Saturday, February 18, 2012

DJ Cymoh - Mulika Mwizi Mixtape

Posted by FreeMusicDownload | Saturday, February 18, 2012 | Category: , | 0 comments

This another hot mixtape by one DJ Cymoh. It's called Mulika Mwizi. It features songs by Kidum and other artists. Enjoy.

DJ Joe - Ten years of Bashment Mixtape

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Saturday, March 19, 2011

#USIU CHICKS by Kapella (ProudlyKenya Exclusive) Free Download

Posted by FreeMusicDownload | Saturday, March 19, 2011 | Category: | 1 comments



Never in my wildest imagination, and dark fantasies did i think that the #USIUCHICKS Kenya's most heated trending topic would give birth to love/hate, impending court battles and now even a song!! 


Kapella, an unsigned hiphop jumped on the trending topic wagon and did some verses on the " Monster" beat done by Kanye West. He flows eazy, going hard and showcasing his mastery on reason and rhyme. Take a listen and be the judge. Click Here To Download

Friday, March 18, 2011

Marya ft Avril - Chokoza (ProudlyKenya Exclusive)

Posted by FreeMusicDownload | Friday, March 18, 2011 | Category: | 1 comments

Even with the controversies both of them have voices and can really sing and coupled with thier beauty, they really form the ultimate collabo pair. On the flip side, the pairing of the duo is a recepie for people to hate and look for fault when there is none.


Now the beat sounds like a “diwali riddim” rip off, but Ogopa Djs put a twist to the beat to make it refreshing and unique in its own way. Now I know some people will compare this track to “Love is wicked” by Brick and Lace but you cannot really blame them. The similarities are just too obvious. The chorus on the song is catchy and even though the lyrics on the track are sometimes confusing (on the first chorus, they talk about accepting Tequila shots from guys then running off but then on verse 2 they say they are independent women who have their own cash to support themselves-What Is What?????) “Chokoza” shows the maturity and growth of the duo.

I wanna know what people out there think of the track. I believe its worth getting some spins here at Proudly Kenya. Enjoy!!!!!
Listen to the track below:
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Click HERE to Download the track 

Reggae Gold 2009 [CD Album]

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For reggae fans, the 2000s will go down in history as a decade in which dancehall toasting and reggae singing often went hand-in-hand in much the same way that hip-hop and R&B went hand-in-hand. Dancehall toasters incorporated reggae singing throughout the 2000s, and reggae singers (especially the younger ones) didn't hesitate to feature dancehall toasters. 


The prominence of dancehall is evident on REGGAE GOLD 2009, which is by no means dancehall exclusive but is certainly dancehall-friendly. 

The compilation spotlights 21st century dancehall with recordings by well-known toasters like Elephant Man ("Dance and Sweep," "Nuh Linga") and Mavado ("So Special"), and the dancehall influence is impossible to miss on British R&B singer Estelle's hit "Come Over" (which features dancehall star Sean Paul). 





While REGGAE GOLD 2009 may contain too much crossover action to be recommended to purists, the compilation is well-worth obtaining if one has diverse tastes and appreciates a wide variety of 21st century reggae.



VP and Greensleeves have been spoiling us a little with full length roots albums from Sizzla, Alborosie, and the upcoming third release from Tarrus Riley. But their bread-and-butter in today’s market is still hits compilations.
The 17th edition of their hugely successful Reggae Gold series is an undemanding selection of one-drop and dancehall sides featuring Jamaica’s most popular deejays, singers and producers.

Rap and R&B influences on dancehall (and their accompanying production gimmicks) show no signs of going away. But in today’s linked up world, any sound – from Jamaica’s heritage to contemporary global - is fair game. Busy Signal turns autotune soaked ghetto preacher for the Rivers Of Babylon and Chrome rhythm borrowing Praise And Worship (for Germain Clarke). Elephant Man teams up with hot producer Stephen “Di Genius” McGregor for the UK clubland informed Dance and Sweep. McGregor takes the mic himself during Chino’s Protected.

