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Up In The Ear meet K.Flay (Exclusive Video Interview)

My penchant for females in hip-hop has spiralled out of control over the past year. 2011 didn’t just see Nicki collaborating on loads of artist’s tracks or like, wrenching out Lil’ Kim’s dusty weave. We saw Kreayshawn’s Gucci Gucci video go viral (not to everyone’s taste and I’m not sure what I can say that is positive about V-Nasty), we saw Iggy Azalea sport most of American Apparel’s spandex range and her and A$AP hooking up. Harlem badass Azealia Banks signed with Universal (but sadly did not score it with Interpol front man Paul Banks after her cutesy cover of Slow Hands…). I think at some point some British girls did some cool stuff for rap (anyone…?) but all the while Brooklyn-dwelling K.Flay (real name Kristine Flaherty) was hanging out being awesome and rapping over a bunch of cool beats she’d produced in relative obscurity. But it’s very likely that 2012 Is going to be her year.

Over from the states to record her first full-length, we meet with K.Flay in Sarm Studios after navigating our way from Ladbroke Grove underground in the pissing, pouring rain. Arriving early we dry off in the reception area, awaiting our invitation to studio 4. Promptly we’re led up the spiral staircase and ushered in to meet K.Flay.

K’s petite and full of energy, welcoming us in with a smile. Dressed in leggings, a slouchy tee, high tops with the laces loose, her hair is shoulder-length, side-parted and a little disheveled; she spends the interview mussing it about intermittently in an animated fashion. She’s full of this sort of effervescence that’s bubbling under the whole time, and immediately totally engaged when we start chatting. While we set up, she bounces about the studio before flopping onto a sofa, momentarily glued to her iPhone, thumbs going light speed crazy. She explains her addiction; Scramble With Friends. I express my reluctance at downloading the game because of the pressure – I’m perfectly content ducking in and out of Words With Friends at a leisurely pace – but K is a bit more hardcore with her gaming habits, telling us about a particular girl she has a fierce rivalry with on Scramble. “Or I think she’s a girl, her name on it’s like, ‘lady-something’!” she laughs at the veritable battle of words she’s having with a total stranger.

Hailing from Wilmette, Illinois (just north of downtown Chicago), K relocated to Stanford University to pursue a double major in sociology and psychology in sunny California where there was a “really interesting hip hop scene in the San Francisco bay area, there was all this hyphy music, like E-40, Mistah F.A.B, Turf Talk and all those guys, so like really weird and playful and eccentric rap.” With no musical upbringing (“I could play guitar as a kid but that was about it”) her initial foray into recording came about in a rather unorthodox manner; “I was talking with a friend of mine about mainstream hip hop and rap at the time and how a lot of it felt really formulaic and we were just kind of going back and forth talking about it, and he was like, “well you should make a rap song” so I did, pretty much as a joke-“ she laughs, “and it was horrible!”

Of her prank, K muses “There was something really fun about the process, about making a beat, recording something, and then it, like, existing. One thing led to another and “I started getting into production and I got a keyboard, started making beats and started playing house and frat parties on campus but I was still super serious about school. It was actually a really cool release for me.” She goes on “It was something that had nothing to do with anything I was studying, and something I had no expectation at being good at, and nobody else had an expectation of me so it was like, this really liberating thing to do. Then I just sort of got more and more serious, a couple of people in the Bay area in San Francisco who are further along, like other artists took me under their wing a bit, and like, mentored me and after graduating I started playing a lot of shows in the area.


”

The music K grew up listening to does not instantly lend itself to hip hop, but as she reels off names it’s evident where she has taken inspiration from in her own recordings, “I listened to a lot of like, depressed female vocalists… A lot of Liz Phair, Fiona Apple, PJ Harvey, Garbage… So kind of that rock girl, pissed off, “I’m angry too!” kinda thing. One of my top albums ever is Metric’s second album  ’Live It Out, I love Emily Hanes and I love Metric and I just like that they’re a band I feel has very interesting lyrical content with like, kinda cool but still very appealing music.” She grins “I was listening to it the other day walking to the studio!”

