overall entertainment go. Our advice to DJ Emir, just keep 'em coming! - Jay of The Great Hip Hop Blog

Jumat, 04 Mei 2007

The Third World War Has Started!- The Mixtape Wars


The recent slew of mixtape raids have caught a ton of media attention. But it wasn't the first time. Other DJs have been hit by the music industry giants. DJs like DJ Rectangle who was hit with lawsuits a few years back and many others.

It's ludicrous that the same industry that uses mixtapes to promote it's new music also turns it back on the DJs, the lifeblood that sustain the empire. They want DJs to distribute mixtapes with their music on them as a form of street promotion and they want the DJs to play their music at the major nightclubs across the globe. But they quickly turn their back when a DJ gets caught up in the Legal entanglement of Copyright Infringement. You just can't have it both ways. And just like ambiguity in land property line disputes, the ambiguity of where players in the music industry stand on the subject of DJs and DJ Mixtapes also leads us all to conflict and eventually war.

The bombing of Pearl Harbor forced the "Sleeeping Dragon" to join the battle and now the Mixtape Raid on DJ Drama needs to have a similar effect on the music industry. It's time to fight back. DJ's, Music Reps, Music Artists and Music Executives need to get together and rise up against the hypocrosy. If they don't it will be just like world War 2, and the Genocide of the Hip Hop Culture, The Techno Culture and any other Music industry that has come to depend on Mixtapes and Nightclub DJs will soon fall.

Selasa, 20 Maret 2007

Mixtape Volume 8: Hip Hop Mixtape





Mixtape Vol8
Track Listing:
1 DJ Emir - Mixtape Vol 8 Intro
2 Mims This Is Why I'm Hot
3 The Game - It's Alright (One Blood)
4 Junior Reed - One Blood
5 DJ UNK - Walk It Out Remix Ft Jim Jones & Andre 3000
6 Crime Mobb - Knuck If You Buck Intermission Beat
7 Lil Scrappy - Money In The Bank
8 T.I. - What You Know About That
9 Ruff Riderz - Intermission Beat
10 Young Dro - Shoulder Lean
11 Danity Kane - Show Stopping
12 Letoya ft Mike Jones - Torn Remix1
13 Letoya ft Jermain Dupri- Torn Remix2
14 Crime Mobb - Rock Ya Hips
15 Jibbs - Chain Hang Low
16 Jibbs - Chain Hang Low Remix
17 Notorious B.I.G. - Spit Your Game
18 Duece Poppi - Did I Do That?
19 Lil Jon - Snap Ya Fingaz Intermission
20 MIMS - Black Train (DJ Emir Remix)
21 Monica ft Franchize Boys - Everytime The Beat Drops
22 Snoop Dogg ft R Kelly - That's That
23 Young Capone - What It Is
24 Yung Joc ft Playalitical - It's Going Down Remix
25 Yung Joc - It's Going Down
26 Yung Joc ft Playalitical - It's Going Down Remix
27 36 Mafia - Side 2 Side
28 50 Cent - In Da Club (DJ Emir Remix)
29 Jim Jones - We Fly High (Ballin)
30 Ali N Gipp - Go Head
31 Don Omar - Dale Don Dale Remix
32 LL Cool J - Hush Reggaeton Remix
33 Shakira - Hips Don't Lie
34 Shakira ft Fat Man Scoop - Hips Dont Lie Remix
35 R Kelly ft Sean Paul - Slow Wind Remix
36 Ice Cube - Why We Thugs
37 India Arie Ft Akon - I Am Not My Hair (Konvict Remix)
38 Akon ft Snoop Dogg - I Wanna Love You
39 E40 ft Candy Girl - U N Dat
40 Snoop Dogg ft E40, Eightball - Candy
41 E40 - Tell Me When To Go
42 Rashard ft T-Pain - Tell Em What They Want To Hear
43 J Shin ft T-Pain - Send Me An Email

Mixtape Vol8

Minggu, 18 Maret 2007

Classic Mixtapes

Classic Mixtapes


Get a hold of the years hottest hip hop mixtapes
take our word for it these new mixtapes are hot, but we understand your skeptisism so take a listen to the sample mp3 clips at DJ Emir Mixtapes we know you'll enjoy these mixtapes as much as we do. Peace... your boys at The Great Hip Hop Music Weblog


Mixtape Volume 7


Hip Hop Mixtape Volume 7




$9.99 Afterall You Deserve A Hot Mixtape
Get Your copy of This Nightclub Party on CD!



Over 40 Tracks of Hot New Hip Hop & Reggae Music


Techniques Volume 7- Hip Hop Mixtape
Mix-CD Track Listing:
1. Intro
2. Chop Shop - La La La
3. TrillTown Mafia - Town Walk
4. Macka Diamond & Blacker - Bun Him
5. Shaggy ft Olivia - Wild Tonight
6. General Degree - Have Weh Yu Wan
7. JT Money - Who Dat (DJ Emir Remix)
8. Obie Trice- Jamaican Girl
9. Tami Chynn - Be Mine
10. Dr. Evil - Jamaica
11. Dr. Evil - Wan More Punnani
12. Beenie Man - We Set Di Trend
13. Idonia - Chicken Head
14. Elephant Man - Gone Up
15. Wayne Marshal - I Forgot Them
16. Cham ft. Akon - Ghetto Story (Remix)
17. Daddy Yankee - (Rompe Remix)
18. Lil Jon - Snap Ya Fingaz
19. Shareefa - Need A Boss
20. Ice Cube ft Snoop Dog - Go To Church
21. Trendz Of Culture - I Wish
22. The Roots - Silent Treatment (Black Thought Remix)
23. Flipsyde - Happy Birthday
24. MIMS - I Did You Wrong
25. Bubba Sparxxx - Heat It Up
26. T.I. - Why You Wanna
27. Sage& T.I. - Why You Wanna Remix
28. Styles P. ft. Rashad - Favorite One
29. T.I. - Why You Wanna
30. Talib Kweli - Listen
31. Sean Paul- Give It Up To Me (Remix)
32. Cassie - Me & U (P. Diddy Remix)
33. Cassie - Me & U (Remix)
34. Funkologist - Knod Your Head To This
35. Bubba Sparxxx - Ms. New Booty
36. Bun B Ft Ying Yang Twinz - Git It Gurl
37. Beenie Man - Hmm Hmm
38. Notch - V.I.P. Get Back
39. Sizzla - Hot Like Fire
40. Nelly Furtado ft. Timbaland- Promiscious
41. Pitbull - Bojangles
42. Ms. Trinity - Bongce Along
43. Sean Paul - Temperature (Remix)
44. Outro




Mixtape Volume 6


Mixtape Vol6 Gets Mixtape Review Award 5 out of 5 starsMixtape Reviews:

"The Mixtapes Are Hot:
Straight Banging Hip Hop & Reggae Mixes
on each CD.
Emir's Mixtapes are as James Bond would say-
"Shaken Not Stirred" for that hot Nightclub sound
that will keep you dancing at your next party or
knoding your head in your ride. Overall the Mixtape was, and still is extremely entertaining.


DJ Emir's Mixtape Volume 6 gets our highest rating:
5 Out of 5 Stars"

-Trent W. of The Mixtape Review





Get a Free Mixtape when you Get The Hottest Mixtape Series in one package Over 6 hrs of Hot Hip Hop & reggae Music on Six Mixtape CDs for just 49.99!


Get Yours Now.



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Denver's Hottest DJ