All posts by Kevin

Akrobatik: Put Ya Stamp On It

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With Mr. Lif and the Perceptionists scheduled to play the Brickhouse in Phoenix on Feb. 1, what better time to check out some new Akrobatik, one-third of the Perceptionists?

Akrobatik’s new record, Absolute Value, comes out Feb. 19 on Fat Beats.

As if the people of Boston need any other reason to brag (hello, Celtics, Patriots, Red Sox), they can also claim Akrobatik as one of their own. The lead single, Put Ya Stamp On It, with production by J Dilla, has a killer string loop and a tight verse from Akrobatik. But … sigh … I once again have to bring up my distaste for Talib Kweli, who’s featured here. I’ve struggled to pinpoint what I don’t like … maybe the tone of his voice or just his flow in general? (“Rappers fruity like the pebbles in ya cereal” … not saying I could do better, but … ).

But Akro shines. It’s just too bad he only kicks one verse here.

A sample:

“So when you be creatin’ your playlist /
don’t forget that we are A-list material /
lyrics dirty to the point they scratchin’ off the serial /
and straight to the basura goes that wack sh*t in your stereo.”

  • Akrobatik (feat. Talib Kweli) | Put Ya Stamp On It

Buy tickets for the Perceptionists show here.

Andrew Bird: Imitosis (Four Tet remix)

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Credit: Adam Berry

I don’t know if I saw this posted much around the Internets, so I’ll go ahead an flash back all the way to 2007.

I think, when it comes down to it, I’m going to regret that Andrew Bird’s Armchair Apocrypha – yeah, I can’t say that word, either – didn’t get more of my attention. If we’re playing the what-album-that-wasn’t-on-your-top-10-list-that-would-be-now game, I’d say that’s probably it.

So here’s Four Tet, doing that remix thing and making fine work of the song’s guitars and layering some more over it without weirding it out too much. Thank you, Mr. Hebden, for that.

  • Andrew Bird | Imitosis (Four Tet remix)

Incoming: Editors, Feb. 12 in Tempe

Thought I was gonna have to make another trip to Los Angeles to see a band, but Editors have kindly included Arizona – Marquee Theatre in Tempe, to be exact – on their tour with Hot Hot Heat and Louis XIV.

Tickets ($17.25 advance; $18 day of) on sale here.

I had a chance to interview Editors bassist Russell Leetch (they were in Florida and seemed to be having a lovely time) and will link to story when, you know, I actually write it.

I’m looking forward to see if Editors live up to the raves they seem to get for their live shows. It seems like the bigger songs from An End Has a Start might make for a more spacious presence on stage. In one interview I read, singer Tom Smith described The Back Room as “claustrophobic,” which I would agree with after the band stretched out a bit on the new one.

Video for Smokers Outside the Hospital Doors on Later with Jools Holland:

I Used to Love H.E.R.: Lymbyc Systym

The 22nd 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 (read intro), comes from Mike Bell, one-half of electronic-pop duo the Lymbyc Systym. Bell and his brother Jared, based in Austin by way of Phoenix, released Love Your Abuser last year on Mush Records. A remix version of the album – featuring the Album Leaf, Daedelus, the One AM Radio and more – will be available March 1. Each disc will be numbered and feature handmade packaging. Check the group’s site for pre-order information on Feb. 1.

  • Lymbyc Systym | Truth Skull
  • madvillainyMadvillain
    Madvillainy (Stones Throw, 2004)

    Madlib and Doom’s masterpiece Madvillainy changed the way I think about hip-hop. Not only did it breathe fresh air into what I considered to be a stale genre, but inspired me to start producing hip-hop beats and collaborating with mc’s.

    I absolutely adore Madlib’s production. I had read an interview with him in which he said he makes an album’s worth of material every day. Whether this is an exaggeration or not, this guy is way prolific and inspiring. His use of rag-tag funk and soul samples, coupled with strange vocal samples provides for a great experience when listening to records he’s produced.

