Pedestrian Dissects N.W.A.

America, your Gs are middle-aged. And they’ve long since followed the vapor trail of white flight far from the block. Strange, isn’t it, that in claiming Compton they were propelled from the flatlands to the hills, to tax brackets unheard of in South Central L.A.? And more, it was by reppin’ Compton so hard that they found their way through the sunny vocabulary of pop to the profane shadows of language as it’s actually spoken.

The soul of N.W.A. is the word “fuck,” and it’s more than apparent than ever on the 20th anniversary re-release of their seminal Straight Outta Compton. Rap was born anew in 1988, amid the ruins of The Fat Boys, and its first mutterings followed from terribly perfect phrases like “Word to the motherfucker,” “Fuck the po-lice,” and “Let me tell you mothafuckers who you fuckin’ with.” With Ice Cube’s “fuck,” the Hays Code, which lingered in the psyches of record labels 30-some years after it withered in Hollywood, was overruled. Sure, “fuck” was uttered by mumble-mouthed Schooly D., image-conscious Ice-T, and single-minded 2 Live Crew, but it was N.W.A. that cleared the fields on which a half million Parental Advisory stickers flowered, and N.W.A. who introduced into vestigially Victorian suburbs the play of the foul.

A violent boy band, N.W.A. had the matching costumes of an R&B quartet, but theirs were from an L.A. swap meet–this was convict chic, anti-flash flash with an occasional staginess that somehow underscored their authenticity; there’s something that seems real about tackiness. How else to explain the terrorizing effect of Cube’s famously furrowed brow, framed as it was by glittering, girlish Jheri curls?

What was striking about N.W.A. in ’88 was that they parlayed their denim ordinariness into spotlit spectacle. They rapped in the boastful key of young men everywhere. They lit up kitchen-sink realism with the blunt glamour of adolescent male fantasy, and it is an injustice, of course, to hold a young man to his word. Perhaps the unsentimental innocence–yes, innocence–of N.W.A. was some large measure of their charm.

Gangsta rap has matured since ’88–see Scarface or U.G.K.–but it could not have done so without its childhood in Compton, a photo album which rests on the coffee table of this album. Nietzsche wrote, “A man’s maturity consists in having found again the seriousness one had as a child at play.” Why not freeze the moment in stone? I see four monumental statues in a loose quartet: Dre standing off to one side in calculating approval, Cube’s incisors clenching his bottom lip, Ren letting a short breath escape, and Eazy screwing up his face for a cold plosive “ck.” And at last, the mouthing of “fuck” is given its duly heroic scale.

Brandon Best records as Pedestrian for anticon.

Top 10: Dizzee Rascal, Matthew Dear

Dizzee Rascal
Maths + English
Definitive Jux
Release Date: April 29

Okay, it wasn’t necessarily a foregone conclusion that Dizzee’s follow-up to Showtime would be an all-out success, but I had a pretty good feeling about the album the moment it was announced. Maths & English finds the MC once again rapping about the grim realities of life in the urban U.K. (which, if you know England, can often go beyond bleak) while a torrent of beats pound in the background. “It’s easily Dizzee’s most upfront and accessible record to date,” states his press kit. I concur.

Pwrfl Power
Pwrfl Power
Slender Means Society
Release Date: March 3

The name may sound like it’s the guise of a pale European who makes dark techno, but Pwrfl Power is actually the project of Japanese architect and calligrapher Kazutaka Nomura. Dance music this is not. Nomura crafts gorgeous acoustic ballads that sound akin to Beach House, but he juxtaposes this sincerity with ridiculous lyrics and hilarious song titles like “My Bird is Dead” and “Let Me Teach You How to Hold Chopsticks.” About time we got someone with talent who doesn’t take himself too seriously.