And for hip hop? “I’ve always been a huge Tribe [A Tribe Called Quest] fan and there is some stuff from that era that I kinda love. I think a lot of the Outkast stuff was pretty influential for me just because it’s weird and freaky… It has a very distinctive flavour even though that flavour is like, always changing, their albums are very different one to the next.
”

What female artists have influenced K? “I think Robyn’s a really interesting case study” wasn’t the answer I’d expected, but she goes on, “She’s sort of developed her own lane in a lot of respects, and she’s been doing music and been around for quite some time with just like, her.” Listening to some of the mixtapes K’s produced it’s actually not difficult to draw parallels between the two artists; K is absolutely doing her own thing and the way in which she combines cute synthy bits with lyrics about loneliness and confusing boys is very Robyn. “There’s something really compelling about her and her vibe, she’s just kind of a badass which I like and she’s just in her lane doing whatever, for the sake of the music and being creative and doing what she wants to do. I think that’s really cool, I’d love to be able to have that sort of energy.” The next evening K plays a show in Kensington’s Archangel; she really doesn’t have to fret about energy levels.

Describing her song writing process, she grins “I usually start a song with some kind of loop, usually like a sixteen bar drum loop, basic synth line, or little riff or whatever, that’s how I start, instead of with a lyric, and I kinda put it on repeat for like, a really long time.” At this point she laughs “It’s annoying for anyone around me… I just get a vibe. I think what’s nice about that, is because I’m creating the music to begin with it feels like it kind of co-evolves you know, as the lyrics change, I can be like, oh the beat shouldn’t be like that it should be this. I just kind of practice over and over again and try to find a rhythmic flow that sounds cool over it, and try to do something different I haven’t done before.”

Of her live set-up K explains “My live show, I run Ableton Live, we’re kind of looking at my live set-up now”, she gestures at the equipment in front of her “I use this Akai MPK 25 pretty much as my midi-controller for everything. I compose most of my stuff on [Apple] Logic and [M-Audio] ProTools, I like Logic for midi. I’m trying to get a little more into Ableton Live for production rather than just for the live show, but I feel a little crazy with it, and I just love it for on-the-fly kind of stuff, but I think it’s cool to add those little modulation things into a recording so that’s kind of what I am using it for.”

Before we have to leave for a further flurry of interviews K.Flay has penciled in for the day (and of course, recording), we speak briefly about her thoughts on being a female in the music industry. Does K feel a pressure to look, dress, act a certain way? “I think in pop music generally speaking there is this kind of hyper-sexualisation. I think for women, a lot, you either exist on one extreme end of the spectrum, like very hyper-sexualised or just totally not. I do think there’s a void somewhere in the middle, I feel like I want to fill that void. I know that for a lot of young girls, like I’m talking about growing up, talking about rock girls, there was that kind of aesthetic, you know, someone who was sort of a badass but wasn’t necessarily super sexualised. Even talking about Garbage or Shirley Manson, there’s a place for it in hip hop. She grins, “I do think there’s room for that, and for me it’s not a fabricated identity, it’s about who I am and what I’m about naturally. I don’t feel a tonne of pressure, I just would like for that to exist.”

K.Flay’s Eyes Shut EP is available for free download on her website KFLAY.COM and for other recommended listening, check out YouTube for her tracks Less Than Zero, Doctor Don’t Know and also her Gucci Gucci remix (she eats a lot of hamburgers in the video for the latter!).

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3 Reasons Why You Should Listen To Quadron

Quadron are a Danish duo consisting of vocalist Coco O. and multi-instrumentalist/producer Robin Hannibal. The pair were introduced by a mutual friend and decided to name themselves Quadron as a respectful nod to their heritages being 1/4 black. Their sound is a mixture of folk, soul, pop, and electronic music. What makes Quadron stand out from the pack is their subtle and often sparse productions, each song giving Coco’s vocals and Robin’s instrumentalism room to combine and shine alone.

