Sunday 31 July 2011

Marcelo D2 – Eu Tiro É Onda (1998)



1 Intro
Written-By – Marcelo D2 0:45
2 1967
Written-By – Rodrigo Nuts, Marcelo D2, Zé Gonçalves 3:38
3 Sessão
Written-By – Rodrigo Nuts, Marcelo D2, Zé Gonçalves 2:33
4 Eu Tiro É Onda
Featuring Shabazz The Disciple
Written-By – Rodrigo Nuts, Marcelo D2, Zé Gonçalves 3:41
5 Mantenha O Respeito 2
Written-By – Marcelo D2 4:21
6 Samba De Primeira
Written-By – Rodrigo Nuts*, Marcelo D2 2:54
7 Fazendo Efeito
Written-By – Eduardo Bid*, Marcelo D2, Zé Gonçalves 1:39
8 O Império Contra Ataca
Featuring Black Alien, Jackson, Speed B. Negão
Written-By – Black Alien, Rodrigo Nuts, Jackson, J.R.Bertrami, Marcelo D2, Speed B. Negão, Zé Gonçalves 5:13
9 Espancando O Macaco
Written-By – Marcelo D2 2:26
10 Eu Tive Um Sonho
Featuring Thaide
Written-By – Rodrigo Nuts, Thaide 2:04
11 Encontro Com Nogueira
Written-By – Rodrigo Nuts, Marcelo D2 2:06
12 Batucada
Written-By – Mário Caldato Jr. 2:49
13 Baseado Em Fatos Reais
Featuring Black Alien
Written-By – Black Alien, Marcelo D2 3:34











Magnolia Slim - Soulja Fa Lyfe



Funkdoobiest - XXX Funk (1995)


01. Clean Version
02. The Dust Patients! Remix

__________________



Darquan - 360





23Hz & Numaestro – Al-Andulus / Praise Dub (12") (2007)


Debut release from Iberian Records, a label based in Lisbon and Barcelona with a focus on Dubstep, Grime, Toxic Dancehall, Kuduro, Techno Dub, Dub and similar styles - and the nurturing and promotion of a nucleus of local and international producers. The founders of Iberian Records are behind two projects related to the dubstep movement: Conspira [Portugal] - a Portuguese duo that make up Unidade Sonoro - and Corsario Riddim - two English producers, 23Hz and Numaestro, that are currently residents in Barcelona. This label is effectively the first label in the Iberian Peninsula to release Dubstep tracks. "Al-Andalus" on the a-side starts with a Moriccan vocal sample joined by an accordion riff - curiously sounding not too dissimilar to Augusto Pablo's distinctive melodica sound - which leads to the drop. "PRAISE DUB" on the flip kicks off with a vocal sample from Algerian music, with a rampaging descending bassline soon dominating proceedings!

Al-Andulus / Praise Dub






Actual Proof - Still Hotter Than July



Darkside Players - I Thought You Knew



Da-Roc - You Aint No gangsta



Dar-Q - U Knot Knowin



Darkside Click - We So Corrupt



Dark Lotus - Opaue Brotherhood



Danoiz - Cadillac Style



Danny - Where Is Danny



Dark Side Cartel - Dark Side Cartel



Dangerous Dame - Same Ol Dame



Dark Sun Riders - Seeds Of Evolution



Saturday 30 July 2011

Apollo Brown vs Black Milk...

 Apollo Brown:



Apollo Brown and Black Milk are two of my fave producers these days, I have been a fan of both for a number of years, I first heard Black Milk beats in the early 00's and Apollo Brown's beats around about 2008.


Both producers hail from Detroit (stand up) and picked up the torch from the late, great J-Dilla after he sadly passed away in 2006.







both are really dope, craft some great head nodding beats and both are quite prolific in their output, but my question is...who is the doper producer to you and why?

Apollo Brown who is signed to the great Mello Music Group label first emerged on the scene with his dope instrumental LP Skilled Trade in 2007 and then went on to work with and produce and/or remix for the likes of...


