Daedelus “For Whithered Friends”

XLR8R cover star Daedelus just sent this one over, and as it usually happens with his tracks, we can’t stop listening to it. “For Whithered Friends” is a reworking of the title track from Fairweather Friends, his Ninja Tune EP from last year. Daedelus has always given off the positive vibes, but this track finds the artist in an extra-good mood, and the cheer should rub off pretty quickly. Props to him for rhyming the words “restitution” and “confusion.” Read more about Daedelus in Issue 120 of XLR8R. Photo by Ye Rin Mok

Deadelus – For Withered Friends

Pon Di Wire: Eek-A-Mouse, Mavado

Pon Di Wire would like to extend condolences to reggae DJ Spragga Benz, whose 17-year old son, Carlton “Carlie” Grant, Jr., was fatally shot by police. Sources say that Spragga’s son was with a friend when Kingston police stopped the pair. One of the men pulled out a gun and fired at police, who returned fire. Grant was taken to the Kingston Public Hospital where he was pronounced dead. Benz was out of the country at the time.

Eek-A-Mouse was arrested in North Carolina last week and charged with drug possession and rape. The DJ (real name Ripton Hylton) posted bail and continues his U.S. summer tour dates. The charges are being disputed, after facts emerged that an undercover cop may have entrapped the entertainer.

Bounty Killer was ordered to pay a $5000 fine this week for using indecent language at Reggae Sumfest in Montego Bay this past July.

Bounty Killer and Upliftment Jamaica’s Gary Foster co-present the Saddle to The East 2k8 charity concert October 18 in St. Thomas, Jamaica. In addition to Bounty, the event will feature Sizzla, Mavado, Busy Signal, Serani, Bling Dawg, Wayne Marshall, Bugle, Voice Mail, Assassin, Kiprich, and Tony Matterhorn. According to the event’s press release, the moderately priced show gives less fortunate populations the opportunity to see the biggest and best names in Jamaican music. Proceeds are donated to schools and charities in the country’s inner-city communities.

40,000 fans crammed Yokohama stadium in Japan on Saturday, August 16, for the county’s major summer reggae event. Headlined by Japan’s world-champion Mighty Crown sound system, the concert also featured Mr. Vegas, who told OutARoad.com that it was the largest crowd he’d ever played, before adding, “Japanese fans have a committed love of reggae dancehall music, making this opportunity more than worthwhile.”

Beenie Man spoke to the BBC radio personality Chris Goldfinger during a recent stop in Spain. The artist, whose real name is Moses Davis, talked about a paternity case involving a British woman and said that the U.K. government is requiring him to pay child support. Davis, a father of seven in Jamaica, acknowledged that the British child is his, and is negotiating the amount he agrees to pay.

Mavado will return to the U.S. to perform for the first time in six months. The DJ is confirmed to play Sunday, August 31 at IRIE Jamboree at Roy Wilkins Park, Queens N.Y. “IRIE Jamboree will give me the perfect opportunity to reach thousands of my fans one time,” commented Mavado.

A grand event commemorating Jamaican National Hero Marcus Garvey’s 121st birthday was put last week by the St Ann-based Irie FM radio station. The event featured performances by Dean Fraser, Cherry Natural, Queen Ifrika, Etana, Tony Rebel, Tarrus Riley. and dub poet and radio host Mutabaruka.

Boston filmmaker Generoso Fierro, who debuted his documentary, Lynn Taitt: Rocksteady, at Jamaica’s first Reggae Film Festival this past February, has announced that his next film will be about ska pioneer Derrick Morgan.

Meanwhile, U.S.-based Jamaican actor Orville Matherson is shooting a feature film highlighting dancehall culture’s positive side. Saving Grace is about a substitute teacher who has to raise $100,000 for his mother’s brain surgery and enters a dance contest. Jamaican groups Black Blingaz and Sample Six are helping to teach the cast the latest dancehall moves.

Beres Hammond’s new album, A Moment in Time (VP), was released digitally on August 19, and is out on CD/DVD on October 14. Beres’ daughter, Nastassja Hammond, shares production credits on the jazzy, bass-driven title track. Hammond’s American tour continues in September, with dates in Atlanta, New Orleans, New Haven, New York, and Washington DC.

