Artist to Watch: Black Cracker

Who:Black Cracker
Location: New York, NY

With a resume as crazy as her spacey, electro-flavored beats, NYC’s Black Cracker is not your average hip-hop producer. The one-time army brat, art-school dropout, and published poet cut her teeth with sisterly avant-pop duo CocoRosie, for whom she produced tracks, DJed, and even provided a little beatboxing. Self-taught and operating out of a grimy basement studio, these days she’s assembling beats for Bunny Rabbit and the Cult of Miracles (with MC Bunny Rabbit), Single White Female (with MC K~Swift), and Light Asylum (with Shannon Funchess of !!!).

Listen: Rahhh – Bunny Rabbit and the Cult of Miracles

Watch: Homemade Music Video by Cracker and Bunny:

black_cracker

Bat For Lashes Two Suns

Three years ago, Bat for Lashes leading lady Natasha Khan entered the scene with the wide-eyed, mystic folk-pop of her debut full-length, Fur & Gold. On her sophomore album, Two Suns, she builds off the organic quality of her earlier work, smartly keeping the drum-circle percussion, cavernous echoes, and sense of mystery. But this time around, she infuses these elements with layers of playful synths and rich, atmospheric samples. Tracks like “Glass” and “Sleep Alone” explore the edge of Khan’s vocal range, her lyrics brimming with tension as she details imagined epic battles. “Daniel” is a bright, catchy, string-tinged pop ballad, while “Two Planets” finds Khan polyrhythmically exploring the cosmos, as she is wont to do.

Gudrun Gut “Apples and Pears”

Monika Enterprise founder Gudrun Gut kicked off 2009 by releasing the digital-only Apples, Pears & Deer in Poland EP, a sampler of electronic compositions that includes two brand-new tracks and one remix by Thomas Fehlmann. Here’s the moody, post-techno title track, of which we showcase a special edit here. If you ever wondered what winter in Berlin sounds like, take a listen.

Apples, Pears & Deer in Poland is out now.

Photo by Malte Ludwigs.

Gudrun Gut – Apples and Pears (Edit)

Craze & Klever Tour, Release New Video

DJs Craze and Klever are known pals, but they also maintain a friendly rivalry where turntable skills are concerned. Klever took the crown at the 2000 DMC USA DJ Championship, only to have Craze turn the tables a few months later at the 2000 DMC World DJ Championship and retain the title as the World DJ Champion. So there isn’t a better pair to show off Native Instruments’ new Traktor Scratch Duo software than these two.

A recent clip appeared on the company’s website, in which Craze and Klever go head-to-head, and though we’re supposed to be admiring the superior interface and top-notch sound quality of the new software, one can’t help but notice the competitive spirit resting in the eyes of the boys as they spin, scratch, and put us novice turntablists to shame.

Craze and Klever will take their friendly rivalry (and fancy new gear, presumably) on the road starting tomorrow. The duo will hit U.S. and Canadian cities, showing off its epic DJ battle in real time.

For music-tech heads and turntable lovers, Traktor Scratch Duo (MSRP: $399) is out now. An overview of the product’s features can be found here. Happy scratching.

Craze and Klever:
04/10 Dallas, TX – The Loft
04/11 Washington, DC – Rock & Roll Hotel
04/16 Chicago, IL – Debonair Social Club
04/17 Indio, CA – Coachella
04/20 Seattle, WA – The War Room
04/21 Whistler, BC – Maxx Fish
04/23 Winnipeg, MB – HiFi
04/24 San Francisco, CA – 111 Minna
04/25 Calgary, AB – HiFi

Craze and Klever Battle on Traktor Scratch Duo:

Toy Selectah Releases Free Album

In his home country of Mexico, Toy Selectah might be best known for heading up the hip-hop group Control Machete, but his musical resume stretches far beyond that. And for anyone reading this who’s been wanting to get their hands on a grip of tropical music, Toy’s latest project, Mex More, should suffice.

