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About Edward Moses

Edward Moses

Edward Moses, the "Nerd King" and a Chicago south side native, has been rocking stages with his infectious, verbose brand of hip-hop since the age of 14. Having found himself comfortably trapped in Champaign-Urbana for the past five years pursuing degrees, he's managed to increase his music and sneaker collection enough times to make moving back home an adventure each time. A subcultural mutt by nature, he finds himself crawling under the bright lights of Downtown Champaign and rocking shows. C-U Local Music Award Winner Agent Mos only resigns himself to schoolwork when he knows that he'll fall asleep face-first in the folds of the book.


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An Epidemic of Hip-Hop’s Illest Descend Upon the Cornfields

NAS boombox.jpg

Two New York’s infamous five boroughs (Queens and The Bronx), well-known for producing some of hip-hop’s hall of fame artists, are getting ready to let loose two of their finest into the wild of their Illinois fan base. On Saturday, September 30, the Canopy Club will play host to one of the biggest hip-hop big ticket bills in recent memory, as Nas and Talib Kweli make their way into Champaign-Urbana.

Independently, these two artists account for some of the most critically acclaimed albums and lyrical works of modern hip-hop. Kweli, as part of the original lineup on Rawkus Records, was part of several pivotal hip-hop groups, including Reflection Eternal with DJ Hi-Tek, and Black Star with Brooklyn-native Mos Def. Since premiering with underground hip-hop hall of famers Mood in 1997, Kweli’s blunt-edged, conscious, black empowerment brand of hip-hop, combined with a sentence-cramming delivery have played into some of the most notable hip-hop tunes, translating into both underground and commercial appeal.

Nas, as an MC, has been nearly unstoppable since his premier on Main Source’s “Live at the Barbecue” in 1991. His first solo album, Illmatic, paints a striking picture of common big-metropolis life, all set to a distinctive voice so young, yet backed by producers that already held legendary status (Large Professor, Pete Rock, DJ Premier.) Having just released his ninth album, The N, and survived his self-proclaimed eulogy of hip-hop as a whole, he still stands as one of the greatest driving forces in modern, true school hip-hop music.

Alongside these two scale-tippers of modern hip-hop, will be local legend Krukid, and New Orleans native Jay Electronica, both emerging voices in this nouveau movement back towards roots hip-hop.

This is definitely one of those shows to experience, as you never know when another bill like this might be rolling through. Come and catch a taste of what hip-hop is supposed to sound like.

Tickets are $35 in advance, and can be purchased through the Canopy Club, either online or at several locations around town (Bacca Cigar, Exile on Main Street, Family Pride Convenience.)

Don’t miss this one, kids.

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Comments (1)

Posted by: Pat
Saturday, August 30, 2008 6:08 PM

I saw Nas at Rock the Bells last month and even though they cut his show short, it was still one of the best at the festival. Mos Def's performance, oddly enough, was one of the worst.

Kweli's last album was alright, but didn't exactly excite me. Don't know if I'll make it to this show since my faith in Kweli is waning and I just saw Nas last month.

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