Finale
Magestik Legend
Supastition
Elzhi
Past Due
Ro Spit
Rozewood
Paradime
Verbal Kent
Buff 1
Danny Brown
Kenn Starr
Boog Brown
5 Ela (aka 5 Elementz)
Flow 'Etic 
Grap Luva 
Rapper Pooh (Little Brother)
Oddisee
Diamond District
Stik Figa
Declaime
John Robinson
Tranquill
Prince Po
The Regiment




Apollo has since released a slew of dope albums with his trademark soul and blues drenched chops and drums and warm basslines in the past few years...

 
Make Do (2009)
 
The Reset (2010)
 
Boog Brown & Apollo Brown (UPS)-Brown Study (2010)
 
Clouds (2011)
and his group The Left with Journalist 103 and DJ Soko who released the ill Gas Mask LP in 2010.

and the awesome new LP with Hasaan Mackey titled Daily Bread



Black Milk:

Black Milk also gets busy on the mic and produces and first made his impact in 2002 with Ten Speed and Brown Shoe (Milk, Name Tag and Ahk) they appered on Slum Village's Dirty District mixtape LP, Black Milk  was also a part of BR Gunna (Black Milk, Young RJ and Fat Ray) and is also part of super group Random Axe with Sean Price and Guilty Simpson.
Black Milk has gone to produce and/or remix for the likes of...

Buckshot and KRS One
Starang Wondah
Phat Kat
Elzhi
Pharoahoe Monch
Wildchild
Baatin
Strange Fruit Project
GZA
Skyzoo
Guilty Simspon
Torae
Buff 1
Invincible
Finale
Royce Da 5 9
Pumpkinhead
Brookyln Academy
5 Ela
Rustee Jux
Marv Won
aDaD
14KT
Blame One 
Slaughterhouse
Now On
MC Breed (R.I.P.) 
Jack White
 from 2005 onwards Black Milk has released the following...

 
Album Of The Year (2010)
Tronic (2008)
 
By Popular Demand (2007)
 
Calitroit (2008)
 
The Set Up (2009)
 
Sound of The City (2005)


http://www.discogs.com/artist/Black+Milk

 You have seen the impressive resumes of both, so who in your opinion is the dopest of the two?



Peace

Jaz

















Dark Hills Gang - The Broken Church



Airborn Audio - Good Fortune (2005)


When Anti-Pop Consortium split in 2001, a lot of folks cried into their backpacks. After all, this was a group that dismissed both commercial jig and the underground's nostalgia obsession. Their Arrhythmia LP bursted with creativity, and its singularity seemed like it would be difficult to top. Former APC member Beans has since shown flashes (tempted to say, "given whiffs") of creativity in reinventing himself as the underground's ass-shaker eccentric, but Kool Keith still sits comfortably atop that throne. APC's other members, High Priest and M. Sayyid, have made less racket in the interim. Releasing solo singles and two preemptive mixtapes, Priest and Sayyid held steady while preparing their debut as Airborn Audio. With Good Fortune, they return to the more experimental ideas on APC's Tragic Epilogue-- and echo some of that album's monotony.


On the opening moments of "Miami/The Jungle", Sayyid rhymes over a boiling synth bass only to be halted by Priest demanding that he "spit something hotter." Sayyid's response is an interpolation of an old Snoop lyric. That offhanded humor hints at the album's underlying problem: Sayyid and Priest don't sound like they're sure what they're doing. The production is lazy, sounding like A.R.E. Weapons leftovers most of the time. Lyrically, they veer closer to the clichéd topics of hip-hop battle rhyming than the abstract intellectualism of past mindbenders. The hooks also stumble, lacking the originality of APC classics like the absurd "We Kill Soap Scum". Instead, we get, "I'ma fuck you up this year/ Don't come around here," from M. Sayyid on "This Year". Seriously? Can I get a "Silver Heat", please? How about a "MEGA/MEGA/MEGAAAAAA!!!!"? No?