The Specials bassist Sir Horance Gentlemen has a new limited edition single titled “Goa Blues,” available from Rockers Revolt. Gentleman (Horace Panter) has played with Specials, General Public, and Rankin Roger over his three-decade career.

Dancehall Top Ten Singles
1. Elephant Man “Nuh Linga” (Board House)
2. Elephant Man “Gully Creepa” (Seanizzle)
3. Beenie Man “Gimmi Likkle” (Born So)
4. Serani “Stinking Rich” (Daseca)
5. Konshens “Winner” (Natural Bridge/Cash Flow)
6. Assassin “Dem Nuh Want Nuh Gal” (Board House)
7. Andrew & Wada Blood “Hustle” (Fire Links)
8. Flippa Mafia “Dem Yah & Dem Yah” (Board House)
9. Vybz Kartel “Trailer Load of Money (Adidjaheim)
10. Mavado “Inna Di Car Back” (Big Ship)

Photo of Mavado by Martei Korley.

Asthmatic Kitty Drops Free Albums

Asthmatic Kitty just announced the release of two albums that are absolutely free, available as full downloads or for streaming via the label’s site.

The first comes from ghetto folkster Grampall Jookabox, whose Rill Bruh EP contains several remixes and outtakes from the sessions that led up to the release of his upcoming Ropechain album.

The second freebie arrives courtesy of Chris Schlarb, a.k.a. I Heart Lung, who enlisted his favorite hip-hop producers and experimental and ambient artists to remix his Interoceans album. Los Angeles is well represented here, with Awol One, Bizzart, Express Fresh, and others making appearances.

Rill Bruh
01 The Girl Ain’t Preggers
02 Ponta (Deppchef Remix)
03 Peace Attack
04 Air Penance
05 That Steamboat Gothic Stomp
06 Tic Tac Sumac (Future Rapper/ Liz Janes Remix)
07 Bad Wis My ‘Sploder
08 That Steamboat Gothic Stomp (Ero Remix)

Interoceans Remixed
01 Interoceans I (Self Says Remix with Express Fresh)
02 Interoceans II (Jel Remix with Awol One and Serengeti)
03 Interoceans III (Ellul Remix with Radioinactive)
04 Interoceans IV (Omid Remix with Gajah and Bizzart)
05 Interoceans I (Sugarghost Remix)
06 Interoceans II (Strategy Remix)
07 Interoceans III (Badun Remix)
08 Interoceans IV (Greg Davis Remix)

Photo of Chris Schlarb by Adriana Lucero.

Illa J “We Here”

It seems fitting, given that the late J Dilla was considered one of the foremost veterans of the Detroit hip-hop scene, that “We Here,” the first single to drop from his little brother’s Illa J‘s Yancey Boys album, is a tribute to the city itself. Laid over a previously unheard Dilla track, the cut features Illa J’s soulful voice trading raps with Guilty Simpson, who stopped by to guest on the new album. The beats here have literally gone untouched for over a decade, and the presence of Dilla is strong here. Photo by iNickel.

Illa J – We Here

Labels We Love 2008: Runners Up

If you’re reading XLR8R you probably already own ’nuff albums on XL or Domino, Def Jux and Lex artists have repeatedly rocked your headphones, and you know what’s coming out on Minus or Stones Throw before we do. So this year–our seventh time loving on labels–we focus on labels we’ve (mostly) never quizzed before. For the final installment of this series, we look at ten labels we’ll be keeping an ear on in the year to come. Vivian Host and Ken Taylor

Almost Gold
The name’s not shy, and the music’s not either. Catchy dance rock from Walter Meego and Does It Offend You, Yeah?, revisionist Brit pop from Black Kids, and the summer-fun stylings of Peter Bjorn and John.

Anticpate
Drum & bass dudes turned minimal techno heads Ezekiel Honig and Morgan Packard head up this thoughtful label, where ambient and electro-acoustic experimentation from the likes of Klimek, Sawako, and Nicola Ratti is paired with equally cerebral and pretty packaging.