    Madlib’s also a self-taught multi-instrumentalist, and a pretty skilled one at that. He always adds his own touches to his loops, be it a bassline, rhodes part or chopped drum groove.
    In my mind, Madvilliany is Madlib’s best work. It captures the essence of everything I mentioned above. I have a feeling he was so inspired to work with an mc as talented as Doom that he chose his freshest unused beats to use on the record. When listening to Madvilliany I hear the friendship between Madlib and Doom, a level of excellence that could only come from a unique collaboration between friends. I love looking at photos from the sessions on stonesthrow.com … pictures of Madlib and Doom laughing, recording and taking bong hits on the roof. I see great times, just as i hear when bumping this record.

    Often times I’ll listen to a record and say “hey, i could do that”, and i definitely had one of these moments when listening to Madvilliany. I was so inspired to try my hand at taking samples from old records and adding my own touches with rhodes, bass guitar, synth and drums. Since then I’ve amassed a library of hours of beats and snippets, which will eventually be whittled down into a hip-hop record with my lyrically gifted good friend and desert dweller, Future Lord aka Michael Busse from Chronic Future and Back Ted N-Ted.

    One last thing I love about Madvillainy and Madlib in general is how the craftsmanship is taken quite seriously, while the mood and vibe can become quite silly and light hearted, a far cry from the shoot-’em-up, booty- and money-driven sounds of most commercial hip-hop. There are hilarious chopped dialoges from Fantastic 4 cartoons placed as interludes throughout. On Shadows of Tomorrow Madlib’s high-pitched alter ego Quasimoto chimes in to give love to weed and Sun Ra and on America’s Most Blunted Madlib digs out some awesome sample of some goofy white boy talking about making music while high … it’s just so freakin laughable, yet so innovative and so well produced.

  • Madvillain | Money Folder
  • Madvillain | Shadows of Tomorrow

DMX responds to dogfighting claims

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Arizona resident DMX responds on a local news station about a raid in August on his home by the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office in which 12 pit bulls were removed and three dead dogs were found.

Check out the video of the news report here.

I extracted audio from the interview for your listening pleasure. Joe Arpaio vs. DMX, Round 2! (I presume Idolator will satisfy the urge for all tacky/punny “Year of the Dog” jokes.)

Incoming: RJD2, April 7 in Tempe

Stateside Presents, in conjunction with Universatile Music, is bringing back RJD2 for an April 7 show at the Clubhouse in Tempe. Buy tickets ($14 advance, $15 day of show) here.

I missed RJ the last time he came through on a solo tour but caught him with Blueprint for Soul Position’s tour a couple years ago in support of Things Go Better With RJ and Al.

Check out a side-by-side rendering of two versions for the video for Work it Out, off RJ’s sorta-maligned The Third Hand.

On the topic of Soul Position, Blueprint says through his MySpace blog that he’s going to release an EP in February on Weightless Recordings. I recorded an interview with Blueprint at the Paid Dues Festival and will try to get some audio of that up soon. He had some interesting things to say in defense of The Third Hand.

If you didn’t like the fact that RJD2 took up singing for that album, the instrumental version is available on eMusic.

Related:
10 questions (via e-mail) with RJD2.

New audio player / feedback

I’ve been toying with some flash-based audio players for the page to try to make it easier for the reader/listener to listen to mp3s without downloading, if that’s their preference.

Thanks to Aurgasm, I’m giving the Yahoo Media Player a try. You’ll see a play button next to each mp3 and a retractable playing device that follows you up and down the page.

Please give it a whirl and leave a comment to let me know what you think.

Also, in the general interest of housekeeping, let me know if there’s anything else that could use dusting/removing/adding/polishing/cleaning up around here. As always, I appreciate your stopping by.