One thing that becomes clear after listening to this LP is Beans was APC's hookman. He may have been a megalomaniacal pain in the ass, but dude stirred the pot. There's not a single moment on Good Fortune that rivals anything that the three together produced on Arrhythmia-- or any of their other material, for that matter. I tried not to compare the two groups, but Priest and Sayyid claim in interviews that Airborn Audio is a continuation of the Anti-Pop movement, a return to form. "Tragic Epilogue '05," says Priest. It's tragic. It's an epilogue. It's 2005. I guess, technically, he was in the pocket.


It's even more frustrating when compared to the material on last year's Close Encounters: The Mixtape, which was supposedly a teaser for the full-length. On the mixtape, the duo sounded hungry, rhyming over noticeably non-APC production. The snippets were bloated with grimy synth-encrusted street beats that borrowed knowingly from everything from Hollertronix to Dipset's anthems. It wasn't abstract. It wasn't groundbreaking. But, it was good. It made me think that Good Fortunewould be an ugly, gritty reclamation of the worldwide underground. Instead, the pressure of resurrecting APC shackled them to a tired sound. Where the low profile of the mixtape allowed them to let loose, the spotlight on the Airborn Audio project over the last year-and-a-half seems to have provoked a backslide.


Here's the deal with taking a step back; you better be damn sure everyone else is still standing where you left them. They're not? Shit. The landscape is not the same as it was when Priest and Sayyid left. Killa Cam spills purple diamonds over opera vocals. Lil' Jon's scoring the apocalypse with terror-synths down in Atlanta. Swishahouse is screwin' and choppin' everything until the streets run red with the 'Tussin. And don't even get started on the juggernaut that is grime. And that's just what's on the radio. Whether hip-hop would sound the way it does today without APC is arguable (probably not), but the APC sound isn't as avant-garde as it was three years ago. And the slight tweaks of that sound on Good Fortune aren't enough to keep pace with current frontrunners. If you want to hear what Airborn Audio might eventually sound like, get the mixtape and maybe Sayyid and Priest's solo 12"s on Sound-Ink. (Pitchfork Review)

TRACKLIST

1 Monday Through Sunday 4:24 
2 Brights Lights 2:39 
3 Miami / The Jungle
Co-producer – Earl Blaize 2:08 
4 Know Who You Are 1:26 
5 Inside The Globe 3:20 
6 Best Shit In The World 3:02 
7 House Of Mirrors 3:27 
8 This Year 3:14 
9 Now I Lay Me Down 3:52 
10 My Eyes 2:49 
11 Wings 3:23 
12 Paradise
Co-producer – Earl Blaize 3:31 
13 Close Your Eyes 2:05 
14 NYC 3:37 
15 Trust Me 0:28


Vex'd - Cloud Seed (2010)


If timing is everything in the business of selling records, then Vex'd might count themselves two of dubstep's most unfortunate men. It may seem a smidge premature to muse underrated or overlooked talents in a genre so youthful, except Cloud Seed—a "lost" second album of sorts—is proof positive that phenomenon already exists in 2010.

Half a decade ago, Vex'd, AKA Jamie Teasdale and Roly Porter, resided in Bristol, pre-dating the city's rise to dubstep pre-eminence. Debut album Degenerate was unleashed on an unsuspecting world in the summer of 2005, back when dubstep reviews routinely arrived with an explanatory genre caveat. A handful of subsequent 12-inches later, the trail went cold, the pair eventually going separate ways.


Comprising a collection of cuts created circa 2006/2007 originally destined for their sophomore album, plus a clutch of remixes, Cloud Seed isn't the follow-up proper thatDegenerate's industrial big bore exhaust explosion demanded. It is, in fact, an entirely different beast; tamed, but in its own standalone context, amongst the most beguiling full-lengths in the broad dubstep bracket since Burial's Untrue.


