Junk Science Announces Tour Dates

The Vans Warped Tour is often referred to as “punk rock summer camp,” but MC/DJ duo Junk Science is here to ensure a little hip-hop is present in this year’s set of dates. Baje One and Snafu only just wrapped a tour with Del the Funky Homospaien, but the two will head back to the road at the end of this week and somehow find a way to fit in among acts like Against Me! and Reel Big Fish. Also joining the tour’s hip-hop contingent are indie hero Dante.

Dates
06/20 Pomona, CA: Fairplex Park
06/21 San Francisco, CA: Pier 30/32
06/22 Ventura, CA: Seaside Park
06/25 Phoenix, AZ: Cricket Wireless Pavilion
06/26 Las Cruces, NM: New Mexico State University-Intramural Field
06/28 Salt Lake City, UT: Utah State Fair
06/29 Denver, CO: Invesco Field At Mile High
07/01 Maryland Heights, MO: Verizon Wireless Amphitheater St. Louis
07/02 Bonner Springs, KS: Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
07/03 Dallas, TX: Superpages.com Center (form. Smirnoff Music Center)
07/05 Selma, TX: Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
07/06 Houston, TX: Sam Houston Race Park
07/09 Atlanta, GA: Lakewood Exhibition Center
07/10 Orlando, FL: Central Florida Fairgrounds
07/11 Petersburg, FL: Vinoy Park
07/12 Miami, FL: Bicentennial Park
07/13 Elkton, FL: St Johns County Fairgrounds
07/14 Charlotte, NC: Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
07/15 Virginia Beach, VA: Verizon Wireless Amphitheater
07/16 Columbia, MD: Merriweather Post Pavilion
07/17 Cleveland, OH: Time Warner Cable Amphitheater at Tower City

U.S. Presidents Get Their Own Compilation

Third graders will have a new way of memorizing the U.S. presidents come September 9, when Standard Recordings Co unleashes Of Great and Mortal Men: 43 Songs for 43 Presidencies.

The über-conceptual, three-disc release is the brainchild of rockers Christian Kiefer, Martthew Gerken, and Jefferson Pitcher, who, with help from the likes of Xiu Xiu, Wooden Wand, Califone, and others, composed this grip of satirical tracks bearing titles like “George H.W. Bush: It was Foreshadowed Here: The Beginning of the End.”

From a recent press release:

“These songs–poems set to music, really–wittily, and sometimes not entirely politely, take issue with the mythology that those who have previously inhabited the White House (POTUS, as they are referred to today) were something more than human.”

Breaking down said mythology includes a look at the Bush administration, which is tied to “the voracious traditions of the Texas oil ‘bidnes,'” George Washington’s famous dentures made of hippopotamus teeth, and “savage condemnation” for the likes of Andrew Jackson, Ronald Reagan, and Nixon.

Tracklisting
Disc One
01 George Washington: Washington Dreams of the Hippopotamus (Feat. Vince DiFiore of Cake)
02 John Adams: Armed with Only Wit and Vigor and the U.S. Navy (Feat. These United States)
03 Thomas Jefferson: The Mouldboard of Least Resistance
04 James Madison: Zinger
05 James Monroe: The Last Cocked Hat (Feat. Marla Hansen)
06 John Quincy Adams: Death In The Speaker’s Room
07 Andrew Jackson: Benevolence (Feat. Califone)
08 Martin Van Buren: The Little Magician (Feat. Tom Brosseau)
09 William Henry Harrison: So You Don’t Have To
10 John Tyler: Hindsight Falls On Deaf Ears (Feat. Bill Callahan)
11 James Polk: The Other is Better / The Landscape to Transform (Feat. Monahans)
12 Zachary Taylor: Rough and Ready
13 Millard Fillmore: The Proof Is In The Pudding
14 Franklin Pierce: My Only Enemy Is Myself

Disc Two
01 James Buchanan: God Will Strike You Down (Feat. Marla Hansen)
02 Abraham Lincoln: Malice, Charity, And The Oath of God (Feat. James Jackson Toth)
03 Andrew Johnson: Was Ever Alone?
04 Ulysses S. Grant: Helicopters Above Oakland
05 Rutherford B. Hayes: The Beard of God
06 James Garfield: Seven Months
07 Chester Arthur: The Epitome of Dignity
08 Grover Cleveland: Bees And Honey
09 Benjamin Harrison: Kid Gloves Hands Surplus to Big Sugar
10 Grover Cleveland: Rubbermouth
11 William McKinley: Czolgosz’s Dream (Feat. Magnolia Summer)
12 Theodore Roosevelt: The Sherman Act Does Not Care
13 William Howard Taft: There Was No Longer Use To Hide The Fact That It Was Gout (Feat. Marla Hansen)
14 Woodrow Wilson: A Life Among Men (Feat. Jamie Stuart of Xiu Xiu)

