Category Archives: remix

Remix Week : The Grab bag

The Remix is not necessarily a way to extend single sales. The Remix does not need to out do the original. The Remix, at least the good one, needs only to change the mood of the piece. Whether the mixer makes a jubilant song into a sad one or turns an airy melody into a jump-out-of your-seat-cuz-you-need–to-dance-motherfucker tune, the Remix is its own art form.


When Kevin told me it was remix week I said, “well, I AM a sucker for remixes.” My creeping procrastination caused, like a term paper turned in two days late with the excuse of a dead great aunt, into this last minute hodgepodge of remixes that I dig.

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The first chunk of reworking comes from the Mistress of the Remix – Bjork. She must give out vocal tracks to everyone on the hipster mailing list, because the mixes just don’t stop. I’ve chosen three by some of my favorite mix masters.

Mark Bell, her collaborative producer, performance partner and all around electronic wunderkind remixed this track and turned this song into a big, orchestral movie score.

Bjork | Bachelorette (Mark Bell Optimism Remix)

Alec Empire took on Joga and muddied up this love song:

Bjork | Joga (Alec Empire Mix)

Photek puts a light dose of drum n’ bass on this one:

Bjork | I Miss You (Photek mix)

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Beth Orton gets the treatment too. Maybe I just have a thing for pretty voiced women getting worked over with strange new beats, I don’t know.

Two mixes of the same song by heavy hitters Roots Manuva and Four Tet:

Beth Orton | Daybreaker (Roots Manuva Remix)

Beth Orton | Daybreaker (Four Tet Remix)

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Kings of Convenience, the indie folk-pop duo from Bergen, Norway, never shy away from a good mix, since singer Erland Oye can be found behind the ones and twos from time to time. Another from Four tet:
Kings Of Convenience | The Weight of my Words (Four Tet Remix)

According to BBC’s 1xtra Drum n’ Bass gurus (voted on by the public) this was the D n’ B remix of the year done by the Artists of the Year (GO Pendulum). Who am I to argue.

The Prodigy | Voodoo People (Pendulum Remix)

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I have to throw this quirky Beastie mix in.

The Beastie Boys | Intergalactic (Fuzzy Logic Remix)

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The RZA joins Choco to take on Charlie Parker.

Charlie Parker | Bebop (Choco And RZA Remix)

And finally, yet another an airy voice with Beth Gibbons heading up Portishead. Here’s a ’70’s riff rock remix of the ’94 sex dripping single Glory Box.

Portishead | Glory Box (Toy Box remix)

Remix Week: A Tribe Called Quest


(Note: All links to mp3s from Remix Week will expire by midnight Sunday.)

I said on the first post of Remix Week that there are few remixes that I like better than its original. Well, here’s one of the few exceptions: A Tribe Called Quest’s Scenario remix. The remix isn’t necessarily better. After all, few songs are better than Scenario. But the remix is pretty much a wholly different song, but with the same cast: Tribe and Leaders of the New School (oh, how I miss the young Busta Rhymes).

And if you ask me, the Scenario remix offers one of Phife’s best verses, including this gem:

“So roll out the red carpet ’cause I’m gettin’ this / Vanilla Ice platinum? That shit’s ridiculous.”

And …

“Let it be known, I’m not the one to step to / You’re better off calling D-Nice to your rescue.”

The Oh My God remix is one of my favorites. And check that I Left My Wallet in El Segundo Vampire Mix, which was remixed by Norman Cook (better known to you and I as Fatboy Slim).

A Tribe Called Quest | Scenario (Remix)
A Tribe Called Quest | Oh My God (Remix)
A Tribe Called Quest | I Left My Wallet in El Segundo (Vampire Mix)

BONUS:
A Tribe Called Quest | Oh My God (Know Naim remix)

(I still have no clue who Know Naim is, but they kill it on this mix, especially the lines: “I cramp your fuckin’ style like you ate before you swum” and “They got my back like a Jansport.”)

Also …

Had some cool instant messaging with Garrison over at Indie Interviews on Thursday. Check out his new Insider Program that gives you, the fan, a chance to ask questions of your favorite artists.

