"Fire" video debut

KidSyc@Brandywine, Jubee & the Morning After, and Floco Torres - jamming at the Social Club on Congress St. It'll be everything you wanted from a live music show but were afraid to ask for. Syc (ala psych, not sick) and the boys will be debuting their new video for "Fire." Shout out to the guys from Savannah Film Co.
They put together this promo vid just to let you know how hot it's gonna be.

FIRE RELASE PROMO from Savannah Film Co. on Vimeo.

DZA

A Russian beat maker and Red Bull Music Academy participant named DZA is getting a lot of buzz right now, and it's well deserved. Here's a dope sampler for his upcoming EP, titled Supershark. It's out June 3. Expect plenty of blips, bleeps, bloops and bass galore. Get more info on the release here.
  PMC080 - DZA "Supershark" EP snippet by Project Mooncircle

You can also check out his tape (an actual physical tape, not a figure of speech) of remixes. 

Taste II recap

A great video recapping the second Taste art event out at Meddin, which took place last month. 12 hours of art, music, performance, beer and mayhem.


TASTE II from FanFlare Media on Vimeo.

Big shout out to Raabstract for spearheading the organizational efforts. Also many thanks to all the artists - KidSyc, DJ D-Frost, Hebermehl, Basik Lee, AFW, Cusses, Jose Ray, Dr. Z, Rrrrumps (who destroyed shit late night), Cousin Dan, Word of Mouth and many more. Also a personal thanks to P.Villa for the 40s on the back porch.

Corduroi

Props due to this Austin TX-based musical entity that lays out some super chill tones - broadcasts from deep in the beat space universe. Hear some more stuff here.
  You And Me (Future) by Corduroi

Video: Groundislava "A Grass Day"

Turns out the west coast beat-maestro's dad is Michael Patterson, the same guy who made that classic A-ha video. Pops came through with the assist for Groundislava's new video for the tune "A Grass Day." Dig it.

Groundislava - A Grass Day from FoF Music on Vimeo.

Baby Baby "Kidz"

The guys from Baby Baby are awesome. So is their new video. Some great feel good rock n roll from Georgia. Get with it.
video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Paste premiered this video a couple days ago.

Vinyl Appreciation

Sunday, May 29th (if we haven't all been raptured), the next installment of the eclectic all-vinyl listening sessions Vinyl Appreciation. Just a chill Sunday evening of obscure and wonderful music.

Amon Tobin "Goto 10"

This track off the new Amon Tobin album is ridiculously amazing.


Check out his album ISAM.

Riddimentary

If you're looking for some gangsta reggae jams for the summer season, consider copping this compilation of Diplo's favorite cuts on Jamaica's Greensleeves label. This thing is packed front to back with groovy riddims that'll keep you bobbing all the way to the beach.
Like this Ranking Dread ode to big girls:

Lady Lazarus

Big shout out to Melissa Sweat, aka Lady Lazarus, for making musical moves on her own terms. When she arrived in Savannah from California she was teaching herself music, since she's arrived, she did a ton of gigs, played at the Stopover Festival, and now is getting crazy love from websites like Pitchfork and PopMatters - the latter of whom premiered this video for her last week:

DJ JS-1 "Reppin' NY"

 JS-1 has been repping the NY underground forever. I remember when the first Ground Original came out and put on dudes who wouldn't make it until years later (in that over-underground way that is the upper echelon for most hip hop heads - they ask about you in Europe and Canada).
For this new single, he makes probably the most NY track in the last couple years with three of the most diehard cats in the history of the Burroughs - Lil Fame (MOP), Joell Ortiz and Freddie Foxx (aka Bumpy Knuckles) - this track feels like a lost Preemo cut, scratched hook and all.
I wasn't crazy about the 2nd installment in the Ground Original series, but this 3rd volume looks promising.

Death Grips

 Having a bad day? Stressed? Tired of all the bullshit you have to endure just to have a little fun sometimes? Mad at the government? Suffering from post-traumatic stress? Crank this and understand that someone out there is more pissed than you, and willing to take you there. Meet Death Grips. And check out his new mixtape Ex-Military. Shout out to Evster for putting me on this massive, grimy goodness.

Zomby x Panda Bear

Q: What happens when one of the guys from Animal Collective joins forces with a front line dubstep producer?
A: This track, which is badassss.

Chain Gang of 1974

A peculiar name, and somewhat ironic considering it's mostly one guy, not a whole gang. Here is a lovely, glitchy-yet-chillaxingly-danceable remix of Twin Shadow's "Undercover"



                       

Dillinger

While I'm on a reggae kick, I'd be remiss not to mention this joint.



Found this after hearing it prominently placed in Downtown '81.
Super duty tough.


Discovered via this interview with Diplo.

Extra Classic


If you need some mellow get-ready-for-summer grooves, here's Extra Classic, who will be opening for !!! on a couple dates this year.
  Congo Rebel Version by Extra Classic

Cop the 45 here.

