Archive for the 'Reviews' Category Page 2 of 3



I <3 LoDubs

I’m really really really feeling this label lately. They’re a dubstep label run out of the Anthem Records shop in Portland, and their stuff is just SICK (not to mention their sleeve design–BEAUTIFUL!)

Seriously–they’re effing GORGEOUS sleeves–hand-printed label logo on a jacket cut from the kind of brown kraft paper that we all know and love from the bags they give you at the record shop (or the comic book shop, liquor store, porn palace…but I know them from the record store).

Anyway, LoDubs has released tunes from perennial Mashit favorite Starkey, South3rn, 6Blocc (aka L.A. jungle producer R.A.W.), and Bombaman (including a super-hot Bombaman remix of Solvent), and have an INTENSE list of slated releases for the near future: Mashit fave Pacheko, DZ (including a DZ Morcheeba remix), South3rn’s absolutely MASSIVE and super-sought-after “Fully Loaded” b/w “Muslim Dub”, a Nadja remix by Vex’d, and a 2CD mix by 6Blocc. Check out their site (just a myspace page at the moment, http://www.myspace.com/lodubsrecords), and have a free mixset of LoDubs tunes (old stuff and super-duper-tippy-top-secret unreleased dub plate business) courtesy of Jon @ Anthem:

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Download: LoDubs Mixtape (mixed by Monkeytek)

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Don’t Take It Remix

I’m really loving a lot of acid house revival stuff coming out of Chicago right now (as well as France, Belgium, England…)
Of particular interest is a new 12″ featuring a Johnny Fiasco Remix of the never-before-released 1988 acid classic “Don’t Take It” by the late, great Armando Gallop. It’s out on a label called (get this) Let’s Pet Puppies. Peep!

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Download: Armando; Don’t Take It (Johnny Fiasco Mix)

SSION News: New CD, 12″, & Tour Dates!

Ok, here’s a big post–I’ll try to start at the beginning. I’ve started a new label (a sister label to Dead Homies), called Sleazetone Records, specializing in all the kinds of music that you’d assume a label called “Sleazetone Records” would trade in. The first releases are a CD & 12″ by a group called Ssion–they’re a Kansas City-based art collective fronted by Cody Critcheloe (graphic designer for Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Scream Club, & others). They’ve toured with YYYs, the Faint, Black Dice, & Liars, and they sound kind of like the Pet Shop Boys meet the Dead Kennedys meet Hakan Lidbo.

I’m really not the first person to write about these guys (they’ve been getting a lot of blog buzz lately–see Better Propaganda, Big Stereo, Fluxblog, Gorilla vs. Bear, Imageyenation, Missing Toof, Music For Robots, Palms Out Sounds, Paper Thin Walls, Pitchfork, Pop Tarts Suck Toasted, RCRD LBL, Slutty Fringe, Stereogum, Pitch Weekly, GBH.tv, Pensatos, XLR8R, and forthcoming reviews in Ghetto Blaster, Vice, & Urb), so I’ll skip the press talk–suffice it to say that I feel REALLY strongly about these guys (otherwise why would I have signed them?)–like, I think this new CD is literally one of the best things I’ve heard in years and I’m thrilled to be involved with it.

Anyway, here’s the news, with a few free mp3s for good measure:

Continue reading ‘SSION News: New CD, 12″, & Tour Dates!’

DJ Flack: “Strictly Scientifical”

DJ Flack: “Strictly Scientifical”DJ Flack will be here in Chicago to play at Bouncement on Wednesday and I want to point your attention to his recent digi-album release, Strictly Scientifical. It’s 16 tracks of twisted dubstep, boston-bounce, and experimental party music, and it’s available from BeatPort, eMusic, and JunoDownload. Give a listen to KlezmaTone. Yes, it’s dubby, electronic, breakbeat-driven Klezmer!

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Download: DJ Flack; KlezmaTone

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OMGZ CUT IT UP DEF 20th ANNIVERSARY~!!

Excited to see this happening. Legendary Miami Bass label Cut It Up Def is apparently back in business (as “Cut It Up Def v2.0“), and has re-released the seminal “Miami Bass Jams” comp as a digitally remastered CD & 2LP. The tracklist on this thing is seriously amazing. Like, WOWIE WOW guys. Here are a couple of mp3s:

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Download: Jock D; Partytime ’91

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Download: Splack Pack; Shake That Ass Bitch

Year-End Look-Back

XLR8R Dec 07 CoverXLR8R magazine asked me to contribute to their annual Best Of poll this year and some of my comments are published in this month’s issue. I thought I’d share them — plus a bunch of the ones that didn’t make the cut — with y’all here:

Best Artist
South Rakkas Crew

I’ve been digin’ these guys dancehall productions for a minute but their “Mix Up” release on Mad Decent is completely untethered.