Wolfkin
Brand New Pants
Crunch Frog
Release Date: March 11

Lars Vognstrup and Kristian Godtfredsen are the new authority on tongue-in-cheek humor… and weirdness. Their debut album is equal parts psychedelic, Sinatra, Zappa, Americana, crude as hell, and obsessed with adult themes. Though the tracks can veer towards the abstract, this one could easily be thrown on the stereo for an impromptu dance session at your next house party. At the very least, it would run the annoying hipsters right out of the building.

The Epochs
The Epochs
Self-released
Release Date: Out Now

As much as I love The Klaxons, it’s time for them to step aside and make way for these Brooklyn indie poppers. Their self-titled album does what the aforementioned new ravers did when they married electronic rave sensibility with rock music, but The Epochs don’t stop there. Big guitars give way to beats that sound like they were made by Dntel, crazy freak-outs pause for poignant songwriting, and from track to track the album has more energy than a pack of kids decked out in Technicolor hoodies circa 2006.

Mochipet
Microphonepet
Daly City
Release Date: April 1

The Bay Area’s nuttiest beatmaker–Taiwan-born David Wang–has turned hip-hop inside-out again. Lots of artists mash up genres. Few do it with the precision and skill Wang displays here, as he drops glitch, dubstep, funk, jazz, hip-hop, and Afrobeat over his frantic drum programming and sharp-as-a-knife lyrics. For the album, he has amassed a collection of some of the Bay Area’s finest talent including Casual & Opio (Hieroglyphics), Rasshan (Crown City Rockers), Mykah9 (Freestyle Fellowship), Dopestyle (Kutmaster Kurt), and others, whose versatile styles further enhance the tracks.

Food For Animals
Belly
Hoss
Release Date: Out Now

If you prefer your beats to be of a darker, grittier variety, try the debut album from Washington, DC crew Food For Animals. Producer Ricky Rabbit experiments with a number of styles here–everything from abstract hip-hop to Baltimore club beats–but the production maintains a rumbling, distorted, often suspenseful feel that is echoed in the lyrics and Vulture V’s rapping. The dude just sounds mean when he’s on the mic, which is great for the album, but I definitely wouldn’t want to meet him in a dark alley.

The Hundred Days
EP
Self-released
Release Date: Out now

Good rock music is as rare a commodity as good house music these days, so when a friend tipped me off to this San Francisco-based band, I was thrilled to find a traditional, four-piece outfit that actually moved me. This EP, which has been out a little while now, is a fine collection of songs that musically makes the head nod and lyrically tugs at the heartstrings, but what really carries these tracks–as well as the ones on the band’s 2006 self-titled full-length–is vocalist Jon Smith’s voice, which seems as much an instrument itself as the guitars, bass, and drums.

Stryke
Twigs EP
Droid
Release Date: March 2008

Speaking of good techno, this is one for the record bag (okay, fine, your Serato collection), with dizzying synth loops throughout the tracks, start-and-stop tempos, and, of course, the good old-fashioined hand clap. Midwest-based producer Dustin Zahn lends his skills for a remix of the title track, stripping it down to an even more minimal format and adding just the right amount of reverb.

Matthew Dear
“Don’t Go This Way”
Download here

“Free track” used to mean free crap, but not so much anymore. Matthew Dear is the latest artist to prove that, with this free download. “Don’t Go This Way” was taken from Dear’s Asa Breed recording sessions, and while it definitely has the feel of that album, this track stands apart, with its bouncy, hypnotic bassline, punchy synths, and spooky voiceover. (Image credit: Doug Coombe)

XLR8R TV!
Watch it here

Last night, the XLR8R crew celebrated one year of XLR8R TV episodes. Over the last several months, the weekly show has captured Devin the Dude singing Randy Travis, performance tips from Simian Mobile Disco, and go-cart races with Modeselektor, and it’s all online for you to see. “XLR8R TV is to this millennium what Jesus Christ was to the last one,” show producer Kerry McLaughlin noted this morning, upon which she stuffed another few saltine crackers in her mouth in an effort to rid herself of a hangover. (Which didn’t work.)

Photo of Mochipet by Alexander Warnow.