I Used to Love H.E.R.: Eso Tre of Substance Abuse

The 21st 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 (read intro), comes from Eso Tre, one-half of Los Angeles-based hip-hop duo Substance Abuse, whose 2006 record Overproof features MF Doom and Kool Keith, among others.

brandnub.jpgBrand Nubian
In God We Trust (Elektra, 1993)

I remember writing an essay for my 10th grade English class comparing a poem written by Countee Cullen to a track off of Brand Nubian’s In God We Trust called It Ain’t No Mystery, a song criticizing the abuses of religion and people’s reluctance to sway from conventional modes of spirituality. Nothing can erase the memory of my forty-something teacher reciting Sadat X’s lyrics in front of a bunch of honors students, and then asking them if any of them had heard of Brand Nubian. None of them had.

Of course, my friends and I knew this group all too well. I remember sitting through Yo! MTV Raps in eager anticipation of seeing what would become my favorite video of all time, Punks Jump Up to Get Beat Down. The simplicity of this video was it’s power: three guys who embodied that quintessential early 90’s New York hip hop, kicking rhymes in the subway and occasionally administering a beat down to anyone who might question whether or not “the Nubian reign had fallen”. As the forthcoming album would prove, it definitely had not.

Part of what makes this album so great and timeless was that sense that these guys had something to prove. With the man who had for a long time been considered their front man conspicuously absent from the equation, Lord Jamar and Sadat X were put in the daunting position of proving both that they could evolve musically as a group and that their charisma as a duo was legitimate. And as dope of an album as One for All was, Brand Nubian’s sophomore effort made it seem as if their classic first album almost obscured the undeniable chemistry between these two emcees.

With solid production provided by the group from beginning to end (with exception of Diamond D’s contribution with Punks Jump Up…), In God We Trust stands with so many other great works of this period that strove to present a unifying vibe and theme, even if at times the leitmotiv seemed to be challenging image of the group that One for All had established. What we hear in the second effort is that the ideology is much the same, but the means of effectuating it is now much more militant, as evidenced by hard hitting cuts like Pass the Gat and Black and Blue. Both rappers sound more polished the second time around, and display an intensity that I have yet to see rivaled by another group.

  • Brand Nubian | Pass the Gat
  • Brand Nubian | Punks Jump Up to Get Beat Down

The Parish: Storm Driven Bird EP

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Thanks again to Hunter at Macktronic and Gold Robot Records for (a) sending me vinyl (always welcome) and (b) introducing me to another great Bay Area band in the Parish.

The latest goodie from Gold Robot – the label’s fourth 7-inch release – is the four-song Storm Driven Bird EP from the Parish. The group is led by husband-wife tandem of Zac and Kim Stanley, but they brought in a full band for this EP, including Graham Hill (aka Roman Ruins) on drums.

I want to say, upon my first few listens, that the Parish sounds something like a cross between Magnolia Electric Co. and and some of the more Southern-influenced ’70s rock. I may be totally off base. But I do know it’s nothing like Gold Robot’s previous two releases from Meanest Man Contest and Panther. Hunter appears to be building a wonderfully diverse catalog.

Check out Dummy in Trouble, a track that follows a catchy organ line into a wash of guitars and cymbals and (my favorite) pedal-steel guitar.

As an added bonus, if you buy the (yellow!) vinyl, you receive a coupon with a code for digital downloads.

  • The Parish | Dummy in Trouble

WHILE YOU’RE AT IT, visiting Gold Robot, check out Quarterbar (one-half of Meanest Man Contest) remixing all of Panther’s Secret Lawns LP into one track.

Source Victoria feature in Phoenix New Times

Great feature on Source Victoria and the band’s new record, The Fast Escape, in the latest Phoenix New Times. Read it here.

“The Fast Escape, however, is no political manifesto. It’s a beautiful narcotic that allows you, the lucky listener, to sail for the better part of an hour above (Brendan) Murphy’s roughhewn voice as it recounts the uncomfortable truths, the impossible personal entanglements, and even the marginalized discordant background noises of everyday life that make this music so compelling and universal.”

If you’re in the Valley, check out the band on Jan. 25 at the Last Exit in Tempe. Also, don’t forget, I’m putting on a show with Source Victoria and Birdmonster on March 8 at Angelo’s Lounge in Phoenix. $5 will get you through the door.