CTM documents Berlin’s annual Club Transmediale festival of experimental music, and some of the ancient sounds found herein manage to achieve a grace that no laptop or damaged guitar can touch. The string solo on “Atabat,” by Syrian classical masters The Omar Souleyman Band, has a taunting trickster’s voice in its bewitching chords, which were perhaps just as arresting centuries ago as they are today. Some standouts include O.S.T.’s haunting string drones on “Synken,” Frivolous’ ring-a-ding-ding microhouse, and Like a Tim’s spaced-out Atari 5200 acid-techno. But at times, the kitchen-sink eclecticism leaves an uneven mess, and a glib and skuzzy death-metal and noisecore element vandalizes CTM.
Mist:ical The Eleventh Hour

The moment you hear MC DRS ask “Is drum & bass in its final hour?” on this disc’s title track, it becomes obvious that what will follow isn’t going to be your typical album. As longtime fixtures within the drum & bass community, Mist:ical (a.k.a. Marcus Intalex, Calibre, and ST:Files) could have easily produced a risk-free record that stayed neatly within the lines. Instead they throw down the gauntlet to a scene that has lost its risk-taking spirit, with guest performances from DRS, Robert Owens, Ras-T-Weed, and the legendary Diane Charlemagne.
Floor Kids
Knife
Lily Allen Tours States

Lily Allen once again reminded the world that MySpace is a money-making machine: She posted a few tracks, put up a pastel background, donned a pair of big frame glasses, and like magic, the record labels began vying for her pop-meets-dub rich girl talents. She’s also had those nasty celebrity bashing moments caught by the media, but I digress. In spite of her likely fate in the bargain bin alongside countless Grime compilations, Ms. Allen is ready to party and talk shit throughout her headlining US tour.
Concert goers are not the only ones to be graced by her presence. Those interested, up early, or up late can check her out on the “Today Show” (April 13) or “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” (April 16).
Tour Dates
03/14 Austin, TX: Stubb’s BBQ
03/15 Austin, TX: Waterloo Record Store
03/16 Houston, TX: Engine Room
03/17 New Orleans, LA: House of Blues
03/19 Atlanta, GA: The Loft
03/20 Ft. Lauderdale, FL: Culture Room
03/23 Mexico City, MX: Salon 21
03/26 Seattle, WA: Showbox
03/27 Vancouver, BC: House of Blues
03/28 Portland, OR: Aladdin Theatre
03/30 San Diego, CA: House of Blues
04/01 Sacramento, CA: The Crest Theatre
04/02 San Francisco, CA: The Fillmore
04/05 Toronto, ON: Phoenix Concert Theatre
04/06 Montreal, QC: Club Soda
04/07 Boston, MA: The Roxy
04/08 Washington, DC: 9.30 Club
04/10Philadelphia, PA: Electric Factory
04/11 New York, NY: Irving Plaza
04/14 Los Angeles, CA: Gibson Amphitheatre
04/29 Indio, CA: Coachella Festival
06/25 Manchester, TN: Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival
EL-P: A Scanner, Darkly
It seems a lifetime ago. Destruction screaming through the air, deep into the city, smashing into the skyline’s metal-and-glass spines. The nation cocooning into fear, paranoia, and delusion, succumbing to hallucinations of wholeness via consumerism, a population drugged to grab the party line and move to the front of the checkout line. As if nothing ever happened.
And did it? In the blink of a disastrous new millennium, time stopped and reversed, rewinding to hide in corrupt churches, lucrative invasions, self-indulgent tax cuts. The invisible gears of America’s massive multiplayer façade continued to turn, cracking bodies and shattering minds and trying to make everything break for good.
Jaime Meline, known to the world as El-P, saw it all happen and he couldn’t take it. In 2002, he went on the offensive, fighting against the fictions with Fantastic Damage, an album whose shotgun sonics were matched only by the seething vitriol of his informed lyricism. “Deep Space 9mm,” a syncopated rejection of the previous millennium’s optimism, envisioned America as a new Rome. “Stepfather Factory” soundtracked a fatherless future where children obsess over useless products, mothers are raped and forgotten, and deliverance comes via mass-produced automatons fueled by alcohol and violence.