Best Album
Durrty Goodz; Axiom EP

Durrty is one of the most dynamic and talented rappers in the grime game, and many of the beats on this EP are stellar too.

Best Single/12″
Dude N Nem; Watch My Feet

The emerging juke sound has quite a few bangers bubbling up around Chicago, but this one is a true piece of pop-genius. It’s got the classic half-time/double-time, hip-hop/ghetto-house combination, and really fun party lyrics.

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R.I.P. Patrick

Today is the 25th anniversary of the death of one of my heroes (and another one of those dance music legends suffering from a SERIOUS respect defecit), Patrick Cowley.

As much as Giorgio Moroder, Cowley introduced electronics into a genre that had been until-then composed primarily with traditional instruments, in effect inventing electronic dance music.*

Born in Buffalo, NY in 1950, Patrick moved to San Francisco in 1971, where he began studying synthesizer at the City College of San Francisco. Though he was originally more interested in prog rock and the like, he soon found himself immersed in San Francisco’s disco scene: he began working as a lighting tech at the City Disco on Montgomery and Broadway, and soon he was running lights and playing organ for up-and-coming disco legend Sylvester. All the while he was working on quirky synth projects in his spare time, and eventually he played some of this stuff for Sylvester and the rest of the band. Sylvester’s pianist (and sometimes Cowley rival) Michael Finden:
“He had a tape which he let us hear and Sylvester became very intent on somehow integrating this synthesized music into our basically R&B sound at the time. It was really quite astonishing to hear his work at that point in time because he really created a whole new sound and technique which was very fresh for 1978.”**

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BD1982 “The Bigfoot EP”

BD1982 “The Bigfoot EP”Our friend Starkey of the Trouble & Bass camp etc. just gave us the heads up that BD1982‘s The Bigfoot EP will be dropping next week on the Seclusiasis label.

The EP is 6 tracks of oblong, texture-rich beats that reference hip-hop, dubstep, and dancehall among other things. Here’s a taste:

BD2982; Wooder ICE:

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BD2982; Coelacanth Town:

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You can hear more at BD1982′s Myspace.

Starkey also pointed us to a promo DJ mix for the release which, though somewhat poorly mixed, does contain some great tracks.

BD1982; Sharks Eat Bigfoot DJ Mix (Zshare) ->

Skull Disco 2xCD Drops Tuesday

For those of y’all who aren’t up on Skull Disco, it’s a dubstep label run by Shackleton & Appleblim, a couple of Londoners who are among the most consistently interesting (if not the most consistently dancefloor) dubstep producers out there at the moment. Their new Double CD on Rough Trade, “Soundboy Punishments”, is a pretty comprehensive collection of what they’ve been up to over the past three years (mostly on Skull Disco, but on a couple of other labels as well). Almost everything they’ve released is on here, and as far as I can tell there are only two new tracks (“Gold And Silver” and “You Make Me Cry”—has anybody seen these around previously?). The tunes generally fall into three categories (with examples provided):

  1. Your “traditional” (whatever that means) dubstep dancefloor fare—really quite stellar actually; reminiscent of Vex’d, but a little more organic/less DSP-centric.

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  2. Super-dubbed out atmospheric cuts that almost sound more like African Head Charge or Bedouin Soundclash than anything in the dubstep scene at the moment.

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  3. Even MORE dubbed-out Middle-Eastern influenced tunes that beg the question “is this even dubstep?” “Tin Foil Sky”, for instance, is the most bass-heavy, tweaked-out Dabke jam you could possibly imagine, but I’m not certain that we’d be calling it “dubstep” if it weren’t for the fact that it’s made by some Londoners who happened to be tied into that whole scene.