Asthmatic Kitty
Since 1999, this eclectic indie has been exploring the outer edges of guitar rock, from My Brightest Diamond’s and Sufjan Stevens’ conceptual folk to the showtunes-inspired noise of Cryptacize.

Creaked
Lausanne, Switzerland’s experimental outpost has been around since 2004, but started to make serious noise late last year with challenging weirdo-pop from Starting Teeth, Larytta, and Mochipet.

Downtown
An independent with distro from Warner, Downtown is quickly proving former Virgin A&R man Josh Deutsch’s keen eye for future pop–the roster includes Santogold, Gnarls Barkley, Spank Rock, and Justice.

Koch
There’s some corny crap on this huge indie-label conglomerate, but Koch’s distribution allows indie hip-hop labels (Babygrande, No Limit, D-Block) and artists (Keak Da Sneak, C-Murder) to get their shine.

Made To Play
Jesse Rose’s love song to stripped ‘n’ bumpy house is growing by leaps and bounds, with fidgety, cheeky, and loopy 4/4 coming from artists Trevor Loveys, Oliver $, and Elon.

Ostgut Ton
The head-twisting sounds of Berlin’s Panoramabar/Berghain club can be found here, as residents MyMy, Ben Klock, Cassy, and Marcel Dettmann show the world how tweaky, up-all-night tech is done.

Permanent Vacation
Not the Aerosmith album, but a new-ish label from Munich! Space divas Sally Shapiro and Kathy Diamond and S.F. trio 40 Thieves are receiving rave reviews from scene stalwarts Tim Sweeney and Todd Terje.

Unruly
This Charm City family remains at the forefront of the raw, bouncy, break-driven B-more club genre, with classic artists (Rod Lee, KW Griff) and future stars like King Tutt and Say Wut?.

Cakebuilder “Mohyla”

Angry dubstep meets sweet melodies on this track from Winnipeg, CA-based breakcore master Jeremy Pillipow, who makes sinister tunes under his Cakebuilder guise. There’s something cinematic to the quality of the music here, with light orchestral arrangements laid over relentless beats and basslines, a combination fit for a car chase scene, or perhaps a really fucked up horror flick. The cut is off Pillipow’s second release for Ad Noiseam, a four track EP that bears the comforting title of Feed the Worms.

Cakebuilder – Mohyla

Woodhands “I Wasn’t Made For Fighting”

Toronto, ON-based duo Woodhands is all about the keytar and drum sound, which music heads will be able to hear for themselves today, as the group’s album, Heart Attack, has just been released. They’ve remixed Sally Shapiro, shared the stage with like-minded acts such as Crystal Castles, and this track is a whirlwind of synths and beats, singing that borders on screaming at certain points, and, of course, the good old-fashioned hand claps.

Meanwhile, pick up Heart Attack today and stay tuned for news on the remix EP, as well as a Stateside tour.

Woodhands – I Wasn’t Made For Fighting 1

Justice Wants Your Photos for New Album

Justice has just announced details of its next release, A Cross the Universe, and the boys are getting the fans involved for this one. The duo put out a call via MySpace, asking people to submit photos of them, the best of which will be included in the booklet set to be packaged with the new album. Those in possession of awesome photos should send material to [email protected].

Also to be included with the new tracks is a documentary, a live set, and the music videos for “Stress,” “D.A.N.C.E.,” and “DVNO.” November is the projected release date for the whole deal.

Photo by Cesar Sebastian.

Mikix The Cat “Freeze (Kanji Kinetic Remix)”

Last time we heard from the Trouble & Bass crew, they were making a left turn and pushing the gentle, melodic strains of Little Jinder, proving there was more to the New York-based collective than dirty bass bangers. Well that’s all fine and good, but few bomb the dancefloors the way this group does, and they’ve returned to dropping heavy hitting tracks with a cut from Mikix the Cat. Suffice to say, your speakers will rumble with this one, which is off the Freeze EP, set for release on September 16.

Mikix The Cat – Freeze (Kanji Kinetic Remix)

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