But El-P’s bracing truth was too much for people. All Music Guide called the album full of “paranoid totalitarian nightmares”–after 9/11, no less. Rolling Stone gave him high marks for sound but short shrift for subject matter, accusing him of “swinging wildly” with “inscrutable rhymes.” Fantastic Damage survived as a potent underground must-have, but the rest of the culture imbibed the more accessible emo-rage of another white rapper named Eminem. If you ask El-P, the narcotizing is still in effect.
Mad World
“Where are the angry records?” Meline asks me over the phone, sounding like he’s trying to kill off the last vestiges of a cold. “I’m fucking angry and upset right now, and I’m also scared and trying to come to grips with balancing this incredible fatalism and the fact that I am still alive, that I am still here. We’re not dead yet, but even the violent records aren’t angry these days. And that shit fucking annoys me.”
At least Meline is doing his part to change that. I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead (Definitive Jux), his hard-hitting follow-up to Fantastic Damage, is easily as loud, angry, and dystopian as its immortal predecessor, if not more so. It packs years of post-9/11 turmoil tightly into 13 acidic tracks. As a testament to El-P’s growing stature and relevance, it features a guest sheet that’s longer than the memories of most Americans, including cameos from Mars Volta’s Omar Rodriguez-Lopez and Cedric Bixler-Zavala, Cat Power’s Chan Marshall, TV on the Radio’s Tunde Adebimpe, even Nine Inch Nails’ architect Trent Reznor, as well as the usual cast of characters from Definitive Jux like Aesop Rock and Mr. Lif. But their voices are all practically unrecognizable, pounded down into El-P’s muscular mixes of noise and poetry that dizzyingly defy convention.
“Someone who listened to the new record said something that made a lot of sense to me,” he explains. “It was this: Your musical background will dictate how you hear this record. If you’re a hip-hop head, you’ll hear hip-hop. If you’re a rock head, you’ll hear that too. To me, it’s all hip-hop, but it’s everything else too. I don’t really fucking care anymore, you know? I really don’t, man. Where I’m trying to go with music, and the influences I have’ just want to mash it all together and rebuild it. Make it coherent.”
Dark Meat
Coherence is on parade here, but so is overwhelming density; each track is soaked with satire, allusion, political fury, and cacophony. “Tasmanian Pain Coaster” lifts a conversation between the doomed Laura Palmer and friend Donna Hayward from David Lynch’s disturbing film Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, while “Smithereens (Stop Cryin)” uses the original Star Trek‘s red alert alarm as a tracking tempo as El-P comes out swinging against a “world of super-duper whores.” “Drive” situates four-plus minutes of laconic sociopolitical commentary in a matrix of automotive metaphor, slamming Hummers and Pimp My Ride samples into an apocalyptic highway for El-P to drive down spitting lines like “my generation is carpooling with doom and disease.”
“There’s a lot of metaphor in that song,” El-P confides, “and some of it I want to just let people unlock. I will say that I really spent a lot of time trying to streamline my writing. But it’s a general way of saying that there is dread around the corner, and I think a lot of people are ignoring it.”
War Stories
But few tracks from Fantastic Damage–or Funcrusher Plus, his classic with Company Flow, for that matter–are as personal and devastating as twin stars “Habeas Corpses (Draconian Love)” and “The Overly Dramatic Truth.” “Habeas Corpses” is a dystopian sci-fi slice of heartbreak about an executioner’s love for the woman he is charged to kill: “I’ll tell her she’s innocent and she’ll show me she’s not/I kiss the number on her arm then lay her on the cot/I’m the first to touch her without gloves on/She’s the first to kiss me without crying/Life before her was just dying/Me and prisoner two-four-seven-two-nine-zero-zed/Away from all this violence live inside each other’s heads.” It hurts to listen to it, especially when you see the photo El-P posted on his blog next to its lyrics: A lone Iraqi woman in a burqa carrying groceries down a destroyed street while an American soldier points a rifle at her from a distance.
And then there is the confessional pain of “The Overly Dramatic Truth,” which El-P wrote about a relationship that went awry because the woman in question was too young, too naïve, and too trusting in a world where all she sees is “living forever” while all he sees is “war.”