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Despite dubstep’s current “most futuristic thing going” status, this particular album has a strong 1980s feel, particularly in the drumwork: think super-canned drum machine sounds, gated snares a la Phil Collins (absolutely DRENCHED in Adrian Sherwood-esque delay for good measure), and even doubled-up heavy metal kick drums in “Cheat I”:

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Overall it makes for a pretty compelling package. The only real low-point is the 18-minute (yes, I know) Ricardo Villalobos remix of “Blood On My Hands”. Now I’m really not a minimal techno person to begin with, but 18 minutes? Seriously? If you’re going to make a tune over 10 minutes, you really ought to have a damn good reason, and Villalobos just never does. And generally, this whole album could stand to be pruned down a bit. I understand that this is intended to be a comprehensive retrospective type of thing, but if they had taken the strongest 70 minutes of these 2 discs and made THAT into an album it would be a fucking masterpiece, instead of 127 minutes of “here’s all the stuff we’ve done”.

Nonetheless, it’s awesome. Really, just awesome. Just don’t attempt to get through the whole thing in one sitting.

AND NOW, for the free mp3s:

Download: Appleblim; Mystical Warrior

Download: Shackleton; Naked

New Yorker, You Disappoint Me.

I quote my dear friend and Midwestern-cum-Swedish-transplant biochemist Evan: “Ladies and gentlemen, I present the shittiest article about music ever written.”

Sasha Frere-Jones – A Paler Shade of White: How Indie Rock Lost Its Soul, from this month’s New Yorker.

In this article, the New Yorker pop critic, former Ui frontman, and brother to type designer Tobias Frere-Jones (a.k.a. “the talented one”) gives his account of the death of African-American influence in rock music, citing thoroughly unfunky bands from Wilco and Pavement to Arcade Fire and Devendra Banhart. For the most part he’s right: indie rock has become increasingly inward, obtuse, artsy-fartsy, and LILY WHITE in the past 20 years, and as far as I’m concerned it’s really bad news, culturally speaking. But then he kind of veers off into the realm of absolute nonsense by blaming the internet for all of this (the basic argument: white people always existed as great popularizers of black music, and now that the internet allows us average white folk to find out about black music without Elvis singing it to us, there is no incentive for whitey to continue borrowing. Enter Arcade Fire).

Furthermore, he brings hip-hop into the whole mix, claiming that it too has become increasingly devoid of white influence (thanks to more restrictive sampling laws). Frere-Jones portrays the cultural shift from De La Soul’s Johnny Cash and Schoolhouse Rock samples to today’s much less sample-laden post-gangsta hip-hop as a purely economic calculus—”now that sampling is expensive, let’s quit sampling”—and cites this as the reason that hip hop (supposedly) has a lot less white influence in it these days. A few points:

1) Dear Sasha, there’s this guy called Kanye West. I know he’s pretty underground—doesn’t make a lot of media appearances—but perhaps you’ll be able to find some info about him and his samples on the interweb (you know—the one that killed rock).

2) Frere-Jones talks about the dearth of white rappers, and has the following to say about Eminem in particular: “A protégé of Dr. Dre’s who spent part of his youth in Detroit, he had to be better than the local black competition simply in order to be accepted—a fascinating inversion of the racism that many blacks have encountered in the workplace.” OH EM GEE SASHA FRERE-JONES HAS SINGLEHANDEDLY DISCOVERED THE PHENOMENON OF REVERSE RACISM WHAT A MINDBLOWING REVELATION TO COME FROM A LOUSY POP CRITIC SOMEBODY PLZ AWARD HIM AN HONORARY Ph.D. STAT!

3) Is hip-hop really less white today than in 1990? Is it just me, or does all this new-fangled synth-driven hip-hop (Frere-Jones mentions Crunk & Hyphy, but I’m talking Swishahouse stuff too, anything by Timbaland, the Neptunes, basically anything you can hear on the radio EXCEPT Kanye) owe a lot more to, say, KRAFTWERK than it does James Brown, Grandmaster Flash, Public Enemy, or even Dr. Dre? Like seriously, the instrumental of “The Whisper Song” might as well be “Home Computer”.

4) HELLO THERE SASHA! OVER HERE! IT’S ME! CHRISSY! You know, the girly/nerdy grad student from Kansas who once released a 12″ by a white Brooklynite-cum-Belgian featuring Jamaican dancehall superstars Ward 21 and sampling “No Diggity” by Blackstreet? Musical miscegenation is alive and well over here in ravesville, duderino. Just because Indie Rock is in a period of white influence doesn’t mean that’s the case for all music, or that it’s a trend that’s bound to continue indefinitely.

Ok, I’m done. Argue away, blog reading types.