Gemineye feat Shabazz The Disciple NYC TO VANCITY
Filed Under (The Creation VC ARCHIVES) by admin on 29-05-2010
Tagged Under : gemineye, shabazz the disciple
R.I.P. Rasul Of Square One Passes A GOOD FRIEND (May 10th 2010)
Filed Under (The Creation VC ARCHIVES) by admin on 14-05-2010
Tagged Under : dj kitsune, dolo, frankfurt germany, german hiphop, germans finest, kingzncrookz, merkk mikzz, monroe, observ one photography, opimum 1, opium 2, rasul r.i.p., sony/bmg, square one, starting line up, the archivest & rasul, tragic heart attack, tyler simpson, vanquish beat battle, warner/emi







MY RELATIONSHIP FRIENDSHIP & BUSINESS WITH RASUL
I am very deeply saddened to write this on one of my best friends for the last year or so.
Ali Rasul met me thru some of Vancity’s best artists one day points at me while I am filming and asks who is that guy, and people reply That’s Trev aka The Archivest Rasul says he looks like cool shit I wanna know what he is about, and I was contacted and had a meeting regarding his work on my come up and we met in Jan 2009 it was the best connection I have ever had, great meetings, amazing lectures the talks about baseball and hockey and grinding in the music business we really hit it off and started working on the project in my studio called Analouge & then named Welcome Home. As this progressed we completed 10 solid tracks Infinite, Godbody, Cross Roads, Train Of Thought to name a few.
I Introduced him to only some of Vancity’s finest he has never met and brought him out to a few Monday Night Lives. As Rasul was very high profile & not many knew his work he chilled in the background and lime light knowing the new sheriff is in town and was not needing to speak about his work, & then working on this project, 2 music videos Cross Roads & Train Of Thought. We also did a photo shoot with Observe One Photography which we were building the best of Opium Mixtape in Oct 2009. After 2010 we had different paths but were in contact with each other as we did some work together and he worked in another studio and accomplished the rest of his album it will be out soon be sure to cop this praise my main man Ali RASUL Rakhshandeh.
It is such a tragedy I have lost one of my best partners in crime, This is the way I cope on his death on my write up and video editing I interviewed him on his success we used to eat at the Happy Sushi Spot, Kents Kitchen, and Duffins Donuts. Every time he went for a smoke I came along with him and we had deep conversations about life and success I am who I am today because of this man and I give him full props for finding me and working together. Im gonna miss this dude thru thick and thin. I also had the benefit working with a new artist Merkk Mikzz who was building his mixtape in my studio and he had the honor of having the one & only collaboration from Rasul in 2009 for his project Young Bible Of Bars which is now released I also documented his work recording in the studio which He requested to show the world when it was the right time.
His father was the one and only Rakim he looked up to in hiphop and was a huge inspiration as well as
Hard Knocks, BDP, King Sun, KMD, More Or Les, World Renown, Crooklyn Dodgers, MF DOOM, The King & I.
Ali Rakhshandeh aka Ali Rasul passed on Tue Morning May 11th in West Vancouver from a heart attack, The rapper became known especially from Germany for his work with the group Square One. & Solo records Opium 1 & 2. The rapper became known especially in Germany for his work with the group Square One. Till his death, Rasul was living in Vancouver and working on a new album titled “Welcome Home”. Personally his album with Square One “Walk Of Life” is one of my all time favourites and it’s very sad for me to see that such a skilled MC of my early Hip-Hop days passed away.
(Documented From Omar Khan):About two years ago I met a fellow artist here in Vancouver.
Rasul had a light about him that made me believe in the un-believable. He had a vision, he had amazing flow, lyrics and talent… but most of all he had heart. He passed away on Tuesday (05/12/10) morning. I had seen him a few months ago in a club during a concert… there wasn’t much conversation… it was loud and it was not the best place to see an old friend in a dark and crowded room. I missed him. The Universe did give me one last chance to see him and I’m glad I told him that I missed him. I saw him on the seawall two days prior to his passing and was excited to talk about music and get that song together that we’ve been trying for so long. He is an inspiration and I know that his light will never go out, because he was an inspiration to me I hope to carry on a little bit of his greatness that I knew.
Knowing Rasul’s music means loving it. There’s no way around it and everybody knows that. What most people don’t know is, how much of a musical mastermind Rasul is behind the music. From discovering some of the greatest producers of the continent to creating musical visions that give birth to milestone albums, Rasul has done it all and he’s doing it again while you read this.