“I think my man Cage said it best,” El-P reminisces. “‘Pain, suffering, confusion, love, happiness? That’s college for writers.’ This is what we pull from. It’s hard. That song was not easy for me to put on the album. It’s a pretty revealing song, you know? And I’m always struggling with that: How much do you reveal, how much do you hide? I decided early on in my career that I was just going to reveal everything. I’m not going to do it halfway. I’m not going to write this song and not really go there.” He pauses. “I just think that’s the only way to do it. No guts no glory, basically.”
“The Overly Dramatic Truth” is Jaime Meline at his all-time greatest, opening his own wounds and corruption and letting everyone see the wreckage. Its steady stream of lyrical oppositions and juxtapositions are immediate and visceral; lines like “You think I’m a genius/I know I’m a whore” and “You’re too young to ask out loud/I’m too old and I know that” slowly strip layers from this onion, powered by a descending keyboard progression and dramatic sexual language that is anything but titillating. It might be the most honest, harrowing relationship song written this century.
“It’s really about being in a relationship with someone who has fallen hard for you and, although you care for them, you’re not really in love with them,” he elaborates. “And you’re faced with the fact that every moment you’re in their company they are falling deeper and you are setting them up for a bigger fall. I just kind of felt dark about it, because I felt like I knew myself much more than she knew herself, knew that I was weak enough to let her dig her own grave. It’s definitely bigger than the specific incident in my life that triggered that song, but it also definitely came from somewhere very personal.”
Duty Calls
As philosophers and artists have shown throughout the ages, the personal and political are the inextricable yin and yang of human experience. That illuminating schema informs the stellar artistic production of El-P’s career better than anything else. When the dust of his dusted generation settles, his output will stand as the uncompromising work of an artist who did not shy away from throwing everything he had into everything he did. Even if that meant excavating his own naked nerves and wounds.
“That’s our fucking job [as artists],” he exclaims. “You get the bullshit filtration of experience from the rest of the world. I think motherfuckers need to act like the records they are making are the last ones they will ever make. And that’s the only thing in my mind while I’m making my own.”
Under the Influence
Decoding El-P’s favorite sources of inspiration.
Sci-Fi
El-P has a taste for speculative narrative. “Habeas Corpses” name-drops dystopian flick Soylent Green, while riffing on the totalitarian futures envisaged in George Orwell’s 1984 and George Lucas’ THX-1138. His love of Philip K. Dick plays out in songs like “Constellation Funk.” That said, El-P was no fan of Richard Linklater’s animated version of Dick’s A Scanner Darkly. “Hated it.” Too much Keanu? “Fuck him.”
Comics
“Watchmen was my shit,” says El-P. Alan Moore’s epochal graphic novel, perhaps hitting the big screen by election year 2008, changed the comics game forever–and its ending was a violent holocaust in Manhattan. El-P also morphed the title of Moore’s League of Extraordinary Gentlemen for his new song “League of Extraordinary Nobodies.”
Fringe Politics
Tracks like “Drive” are as infused with metaphor about global warming and peak oil as MTV and dumbass rappers. “Global peak oil sort of sent me into a panic attack for about a year once I started researching it,” he says. “When I started peeping what people were really saying about what it would mean and how it would affect us, it fucked me up.”
Comedy
El-P is a dark dude, but not without a sense of humor. On “Deep Space 9mm,” he apes Phil Hartman’s “Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer” from Saturday Night Live. Before the defiant “Smithereens (Stop Cryin)” begins, he says “Cue the dramatic intro machine!” “The League of Extraordinary Nobodies” uses a laugh track as a backing track. After the serious-as-cancer “Habeas Corpses (Draconian Love),” his crew erupts in laughter.
Now Playing At Peepshow: Mark Rubenstein

XLR8R‘s latest Peepshow features photographer Mark Rubenstein‘s three-year long project Common Place, a three-part series that, in his words, “unfolds to tell the story of one’s own personal evolution.” The photos here capture the subjects’ physical changes, introspection, and even a little surrealism.
See it now, only at Peepshow.