The album, which is available through the Mad Decent blog, is a collection of 12 remixes Toy made, including re-workings of Santigold (formerly Santogold), Chromeo, Boys Noize, Devendra Banhart, and Justice. He covers a rather wide range of musical styles here, turning tracks into reggaeton, cumbia, club, and rock numbers, thusly proving his musical chops. Mad Decent is giving the entire thing away as a free download, so get thee to the label’s site right now.

Mex More:
01 The Outfield “Your Love (Mex-More Remix)”
02 Café Tacvba “Volver A Comenzar (Mex-More Refix)”
03 Boys Noise & Feist “My Moon My Man (Raverton Refix)”
04 Devendra Banhart “Carmensita (Raverton Refix)”
05 David Ghetta “Love is Gone (Raverton Remix)”
06 Justice “One MInute Pal Cumbion!!!! (Raverton Refix)”
07 Santogold Feat. Spankrock “Shave It (Cumbia Refix)”
08 Lil Wayne “El Mili (MTY Mex-More Cumbia)”
09 Illya Kuriaki “Jaguar House (20.08 Remix)”
10 Air “Sexy Boy (Raverton Remix)”
11 Chromeo “Fancy Footwork (Raverton Remix)”
12 Human League & Kissy Sell Out “Things that Dreams are Made (Raverton Refix)”
13 Molotov “Bailen El Puto (20.08 Mex-More Refix)”

Bonus
14 Justice “One Minute Pal Puro Cumbion!!!!”
15 Chromeo & TItan “Gina Fancy Montes Footwork”

Nosaj Thing “Coat of Arms”

Nosaj Thing is a name often uttered in the same sentence as Flying Lotus, Daedelus, and Lazer Sword. The L.A.-based producer—who is a key member of his city’s hip-hop-via-IDM-noise scene—will soon release his debut full-length, Drift, on Alpha Pup (who seems to release all those guys’ work). Here he brings us the track “Coat of Arms,” in all its distorted handclap glory.

Drift is out June 9.

Nosaj Thing – Coat of Arms

Podcast 81: Hit the Dancefloor with The Presets

Julian Hamilton and Kim Moyes (otherwise known as The Presets) are currently on North American soil, touring through the likes of Chicago, Atlanta, Vancouver, and Murray, Utah, and where these Australian lads go, the party, undoubtedly, will follow.

Such is the case with the latest installment of the XLR8R Podcast, which Moyes curated for us while reportedly on the tour bus. The sheer number of remixes on the tracklisting should indicate what this mix is about, namely, tearing up the dancefloor in the wee hours, to the sounds of hard-hitting electro, driving techno, and a little minimal thrown in for good measure.

This mix also coincides with the remaining dates in the duo’s afterparty series, in which a post-performance Moyes plays musical host to the late-night partygoers.

Hit the Dancefloor:
01 Dinamics – “Rocco Bis”
02 Moodyman – “Freaky Mother Fucker (Catz n Dogz Remake)”
03 The Golden Filter – “Solid Gold (Clouded Vision Remix)”
04 Actor One – “Popcorn”
05 Guy Gerber and Chaim – “MySpace”
06 Fever Ray – “When I Grow Up (Van River’s Dark Sails On The Horizon Mix)”
07 The Presets – “Anywhere (Still Going! Remix)”
08 Tiga – “Shoes (Green Velvet Remix)”
09 Lutzenkirchen – “All That Jazz (Popof Remix)”
10 Mr Oizo – “Erreur Jean (Arveene and Misk Remix)”
11 Daniele Papini – “Church of Nonsense”
12 Ramon Tapia – “Just Me”
13 Of Montreal – “Gronlandic Edit”

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Photo by Harold David.

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Tiga “Shoes”

Saying you feel like Leonard Cohen if he owned a jet ski doesn’t exactly describe the sound of your music, so when it comes to Ciao!, the latest album from Tiga (who said such a thing—perhaps in jest, perhaps not—in a recent press letter), we’re left to guess at what the Montreal-based producer has in store for the follow-up to 2007’s Sexor. Fortunately, the folks at Last Gang unleashed this track, and the witty, snare-heavy electro number should provide a decent clue. Or you could just dance to it.

