Take Off EP was the beginning of a Grime Take Over, January 30th will see the release of the much anticipated sophomore effort, The Second Six.

January 30th 2012 sees the highly anticipated release of Faze Miyake’s triumphant follow up to 2011’s Take Off EP, The Second Six. In the eight months since the release of his first official EP on his own imprint, Woofer Music, twenty two year old Faze Miyake has scored the single for the Lord of The Mics 3 CD/DVD release, remixed Magnetic Man and P-Money’s Anthemic, produced Kozzie’s single I’m Famous, and continues to exceed all expectation in his role as in house producer for Grime collective FT (Family Tree).

Since releasing the Take Off EP, Faze Miyake’s raw, undiluted, barbaric style of Grime has caused quite a stir, not only in Grime ciphers where MCs would throw the gauntlet against one another in a battle of punch lines and technical prowess, but on the dance floor, where the Woofer epidemic spread immensely, causing revellers to sound cries of Woofers from out of the strobe lit darkness of hot overcrowded nightclubs nationwide.

The Second Six is the second batch of instrumentals featuring Faze’s signature sound; hard hitting drum rhythms and deep heavy bass, perfect ingredients to soundtrack legendary MCs battles and for DJs to play out in the clubs to keep the revellers happy. All six tracks have been played by a select few of Grime’s elite DJs and will be available to buy digitally from iTunes, Amazon, and Bandcamp.

Tracklist

  1. Tom & Jerry
  2. Boom
  3. Milkshake
  4. Take Off V.I.P
  5. Splurt Diablo – Bang
  6. Bang Bang

Email | @FazeMiyake | SoundCloud | Bandcamp | Facebook

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About Khalid Golding

Creative Writer and Blogger.

3 Responses »

  1. [...] The first collaboration, Suspect, sees Spyro join forces with Grime’s new producer on the block, Faze Miyake to create a bridge between their two distinct Grime styles. The second collaboration is between Sir [...]

  2. [...] Straight out the mean streets of Lewisham, Merky Ace is fast becoming a force to be reckoned with. Representing the infamous Grime collective Family Tree alongside MCs; M.I.K, TKO, Ego, Shif Man and producer Faze Miyake, Eff Tizzy further demonstrates why Merky seems to be the ace in the pack. Whether it’s the signature Family Tree flow or the barrage of cheeky audacious punchlines, there’s no question of a doubt that Merky continues to go from strength to strength as a Grime artist. Bursting onto my radar in May 2011 when I heard ‘Shutdown‘, Merky’s characteristically cheeky flows were quite undeniable but it weren’t until he slaughtered the ‘dude from the Birmingham‘ on Lord of The Mic Vol. 3, in December 2011, that the masses began to recognise him as a future Grime God. Fast forward seven months and Family Tree have slipped into the place BBK used to be in ’07/’08, everyone seems to have digested and regurgitated the Family Tree style of rap whilst producers, old and new, continue to emulate Faze Miyake. [...]

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