Remix Week: In praise of Josh Homme


OK. I’m just gonna lay it on the line here: I may have a man-crush on Josh Homme. This will come as a disappointment to my cohort Royce, who recently (and to my disbelief) called Queens of the Stone Age “overrated.” So I socked him. And that was that.

Homme is the architect/singer of Queens, drummer (an average one) for Eagles of Death Metal and an all-around rock star. When I saw Queens in concert last year, I was bowled over. Having been to so many indie shows, where the singers are in a sort of emotional, affected haze, I forgot what a true rock show felt like. There is no namby-pamby, heart-on-the-sleeve, woe-is-I sap. Trust me, I like all that. But Queens? I mean, if I was gonna be in a rock band (hey, I played drums in middle school) … that’s the way to do it. Just rock. What more can you say? As a wise man once said (OK, it was Paul Rodgers and Bad Company), “It’s all part of my rock and roll fantasy.”

It seems Homme is now taking to remix production. And here’s a couple.

U.N.K.L.E. | Eye for an Eye Backwards (Joshua Homme and Alain Johannes remix)
Death from Above 1979 | Black History Month (Josh Homme remix)

BONUS:
Queens of the Stone Age | No One Knows (U.N.K.L.E. remix)


Also …

  • Here’s that trailer for the Bloc Party DVD that’s due out Jan. 17. You can buy it at an indie retailer near you.
  • For anyone in Arizona, Rob Dickinson, former lead singer of The Catherine Wheel, is playing Anderson’s in Scottsdale on Jan. 26 for only 5 freaking dollars. Solo, acoustic, so I hear.
  • I’m worried my Sun Devils will not win a single Pac-10 basketball game this season. The safe guess is that spells the end of Rob Evans’ tenure at ASU.
  • Four days until Panthers at Bears …

Remix Week: Soul Coughing, circa 1994

Today’s remix selection comes from a choice 12″ promo single I’ve been holding onto for years, just for a special moment like this.

If you’ve listened to any of Mike Doughty’s solo material (buy Haughty Melodic here), it’s pretty apparent he took off in another direction from his Soul Coughing days. And that’s fine, and it probably was a necessary departure for his creative health.

Still, Soul Coughing was it in the ’90s: progressive instrumentally, and scatterbrained but somehow thought-provoking lyrically. Doughty’s role of misunderstood genius played brilliantly off the band’s synth-driven, orchestrated cacophony (did I just use the word “cacophony”?).

Anyway, these remixes of Sugar Free Jazz (original on Ruby Vroom) only expand on the experimental musical leanings of a great (if not overlooked) band of the ’90s.



Soul Coughing | Sugar Free Jazz (Sugar Cane Jungle Mix)*
Soul Coughing | Sugar Free Jazz (Cane Field Mix)**

* – Remixed by Mad Professor and Dougie Digital.
** – Remixed by Mad Professor.


Elsewhere …On Jan. 17, Bloc Party is releasing a DVD, God Bless Bloc Party, which contains a one-hour documentary filmed around the group’s second U.S. tour and live
performance footage from their June 2005 shows at the El Ray Theater
in Los Angeles and July 2005 at a festival in Belfort, France.

Check Vice Records for the latest news. A link for the trailer wasn’t working; hopefully this will be corrected shortly. You might check out Vice’s blog for a Two More Years remix by MSTRKRFT.

Remix Week: Oodles and oodles of De La Soul


If I planned it right, I could dedicate an entire week (or two) to De La Soul remixes. I have more remixes from De La Soul than any other artist in my collection. I have remixes I haven’t even listened to yet, including a full-length Japanese import CD simply titled Remixes (part of liner notes below).


I have no real explanation for this massive De La library, other than they’re one of my all-time favorites and I simply know no boundaries when it comes to buying their music. Picking out just a few was a complicated task, although I noticed most of the remixes come from the early days: 3 Feet High to Buhloone Mindstate.

So, until that De La Remix Week, these will have to tide you over:

De La Soul | Keepin’ the Faith (Fly and Funky Mix)

From: Keepin’ the Faith CD single import.