Ciao! is out May 19 in digital format and May 26 as a physical release.

Tiga – Shoes

Lady Sovereign Jigsaw

While some of her early singles like “Random” and “Ch-Ching” could be labeled as grime, London’s Lady Sovereign never gained full acceptance from the scene that the media desperately wanted her to be a part of. On her sophomore album, Jigsaw, Sov ignores expectations, only sticking to one constant—making pop-friendly music. The LP is by no means flawless, especially with lazily delivered tracks like the club-targeted “Bang Bang” and “I Got the Goods.” Still, this feisty rhymer embraces her accessible brand of quirkiness on the bouncy, Cure-sampling “So Human” and the reflective hip-hop cut “Guitar.” Even without nailing every number, Lady Sovereign is arguably moving in the right direction.

Carsten Nicolai: Gridlocked

Carsten Nicolai is a co-founder of Raster-Noton Archiv Fur Ton und Nichtton (Raster-Noton Archive for Sound and Non-Sound), the imprint behind the Clear and 20’ to 2000 series. The former was an attempt to release music without anything but the music and the format it was carried on (packaged in clear casings with as little text as possible); the latter compiled a single 20-minute CD each month in the run up to the millennium. Nicolai is also a visual artist, whose sculptures, drawings, and conceptual installations have appeared around the world, including the Venice Biennale and Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie.

His new book, Grid Index, is a “visual dictionary on two dimensional grids and geometric tilings” that lifts inspiration from art, architecture, and scientific papers. Sometimes austere and often beautiful, the collection feels like an “arty” visual counterpart to the minimal electronic music he records under the Noto and alva.noto monikers. We talked with Nicolai about his lexicon of patterns and grid systems, which he describes as a functional tool, reference book, and practical resource.

XLR8R: What do you see as the function of Grid Index?

Carsten Nicolai:Grid Index was produced for myself, as an archive—a source book where I can just go and look when I’m searching for a specific grid for something like an architectural project or for design issues. I thought it should be published because it’s a massive work and a beautiful collection. It’s the first book, as far as I know, that tries to categorize and to make a visual example of grids. I see it as a kind of scientific publication. I hope designers, architects, and mathematicians can get some use out of it as well.

What are you saying or hoping to articulate with the book?

I hope it becomes a foundation. If you need a grid or if you want to know more about grids or make your own grids, you can use things out of this book.

Is Grid Index a design for living? Are such levels of order, regulation, or neatness deliberately reflected elsewhere in your life?

Um, maybe not. It’s really, for me, a tool rather than a design book. It’s maybe a bit confusing because Gestalten publishes many books on the edge of architecture and design and art. I like that it shares all these areas a little bit but it’s much more about being a source, like the tafelwerk we were given at school that had all the logarithm numbers before pocket calculators, all the basic formulas that you needed to calculate things. It’s a dream that everybody would want to have this book on their shelf and use it every day or every week or every month—that it becomes like a school book.

Grid Index is accompanied by a CD of the book’s grids and patterns. What do you hope people will do with these images?

I hope people use it. Copyright is quite flexible in that people can use it for personal use and people can create things. I hope that this CD gives many elements to play with, to start thinking about patterns in a different way, to start a discussion about ideas of patterns, and to be aware more of how we use patterns in our daily life.

You’ve previously worked as a gardener. In what way has this impacted your subsequent work?

I worked as a gardener and studied landscape design, and I think this has been very influential for me. Nature is still a huge, huge inspiration. When you look at Grid Index, you can see that many of these patterns are basically “inside of nature.” Many more complex patterns are in life organizations or inside the organization of lifeforms; they are part of the foundation of our life. Mathematics is basically a part of nature.

Grid Index is out this month via Gestalten.

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