It all began with a 104rog remix of Average Fruit…

I discovered Quadron through a Seattle producer called 104rog who had remixed their single Average Fruit. After hearing and listening to this remix countless times, I embarked on a research mission to find out what their music sounded like and discovered they were also two members of the Boom Clap Bachelors. Since discovering their self titled debut ‘Quadron’, it’s been on loop. It’s addictive, thought provoking and calming. Listening to this album allowed my thoughts to manifest and run rampant without keeping track of time, nor the amount of times I had listened to the album over and over again.

A Game of Comparison.

Coco O. is [ridiculously] skilled when it comes to throwing down vocals, as Robin Hannibal is with the instrumentation. She bends with the wind, moulding herself to all aspects of Robin’s compositions, creating the perfect musical partnership. Coco’s voice is far from Florence Welch‘s (Florence and The Machine) level of overbearing and sometimes gaudy tonality, it’s light years away from Beyonce Knowles‘ vocal and star spangled showboating, and much less troubled with pain riddled vulgarity of a smokey, untamed, and bastardised style of Amy Winehouse.

Coco’s vocals are understated, humble, subtle, and endearing, directly reflected by the soundscape painted by her partner in crime, Robin Hannibal. The two combine to become the sweet whispers from your star crossed lover whilst wrapped in the confines of your duvet on a cold winter night, staring up at a blanket of stars through the skylight window in your loft converted bedroom. [Descriptive cringe overload.]

Favourite Track: 09. Far Cry

This is a dark spiral of pleasant melancholia which captures all manner of melodramatic sentiments. I haven’t heard such a haunting, emotive, and near tear jerking track do it so subtly. At times it can be an uncomfortable listen but that’s what has you coming back for more. The vocal pauses lead the way for contemplative breaks, where the melodic loop of instrumentation allows you to dig up, digest, and deal with all the emotional turmoil of last seasons broken heart, which had been long buried and forgotten. It’s beautiful and cringe inducing, it lightheartedly expresses the darkness of waking up to nothing the day after. Robin’s instrumentation provide a warm reassuring embrace to Coco’s cries of despair.

Facebook | Website | @QuadronMusic | @PlugResearch | Buy Album

Izzy Toshi

Introducing #1 – Izzy Toshi aka Magik Skillz (Producer/Beatsmith)

Izzy Toshi a.k.a Magik Skillz is a producer/beatsmith from North London. I caught up with him in the midst of a major studio overhaul, a busy production and studio session schedule to talk all manner of things from rebranding himself Izzy Toshi to improvisation and musical infusion.

Izzy Toshi is a befitting name to this artist because his real name is Israel Omotosho, he’s a self taught pianist who was born and raised in Nigeria before moving to North London at the tender age of six. Izzy recalls that his first experiences of London were shock because London was densely populated, ‘They live too close together’, as opposed to back home where there was a fair amount of space between neighbours. A man of very few words, Izzy Toshi is a humble observer who chooses to express himself through music. I thought he’d object to becoming Izzy Toshi but once I explained to him that for a production and skill set so eclectic, he needed a name that would not only stand out but represent himself, his family and cultural history.

Facebook | @MagikSkillz

I met Izzy while studying a Fda Popular Musician degree at British Academy of New Music in London, where alumni include chart toppers Rita Ora and Ed Sheeran, so I’ve seen the progression in sound and skillset. He’s produced and remixed for UK artists Kasha Rae, Kristina Shashina, Tyme‘s Money and a whole host of artists from the African diaspora. He’s dabbled in a variety of genres across the musical spectrum from Afrobeat to Rap, House, R&B and Pop. Izzy Toshi is someone who stays open to experimentation so if your looking for a producer, remixer and beatsmith/collaborator, look no further.

Ghost.

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Lana Del Rey – Born To Die (Long Overdue Review)

Lana’s a hottie. Lana’s got a nostalgic and cinematic voice. Lana hooked up with the right producer for the album. Lana’s album contained no tracks that I wanted to skip. Lana’s album was epic. Lana’s voice was accentuated by the soundscape. Lana did her own thing. Lana carved her own lane. Lana stuck two middle fingers up at the techno-urban-amalgamation-pop trend. Lana Del Rey has dropped an album that will result in every other vocalist following suit. Lana Del Rey I love your album and everyone who loves ‘genuine’ music loves your album. Lana I apologise for getting the album as a leak but we enjoyed it and I will buy the hardcopy because the album is epic. Lana I will buy a ticket to your show when you visit London. Lana I respect your artistry. Lana I love that you have made a work of art that plays out like a movie. Lana you embody nostalgia and cinematic music. Lana I admire the way that you allow the music to speak for itself and don’t distract the listener with shallow spectacles.