De La Soul | Ego Trippin’ (Part Three) (Egoristic Mix)

Note: New beat, new music, new verses. Fresh!

De La Soul | Buddy
From: The Magic Number CD single; not really listed as a remix, but it’s a different version with different guests: Tribe, Jungle Bros., Monie Love, Queen Latifah

BONUS
De La Soul | Ain’t Hip to Be Labelled a Hippie [sic]
From: De La Soul Remixes Japanese import.


Catchin’ up …

  • Hey, look who came back. Better than ever.
  • OK, people. There are other options than iTunes out there. You know about eMusic. Now check out Audio Lunchbox. Files are 192 kbps and have no digital rights management locks, and the indie selection is pretty large. Available artists: Tim Fite (personal favorite), Blackalicious, DangerDoom and Okkervil River, to name a few. Get a subscription or buy tracks individually. Looks like album art is included with downloads. Check all the record labels available here.
  • The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (where I once interned way back in 2000) has a nice article about mp3 blogs. (via Largehearted Boy)
  • Thanks to Matthew, K. and Jennings, all of whom have been active commentors (is that a word?). Keep it up, and thanks!
  • And you should probably visit Dodge because, well, he’s Dodge. And he rules.

The Unveiling … and Remix Week

Welcome to the redesigned site, a long overdue project I’ve been dabbling with for months. My main goal was to steer clear of a cookie-cutter Blogger look and go for a cleaner, more streamlined look. Does it work?

Many thanks go to my best bud John, who toiled over the drawing for the banner and withstood my many demands. To his wife Gabriela, who showed me the dark and mysterious ways of HTML and Dreamweaver. I am in debt for their patience. And to Eric, whose clean layout led me to, um, borrow some of his coding (with his permission, of course). There likely will be tweaks here and there.

The idea for the banner drawing was inspired by some old Twilight Zone watching, specifically The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street (Season 1). In sum, a neighborhood in Suburbia, USA, becomes convinced of an alien invasion. When a boy who reads sci-fi says human-looking aliens usually precede the invasion, the once-friendly neighbors start pointing fingers, speculating who might be the alien. As Rod Serling recaps: “There are weapons that are simply thoughts, attitudes, prejudices – to be found only in the minds of men.”

Neighbors turn ugly in The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street.
In keeping true to the redesign theme, I’m offering up the inaugural Remix Week. In addition to any regular posts, I’ll make available a few of the many remixes in my music library: whether from CDs, vinyl or cassettes. Other than that, I have no particular procedure for how I’ll pick them.

And what about remixes, which once seemed the proprietary domain of hip-hop? Why do we love (or loathe) them so? As my sometimes contributor Royce likes to say: “I’m a sucker for remixes.” To that end, remixes have become bait for consumerism. Full albums of remixes are becoming commonplace. Look at Bloc Party: Did Silent Alarm really need to be remixed? Probably not. More likely, the clamor for Bloc Party created an opportunity (in the form of sales) that Vice Records would be dumb to pass up.

So, what draws you to remixes? I have many in my collection, though I’m hard-pressed to think of a remix I like better than its original. But is that ever the point? Sometimes I fear my impression of the original will be tainted somehow. On the other hand, a really well-done remix offers a new vision or perception of the song.

My first selection is Z-Trip’s reworking of The Jackson 5’s I Want You Back. In this instance, Z-Trip maintains the true spirit of the song, but adds an updated drum loop, really putting the focus on the beat. Z-Trip’s respect for the original is evident, and he still is able to put his imprint on it.

The Jackson 5 | I Want You Back (Z-Trip remix)

(From Mowtown Remixed)

My second choice is an example of a remix that makes me wonder: Why? Paul Banks of Interpol takes his own group’s song Narc and strips it down to a bare minimum. It’s not that the remix is particularly bad; but I quite enjoy the original, so it’s difficult to frame the lyrics/music in the much slower, moodier remix.

Interpol | Narc (Paul Banks remix)

Michael Franti and Spearhead

I was excited to browse local concert listings and see Michael Franti and Spearhead are due for a Feb. 3 date in Tempe. Sadly, I fell out of love with Spearhead when I (probably immaturely) wrote off their second LP, Chocolate Supa Highway. Their debut, Home, was so stunning – in its musical breadth and social commentary – that Chocolate left me a little flat; although, looking back, I can’t quite recall why.

