New Ryan Ferguson: Remission

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No Knife, No Knife, No Knife. I love(d) No Knife. The San Diego band filled such an important space in my music collection – somewhere between punk music I never attached myself to and the power pop of the indie scene that I loved. Throw in some cryptic songwriting, and I’m hooked. (I can’t recommend No Knife’s Hit Man Dreams and Fire in the City of Automatons enough.)

Former No Knife guitarist/co-frontman Ryan Ferguson, whom I’ve written about before, is set to release his full-length solo debut, Only Trying to Help on Better Looking Records on Aug. 21.

Ferguson’s solo work, like on his EP Three, Four, is less jagged than his work with No Knife, a little smoother around the edges. But it’s no less interesting. From what I’ve heard on Only Trying to Help (thanks, 3Hive), Ferguson crafts big guitar hooks that, these days, are a little more pop than punk, but it opens the way for more straightforward and thoughtful lyrics.

You can stream Only Trying to Help at Ferguson’s Last.fm page (Remission and Kill My Confidence are faves so far).

3Hive (with Ferguson’s permission) also is offering his EP Three, Four in its entirety.

  • Ryan Ferguson | Remission

Radar Bros. finish new album

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In news that may excite only myself and Brian @ Bows + Arrows, Jim Putnam announces on MySpace that a new Radar Bros. album is finished and likely due for a January release.

The post:

our new album is finished, mastered and in the can! i’m sleeping better already, with the aid of some otc pills….generic of course.

what can i say? looking at a january release most likely, and the album title will be “auditorium”. 12 songs. good ones. vodka or bourbon?

jim

p.s.- did anyone know that squids have beaks?

So until January, a span of time in which Putnam apparently will be watching Animal Planet, here’s a B-side from an EP that I’m pretty sure I snagged at Bows + Arrows.

  • Radar Bros. | No One Left

I Used to Love H.E.R.: Chris Schlarb

Hey, when it rains it pours. The 17th installment – and third in about a week – of I Used to Love H.E.R. comes from Chris Schlarb, founder/owner of Sounds Are Active record label and a member of experimental/indie-jazz duo I Heart Lung, which is playing TONIGHT at Stinkweeds in Phoenix with Bizzart and James Fella at 8 p.m.

Omid
Beneath the Surface (Alpha Pup, 1998)

“The last iPod I had was possessed by Beneath the Surface. The opening flute lines of the title track would creep out of the miniature jukebox even when turned off. Phoenix Orion’s voice would then bleed out from the speakers with an announcement of the genius/genus to follow.

“By 1998 I had already ingested some of the best of what the East Coast had to offer: Midnight Marauders, Blowout Comb, Illmatic, Do You Want More?!!!??!, et al. Meanwhile in Los Angeles, as Ice Cube recycled every Parliament vamp, Omid Walizadeh (then OD) was sampling Iranian folk music, melodic jazz vibes and “Swelling Itching Brain”-ish keyboard basslines. Having come of age listening to King Crimson, Genesis, Run-DMC and Arrested Development, I found in Beneath the Surface something that both provoked and reassured me.

“With his production revered by all MC’s at the legendary open mic spot Goodlife, Omid then participated in the classic hip-hop quid pro quo: you rap for my beat and I’ll produce a beat for your raps. He quickly assembled a diverse cast of hungry and highly experimental lyricists unfettered by hip-hop’s lineage. Absent are the Spoonie Gee or Funky 4+1 name drops indigenous to East Coast raps, the MC’s assembled here are more concerned with meta-African folk-tales (“When The Sun Took A Day Off”) or running together hominid-centric pop culture references as done on Circus’s hilariously brilliant four minute verse which ends stunning “Farmer’s Market of the Beast.”

“Like all masterpieces Beneath the Surface is burnished by repeated examination. From the brutal “Night and Day” which samples Emerson, Lake & Palmer’s “The Barbarian” to the quintessential L.A. chill-out back beat of “Line Posting In ‘Pedro,” Omid balances melody, avant-garde composition and extrasolar lyricism with seeming familiarity: you think you’ve heard something like this before.

“For connoisseurs of underground hip-hop this album also happens to be an underground Rosetta Stone of sorts: Freestyle Fellowship, Awol One, 2Mex, Global Phlowtations (featuring a young Adlib who would later produced Saul Williams under his own name, Thavius Beck), Rakaa Iriscience (of Dilated Peoples) and Radioinactive among many, many others. When confronted with Omid’s powerful production each rapper rises to the occasion; attempting to both complement and out do one another.

Beneath the Surface is a document of the L.A. youth consciousness at the turn of the century. Full of paranoia and community pride, God and the LAPD, rocking shows and self doubt. Interestingly it would prove to be greater than the sum of its parts and many of the MC’s involved would never make kind of lasting impact that they collectively manifest here.

“I never did figure out what was wrong with my iPod. My only guess is that, as with me, something Beneath the Surface took over. At any given moment you might recollect a drum break or lyric and then suddenly, as P.E.A.C.E. illuminates, you are in its clutches. Word is bondage indeed.”

  • Omid | Line Posting in ‘Pedro
  • Omid | Farmers Market of the Beast

Beneath the Surface can be had at eMusic.

New Murs: Dreadlocks

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Living Legends alum Murs put out one of my favorite records last year with his Murray’s Revenge. He’s since signed with Warner Bros. (weird, right?) and is preparing to release, just in time for the election season, Murs for President.