Disc Three
01 Warren Harding: An Army Of Pompous Phrases
02 Calvin Coolidge: On Silence (Feat. Radar Bros.)
03 Herbert Hoover: Woe Is A Spoon-Shaped Heart (Feat. Marla Hansen)
04 Franklin D. Roosevelt: Illuminating The Bright Lines
05 Harry S. Truman: Suits And Fine Trousers Vs. Hiroshima (Feat. Denison Witmer)
06 Dwight D. Eisenhower: When Ike Walked The Land (Feat. Alan Sparhawk & Mark Kozelek)
07 John F. Kennedy: There Is No Plan
08 Lyndon B. Johnson: Ladybird Take Me Home (Feat. Steve Dawson)
09 Richard Nixon: 2 Under Par Off The Coast of Africa (Feat. Tom Carter)
10 Gerald Ford: Now You See It, Now You Don’t See It (Feat. Vince DiFiore)
11 Jimmy Carter: A Great Beam of Light (Feat. Rosie Thomas)
12 Ronald Reagan: Such A Marvelous Dream (Feat. Califone)
13 George H.W. Bush: It Was Foreshadowed Here: The Beginning of The End
14 William J. Clinton: The Mighty Lion Will Not Roar Again
15 George W. Bush: Though The Night

MP3: “James Monroe: The Last Cocked Hat” feat. Marla Hansen

Of Great and Mortal Men “James Monroe: The Last Cocked Hat feat. Marla Hansen”

The idea behind Standard Recording Co’s latest release came about due to “February Album Writing Month,” in which songwriters were challenged to create 14 songs in 28 days. Christian Kiefer, Matthew Gerken, and Jefferson Pitcher ended up writing 42, each one dedicated to a U.S. president. When it came time to compile Of Great & Mortal Men: 43 Songs for 43 Presidencies, the only person left to cover was Dubya. The three-disc release sees contributions from Xiu Xiu, Califone, and Wooden Wand, and come January, the boys will compose a tune for our 44th president. Start with this slow, country-flavored number about our fifth president, James Monroe.

Of Great and Mortal Men – James Monroe_The Last Cocked Hat feat. Marla Hansen

Techno Goes to the Olympics

Germany-based Great Stuff Recordings is taking techno into previously uncharted territory on its forthcoming label compilation–namely, the Olympic Summer Games in Beijing.

The double-disc release, simply titled Great Summer Games Stuff, will feature 24 electronic music artists hand-picked from 24 countries participating in the games. Exclusive tracks by everyone from Atomic Hooligan to Iran-born, Berlin-based producer Namito make up the sampler, and though the lineup is diverse, minimal is the main ingredient here.

Great Summer Games Stuff is out July 21. For all the sports-crazy readers out there, the Olympic Games kick off on August 8.

Disc One
01 Makossa & Megablast ft. Kuchok Yoenten – Tibet
02 Amir – Syria
03 Namito – Iran
04 Butch – Turkey
05 Danilo Vigorito – Italy
06 Etienne De Crécy – France
07 Swen Weber – Germany
08 David Amo & Julio Navas – Spain
09 Tomcraft – Bavaria
10 Aldrin & Akien – Singapur
11 Fergie – Ireland
12 Ramon Tapia – Belgium

Disc Two
01 Tokyo Black Star – Japan
02 Rui Da Silva – Portugal
03 Markus Mehta – India
04 Gusgus – Iceland
05 Mihalis Safras – Greece
06 Steve Angello pres. Who’s Who? – Sweden
07 OK Corral – Romania
08 Atomic Hooligan – England
09 Greg Churchill – New Zealand
10 Tommy Trash – Australia
11 Lucca – Czech Republic
12 Lützenkirchen – Cuba

Above: Namito. Photo by Shahrham Jafari.

The Chap “They Have a Name (Atlas Sound Remix)”

The Chap have, according to Ghostly’s site, “never been influenced by anyone or anything at any time, ever,” which makes for a rather diverse group of tracks on the London, U.K.-based band’s forthcoming Mega Breakfast release. For “They Have a Name,” Bradford Cox and his Atlas Sound crew throw in yet another layer of eclecticism with a remix that doesn’t so much rearrange the parts of the original as capture the essence of it in a very different sounding track. The trippy drum machines have been slowed down, the vocals have been snipped out, and something that sounds akin to an 8-bit xylophone gives the new version that sweet, ambient feel present in most of Atlas Sound’s music.

