Kikumoto Allstars House Music

Thank goodness for truth in advertising—the album is called House Music, and it is house music, ’80s acid house to be exact. This sharply, tightly produced album was even made with analog synths and drum machines. “Take you back to ’86,” goes part of “I’ll Make You Jack,” and “I pledge allegiance to the house groove,” notes the coolly possessed female vocals on “Still Can’t Stop the House.” So why bother picking up this album by the Allstars (a.k.a. DJ/Producer Cam Farrar)? After all, this isn’t new ground—but as a loving homage, it’s not only spot on, it’s also fun in its own right. ’86, yeah, but a little ’09, too.

Tanya Morgan: Hip-Hop Fantasy Land

A none-too-girly trio gives birth to a hip-hop fantasy world.

“There’s a quirky kind of edge to us,” says Von Pea, offering his best explanation for Tanya Morgan‘s self-created mythology. Take the group’s name; seemingly devised on a whim, it refers to a woman that doesn’t exist. The three say they hail from Brooklynati; much like William Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha County, it’s an imaginary hometown that pays homage to the group’s dual stomping grounds of Brooklyn and Cincinnati. At their website, brooklynati.com, a hip-hop geek’s fantasy is brought to glorious life, with mythical locales such as Yancey Park, Questo’s Instrument Shop, and Tiggalo’s House of Worship.

Brooklynati, the group’s new album, arrives three years after their 2006 debut, Moonlighting. On that first release, Von Pea, Donwill, and Ilyas drew effusive praise from the OkayPlayer crowd for their zippy, off-the-cuff rhymes; their unpretentious approach to hip-hop seemed to capture the art form’s playfully musical essence. But Moonlighting sold fewer copies than expected as Loud Minority Media’s then-distributor, onetime Bay Area rap giant ABB Records, folded. Loud Minority has since re-organized under a new name, Interdependent Media, giving Tanya Morgan a real shot at indie rap fame.

On Brooklynati, co-produced by Von Pea and beat-maker Brickbeats, the group tries to fulfill that promise with lush hip-hop soul and cameos from Phonte, Blu, and many others. “Moonlighting was essentially the demo tape that got us a record deal to make Brooklynati,” says Donwill, who explains that Tanya Morgan worked on Brooklynati for three years. Instead of relying on first-take vocals, the group re-recorded tracks to draw out their best performances. “We employed a technique that a lot of rock artists use—and I don’t know if rap artists do it like that—[where] we went in and re-did all the songs, because we understood that this was a time capsule.” He compares the process to “having
a baby.”

Brooklynati contains excellent nerd-rap fiction—one of the album’s highlights stars “Hardcore Gentlemen,” a made-up group that mimics the overwrought growling of early ’90s horrorcore acts—and plenty of real-life drama, with rhymes about surviving as starving artists (“Plan B”) and arguing with flaky concert promoters over money (“Don’t U Holla”). Tanya Morgan still performs the crazy freestyle sessions that made Moonlighting so great: Check “Never Secondary,” a cipher with their Lessondary crew. But the group’s zany, freewheeling spirit seems more tempered this time around, perhaps a result of seeing the industry as insiders instead of, as Ilyas puts it, “from the outside looking in.”

“Conceptually, this album is about life,” he says. “When you listen to the songs, there’s a lot of narrative—like, ‘What if I didn’t have a record deal?,’ or ‘These promoters are shady,’ or even, like, ‘Now that we put out an album, you’re [automatically] going to want another album because the internet is so saturated with music.’ It’s about life in 2010.”

MP3: “So Damn Down”

Gravious “Jupiter Jazz”

One of Highpoint Lowlife’s latest releases comes courtesy of Alastair Jackson, otherwise known as Gravious. Under the guise, Jackson makes some very fresh, forward-thinking dubstep influenced as much by Aphex Twin as it is by Digital Mystikz, and his Futurist EP has been making the blogwaves of late. Check this wobbly dub-tech number off the release.

Gravious – Jupiter Jazz

Stream: Mark Pritchard and Om’Mas Keith

Hyperdub‘s next release comes courtesy of electronic music producer Mark Pritchard (of Jedi Knights and Harmonic 313 fame), and he’s teamed up with none other than SA-RA Creative Partners’ Om’Mas Keith for the occasion.

The two met while working at the Red Bull Music Academy last year in Spain, and the resulting single, “Wind it Up,” is one of the wobbliest dubstep-meets-synth-hop amalgamations this side of Flying Lotus.

The single is out July 20, in vinyl and digital formats. In the meantime, listen to the title track here.

“Wind it Up”
A Wind it Up
B1 Wind it Up (Freak Mix)
B2 Wind it Up (Instr Mix)

wind

Major Lazer Gets iPhone App

Several weeks of hype later, Major Lazer‘s album Guns Don’t Kill People, Lazers Do is available for purchase. Now, here comes the iPhone app.

Downtown Records and iZotope have created a little something called iDrum, which lets users remix tracks from the album via our iPhones and iPods. Ten customizable kits include elements from the album, which can be remixed and recorded by a mere touch of the screen. Should be useful when warding offvampires and zombies.