His management company has posted the first single, Dreadlocks, a track about, uh, yeah, dreadlocks. Like Noz over at Cocaine Blunts, I’m not sure what to make of this Rick Rock-produced track, which also shows up on the Madden ’08 soundtrack.

On the one hand, it swipes a De La Soul line (from Bitties in the BK Lounge) for the chorus’ hook. And I’ve got nothing against the beat or the hyphy/Bay Area-influenced feel of the track. It just seems Murs’ tongue-in-cheek delivery doesn’t exactly suit the style. I’m wondering if this is the exception on Murs for President or a sign of what’s to come.

Either way, Murs is playing the Paid Dues Festival on Aug. 10 at Mesa Amphitheatre. Get tickets here.

  • Murs | Dreadlocks

I Used to Love H.E.R.: King Krash

The 15th 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 King Krash, a record producer/remixer/beat creator who was kind enough to e-mail me to thank me for a previous post. Krash raps succinctly about one of his favorite hip-hop tracks.

Buy his Hambone Sessions album here.

utfo.jpgUTFO
“Roxanne, Roxanne”

(off 1985 self-titled album on Select Records)

“I think my older brother bought the single when I was 5 or 6 and I quickly made it mine. At that age I would just put on a song 100 times in a row. I had one of those kids suitcase style record players, the needle did wonders for the records, and at that age you’re up at like 6am everyday. So 6am till breakfast and again till lunch. Killin’ my 6 year old dance moves and memorizing all the words. I think they were the first to use the “Big Beat” break plus those cuts are branded in my brain. Anyway to this day both my brothers know the whole song by heart I played it so much and they laugh now but they hated it when it was happening. I still have the 12″. If you can put up a pic of the cover peep the outfits. Swords!? I fucking love it.”

  • UTFO | Roxanne, Roxanne

Camp Lo: Black Nostaljack (Kid Capri remix)

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Recent posts by Gorilla vs. Bear and Passion of the Weiss on the return of Camp Lo got me sorta amped about the good ol’ days, which always means digging through a little vinyl.

I have two Camp Lo 12-inches from the great Uptown Saturday Night – one for Black Nostaljack (Come On) and the other for Luchini aka (This is It). I’ve yet to listen to In Black Hollywood – Weiss calls it a contender for hip-hop album of the year – but damn if Uptown wasn’t just one of the dopest, if not criminally underrated, hip-hop albums of the 90s.

Here’s the flip side on the Black Nostaljack 12-inch, a Kid Capri remix that features Run and cops Run-DMC’s Beats to the Rhyme.

Kanye West: Can’t Tell Me Nothing (alt. video)

Kanye West has posted an alternate version of the video for Can’t Tell Me Nothing.

For reasons I can’t explain, Will Oldham and Zach Galifianakis are in it. According to a Billboard story I read on the wires, it was filmed at Galifianakis’ North Carolina farm.

From same story:

“He saw me do stand up a few weeks ago here in Los Angeles, and we chatted after the show,” Galifianakis recently told Impose Magazine.

Well, whatever, it’s pretty damn funny.

k-os: Sunday Morning (Twilight Mix)

I’m still not sure why k-os’ Sunday Morning isn’t huge. It seems like the perfect summer jam, with its catchy beat and singable chorus.

I had a chance to chat with k-os for a story for my day job to help preview the Warped Tour, of which he was a part. He seems eager to break into the States having already cashed in his popularity in his hometown Toronto.

In any event, a collection of his selected singles and some unreleased work, cleverly titled Collected, has been released to help his transition into the U.S.

Here’s one of the tracks, a more slowed-down, deliberate reworking of Sunday Morning. The remix loses a bit of its dance appeal but gains a more leisurely appreciation k-os’ verses.

  • k-os | Sunday Morning (Twilight Mix)

DJ Z-Trip: Doin’ It Like This

I know I just posted about Z-Trip and his All-Pro Soundtrack earlier this month, but now Z has made a track off the album available for download on his own site.

Like most of the album, Doin’ It Like This leans heavy on rock, taking a Clutch song, Profits of Doom, as its main sample. I’ve never been a huge Clutch fan, but I love this track and the way Z spins the repeating chorus, a not-so-subtle message to the wannabes and bedroom DJs: “I’ve been doin’ it like this since way, way back.”

The guest list on this album is deep – Chali 2na, Slug, Gift of Gab, Aceyalone, Rakim (whaaat!), among others – and Z revives his remix of Rush’s Tom Sawyer, which first appeared on the Small Soldiers soundtrack.

If you didn’t know already, Z-Trip is at the Brickhouse in Phoenix on Aug. 22 with Aceyalone and Gift of Gab. Buy tickets.

Al Green’s Quote of the Year

I read a Billboard story yesterday about Al Green teaming up with Ahmir “?uestlove” Thompson and the Roots on a new duets album, which in and of itself is incredible news. (“The Roots have already laid down 15 songs … ” … delicious!)

But then Green decides to really set the whole thing off with what is possibly the funniest thing I have read in some time:

“It’s turning out to be like fresh cream, man, like fresh milk from the cow’s titty, baby,” Green gushes.

I repeat: Like fresh milk from the cow’s titty, baby. How cool is Al Green?