One the one-drop side of things, of particular note is Queen Ifrica’s tender and moving Far Away (on Rickman Warren’s Movements rhythm) a million miles from the harsher vocals of her deejaying works. Then there’s Etana and Alborosie’s mutual love-in, Blessings (produced by Alborosie and his Escape From Babylon album collaborator Clifton “Specialist” Dillon) and Beres Hammond’s typically effortless sounding See You Again (for the other McGregor, Kemar).
Last year Danes Enur and the late Natasja gave the collection an international flavour. This time US R&B artist Jazmine Sullivan rides a bastardised mashup of the rhythm to Queen Of The Minstrel, while London soul singer Estelle duets with Sean Paul on the Supa Dups creation Come Over.
If you don’t like modern reggae-dancehall production techniques, autotune, or slick sweet “earworm” choruses, there’s really nothing for you here. From the other side of the fence, Jamaican music could be said to be in the throes of a golden age of pop to rival the rocksteady era, or the crossover of dancehall in the 80s and 90s. Either way, you can’t deny the catchiness of these tunes.

Included are 15 big tracks Mavado, Sreani, Estelle feat. Sean Paul, Jasmine Sullivan, Busy Signal, Etana feat. Alborosie, Queen Ifrica, Beres Hammond, and Tarrus Riley.


Audio Remasterers: Paul Shields; Neil Edwards.
To download whole album Click Here. To download Singles, Click On Single Track Title To Download Below


Friday, November 12, 2010

P-Unit – KArE (feat Mimo)

Posted by FreeMusicDownload | Friday, November 12, 2010 | Category: | 0 comments

P-Unit – KArE (feat Mimo) (Exclusive ***)


P-Units album is finally complete and should be hitting the stores (itunes also) in the next few weeks. I personally cant wait to meet these cats in person. I can’t wait for the US tour, I know it will be challenging for Kenyan promoters to support flight and accomodation for 3 artsts and a manager but I think the quality put into this album and they type of work these guys put out – SOMEONE somewhere better come up with a bright idea of how to get P-Unit in the US.

One of the few reasons I am persistent on getting to see P-Unit live is mainly because I feel like they haven’t let me down so far. Every song every rhyme, every video, every freestyle has just been quality delivery. To top that off with this single release to push the album – I just think its time. I think this is one group that I can listen to the entire album from start to finish. It also helps when you think that Musyoka (Decimal records) is behind the entire initiative.

P-Unit have been known to pioneer or invent new lingo/words sheng terms such as Iko Juu, Iko down e.t.a. Now with this KArE hit am left aloof… Am not sure what it means but this song is a sure shot – BANGER. Play this a few times before you pass judgment. Musyoka is a true production genius, put a genius producer with some talented lyricist and you get mega hits like this one..

Enjoy

download the track here:

Bonus Material DJ Material:

Download the instrumental here:

download accapella here:

Friday, February 5, 2010

Rihanna Rated R Album Review

Posted by FreeMusicDownload | Friday, February 5, 2010 | Category: | 0 comments

Rated R is the fourth studio album by Barbadian R&B singer Rihanna, released November 20, 2009 on Def Jam Recordings. Recording sessions for the album took place during March to November 2009 at Milk Studios and Germano Studios in Manhattan, New York, Studios Davout in Paris, France, and Westlake Recording Studios in Los Angeles, California. Conceived after Rihanna's assault by her then-boyfriend, singer Chris Brown, Rated R features a foreboding and angry tone, in terms of musical and lyrical direction, and incorporates elements of hip hop,rock, and dubstep.

The album debuted at number 4 on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart, selling 181,000 copies in its first week, making it Rihanna's highest-selling debut in the United States. It became her third consecutive platinum album in the United States and spawned three singles, "Russian Roulette", "Hard", and "Rude Boy", that attained chart success. Upon its release, Rated Rreceived generally positive reviews from most music critics, based on an aggregate score of 76/100 from Metacritic.

Rihanna may have been a good girl gone bad on her 2007 album, but on her new one, she's a good girl gone bad-ass. During the electric-guitar-soused "Rock Star," the R&B singer revels in her bad-girl rebellion, crooning, "Got my middle finger up/I don't really give a fuck." And over double-speed drums on "G4L," she warns, "Any motherfuckers want to disrespect/We don't play that shit."

Meanwhile, the singles "Wait Yo
ur Turn" and "Hard" find Rihanna singing beefy lyrics-"I'm such a fucking lady" and "the hottest bitch in heels," respectively-over epic piano patterns.
But the artist doesn't talk tough all the way through the set. "Photographs" features Rihanna lamenting over a lost relationship above static drums, whereas on the heartfelt ballad "Stupid in Love," she croons over a pulsating beat, "You don't know what you lost/And you won't realize it till I'm gone."

