All posts by Kevin

azcentral.com preview: Sea Wolf

I spoke to Sea Wolf’s Alex Brown Church for a story to advance his show opening for Okkervil River on Thursday at the Clubhouse in Tempe.

He was about as nice and pleasant as you can expect in discussing his living in Montreal half the year and his conflicted feelings about his home base of Los Angeles.

I did ask him about You’re a Wolf being used for a car commercial that aired during the Olympics. His response (which didn’t make the story):

“I haven’t seen any bad feedback, which is good because I was a little bit hesitant to do it. … Everybody I know told me that everybody they know saw the commercial. Exposure is good. In today’s music climate, it’s just one of the ways, if you’re a small band, to get music out there. It’s not necessarily way I would like it to be. But I hope it ends up being a good thing.”

  • Sea Wolf | You’re a Wolf

Here’s the aforementioned commercial:

This week in Phoenix/Tempe shows

It’s not going out on a limb to say this week of shows in the Valley might go down as one of the busiest/best. Sadly, work won’t allow me to attend just about all of them (but we did hit the San Diego Street Scene this past weekend, and that was a blast).

Check out the schedule of shows this week (already missed Beck/MGMT on Monday night):

TUESDAY

My Morning Jacket at Marquee Theatre.
The New Year at Modified.
Hot Chip/Vampire Weekend at Rialto Theatre in Tucson.

WEDNESDAY
Vampire Weekend at Marquee Theatre.
Sera Cahoone at Modified.

THURSDAY
Okkervil River with Sea Wolf at the Clubhouse.
Tilly and the Wall at the Rhythm Room.
Fake Problems with Cobra Skulls and Frank Turner (the reason I’d go) at Modified.

FRIDAY
Dear and the Headlights CD-release party at the Clubhouse.

SATURDAY
Edgefest 2008 with Airborne Toxic Event, Atmosphere, the Kooks and more at Schnepf Farms.

MONDAY
Ra Ra Riot with Walter Meego and the Morning Benders at Modified.

ALSO:
You can check out a couple stories I wrote that were published last week at The Arizona Republic’s Web site. The first was on famous pizza chef Chris Bianco designing a T-shirt logo for local band Kinch. The other was a preview of Saturday’s Go Vote show with Calexico and Jim Adkins (more on that soon).

I Used to Love H.E.R.: author Dan LeRoy

The 34th installment of I Used to Love H.E.R., a series in which artists/bloggers/writers discuss their most essential or favorite hip-hop albums and songs, comes from writer Dan LeRoy, author of The Greatest Music Never Sold and the 33 1/3 book on the Beastie Boys classic Paul’s Boutique.

Dan offers thought-provoking insight on an album that, honestly, I had never heard, which is just another reason I get such a thrill from this series. Visit Dan at MySpace or on his Web site.

seeds of evolutionDark Sun Riders feat. Brother J
Seeds of Evolution
(4th & Broadway/Island, 1996)

Two of my favorite hip hop albums are the Beastie Boys’ Paul’s Boutique and Seeds of Evolution, by Brother J’s post-X Clan group Dark Sun Riders. I wrote a 33 1/3 book about the first, and the second is the subject of this post. But it didn’t really strike me, until Kevin extended this very generous invitation to give Seeds some very belated praise, just how dissimilar the two records are.

Everyone knows, or should, that Paul’s Boutique was pretty much the last mainstream gasp for anything-goes sampling. The Beasties, Dust Brothers and Matt Dike stuffed every groove with as much familiar sonic flotsam and jetsam as possible, but changes in sampling law have made it unlikely any artist will ever be able to party like it’s 1989 again. Seeds, however, resides at the opposite pole. Except for the basslines (played, interestingly, by Quicksand’s Sergio Vega and producer/journalist Rich Tozzoli) and a handful of sound effects, it is boom-bap at its most uncluttered and primal. That’s high praise here, because the drums — mostly supplied by producers DJ M.A.T.E. and UltraMan — are simply huge throughout the disc. On songs like the single, “Time To Build” and “Rhythmous Flex,” UltraMan’s beats are so monstrous that other instruments are barely necessary.

Part of the pop-culture potpourri of Paul’s Boutique includes lyrical namechecks and nods clustered so densely that whole web sites are devoted to nothing but parsing Paul’s verses for obscure bits of cultural trivia. But Brother J’s refusal to play spot-the-reference gives the songs on Seeds a timeless quality. It’s set up like a sci-fi fable, with Brother J and his Dark Sun Riders on a quest for truth and light, in a messed-up, out-of-balance future world that seems not unlike our own. In fact, it might be the only hip-hop album I can recall where the interludes are actually necessary, something like the Broadway-style transitional songs such as “Sally Simpson” and “1921” in the Who’s Tommy.

Which brings us to the last big difference. Even people who, post-Licensed to Ill, believed the Beasties were assholes of the highest magnitude would have been hard-pressed not to chuckle at some of the juxtapositions and clever lines on Paul’s Boutique. It is simply a very funny record. Seeds, by contrast, is anything but. The few lighter moments occur mostly during interludes like “Day of the Gathering,” a splash-panel of an introduction to the whole valiant Dark Sun crew that couldn’t help but make any old Marvel or D.C. fan smile. And while Brother J’s lyrics resurrect some of the very serious topics (pro-black nationalist, anti-gay) that made X Clan a troubling proposition, it’s hard at least to argue with stuff like the haunting “Return to the River,” which describes seeing the “young and unschooled telling old man stories/teaching lessons never learned…no one seemed to care that the shadows were becoming one with the flesh.” Sound like any MCs and any hip-hop mainstreams you know, in 1996 or at present? Whatever he’s saying, Brother J’s forceful, yet refined delivery is a reminder that he’s one of the most unjustly unsung rappers around, something like the missing link between Rakim and one of today’s more eloquent mic practitioners.

