All posts by Kevin

azcentral.com: Hieroglyphics preview

As promised, my preview story on the Hieroglyphics show for July 15 is published at azcentral.com.

My interview with Tajai, who pretty much serves as the head of the Hiero Imperium label, was very enlightening – not only did it sound like he was entertaining his daughter in the background, but he was pretty forward about the ups and downs of operating a self-sustained label. I appreciated his honesty and frankness about it all.

One of my favorite quotes from the interview:

“I hope fans bear with us. It’s got to be frustrating being a Hiero fan. I just wish people could understand the time and effort and hard work that go into any endeavor, but especially one as serious as a record label. It’s really no joke. It’s a lot of work.”

Buy your tickets ($17) for the show at Ticket Web.

  • Hieroglyphics | Classic

El-P: Weareallgoingtoburninhellmeggamixx2 (free)

If you keep up with El-P’s blog, Bastard’s Delight, at Okayplayer, then you already know this. If not, take note: El is offering the first disc of his tour-only Weareallgoingtoburninhellmeggamixx2 for free download.

As El-P notes, however:

“You won’t get the Eat My Garbage CD (disc 2), nor will you get the amazing original artwork by Travis Millard or the bragging rights of owning a cd that is going for 150 (so ive been told) bucks a pop on EBAY. But to be honest i felt kind of bad not letting fans who weren’t able to go to the shows hear this stuff. and besides it aint like its not being spread here and there on the net anyway.”

You have to go through the Definitive Jux shop to get it, but it’s worth it. Also, is there anything as depressing as the cover image for the mix?

  • El-P | Krazy Kings 3

(From Weareallgoingtoburninhellmeggamixx2.)

Incoming: Born Ruffians, October 18

When I think about some of my favorite albums of the year so far, I keep finding that Born Ruffians’ Red, Yellow & Blue (available at Insound) sneaks up on me.

It’s full of disjointed, poppy energy. The hooks don’t immediately reveal themselves – until later, when you find yourself chanting their call-and-response choruses.

We enjoyed their opening set for Cadence Weapon in March, so I’m happy to see them come back for an Oct. 18 show at Modified with Plants and Animals. Tickets ($11) are on sale here.

(Mind you, one of the most ridiculously/hilariously titled songs – say it out loud! – but also insanely catchy.)

Video for I Need a Life:

Video trailer for new Calexico album

Raising the anticipation for Calexico’s new album, Carried to Dust (out Sept. 9), Touch and Go Records has put together a video trailer that features some clips of Tucson. I especially like the drive-by shot of the sign: “Ugly but honest.” That kinda sums up the Old Pueblo – a very down-to-earth place that doesn’t necessarily want the bells and whistles of big-city life.

Calexico on iLikeGet Sidebar

Wednesday night: Filet of Soul

My pals Jay (aka DJ Funkfinger) and Celine (Queen Celine) are putting on the first of what I hope to be many successful soul nights at Chez Nous in Phoenix. As you can tell by the blinking gif there, the night is called Filet of Soul.

Jay has kindly asked me to contribute some tunes – 45 minutes’ worth – and my wife (bless her) won’t let me get out of this. Eeek! As I’m not a DJ nor do I pretend to be, I’m a little nervous about showing how I can’t mix or match beats. To think, I usually mock those kinds of DJs!

Ah well. If anything, I’m going in there with a theme: I’m going to play soul songs that have been sampled by recognizable hip-hop songs. Maybe not all that original, but it’s what I know.

So who out there has some suggestions for me? I’ve got a pretty decent list compiled so far. I’ll be using Jay’s Serato set-up – what? I never ripped on DJs who mix only mp3s … honest – though I wish I could do it on all 45s.

No matter. Here’s one of the tracks I’ll be playing.

  • Ike Turner and the Kings of Rhythm | Getting Nasty
  • As sampled on:

  • Jurassic 5 | Concrete Schoolyard
  • Q&A with Steve Wynn of the Baseball Project

    I had the good fortune last week to talk with Steve Wynn (Dream Syndicate, Steve Wynn and the Miracle 3) about his newest group: The Baseball Project (see previous post).

    We talked music and baseball – what could be better? – and about the origins of the group, which includes Scott McCaughey (Young Fresh Fellows, the Minus 5), Peter Buck (R.E.M.) and Linda Pitmon. The Baseball Project’s debut, Vol. 1: Frozen Ropes and Dying Quails, is better than thumbing through The Baseball Encyclopedia – it’s full of sharp wit, colorful storytelling and wonderfully crafted songs that strike a perfect balance of criticism and romanticism of the game.

    So Much Silence: How’d the project come together?
    Wynn: “The thing is Scott and I had both been thinking about doing a record about baseball for years. I’ve been talking with him for about five years. Linda, my wife and drummer in the band, she kept telling me to shut up and stop talking about it or someone would steal the idea. We got together at the R.E.M. party (pre-Hall of Fame induction) about a year ago and realized we both had the idea. It kick-started both of us to get going. Having a partner made it a lot more fun. We started e-mailing mp3 files of songs we were working on … and I was thinking, ‘Man, that’s pretty good.’ It was a friendly competition of writing something we care about and that made it happen in no time.”