Last Week’s Top Ten

Born Ruffians Red Yellow Blue

After the brief taste of 2006’s Hummingbird EP, the anticipation has been brewing for Red Yellow Blue, the debut from Toronto’s Born Ruffians. Mostly comprised of guitar, bass, and drums, the trio takes simple guitar pop and makes it awesome again. Aided by Animal Collective/Panda Bear producer Rusty Santos, the perky rock n’ roll is as warm-sounding as it is irresistible. The title track offers some gentle guitars before “Barnacle Goose” knocks out some crazy-catchy gang vocals and “In a Mirror” builds to an uplifting finale. Somehow this sounds like The Strokes, Grizzly Bear, and Rites of Spring all at once, and it’s completely addictive.

Bicycle Film Festival 2008 Announced

Continuing its seeming quest of world domination, the Bicycle Film Festival crew gears up for another international tour of artists, musicians, filmmakers, and all things bicycle-centric, set to kick off this spring in New York.

The 2008 edition will feature filmmakers Kalim Armstrong, Massimo Giommi, Colby Elrick, Colin Arlen, and David Rowe, with pieces concerning everything from DKNY bikes at fashion week to Japanese races. For those who still want to submit a film, head to the festivals’ website for the guidelines. Entries will be accepted until March 7.

Confirmed Cities
New York (May)
Los Angeles (June)
Paris (July)
Chicago (August)
Minneapolis (August)
Toronto (August)
Portland (September)
San Francisco (September)
Vienna (October)
London (October)
Milano (October)
Roma (November)
Barcelona (November)
Tokyo (December)
Sydney (December)

Hamburger Eyes Likes It Raw

Over the past seven years, Hamburger Eyes has been publishing the freshest photo zine around. Its distinctive, street-level point-of-view and sense of humor has helped it evolve from a photocopied pamphlet made by a few friends to a beautifully produced hardcover book filled with renowned contributors from all over the world. We catch up with founders Ray Potes and Stefan Simikich, and contributors Ted Pushinsky and Michael Jang, as the crew sets up for the book’s release party.

Coming Soon
XLR8R TV‘s Vivian Host sees the future of fashion in Las Vegas.

Astonish From Now Until Forever

Astonish, the newest member of Chicago’s Molemen crew, has confidence to spare on his reliable debut. The MC may be getting a bit ahead of himself by claiming to be the “rookie of the year” on this EP, but his self-assurance is often warranted. When not spitting unwavering braggadocio in his Opio-like flow (“The Interview,” “Microphone Check”), Astonish is convincingly able to tap into his everyday struggles with lines like “Still the type that got a job/But nothing to show for it” (from “Problems”). And the sample-heavy beats from his Molemen crewmates Panik and PNS, and others like Ozone routinely match the MC’s verbal potency.

Guilty Simpson Ode To the Ghetto

Guilty Simpson–like Phat Kat and other venerable Detroit MCs–hasn’t received much love from the industry until recently. But a little late support is better than none, as Guilty uses his Stones Throw debut to showcase his slow, well-pronounced flow and telling, thug-leaning raps. Even though this MC’s delivery isn’t all that hard-hitting, his words stick with you. Without glorifying the crime life, Guilty tells it like it is with lines like, “I don’t recommend it/But I choose to pack guns” (from the Madlib-produced banger “The Future”). Guilty isn’t all about the glocks and stick-ups, though. In fact, the realm of relationship rhymes is visited on occasion (“I Must Love You”) with surprisingly forthrightness. But regardless of the subject matter, Guilty manages to keep everyone listening. And the progressive yet accessible beats from Mr. Porter, Madlib, and select others often add to the replay value.

Huoratron “Dollar Dollar Troopers”

On the hyped-up New Judas label comes Huoratron, a Finnish version of Boys Noize or Justice. For me, even better than the great original is the slightly more club-friendly Lars Moston and Duncan Whitely remix. Sounds like you’re play an old-school videogame over a pumpin’ beat. Listen to the breakdown, where it culminates in double-time gabba armageddon. Mayhem!

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