10 Reasons To See Nas: Time Is Illmatic Live
Why you need tickets to the Q-B Kid's documentary screening.
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Memory Lane - "Sometimes all you got is hip hop," Nas told the audience at the Lincoln Theatre in D.C. last Saturday.He was there MC'ing a special Tribeca Films and Hennessy V.S screening of Nas: Time Is Illmatic, as the face of the cognac's "Never stop. Never settle." campaign. His documentary is an ode to the culture he's helped architect as one of the most acclaimed to ever do it.It opened at the Tribeca Film Festival earlier this year and features not only the drama that was Queensbridge in the '90s but also appearances from the producers who laid the soundtrack — Large Professor, Pete Rock, DJ Premier, Q-Tip and L.E.S. — and special guest appearances from some of the listeners who carry on the tradition, Alicia Keys, Erykah Badu, Pharrell Wiliams, Kendrick Lamar, J. Cole and Dr. Cornel West.T...
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The Genesis - Three words: Truth. Emotion. Artistry.That's why Nas's debut album still resonates 20 years after it's release, says Time Is Illmatic writer/producer Erik Parker. And the documentary leaves the same impact."I think we always knew that Nas was like a genius in some way, the way that he sees the world and explains it to us, but the most surprising thing that I learned about Nas was how he became the person that he became," Parker told BET.com.(Photo: Tribeca Film Institute)
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One Love - Parker and his filmmaking partner, director/producer One9, took a "One Love" approach in making the movie, they said, meaning it's some straight head noddin' hip hop s--t."[The song is] not heavy-handed in the theme," Parker explained. "... [Nas] he’s not very heavy-handed in what he’s talking about, but you walk away with a great sense of empathy and understanding."(Photo: Tribeca Film Institute)
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It Ain't Hard to Tell - Time Is Illmatic confirms Nas is half-man-half-amazing. The film crew traveled around Queensbridge and to Natchez, Miss., to get to the roots of who he was before he wrote one of hip hop's most referenced albums, showing the development of his relationship with his father, Olu Dara, and the everlasting bond he has with his mother, Ann Jones (shout out to October). (Photo: Tribeca Film Institute)
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Life's A B---h - Once Illmatic dropped, however, there was no denial that Nas's lyrical delivery of his story is raw. With the movie, God's Son somehow becomes even more three-dimensional.The way he reminisces, for example, on how Ill Will passed, casts Nas in a certain vulnerable-yet-strong light that makes you see his music differently (no matter how many times you've heard it).(Photo: Tribeca Film Institute)
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