Lana I’m going to buy this on CD, I don’t buy CDs but one day I’m going to get you to sign it when we meet. Lana I understand that a lot of critics have written off your album but I think that in this day and age of hyperreality, people forget that it’s the music that matters and how it makes you feel. Lana people get it twisted probably because you’ve got no electronic arpeggios and dance club singles with the “oh ah oh” ad libs featuring punk mcs like Flo Rida and Pitbull. Lana they need to realise that you don’t need WillIAm with his fucked up hairdo to sell records, you’ve just got to be sincere, capture the right sentiments and people will always relate to it. Lana thank you for delivering such a great album, I apologise for not going into the specific highlights of the album but people reading this will only realise the reason once they listen to it… No words can articulate a sentiment, you’ve just got to put this album on and enjoy the movie.

http://www.lanadelrey.com

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Faze Miyake – The Second Six EP Out 01/30/2012

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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Corinne Shields – Maybe I’ll Miss You (Audio)

I’ve found a new ‘favourite’ artist that I’ll be on the lookout for in 2012!

I was doing the sporadic twitter/soundcloud rounds when I come across this song Maybe I’ll Miss You. At first I didn’t think much of it, I slyly dismissed it but I got to the chorus and I was like “WHAT THE FUCK!? THIS IS A BANGER!”. It was there that I began to share it on my Tumblr blog whilst listening to it and sorta started writing a commentary in real-time. Since posting it I think I’ve listed to it a few dozen times. At first I didn’t know why I loved it so much but then I put my finger on it, she has an angelic vocal timbre similar to Ellie Goulding. It’s also the way Corinne layers her vocals, the harmonies, the ad libs -simply majestic, add that to her overall sound and song choice; an amalgamation of quirky, ‘booty shaking’, feet shuffling electronica (UK Garage), and a piano ballad with sprinkles of manipulated oscillators on a variety of modular, granular, and additive synths -reminiscent of my gaming excursions on Nintendo gaming consoles in the late ’80s/early ’90s, it’s no wonder why I’m captivated by this particular song.

Corinne Shields’ Maybe I’ll Miss You has won a place ‘Up In My Ear‘ because she -with the help of a creative collaborator perhaps, has managed to capture the sentiment of nostalgia almost absolutely. Also befitting of the song title and subject matter -WELL-FUCKING-DONE!

Live Tumblr Commentary

Randomly seething through twitter/soundcloud before finding this. Flicked through it and fell in love with it. Not perfect but I’d love it because the chorus is sick and it reminds me of one of those video games, you know the travelling through space in a spaceship on a mission to rescue Zelda…

Pretty much wrote this as I’m listening and I’ve just heard the breakdown… The backing vocals, harmonies are on point. She’s looking for work as a writer so artists and producers get in touch.

The track continues to grow on me with every listen, by the time I got to this sentence I had actually began to listen through all the other tracks.

corinne_shields@yahoo.co.uk | @CorinneShields

One Foul Swoop of Genres

Up In The Ear #1- One Foul Swoop (Podcast)

As many or some of you may know, I am no new comer to turntables and vinyl -having embraced the Hip Hop culture through my Father and the many Public Enemy tour videos we watched to the countless times I watched Beat Street and tried to backspin on the kitchen floor, I grew up on a healthy diet of Reggae, Roots, Motown Soul and Dub, so it was no surprise that I fell in love with Jungle in the early ’90s and got infected with the UK Garage bug after hearing a few tracks in ’97. Following in the footsteps of my older sibling, I began to work my way around the turntables and vinyl whilst he was at work -making sure everything was back in its place when he got home, I honed my skills and gradually picked up the mic in time for the monstrous metamorphosis of Garage into Grime. After much time spent in the wilderness of music production and songwriting, I rediscovered House music, started building an extensive collection of vinyl -both old and new- and ventured into unchartered listening territory. Fast forward half a decade and I’m pretty much an amalgamation of all these influences and sub cultures…