    SMS: You and Scott split songwriting duties, right?
    Wynn: “We were intending on collaborating, but we wrote everything on our own, except for (bonus track) Blood Diamond. We have full intention of doing this for years, writing 50 volumes until we’re 110 years old. And we’re excited about writing songs with other musician baseball fans. We’re finding out about a lot of people we had no idea who were baseball geeks like we were.”

    SMS: Like who?
    Wynn: “Ira Kaplan from Yo La Tengo, Craig Finn from Hold Steady, Joe Pernice from Pernice Brothers, Steve Malkmus, Ben Gibbard from Death Cab for Cutie.”

    SMS: Have you talked to them?
    Wynn: “Before we made the record, we were going to involve input from a lot of other people. We did talk to Ira and Joe Pernice and Craig Finn and Barbara Manning. Some were busy … and we got so much momentum on our own we didn’t feel like waiting around. It went pretty fast. There is no shortage of stuff to write about.”

    SMS: Was there a lot of research involved in writing?
    Wynn: “The basic structure of the songs were from our own memories. But we had to fact-check a little bit. Harvey Haddix took a lot of research. I wanted to list all the people who have thrown perfect games, but I admit I don’t remember them all.”

    SMS: How do you approach a project like this without letting the songs become sort of cheesy rah-rah anthems?
    Wynn: “That’s easy. We don’t write that way. We’re not that kind of people. Scott and I have always written kind of dark, ironic – not sinister – but between-the-cracks kind of songs. We’re more drawn to write about people like Curt Flood or Ed Delahanty or Jack McDowell’s bender. We’re not geared toward writing rah-rah songs. We didn’t have a mission statement to write about more of the freaks, but that’s what we gravitate toward. There’s not a lot of happy stuff on there … not a Centerfield in the bunch. That’s a great song but not what we were doing.”

    SMS: A lot of the songs are really great history lessons. Do you hope younger fans learn about the game from the album?
    Wynn: “In fact, it’s funny because when This Week in Baseball ran the Harvey Haddix montage, I was watching and wondering, ‘Man, I wonder if some 12-year-old kid is watching this right now and wanting to look this up.’ And that’s what baseball is all about. I’ve got a nephew and when he was 10 we would talk about baseball and he would talk with complete authority. That’s the great thing about the game – it’s a mental scratching post to get out all these numbers in your head.”

    SMS: Do you feel like you have to be a baseball fan to enjoy the album?
    Wynn: “Not at all. And that was the point. It’s obvious we’re big fans and have been for a long time. All the songs are universal. Like the Curt Flood song. It’s a song about sticking your neck out on the line and blazing a trail for other people and them profiting from something you pioneered. Or the Jackie Robinson song … the pain of being the first to do something and having to shut your mouth. … These are all subjects that can fit to anything. The reality is once you explain the basic concept of a song it works for many different subjects.”

    SMS: What about baseball lends itself to songwriting?
    Wynn: “More than any other sport, it’s a game of individuals. You can’t say about any other team sports that you can excel even if your teammates suck. When you’re at bat, your teammates might not be able to hit, but you can still hit it out of the park. Being a game of individuals, a lot of the them are flamboyant, loud-mouth, cocky precocious players. And it makes for great individual players.

    “Plus, the pace of the game allows you to talk to a buddy about the history and stories. It’s a real talking game. If you’re watching English football during World Cup, you better shut up. Baseball’s not that way. It’s about telling stories and having more obscure, more arcane reference points than next guy.”

    SMS: There’s some pretty rich characters in the game.
    Wynn: “Oh, yeah. There’s so many it’s incredible. We each knew people we wanted to write about. For example, we both wanted to write about Curt Flood. But Scott let me write my song. I took the reins on that one.”

    SMS: Did you guys keep track of how many players you mentioned in the album?
    Wynn: “A lot more were mentioned before we toned it down. On The Closer we had about 20 different relief pitchers named. Linda was our geek-meter … she kept us in check and would say, ‘You guys are going into the list-making arcane.’

    SMS: Would another sport even have the same appeal, the same tradition if someone wrote an album about it?
    Wynn: “I don’t think it would. Obviously, you can write about anything. If Sufjan Stevens can write a whole record about Illinois … That’s why I’m amazed at how few really good songs have been written about baseball. It’s such an American tradition and so ripe for Americana picking. I’m glad we got to it first. I can name baseball songs I really like on one hand. Dock Ellis (Barbara Manning), Catfish by Bob Dylan, Bill Lee by Warren Zevon. Those are great baseball songs.

    “Now there’s probably 50 guys out there saying, ‘I was meaning to do that!’ I’m glad that person isn’t me.”

    ————————————

    SMS: I want to hit you with a lightning round of sorts about topics baseball fans like to argue about.