Only the greatest musicians of our time possess the ability to express themselves in feelings and visions; a characteristic that Rasul gets credit for ever since his first releases have seen the light of day. Rasuls outstanding gift to describe and transport emotions and stories made him become one of the most appreciated rappers of Europe ever since Square One, not trying to neglect the fact that the group projects debut release Walk of Life (Showdown / WEA / Warner Music) had a tremendous success in more continents than only one. Releases in countries like the USA, France, Germany, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, Austria and Switzerland prove this artists motivation and claim to work on an international level. Besides the impressive feedback from press, artists and fans for an album that can easily be justified as one of the milestones of rap music produced in Germany, the Persian born Rasul always had a constant strive for artistical development and output, the latter not being able to accomplish in the old constellation of a group of four.
2 years after the split of Square One, Rasul has finished work on his solo debut Welcome Home and although the expectations for the comeback have been high on all sides, after months of intensive work Rasul seems to take this hurdle with ease. The Brooklynite of many years is taking his position as one of the greatest rappers and mcs on this planet and impressively moves intuitively on the highest lyrical level to bless the instrumentals of the biggest producers in Europe.
RASUL BIOGRAPHY AND ALBUM REVIEWS
Let’s get one thing straight this dude can put it down on the mic..no doubt. But as dope as Rasul is lyrically he is even more impressive when it comes to his knowledge of this monster we call Hip Hop. Some of you may be familiar with Square One (which Rasul was a member of) who released their debut album “Walk of Life” in 01′ that featured collabos with A.G., Party Arty, Ali Vegas, Sheek Louch From D-Block etc. Now Rasul has embarked on his solo career and…well, let’s just say his latest venture “Opium Vol. 2″ hosted by Statik Selektah (who has worked with Royce, Primo, Nas, Termanology, and the list goes on..) is a very impressive, heartfelt, soulful piece of work.
When Rasul raises his voice he does not only talk. When he forges his
thoughts and words, not only a clear statement can be heard. Rasul
speaks his soul. 2 years after the split of Square One, Rasul has
finished work on his solo debut Welcome Home and although the
expectations for the comeback have been high on all sides, after months
of intensive work Rasul seems to take this hurdle with ease.
Only the greatest musicians of our time possess the ability to express
themselves in feelings and visions; a chracteristic that Rasul gets
credit for ever since his first releases have seen the light of day.
Rasuls outstanding gift to describe and transport emotions and stories
made him become one of the most appreciated rappers of Europe ever since
Square One, not trying to neglect the fact that the group projects debut
release Walk of Life (Showdown / WEA / Warner Music) had a tremendous
success in more continents than only one.
Releases in countries like the USA, France, Germany, Canada, Japan, New
Zealand, Austria and Switzerland prove this artists motivation and claim
to work on an international level. Besides the impressive feedback from
press, artists and fans for an album that can easily be justified as one
of the milestones of rap music produced in Germany, the Persian born
Rasul always had a constant strive for artistical development and
output, the latter not being able to accomplish in the old constellation
of a group of four. The Brooklynite of many years is taking his
position as one of the greatest rappers and mcs on this planet and
impressively moves intuitively on the highest lyrical level to bless the
instrumentals of the biggest producers in Europe.
Besides the impressive feedback from press, artists and fans, for an album that can easily be justified as one of the milestones of rap in Germany, 2 years after the split of Square One, Rasul has finished work on his solo debut Welcome Home and although the expectation for the comeback have been high on all sides after years and months of extensive work Rasul seems to take this hurdle with ease. The Brooklynite of many years is taking his position as one of the greatest rappers and mcs on this planet and impressively moves intuitively on the highest lyrical level to bless the instrumentals of the biggest producers in Europe.



Albums To download of his history are
Square One The Walk Of Life:to download click here
Opium Volume 1:to download click here
Opium Volume 2:to download click here
It is a great honor to give praise and thanks, to some of the greatest kats from Germany that go by the group name Square One
the members are Rasul, Edward Sizzerhand, Iman Magnetic, Dolo.
Rasuls outstanding gift to describe and transport emotions and stories made him become one of the most appreciated rappers of Europe ever since Square One, not trying to neglect the fact that the group projects debut release “Walk of Life” (Showdown / WEA / Warner Music)</strong> had a tremendous success in more continents than only one. Releases in countries like the <strong>USA, France, Germany, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, Austria and Switzerland prove this artist’s motivation and claim to work on an international level.
Besides the impressive feedback from press, artists and fans for an album that can easily be justified as one of the milestones of rap music produced in Germany, the Persian born Rasul always had a constant strive for artistical development and output, the latter not being able to accomplish in the old constellation of a group of four.