In either case, she proves that the good girl in her has gone bad indefinitely. --

Photo

Rihanna

Rated R Get it Below

RS:4OF 5 STARSAVERAGE USER RATING:3OF 5 STARS

2009


The cover of the new Rihanna album features a severe black-and-white head shot of the star. She has her hand clapped over her right eye; her left eye, surrounded by a raccoon ring of mascara, glares back at the viewer. The context here is no secret: It is impossible to look at those eyes without remembering the images of Rihanna's bruised face in the aftermath of her beating in February by ex-boyfriend Chris Brown. Until recently, the singer has been quiet about the incident. Songs like "Russian Roulette" — a domestic-violence victim's confession whipped into soaring melodrama — tell us why: She was busy saying her piece in the studio.

If by some accident of fate, or maybe record-company cynicism, the new Chris Brown album has arrived at the same moment as his ex's. The results tempt a reviewer to talk in terms of moral victories, but the real triumph here is artistic. Chris Brown has made a bland, occasionally obnoxious, pro forma R&B album. Rihanna has transformed her sound and made one of the best pop records of the year.

Brown mostly ignores the elephant in the room, churning out punchy dance-pop songs full of club-ready beats and Casanova gestures. He gloats about "the cars and the girls and the cribs." He promises ecstasy ("Gonna make you bloom like a flower," he tells the girl in "Take My Time"). There are also lost-love ballads, delivered by Brown in his nasal wisp of a singing voice. But as unfair as it sounds, the Rihanna incident has made it impossible to hear him in the same way; the sweetness that animated songs like 2008's "Forever" is now a hard sell.

With Rihanna, singing has never been in doubt. The question has always been personality: Is there a flesh-and-blood woman lurking beneath the big voice and model looks? On Rated R, she answers the question emphatically. There are a couple of engaging uptempo tunes. (The StarGate-produced "Rude Boy" is smutty fun, with a Caribbean bounce.) But this is an album with a grim theme: love gone horribly wrong. "What you did to me was a crime," Rihanna sings in the slow-boiling "Cold Case Love." Elsewhere, she is bent on vengeance. "I lick the gun when I'm done," she cries in "G4L," "because I know that revenge is sweet." The songs are etched in somber shades and minor chords, with Rihanna belting over synths and booming beats. The results are a musical match for the black-on-black CD cover — goth R&B.

No single song approaches the grandeur of Rihanna's 2007 megahit, "Umbrella." But even the most sprawling power ballads here have an intimate quality. In the plaintive "Stupid in Love," Rihanna turns the blame inward. "My new nickname is 'You Idiot' …/That's what my friends are calling me when they see me yelling into my phone." Such introspection is evidently beyond Brown. On "Lucky Me," he turns his troubles into an occasion for self-congratulation: "Even when my world's falling down/I still wear a smile." A simple sorry might have made a better song — or at least made Brown a better guy.


CLICK ON THE SONG/TRACK TO DOWNLOAD

Track listing

#TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Mad House" Makeba Riddick, Will Kennard, Saul Milton,Robyn FentyChase & Status1:34
2."Wait Your Turn" James Fauntleroy II,Mikkel S. Eriksen, Tor Erik Hermansen, Kennard, Milton, Takura Tendayi, FentyChase & Status,StarGate3:46
3."Hard" (featuring Young Jeezy)Terius Nash,Christopher Stewart, Fenty, Jay JenkinsThe-Dream, Tricky Stewart4:10
4."Stupid in Love" Shaffer Smith, Eriksen, HermansenStarGate, Ne-Yo4:01
5."Rockstar 101" (featuring Slash)Nash, Stewart, FentyThe-Dream, Tricky Stewart[20]3:58
6."Russian Roulette" Smith, Chuck HarmonHarmon, Ne-Yo3:47
7."Fire Bomb" Fauntleroy II, Brian Kennedy, FentyBrian Kennedy4:17
8."Rude Boy" Eriksen, Hermansen, Ester Dean, Riddick, Robert Swire, FentyStarGate, Robert Swire3:42
9."Photographs" (featuring will.i.am)William Adams, Jean Baptiste, Michael McHenry, Allan Pinedawill.i.am4:46
10."G4L" Kennard, Milton, Fauntleroy II, FentyChase & Status3:59
11."Te Amo" Eriksen, Hermansen, Fauntleroy II, FentyStarGate3:28
12."Cold Case Love" Justin Timberlake, Robin Tadross, Fauntleroy IIThe Y's6:09
13."The Last Song" Fauntleroy II, Kennedy, Ben Harrison, FentyBrian Kennedy, Ben Harrison4:1