    SMS: Designated hitter.
    Wynn: “Anti. Even though I’ve become more of an AL fan, I grew up in Los Angeles watching the Dodgers. I like strategy. I love the double switch. I love having to decide whether to let the pitcher hit.”

    SMS: Interleague play.
    Wynn: “Not that into it. It’s a lot of fun to have the White Sox play the Cubs or the Yankees play the Mets. But I liked it more when teams in the World Series hadn’t seen each other. I’m an old crusty traditionalist.”

    SMS: Wild card.
    Wynn: “Well, the only good thing there is you get more baseball. The postseason lasts longer. I kind of like that.”

    SMS: All-Star Game determining home field for World Series.
    Wynn: “Yeah, I don’t like that one very much either. I really love the All-Star Game, but I feel it should be more of an exhibition for fans than something that should determine postseason play.”

    SMS: Should Pete Rose be in the Hall of Fame?
    Wynn: “He should be in the Hall of Fame. For sure. Absolutely. I think Shoeless Joe Jackson should be. Rose blew it repeatedly where he could have been forgiven and that’s his thing. Same thing with Barry Bonds.

    “But I went to the Hall of Fame last year and there’s so little in there about Rose. That’s wrong. He’s one of best hitters in the history of baseball.”

    Sundays with A Tribe Called Quest: Vol. 2

    So Friday night we went out with some friends, and I ended up, uh, falling asleep in the passenger seat while my wife navigated home. While I was still awake, I popped Midnight Marauders on the iPod – only one of the greatest hip-hop records with one of the greatest covers – for the drive home.

    I’m told I fell asleep, clutching the iPod as to not allow my wife a chance to change the tunes (and, really, why would she?). I quite enjoyed the unintentional symbolism at work there: You’re going to have to rip Midnight Marauders from my cold, dead hands when my time eventually expires. It’s too much to go into how much I love that album for these purposes, but let’s say I will write an I Used to Love H.E.R. entry one day soon … and it will be long and it will be glorious.

    Until then, I will say that the last two tracks on Midnight Marauders – Lyrics to Go and God Lives Through – are probably my favorites off the record. (I think there’s a post brewing about best last songs on albums … hmmmm.) One of the most unique aspects of God Lives Through is how it samples a vocal loop – Busta Rhymes growling “oh my god!” – off a song from the same album. It’s a move that seems like it would be self-aggrandizing, but it’s really genius instead with how it hammers in your brain the hook.

    The pacing of the track also appeals to me, its unorthodox syncopation dropping bass hits early in each measure. It’s definitely one of my favorite Tribe songs to rap along with while it plays. The verses – just one apiece from Q-Tip and Phife – are meaty and loaded (thanks to Phife) with playful yet resourceful name-checking: the Pharcyde, Toni Braxton, Babyface, Shanice and, of course, his best friend Steven at the Home Depot.

    Samples used: Jimmy McGriff, Dig On It; David T. Walker, On Love (via The Breaks).

    The Wackness official mixtape by D-Nice

    I haven’t read up much on this movie The Wackness with Ben Kingsley, but I’m more motivated after seeing one of my favorite hip-hop artists, D-Nice, take part with the “official movie soundtrack mixtape.”

    Considering the movie’s backdrop is mid-90s New York, D-Nice’s mixtape drops a healthy dose of East Coast classics in this lean, mean 24-minute mix.

    The Wackness Official Movie Soundtrack Mixtape tracklisting:

    1. Intro (Heath Brothers – Smiling Billy Suite)
    2. Nas – One Love
    3. The Notorious BIG – The What Feat. Method Man
    4. Lou Reed – Walk On The Wild Side
    5. A Tribe Called Quest – Can I Kick It
    6. KRS-One – I Can’t Wake Up
    7. Stanley Turrentine – Sister Sanctified
    8. BDP – My Philosophy
    9. Black Moon – How Many Emcees
    10. O.C. – Time’s Up
    11. Craig Mack – Flavor In Ya Ears
    12. Group Home – Supa Star
    13. Biz Markie – Just A Friend
    14. Freddie Scott – (You) Got What I Need
    15. Wendy Rene – After Laughter (Comes Tears)
    16. Wu-Tang Clan – Tearz
    17. Ahmad Jamal Trio – I Love Music
    18. Nas – The World Is Yours

    Incoming: GZA performing Liquid Swords?!!?!

    According to a MySpace bulletin, the guys from Universatile Music are bringing GZA to the Clubhouse in Tempe on Sept. 17 for a performance of Liquid Swords. Um, woah.

    Here’s the brief bulletin:

    “UM presents…THE GZA performing a special Liquid Swords set
    at The Clubhouse in Tempe on 9-17
    at The Green Room (formally Mogollon Brewery) in Flagstaff on 9-18

    VERY, VERY special guest TBA

    more info coming soon…stay posted.”

    Two words to that: Hell yeah. … Nice job, UM.

    • GZA | Liquid Swords