The app is available right now via iTunes. Seen?

Blaq Poet “Ain’t Nuttin’ Changed (Queensbridge to California Remix)”

Queensbridge MC Blaq Poet went bi-costal with this remix (the original of which appears on The Blaqprint) when he enlisted L.A.-based rhyme slingers MC Eiht and Young Malay to contribute. The latter two rap some brand new verses for the track, while the beats, courtesy of DJ Premiere, remain firmly intact.

The Blaqprint will drop June 30 on Year Round.

Blaq Poet – Aint Nuttin Changed Feat MC Eiht and Malay (Remix)

Artist to Watch: Ghosts on Tape

Who:Ghosts on Tape
Where: San Francisco, CA

The past year or so has seen the term “tropical bass” increasingly bandied about, but few artists encapsulate the idea like Ghosts on Tape. Using only a pair of antiquated samplers with beats stored on floppy disks, St. Louis transplant Ryan Merry concocts a raw, speaker-blowing mix of electro, grime, dancehall, reggaeton, and more. Mary Anne Hobbs recently tapped him for an exclusive mix on her BBC radio show, and his debut Predator Mode EP is slated to drop soon on Glasgow’s Wireblock label.

Listen: “Omar K (Ghosts on Tape Remix)”

Listen: “Sunchips (Ghosts on Tape Remix)”

sunchips

omar

Lindstrøm & Prins Thomas II

The venerated Norwegian pair of Hans-Peter Lindstrøm and Thomas M. Hermansen (Prins Thomas) has knocked out deadly remixes and epic-length DJ sets together for six years, but with II, their second proper album following a 2006 self-titled full-length, they’ve split open and brilliantly rearranged their cerebral, cloud-hopping aesthetic into a rougher, delightfully haphazard shape. II’s eight discrete parts, spread over 99 tracks, manage to shift gears radically yet gracefully between the stardust-spangled chug of “For Ett Slikk Og Ingenting” and the vibraphone-laden post-rock textures found on “Skal Vi Proeve Naa?,” also making time for space disco sheen on “Rett Paa” and “Rothaus.” Although it’s much more of a headphone phenomenon than L&PT’s past works, II provides plenty of its own special thrills.

Party out of Bounds: Thunderheist

Global party professionals tell you the best places to get buck wild.

It’s common knowledge that the best way to experience a city is to have a local take you around. And since our summer party schedule sees us touching down in some pretty exotic locations, we decided to ring up a few fearless natives to see where they hang out. In Helsinki, Finland, we tapped the renaissance men of the Top Billin crew—DJ/producers, label owners, promoters, bloggers, and all around wild and crazy guys—to take us to rockabilly barbershops and afterhours bars. Isis and Grahmzilla of tropical club-rap phenoms Thunderheist show us the best shops and oxtail-eatin’ on Toronto’s Queen Street West before we head south to heat up the parks and food stalls of Buenos Aires with cumbia nueva crew Zizek. And just when you think you’ve seen all NYC has to offer, DJ and dairy lover Derek Plaslaiko gives you a tour of the city’s secret techno hotspots, with a side of mozzarella. Vivian Host and Ken Taylor. Photos May Troung.

Thunderheist
Toronto, Canada
Graham and Isis, Big Dada’s totally tropical duo, take us on a caffeine-fueled tour of Toronto’s Queen Street West.

Swan Restaurant, 892 Queen St. West
Graham: This place serves a mean coffee and also has some super-rad food. Only problem is that it only holds about 20 people, so it’s really hard to get a seat.

Carte Blanche, 758 Queen St. West
Isis: On the pricey side, but $300 later, you walk out looking good.

Trinity Bellwoods Park, 1053 Dundas St. West
Isis: The perfect place for chilling in the summer—just watch out for the dog poop and crazy people.

The Drake Hotel, 1150 Queen St. West
Graham: I love this place for two reasons: it’s my morning cappuccino spot, and I have a DJ residency in the basement called Nonstop, which is usually a blast and we bring in all kinds of good DJs from abroad.

Rotate This, 801 Queen St. West
Graham: One of the best record shops in the city for new and old vinyl. I try to make a point to go once a week and buy something new. I have a renewed love for vinyl since I got a portable Vestax turntable and put it in the kitchen. Cooking is an art, and having a soundtrack for each meal is where it’s at!

GANDHI, 554 Queen St. West
Graham: Love the roti. Hate the post-roti burn. Definitely do not order the spicy roti!

Vintage 69, 1100 Queen St. West
Isis: The best place to get vintage stuff in Toronto. Awesome staff, and a must-see for vintage connoisseurs.

City Center City Center

This new project from former Saturday Looks Good To Me honcho Fred Thomas takes more than a few moves from the Panda Bear playbook. This may sound alright in theory, but in practice Thomas seems to be writing against his own strengths throughout much of the album. Middle track “Bleed Blood” is especially weak, as the looped samples knock the melodies off center rather than buoying them. That some of these sounds seem to be little more than decent approximations of Person Pitch’s key phrases isn’t as distracting as the sense that the music is struggling to work its way into a productive tension.

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