This record sold over 50,000 units with Japanese distribution



A crew from Munich, Germany. Two of its members are originally from Iran, one is American. They call themselves Square One. They rap in English. See, rap music transmits itself really easily: by being heard, by being listened to. Anyone who ever tried to rhyme has had that moment when he heard this particular rapper that made him say: well, let me try this myself. So certainly in the late ’80s to mid ’90s you had people all over the globe rapping in English just because their role models were doing so and they had not figured out yet how to do it in their own language. This and US rap still setting the tone to this day explains why despite there being healthy hip-hop scenes that express themselves in their native languages, English is still very well understood and even spoken within these circles (with the exceptions of France and Japan). Then there’s the huge role that Americans that were actually physically present played in this process. They often were and are an integral part of these scenes, acting as teachers in many ways. This, plus the fact that English is evolving into the main international language, all leads to English being a crucial element to foreign hip-hop cultures.
There’s no reason why Square One shouldn’t appeal to open-minded people in the USA. Both rappers, Rasul Allah and Gianni Dolo, have US high school G.D.’s, so don’t expect any funny accents from them. They know their ABC’s, and it’s not just for the sake of being able to rap in English that they rap in English, they actually have something to say - in English. As the title of their debut album, “Walk Of Life”, suggests, they’ve been places, they’ve met people, they’ve learned lessons, and it all went into the making of this album. Rapper Rasul takes the leading role. This is a quick-tongued, soft-spoken MC who will occasionally raise his voice to Pharoahe Monch-like authority. He specializes in multisyllable ryhming, expanding over entire lines, putting the common rhyme scheme you’ll find on any contemporary record up a notch, similar to what Percee P and other underground legends used to do. This will look like this:
“Sticks and stones, visions of chrome and twisted hones
Brainstorms drift in zones of Bönz Malone
Me and Mrs. Jones intone to Nina Simone
I’m jinxing poems on mystic thrones
To all my dun-duns
Wherever they at or where they come from
Fugitives on the run-run, chocking their very lungs numb
Biographies: humdrum; phrophecies: undone
The function’s to slap rappers with a pump-gun
Forfeit, the orbit of grand exalted
My plans seem often like the hands that arson
Plant the corbins in the land of orphans
The co-operate, similar to gangs in Boston
Square: architects, the walking threats
We palm your chest, then bomb your decks
Cause and effect, armed cadets to rob the vets
I’m in the heart of queens like the ball park of Mets”
My experience is: the more rhymes you try to incorporate in your raps, the less you get to say what you really want. In theory rhymes are a limiting factor in regards to content. But time and time again rappers prove that theory wrong by putting extra emphasis on what they say by making it rhyme. Tupac Shakur being one of the prime examples. It’s often the rhyme that really hits home. On the other hand, there’s the danger that you’ll say anything just to make the damn thing rhyme. Rasul Allah stands somewhere between these extremes. None of his rhymes really stick with me, but in detail he is able to draw some really intriguing poetical pictures. Like this one from “Knowledge Is Knowledge”: “I squeeze my pen / my tears repent the deepest sins / Read these hymns / I breed these gems on bleeding skin / My peers and friends / are fearless men / Iman and Rasul are like Siamese twins”. Dare I say - skills?
Then there’s cases where he just overdoes it and ends up with no saying much, really: “I’ll be firing threats / quiet as kept / my nine’ll reflect / signs of regret / through holes that my silencer left / live & direct / computerized minds’ll connect / high intellects / raised in confinements of death / and you better peep the science that I hide in my tec / tryin’ to neglect / the depth of pride and respect / everytime you see the God, you be dying for rep / crying for less / leave your hoes eyeing and wet / When I asked for some beats ya couldn’t find your cassettes / so how the fuck you wanna go line for line with some vets? / Rhyme for a Lex / catch me even rhyme for sex / Make heads bang till they’re bleeding out of their necks / I’m probably the best / my sick terminology’s flesh / all that ‘let’s keep it real’ got me tired and vexed / as hard as it gets / the Concrete Messiahs are next / watch Edward Sizzerhand electrifying your sets, bet”…
Give me a break! Which DJ Edward Sizzerhand will gladly provide (check his solo spot “Unorthodox”), but first I gotta give it up to the group’s beatmaker, Iman. The music that he puts down is nothing short of perfect. It’s some of the most soulful and soothing hip-hop I’ve heard in a long time. This is music that takes its time. Music that evokes different moods. Good moods, not bad moods. Music that is highly persuasive. But still very distinctly hip-hop, down to the last beat drop. Organic beats. None of these hurried drum patterns that knock you off balance. Iman achieves the highest quality with the smallest quantity. I wish Common, Mos Def and Talib Kweli could rock over these beats. But since they won’t know a dope beat, I’m just happy that Square One’s got some. US rappers Ali Vegas, Andre the Giant and Party Arty (of Ghetto Dwellaz) guest-star on “Walk Of Life”, but they could have been left off it, for all I care. Their performances lack the insight and intensity of Ali Rasul’s. He teams up with his partner in rhyme, Gianni Dolo, on several cuts, but it’s always him that shines the brightest. One of the stand-out cuts on this album, “Applause”, shows him in rare attack mode on MC’s:
“Picture the attica blues, cinematical moods
My literature’s beyond mathematical jewels
They say Ali spits the most radical views
but I cock back the Mack and happen to snooze
Panicking crews put on their travelling shoes
they chose the right path of what many refuse
Actors and fools are gonna get dramatically bruised
plus their whole entourage gets slapped on the news
Bringing the ruckus, I stomp on you miniature puppets
watch Iman put on the finishing touches
while you lost on the course, pursue an image of others
I represent the seeds and underprivileged mothers”
From the way they rap it’s clear that Square One are heavily influenced by the whole conscious rap philosophy that has its roots in the late ’80s. As “Nuttin’ Changed” indicates, they’re not nostalgic about it, even though things have changed since the days of “‘Wild Style’, ‘Beat Street’ and ‘Krush Groove’ / where writers would cut moods on walls with something smooth / b-boys would bust moves, bumrush fools / 50 deep in the club hollering “La Schmoove!” / the Scoob & Scraps, Chuck D would shoot the facts / Griff would lose the track, sling bad news on wax / loop the sax / dreams to boost the plaques / ignore the ruthless slacks / tell me now ‘who’s the mack?’ / I used to be real abstract / what happened to Mike Bivins or Ill Al Skratch?”
