Monday, November 16, 2009

ARCHIE SHEPP & THE FAMILY OF PERCUSSION - HERE COMES THE FAMILY


ABSOLUT BANGER!!!
the track 'here comes the family' sees Mr Archie Shepp doing some poetic recitation over a slow tempo beat that very much sounds like rapping!!!He is originally known for playing saxophone and this is one of the rare times he actually grabs the mic !Superb...
Here is a bit of info from Professor Wikipedia :
ARCHIE SHEPP (born May 24, 1937) is a prominent African-American jazz saxophonist.[1] Shepp is best known for his passionately Afrocentric music of the late 1960s, which focused on highlighting the injustices faced by the African race, as well as for his work with the New York Contemporary Five, Horace Parlan, and his collaborations with his "New Thing" contemporaries, most notably Cecil Taylor and John Coltrane.[1]

Download link here
Enjoy!!!
Ps: Big up the blog orgy in rythm for sharing theses gems with us!!!

Thursday, November 12, 2009

fresh brand new music : Tune yards



tUnE-yArDs is the singular musical project of New England native Merrill Garbus. Possessing an expansive sound that marries a coarse folk ingenuity with the bold pop sensibility of an R&B siren, BiRd-BrAiNs was assembled with a staunch DIY aesthetic.

Recording herself using a digital voice recorder and assembled using shareware mixing software, she was described by Stereogum as “a self-contained Sublime Frequencies compilation, jumping between blues, African tunes, shiny reggae-esque sprawls, and lo-fi folk”, infusing the worldly sonic palette of M.I.A. or post-punk pioneers The Raincoats.

Check out her amazing live performance here

Enjoy!!!

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Orange juice - 'The Glasgow School'


Orange Juice was a Scottish post-punk band founded in the middle class Glasgow suburb of Bearsden as the Nu-Sonics in 1976. Edwyn Collins formed the Nu-Sonics (who were named after a cheap brand of guitar) with his fellow Bearsden Academy pupil, Alan Duncan, and James Kirk and Steven Daly left a band called The Machetes to join them.[1] The band became Orange Juice in 1979. Orange Juice are best known for the hit "Rip It Up", which reached number 8 on the UK Singles Chart in February 1983, the band's only UK Top 40 hit.[2]

My personal favourites on this one are "consolation prize" and "poor old soul part 1"

Enjoy!!!


Download!

Da king and I-"contemporary jeep music"


FUNKY, FUNKY, FUNKY...is the best word(s) to describe this '93 east-coast release. Of course, 90% of the albums that came out in that brilliant era were dope, but Da King & I is a really unique duo with a sound that seemingly never gets old. You could say it's Maj's incredible, layered beats that make this album stand out, but more appropriately it's the chemistry between Izzy and Majesty that make "Contemporary Jeep Music" a really dope listen.


Here's the track list:

1) Intro (Contemporary Jeep Music)
2) Let's Take a Trip
3) Flip da Scrip
4) Interlude 1 (MC A$$h*le)
5) Krak da Weazel
6) Interlude 2 (Amusement Park)
7) Brain 2 U
8) Tears
9) Soul Shack Interlude
10) Ghetto Instinct
11) Mr. All That
12) Interlude 3 (Jazz Skit)
13) This is How We Do
14) Interlude 4 (Izzy Sings da Blues) *One of the best skits I've ever heard*
15) Lost My Mind
16) Represent
17) Crack da Weasel (Dat Other S***)
18) What's Up Doc



download!

Pigbag (full band history here) was a fantastic melting pot of rock, funk, jazz, and Latin styles; unfortunately they were only together for three years, 1980-83. After the breakup, Y Records released this album of odds and ends, containing seven live tracks from five shows and a remix of "Jump the Line." Most notable are the live versions of "Sunny Day" and "Papa's Got a Brand New Pigbag," and a cover of the Norman Whitfield/Barrett Strong classic "Smiling Faces (Sometimes)" which did not appear on any of Pigbag's studio albums. The full track listing is:
A1 Shack of Scraps Live - Berlin Latin Quarter - 5th April 1983
A2 Smiling Faces Live - Berlin Latin Quarter - 5th April 1983
A3 Sunny Day Live - Birmingham Locarno - 17th March 1982
A4 Papa's Got a Brand New Pigbag Live - Hammersmith Palais - 16th March 1982
B1 Jump The Line Remix - Jacobs Studio - December 1982
B2 Global Terrain Live - Berlin Latin Quarter - 5th April 1983
B3 End of Ubud Live - Munich Alabama Hall - 6th April 1983
B4 Can't See for Looking Live - Tokyo Sun Plaza - July 1982

Download link in the comments>..
Enjoy!!!