The Chap – They Have a Name (Atlas Sound Remix)

Various DJ Yoda: Fabriclive 39

Shoving opposites like Ice Cube, Minnie Riperton, Violent Femmes, and Bell Biv Devoe into the same room spells out potential carnage. Yet, London’s DJ Yoda makes peace and he even warms the heart. Early on, Yoda scratches up the dum-dum, dum-dum beats on the Femmes’ “Blister in the Sun” and later runs through a keen, circa-1991 junior-high dance mix of BBD, Run DMC, and Salt-n-Pepa. There’s also a marching-band rendition of “Sexual Healing” and a sharp grime/dubstep clash courtesy of Wiley and Skream. But the charmer is the sing-along finale of Lord Kitchener’s classic calypso ode to West Indian immigrants, “London Is the Place for Me.”

MC Zulu and Kush Arora “Lose Control”

Most people would rather forget the taunting and name-calling they experienced during adolescence, but not Dominique Rowland. After moving to a mostly white neighborhood in Chicago as a school child, Rowland heard some ignorant classmates call him “Zulu.” Rather than try to avoid the name, he embraced it, and also took inspiration from the Zulu freedom fighters of South Africa and Afrika Bambaataa’s Zulu Nation. These days, Rowland uses the moniker to perform as of the hottest ragga MCs in the U.S. This track is a collaboration with San Francisco-based bhangra-ragga DJ Kush Arora. Wyatt Williams

To read more about MC Zulu download a pdf of XLR8R 118.

MC Zulu – Lose Control

Booka Shade The Sun and the Neon Light

It’s almost too perfect that Berlin’s Booka Shade included a track called “Comacabana” on this latest outing–you could just as easily doze off to these jams as freak out. The album’s split personality has everything to do with the overall sound, which wraps every wash and click into a pleasant, straight-lined cleanliness. But rather than come off as overtly sterile, tracks like “Duke” don’t so much flaunt obsessive details as bask in thoughtful, warm craftsmanship. Unfortunately, the flipside to that approach is that sometimes The Sun verges into coffee-table territory, asserting a level of refinement that seems at odds with the (supposed) goal.

C.R.A.C.: Lo-Fi Pop Rock

Rappers Blu and Ta’Raach are the type of guys who make random demands–like asking me to put the names of actresses Monica Belucci and Kerry Washington somewhere in this article. In all caps. Without any preface. And as C.R.A.C.–pronounced “crass,” because, well, “That’s what the music is, that’s what we are,” says Ta’Raach–they’re less concerned with talking about music than they are about breakfast cereals. However, the Southern California-based twosome is thoughtful enough to issue their listeners this disclaimer: “There’s a lot of curse words from me personally [on our debut album, The Piece Talks],” warns producer/MC Ta’Raach. “And a lot more from me,” adds Blu, who was praised by various hip-hop websites as rap’s 2007 rookie of the year.

On The Piece Talks, Ta’Raach–who was known as Lacks, a member of J. Dilla’s Detroit camp, before migrating westward–crafts leftfield beats for himself and Blu to drop distorted soul rhymes over. And like Jaylib, that other influential L.A.-Detroit duo, C.R.A.C. (an acronym for Collect Respect Anna Check) transcends rap mediocrity. In fact, if you ask them, they don’t even make hip-hop. “Hip-hop is forever, but let’s give birth to something else,” says Ta’Raach.

Self-identified as “lo-fi pop rock,” the duo’s music deftly defies genre classifications. At times, C.R.A.C. can be straightforward, with gritty beats, pounding percussion, and raw rhymes on tracks like “Respect” and “Major Way.” But, like a paranoid schizophrenic, the album doesn’t sit still; Ta’Raach takes different directions with each track, his layered instrumentals typically clocking in at a little over two minutes a pop. The lead single, a rousing and infectious curveball entitled “Buy Me Lunch,” features vocals from Noni Lamar over a bubbly, ’60s acoustic-pop motif. Blu and Ta’Raach don’t spit a single bar on the song, yet the few words they shout on the hook sum up what C.R.A.C. is all about, for better or worse: “Let’s play! Get paid! Don’t be fucking sensitive! And don’t be gay!

“Most rappers are either really happy being rich and they talk about it all the time, or they’re broke and they talk about it all the time,” Ta’Raach explains.

According to Ta’Raach, the album’s been done since 2005 but the industry’s stalemate halted its release. “The industry is broke, going through a collapse with digital marketing, digital distribution,” he explains. “It was hard for us to find a proper home. Blu did his record [Below the Heavens, with producer Exile]. I did a producer record [Fevers, which featured Blu on three tracks]. Someone hollered at us about it.”

The rest, as they say, is history. But as for the duo’s future, one can only guess. “I’m down to see what happens,” says Ta’Raach. “I just want people to listen to the record. We got more work [to do]. I was watching an interview with Russell Simmons, and he was like, ‘Yo, I just like to serve.’ I’m here to serve. I rap. I make beats. We serve the community.”

MP3: “Buy Me Lunch”

Page 2919 of 3781
1 2,917 2,918 2,919 2,920 2,921 3,781