Nublu Orchestra Nublu Orchestra Conducted by Butch Morris

If Nublu Orchestra sounds like a bunch of musicians were tossed into a room and told to start playing… well, maybe that’s what happened. Composed of members from a range of bands (from Brazilian Girls to Forro in the Dark), Nublu merges blippy electronics with improv jazz (the real stuff, not diluted) with instruments and melodies surfacing and receding. The result can be overly intellectual (their bio includes a long-winded explanation of Butch Morris’ “conduction”), but when it comes together, as on “Here Comes the Man,” it sounds beautifully unrestrained and genuinely new.
Various Artists FabricLive 33: Spank Rock

Spank Rock’s edition of the now-famed FabricLive series is fine, fortified junk food for the soul. The B-More crew typically delivers hip-hop that sounds like it’s powered by stolen streetlight electricity. This DJ mix enters an alternate universe where yuppie-rock classics by Yes and The Romantics click into post-DFA grooves and ride alongside reminders that electroclash didn’t always curse the earth it walked upon (i.e. Miss Kittin’s “Stock Exchange Woman”). The sleaze element is ripe here, but the impromptu raps that call for sing-alongs or brag about being badass sometimes upset the mix’s flow: Such a sin befouls Kano’s Italo-disco classic “I’m Ready.” Otherwise, drink deep and don’t drive.
Nomadic Wax Travels to The Depths of Dakar

The compilation African Underground: The Depths of Dakar furthers Brooklyn label Nomadic Wax’s mission statement of uncovering, recording, and distributing new talent from Africa, but to catalog the disc as a mere label sampler would be misleading. Released in conjunction with the label’s Democracy in Dakar documentary (co-produced with partners Sol Productions), Depths of Dakar acts as both a study of hip-hop’s influence on Senegalese politics and a mouthpiece for the people.
Despite notable media sources, such as the BBC, upholding it as one of Africa’s model nations, Senegal has experienced rampant poverty and unemployment within its borders. Thousands risk their lives every year taking dangerous boat journeys to Spain’s Canary Islands, seeking better lives. Freedom of speech is, according to many, becoming a rare commodity, with radio stations and journalists being harassed and sometimes harmed for their “biased” viewpoints.
Music is no exception. Hardly the American stuff of bling bling, Senegalese hip-hop might be seen as a cathartic means for the country’s youth to express the state of their country–and the dangers that rise with voicing such opinions.
“Rap music in Senegal is no game,” says Nomadic Wax founder Ben Herson, who makes periodic trips back to the country seeking new talent. “[The artists] have been threatened, beaten up, and censored, yet they continue to speak for the people and get their voice heard. The Democracy in Dakar project is all about providing a platform for people worldwide to hear the story straight from the source.”
With that in mind, Herson, along with partner-in-crime Dan Cantor, set up shop in the capital city in 2003 to capture that story. The two constructed a temporary studio in Dakar and opened its doors to anyone willing to drop by and pick up a mic. “Keeping things open like this has allowed me to discover some incredible talent that many in Senegal had not had the opportunity to discover,” explains Herson. “Rather than take artists out of their element we bring the studio directly to them, in an environment they are most comfortable in.”
The result of such “guerilla-style” recording is a selection of rising stars, established artists, and unknowns spitting sharp lyrics over tightly arranged beats that demonstrate both the politics of hip-hop in Senegal and the country’s rich musical tradition. “We want our audience to get the clearest picture possible of what these artists are going through,” says Herson, “and the hardships that rappers in Senegal face to get their music out.”
Depths of Dakar is out May 15, 2007 on Nomadic Wax.
Listen to Sen Kumpa’s “Niawal,” from the compilation, available now at XLR8R’s Downloads Section.
Tracklisting
1. Sen Kumpa “Niawal”
2. Pato “Keep It Real”
3. Zoo Squad “Fresh Time pt 1”
4. Foumlade “sing With Us feat. Bag Blin D”
5. Nightmare “Geble Night in Blue feat. Yella”
6. Adama “Aduna Bi”
7. Omzo “Goor Yombul”
8. Jojo “All I Want feat. Gofu (Yat Fu)”
9. Zoo Squad “Fresh Time pt 2”
10. Fatim “Real Woman”
11. Tigrim Bi “Hip-Hop”
12. Omzo “Li Guen pt 2”