For all their differences, Paul’s Boutique and Seeds do share at least one unfortunate bit of history: both are great albums that major labels had no idea how to sell. The Paul’s Boutique chart debacle, and the Beasties’ comeback on Capitol, have now entered legend, but Seeds marked, as best I’m aware, the last time Brother J got a release on a major. That’s a loss for the larger hip-hop world; if you have followed the Clan’s recent exploits (as on 2006’s Return to Mecca) you know it isn’t like the guy suddenly forgot how to dominate a mic. But if you’ve never heard Seeds of Evolution, you should find a copy at once and hear him at his creative peak. Or better yet, listen to it back to back with the Beasties; it makes a nice rebuttal to anyone who claims there’s only one kind of “real” hip-hop.

The Mighty Underdogs: War Walk

Take two of my favorite emcees, add a highly regarded Bay Area producer and put their record out on the heavyweight champ Definitive Jux and what do you get? The Mighty Underdogs and Droppin’ Science Fiction.

I think it’s safe to predict that bringing Gift of Gab from Blackalicious and Lateef the Truthspeaker from Latyrx together will result in some breathtaking verses. Add Headnodic from Crown City Rockers and we’re talking supergroup material.

The group is offering a free download of a new track, War Walk, that features Chali 2na (shocker), Tash, Raashan Ahmad and Zion I. And, man, it’s great to hear Lateef, who probably ranks as one of the more overlooked cats out there.

Pre-order Droppin’ Science Fiction at Def Jux. Other guests on the album include MF Doom, DJ Shadow and Mr. Lif.

Here’s the pretty awesome video by Ben Stokes for Gunfight, featuring MF Doom:

I Used to Love H.E.R.: Illa J (brother of J Dilla)

The 33rd installment of I Used to Love H.E.R., a series in which artists/bloggers/writers discuss their most essential or favorite hip-hop albums and songs, comes from Illa J, younger brother of the late J Dilla (R.I.P.). Delicious Vinyl will release Illa’s debut album, Yancey Boys, which features Illa J rhyming/singing over previously unused J Dilla tracks. It’s due for a November release. Check the first single below.

ruff draft


J Dilla
Ruff Draft (Mummy Records, 2003)

Note: Stones Throw remastered and rereleased the album in 2007 with additional tracks, instrumentals and a new cover (on the right side).

My favorite hip hop album is Ruff Draft by my brother, J Dilla. It’s classic! I love this album because it’s so raw … he took it back to straight loops. The intro pretty much sums up the album, “You wanna bounce in your whip with dat real live shit? Sound like it’s straight from the mufuckin’ cassette.” Even though he used loops throughout the album, Dilla didn’t loop beats the same way an average producer would. What’s crazy is that a lot of the joints off the album were flipped using the same record. I love to hear it in the system in the car … it bumps real hard, as Dilla declares in the intro. It puts me in a trance. As with any Dilla beat, the drums are out cold. Ruff Draft is important to me because it has inspired me lyrically as a songwriter and an MC. It helped me to think out of the box from an MC standpoint as well as from a producer’s perspective. I love the overall concept of the album, which is getting on your grind and doing whatever it takes to make it. Whenever I listen to it, it keeps me focused and on track with the ultimate goal of achieving my dreams and making them become reality.

Travis: J. Smith (video)

On the heels of that last Frightened Rabbit post, let’s keep the Scottish theme rolling.

Travis has released a second video (here’s the first) for the band’s upcoming album, Ode to J. Smith. (If you recall, this is the song that got me in a little bit of hot water.)

According to Travis’ YouTube page, the video shows a man trapped in an elevator car “for days.” That puts a new spin on the desert-island discs debate … what albums would you most like to have if you were stranded in an elevator car for 41 hours?

Frightened Rabbit: live, acoustic album!

By now, you probably know Frightened Rabbit is returning to Phoenix in November and that I’m a huge fan and that I’d agree with Amy Phillips at Pitchfork that The Midnight Organ Fight is the best record of 2008.

That said, the band will be releasing a live, acoustic album called Liver! Lung! FR! (Fat Cat) on Oct. 21. Wonderful. And Twilight Sad singer James Graham lends a hand on Keep Yourself Warm. Is it Oct. 21 yet? (Pre-order the album.)

Pitchfork gave us a taste of the record, making the acoustic version of Old Old Fashioned available as download.

  • Frightened Rabbit | Old Old Fashioned (live)

ALSO, there’s a downloadable KEXP session, recorded in June, available here. (Thanks to Chromewaves.)

And, sorry, I still have so much fun watching this clip from the band’s show at Rhythm Room in June.

Cut Chemist: (My 1st) Big Break – video

As always, Sole Sides has got me covered on news I’m missing.

This time, we get a new video from Cut Chemist’s The Audience’s Listening, even though the album came out in 2006.

According to the Eyestorm Productions YouTube page, the video for (My 1st) Big Break the “first music video shot entirely on a 360 degree panoramic view.”

Here’s hoping Cut serves up something new real soon (though I definitely haven’t grown tired of this album). On a side note: I gotta get me one of those Cut Chemist slipmats.