While Untrue represented the view from a South London nightbus window, Cloud Seed takes the same route through tower blocks and cold concrete ravaged by a chilling nuclear winter, at points orchestral to the point of classically trained compositions. "Remains of the Day" backs that notion early on, an ambient Terminatorfranchise-worthy soundscape as eerie as post-blast wave dust settling. Closing epic "Nails" is a steampunk nightmare machine so invasive that it heightens awareness of the very blood pumping in your veins, apparent black metal-sampling epilogue included. Similarly, there's a tangible malevolence at the heart of "Out of the Hills," riffing off patented space-dub vibrations versus disorientatingly thick weaves of peripheral bass.


It follows that as a retrospective collation that a certain coherency would be lacking, flitting from subtleties to, in the case of "Killing Floor" (Mah Mix)—the original the flip of 2006 single Bombardment of Saturn—tangible links to Degenerate's muscular darkstep. Yet it remains tempting to ponder where Teasdale and Porter would be now if Cloud Seed had emerged immediately after its creation at the height of Burial fever in 2007, or even beaten the anonymous one to the punch. Perhaps it's just as well that it didn't, though: remaining perfectly of the moment three years later, back then chances are that Vex'd would have disappeared over the horizon of dubstep's ever-evolving curve where few ears could keep pace. (RA.REVIEWS)

TRACKLIST

1 Vex'd Feat. Warrior Queen – Take Time Out
Vocals Warrior Queen 5:14 
2 Vex'd – Remains Of The Day 3:55 
3 Vex'd Feat. Anneka – Heart Space
Vocals Anneka 4:51 
4 Vex'd – Out Of The Hills 5:02 
5 Vex'd – Shinju Bridge 1:52 
6 Vex'd – Slug Trawl Depths 1:36 
7 Plaid – Bar Kimura (Jamie Vex'd Remix)
Remix Jamie Vex'd 4:55 
8 Vex'd Feat. Jest – Disposition
Vocals Jest 4:03 
9 John Richards – Suite For Piano & Electronics (Vex'd Remix)
Remix Vex'd 3:50 
10 Vex'd – Killing Floor (MAH Mix) 3:28 
11 Gabriel Prokofiev – String Quartet No.2 (Vex'd Remix)
Remix Vex'd 4:39 
12 Distance – Fallen (Vex'd Remix)
Remix – Vex'd 6:18 
13 Vex'd – Oceans 4:59 
14 Vex'd – Nails 4:43 


Raper Discoteque Style Vol 020

01 - Ultrabeat vs Darren Styles - Sure Feels Good (frisco remix)
02 - Zone Breaker - Wild Nights (flashtune remix)
03 - R Gee vs Tecay - Are U Ready (partyrausch remix)
04 - Bass Up - See Me Now (bass up extented by dj deect)
05 - Klubbingman - Never Stop This Feeling (extended club mix)
06 - Ravers On Dope - Trip 2 Wonderland (bass rockers remix)
07 - Sample Rippers - Kick The Nation
08 - Akon - Smack That (stian k vs banana inc remix)
09 - Floorburner - Kickin Da Base (club mix)
10 - Ultrabeat vs Darren Styles - Sure Feels Good (rezonance q remix)
11 - BaseTime - Colours Of Your Dream (radio mix)
12 - Groove Coverage - Moonlight Shaddow (djdeect 2007 radio mix)
13 - Sample Rippers - Nobody Likes The Records That I Play
14 - Topmodelz - Heartbeat (club mix)
15 - Basslovers United - Insanity (basse creator vs tobb c rmx)
16 - Mo-Do - Eins Zwei Polizei (d-tune 2007 remix)
17 - Starsplash - Princes Of Love (verano promo remix)
18 - Akcent - Phone Sex
19 - Zone Breaker - Wild Nights (original edit)
20 - Ultrabeat vs Darren Styles - Sure Feels Good (alex k remix)