What I do remember is seeing Spearhead in concert for the first time, opening for the Digable Planets in 1995. Coming to that show, I couldn’t have imagined anyone squashing my enthusiasm for seeing Digable, but, quite honestly, Spearhead proved to be (pardon the cliche) a tough act to follow.

Peep the one-time local DJ in fine print.
Whatever the case, Franti (formerly of Beatnigs and Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy) is an important voice in hip-hop – and music, in general. When there seems to be a lot of mindless lyrics out there, Franti always seems to have something to say.

Spearhead | Hole in the Bucket (live)
Spearhead | People in Da Middle (the Angel Re-Mix)
Michael Franti | Positive

(taken from Disposable Heroes 12″ of Famous and Dandy / Charlie Hunter on bass, guitar, harmonica; Rono Tse on percussion)

Flashback Friday: The Nonce

It’s been a few weeks since I’ve done a flashback, and this one is special. The Nonce was probably one of the most criminally overlooked hip-hop acts of the ’90s. For proof, check out All Music’s two-sentence bio on the LA-based duo that also lists the genre as rock.

Plus, there’s a scarcity of information about The Nonce on the net. The Broke BBoys had a nice post about ’em in January, including the hazy details of member Yusef Afloat’s death in May 2000.

The Nonce opened for the Roots in Phoenix in 1995.
I ate up everything The Nonce put out; sadly their only full-length was World Ultimate, on Rick Rubin’s American Recordings label. Comparisons to A Tribe Called Quest and Digable Planets aren’t entirely off, but not totally accurate either. I think The Nonce’s style was a little more streetwise, evidenced in the single Mix Tapes, about sellin’ mixes on the street corner. That song has one of the deepest, dopest basslines … and that chorus: “I used to sell mix tapes, but now I’m an emcee / I got the rhymes and beats / I used to rock them tapes.”

Found this promo single in Tucson; trust me, I’m not an “A-list DJ.”
The Nonce | Mix Tapes
The Nonce | Bus Stops
The Nonce | Mix Tapes (1926 Sunday Night Remix)
(From Mix Tapes The Remixes blue vinyl 12″)
The Nonce | Turnin’ It Out

Aceyalone: new track

It seemed to be almost a unanimous verdict around the blogosphere that 2005 was a down year for hip-hop, with the exception of a few standouts: Blackalicious The Craft; Atmosphere You Can’t Imagine …; Danger Doom; Cyne Evolution Fight (which I’ve only heard is great).Ah, but 2006 is poised to start off strong. Aceyalone’s Magnificent City – produced entirely by none other than RJD2 – is supposed to drop Feb. 7. I’m anticipating beautiful work between these two. These supergroup emcee/producer tag teams seem to be all the rage (see also, Danger Doom).

I already dig the first Acey track getting around, Fire, which has a decidedly soulful, 70s-style backdrop.

Aceyalone | Fire

BONUS BEATS
Aceyalone | Headaches and Woes (remix)
(b-side from 1995’s Mic Check 12″ single)

Death Cab recap

Even under the influence of Newcastle, I can tell you that Death Cab for Cutie puts on a great show. However, I slacked and didn’t bring my camera (bad blogger!).

I wasn’t overwhelmed; their style, their sound doesn’t translate to a larger setting very well. And, as my brother bitterly pointed out a few times, they didn’t play Blacking Out the Friction — their “best song ever”; I’d have a hard time disagreeing with big bro there. Still, there were plenty of highlights: Amputations and President of What? (off Something About Airplanes), We Laugh Indoors and Transatlanticism, with assistance from members of opener Stars, as the ultimate closer.

And, oh, Different Names for the Same Thing is quickly becoming my favorite songs off Plans.

The crowd … well, what do you expect now? They skew younger and that can be hard to swallow for the faithful. I guess you just have to laugh at it. It was obvious that when they played older material, the interest waned accordingly.

Death Cab for Cutie | We Laugh Indoors (dub mix)