It’s really hard to tell if this album could have come from a New York crew (provided somebody would have signed them). On one hand, you won’t hear anything about their experience living in Europe. I neither can’t tell if they had the American market in mind when they recorded this, or if it’s just their state of mind to come off so American. On the other hand, they possess what most mainstream US rap lacks these days: soul. There are no Muslim references either, save for a single ‘Allah U Akbar’ somewhere and Gianni’s (who is Afro-American) “The fact is you can’t sack these black quarterblacks / we’re strapped like some cats with love for Arafat.” It seems that hip-hop can engulf people so entirely that they take on a ‘hip-hop identity’ and forget about the rest of their lives. And that’s in the US just like abroad. Nonetheless Square One are so articulate in expressing themselves through hip-hop that it can’t possibly be that they just repeat other people’s words. But maybe this verse by Rasul is an indication that hip-hop is indeed something you can be haunted by:
“In my dreams I rock rags, Avis & Clarks
just one in a million, playing my part
in ciphers with Dolo, trading our hearts
on the concrete jungle, state of the art
In my dreams I kept it real a long time ago
before there been MP3’s and them cyber-hoes
before kids knew KRS in Idaho
before making my first tape in ninety-fo’
In my dreams a human out of flesh
Forgive me, but I refuse to be the best
Rasul, disillusioned and depressed
In my dreams I pop a deuce-deuce in your chest
I’m still slingin rocks in my dreams
still the school of hardrocks in my dreams
still them big guns and cops in my dreams
Hip-hop got me shadowboxing with my dreams”
Square One’s multi-layered lyrics make it hard to grasp their full meaning sometimes. So I’m left wondering if the highly analytical “Gangsta” speaks out against the ‘gangsta’ imagery or if it speaks with it. But otherwise Square One write ’songs’ that deserve the attribute. “Countdown”, a truly funky chumpie, has them going back and forth, counting down from “12 years of struggle, 12 years of hustle” to “Square - 1 life to live, so this life we give / 1 love to the ones who pump our shit / thump our shit in 1-room appartments / have your neighbors call the police department” (with Gianni making a stop at Rakim’s for number 7: “I take 7 MC’s, put them in a line” etc.). The superior “Can’t Mess” also lives up to its name, “Paradise Lost” talks of the world today (”Now that’s real in these fields of sorrow / if parents misbehave, their children follow / they squared 41 shots to kill Diallo / and it’s 40 shots too much for me to swallow / let’s build our boroughs and seal tomorrow / sending out messages in Olde English bottles”), while “Cry” and “Fallen Angels” tell of those living in Hell on Earth and those coming down to Earth from Heaven, respectively.
Overall, this is a very serious album. Both in content and form. Not Mobb Deep-type seriousness, but serious like a man who praises the comfort his wife gives him, as Rasul does in “Taste Of Life”. Its contemplative mood made me think of racial and religious harmony and what role hip-hop could play in it, but that thought may be gone as quick as there will be another album in my CD player. Maybe we really should go back to square one.


Courtesy Of The Archivest & VC Archives May 2010
R.I.P. My Main Man Rasul
There will be no one to replace you on this earth of your love dignity and beauty to music and life.
I LOVE YOU HOMIE!!!!
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Filed Under (The Creation VC ARCHIVES) by admin on 07-05-2010
Tagged Under : Aaron Mallin, emotionz wildstyle, matt brevner up and down, stylust
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