Bush Tetras is an all girl band from the 80's that could be put in the New York No Wave section at your indie record store, but it's a little too melodic and funkified to live there comfortably. The lack of classification may explain the overlooked nature of this band. Boom in the Night is reissue of their original recordings made between 1980-1983 and is, in my opinion, the best collection of their work. Only a handful of EPs were released on independent labels in the 80's, but they seemed to disappear until their reformation in 1995. I recently came across the band via a comment made by Thurston Moore on New York Noise and I have been listening nonstop for the past couple of weeks. If I could coin a new term, I would call it Funk-Punk. Taking super stripped down punk to its most minimal and adding groove-saturated bass lines and cutting guitars. Kinda like early The Liars if they were all girls and heavily into Tim Burton.

download Iink in the comments
Enjoy!!!

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Back in 1986, Bram van Splunteren traveled to the U.S. to find out what the hell was going on in the Bronx, NY. What he found was a quickly growing artform and movement that became known as hip-hop. This Dutch-produced documentary features many of hip-hop luminaries including Grandmaster Flash (complete with jheri curl and custom jacket with "FLASH" on the back), a balding Russell Simmons, Roxanne Shante, a slim and trim Biz Markie, and DMC in the place to be. Some great clips and interviews are featured here. Watch it now.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

That said, here is a golden mine to get the originals of classic hip hop albums.

http://kevinnottingham.com/diggin-in-da-crates/
Sample Outing: Stop Snitching

I've said it before but I'll say it again -- "sample outing" is bad news. When people publicize a producer's unlicensed sample source it's bad for music and it's bad for sampling. It's worse than plain old snitching because it's diming on a colleague, motivated by money and/or personal gratification. ("Aren't I cool? I found that guy's sample and now I'm sharing it with the rest of you. Now do you respect me?")

When you out someone's samples, you expose them and their labels to potential lawsuits. And this will kill sampling. You will be responsible for the death of sample-based music if you continue to do this. Labels will be less likely to risk liability with sample-heavy compositions; artists will generally stop sampling out of fear of getting exposed. That's why I urge all of you who make these compilation to STOP. Yes, you're awesome - you have just as many obscure records as the producers you envy. But if you want to impress the rest of us, do something more creative with them.

And for the music lovers who eat this stuff up, it really falls on you to boycott labels that issue these compilations. They do nothing more than capitalize off of another artist's celebrity while exposing them to potential liability (I'm looking at you Pete's Treats.) Websites that amass data about unlicensed sample sources should be pressured to close down. Let's keep that stuff private... scratch the labels off of those records, if you catch my drift. Publications like Wax Poetics have always been tactful about those issues and I wish other people would follow their lead.

As I see it, there are 4 situations where I think it's okay to release compilations of sampled material to capitalize off the fact that they've been sampled: (1) When the producer himself/herself has consented to the sample source's publication (or if the producer has reach some kind of deal with the sample source owner for mutual exploitation); (2) When the the sample is in the public domain (Can you wait until 2067?); (3) When the compilation makes no references to the sampling artist, producer, song title, etc (no cutesy end-arounds like "Bob Dorough - Three is a Magic Number (as heard on the album 3 Feet High and Rising)"; or, lastly, (4) When the sample is licensed and such licensing is made public by the artist in the liner notes of the album. (Yeah right, when in the world does that happen?)

Well, did you know that DJ Shadow actually licensed some samples for Endtroducing? I recently broke out my vinyl copy of Endtroducing the other day and was surprised to see the following songs acknowledged as being licensed in the liner notes: Bjork "Possibly Maybe"; Pekka Pohjola "The Madness Subsides"; Motion "Voice of the Saxophone"; Jeremy Storch "I Feel a New Shadow"; Tangerine Dream "Invisible Limits"; and Nirvana (the UK not Seattle Nirvana) "Love Suite".

Now, I'm not outing Shadow here because he acknowledged it himself in the liner notes. And I'm happy he did because I find it very interesting that, of everything sampled on Endtroducing, those 6 samples were cleared. But the point is this: yes, the world is a better place because Shadow taught many people about David Axelrod, et al but I think it's our responsibility as producers, music lovers, historians, and lovers of sampling to maintain a pseudo attorney-client privilege deal when it comes to sample sources. Why shit where you eat? That's what it comes down to. Think about it -- it's necessary for our survival.

posted by Chomp Samba at 6/09/2008 | 0 Comments