Amon Tobin

You know all those new dubstep and wonk producers who are starting to sample and re-sample sounds from nature and/or around the house to make the future sound more organic? Well, Amon Tobin is their dad, and he's putting them all on punishment. The king of textural, orchestrated electronic mayhem is back with a new album called ISAM. 
The whole album is streaming on his website, check it out here.
Get a free download of a song off the album by donating your email address:


                       

The Post-Osama United States

Obama and crew waiting for the raid to take place. Image source.
Many Americans feted the execution of Osama this week. They gathered at the White House, at Ground Zero, in parks and bars; they hosted events, called radio shows, wrote letters to the editors of their local papers. There were others who didn't feel so gung-ho on the whole thing, and questioned whether it was ok to feel happy or excited about killing someone. Sure, he deserved it. No one questioned that. But, proving that America does still have some pragmatic morality left in her heart, there were some who took pause.

One thing that's really struck me personally is the passage of time. It's hard to believe it's been ten years since everything changed. Can you remember the spring of 2000? Everyone was ecstatic that Y2K was a huge hoax - planes could land, the stock market wouldn't crash and the federal budget was balanced. Shangri-La-di-da.

Amidst the ease and safety of the age, the world was far from perfect, but it wasn't apocalyptic if you were an 8 year old. At least one of your parents was employed, more than likely, the house wasn't getting foreclosed on, polar bears weren't dying, there weren't multiple wars being fought abroad, and schools weren't having funding and programs cut by anorexic state budgets. To these 8 year olds, the fall of 2001 would shatter their young worlds.

What set off that firework in my brain was when I heard a college kid being interviewed by NPR say that "a specter" which has loomed over his formative years - the conventional wisdom's face for terrorism, Osama bin Laden - had been lifted. It really dawned on me how completely different an experience it would have been for a young kid - these kids who had aged 10 years and were now in college. (They grow up so fast, don't they?) These were the kids who were outside the White House (including several cheerleaders who got a lot of camera time from MSNBC's live feed), whether they were ecstatic, or introspective, or in-between.

I suspect (and this is the point that set me off on this bit of ranting) that a lot of people who are happy feel that way because it's the first thing that the government has actually done in the win column in a decade. This a period that should be remembered for the complete and utter dissatisfaction of people toward a government that is supposed to work for them, rather than against them (see the Tea Party, or senselessly broad shifts of allegiance among independent voters searching for a candidate to represent their interests as evidence to this point).

You can argue that the administration passed healthcare reform (for better, or worse) as an accomplishment. And yes, it did pass, but it passed in a such a watered down manner that really no one was happy with it. Yes, it will do some good things for some people, but it will also make life a lot more difficult for others without solving A LOT of the real problems (shrinking of available primary care facilities other than hospital emergency rooms in many communities, exponential growth of the pharmaceutical industry, etc.) So, while it passed, it left the country more divided than it was before, so it's a net fail.

The bailout and stimulus - that could have done a lot of good if it had been invested wisely into a comprehensive mix of infrastructure, culture, education and technology development, but it was swallowed by Wall Street - a smarmy bunch of wealthy douchebags who vote Republican for the tax breaks and complain that people should pull themselves up by their bootstraps rather than accept government assistance - who had the audacity to pilfer the biggest handout in history in order to line the pockets of shareholders and executives.

Even during the Bush era, what did we get? Two wars, tax breaks that didn't affect anyone I knew in a meaningful way, an increase in the federal bureaucracy attached to public education funding (NCLB), and a bunch of calls to support our troops (while the government was using defense budgets to pay private contractors 3-4x what they were paying US armed forces, failed to maintain good post-war care [including Walter Reed] for soldiers, etc).

Not only that, but they couldn't even catch one bearded guy, who was partially trained and funded by the US government in the 1980s when we needed his help screwing the Russians in Afghanistan.

Until the government finally did catch and kill him.

The picture above has gone viral in the last 24 hours, and part of that is because it's a reminder to a lot of people who had lost hope in the government all together that there are still some high powered, super secret, clenched butt cheek meetings and some measurable outcomes that result from them. The government does actually do stuff, they just haven't been able to lately. Maybe remembering how to win will be the start of something positive.

Self-Titled

I've got to give respect due to the folks at Self-Titled. Not that I want to give you the brush off and send you elsewhere, but these guys are on point with their material. I've recently enjoyed a streaming preview of Prefuse 73's new album and this banging mixtape by Atropolis, who is dropping crazy dubby-cambio-electro-mayhem.

Mobb Deep History

The Infamous
Check out this amazing interactive feature on the making Mobb Deep's classic album Infamous. Apparently it's the 16th anniversary of that album, and Complex goes through track by track and gets history straight from the source - Havok, Prodigy, Q-Tip (who was involved on the production side), and dudes from Loud Records. All sorts of interesting bits, plus you can listen to each track as you read about the story behind that cut. Well done, Complex.

Cousin Dan "Already Home"


Cousin Dan came and killed a set during Taste last Saturday. Had the whole place grooving to his bizarre blend of new wave and main line 80s funk. Topping off the deal was his a denim vest with mirrored shoulder pads and matching mirrored cod piece over leopard pattern tights. Devastating.
How much does this bassline sound like "Pony"?
Get more info here.