I love nothing more than listening to, discussing, and creating music. It’s always a pleasure to share sounds that I’ve discovered through the blog but I decided it was time that I upped the ante and hit you with a new medium for sharing what I’ve been listening to and discovered. I’m actively seeking out new sounds as well as classic ones, could say I’m scouting for future greatness to support so if you have something to share, please don’t hesitate to send a download link with some info to the email at the bottom of the page.

Up In The Ear #1 – One Foul Swoop

This mix features the sounds of my fave new discovery ::Made:In:Heights::, Seiji from the supergroup Bugz In The Attic, Juicy J and Lex Luger, Jay-Z and Kanye West, Project Pat, Submerse, CRST, TRC, Preditah, Manga, Trim, Kwod Sonik Punk, Louie Vega, Todd Edwards, and a few rough unfinished exclusive edits from myself under my alias MRKOZOID.

I hope you enjoy the first dose of my ‘yet to be put into a regular schedule’ radio show to accompany the blog. If you’ve got tracks to submit, send me a download link and if I like it I’ll give it a spin.

@UpInTheEar | @WhereIsKO | Mixcloud | Soundcloud

Click To Buy/Download

::Made In Heights:: – Aporia: In These Streets (Album)

I don’t think there’s anyone else in the world who I’ve had the option of downloading their release for free but decided to purchase the music because it was so fucking good. While most artists are busy emulating the last successful release in the pop charts, ::Made in Heights:: are busy creating something special. It’s not your bog standard ‘amalgamation’ -urban electronica mash up malarky, it’s inventive innovative juxtaposed bricolage.

Click To Buy/Download

::Made In Heights:: lift elements from the genres of Dubstep, Rap, Drum and Bass, R&B, Folk, and Pop, with unquestionable panache to create a subtle sound which simply cannot be classified nor put into any categorised box. There’s some songs that shouldn’t work, you know if it were made by any other person/group it would simply sound generic but the manner in which the two elements of ::Made In Heights::, producer Sabzi and vocalist Kelsey ‘Kelz Bellz’ Bulkin, combine adds a uniqueness that is unparalleled in anything deemed to be a pool of their so called contemporaries (no gibberish).

Basically Sabzi seamlessly mixes the experimental with the generic whilst cross pollinating mixing and production techniques associated with particular sub-genres, which culminate into a soundscape that Kelsey blends into effortlessly. Her voice is what distinguishes ::Made In Heights:: from all other bands and collaborative projects that have tried to do the same and failed. The chemistry, mechanics, and architecture of the album is nothing short of perfection. They offered it out for free but I decided to pay because when I heard the opening song, Wildflowers, I was sold from the first line and the beat drop.

Bandcamp | @MadeInHeights | Facebook

I love this band, I love this album, and I encourage everyone to PAY for their music. I also recommend that you cop the preceding EP, Winter Pigeons.

K O.

Mr-Little-Jeans-006-Mr

Mr. Little Jeans – Valentine/Suburbs (Directed By High5Collective)

I don’t know about you, but when I discover something new to my ears, I get all warm and fluffy inside. I get this overwhelming feeling of euphoria which makes me want to shout about and share this ear candy with the rest of the world. Out of the many ‘new’ songs and sounds I hear, only a few motivate me to stop whatever it is I’m doing at that particular moment and shout about it. I literally stop whatever it is I’m doing and flash straight to the laptop, yes the laptop rather than the iPhone app, to share my latest discovery with you. Fair enough Mr. Little Jeans isn’t exactly a new band but to me, someone who’s only just heard of them, they’re on par with the Boom Clap Bachelors.

Firstly I’d like to point out that ‘Valentine‘ was a song that I heard after watching the video to ‘The Suburbs‘, which was directed by a creative mob, who are making major waves out in the sphere for their high quality conceptual visuals, the High5Collective. Valentine and the overall sound of Mr. Little Jeans is reminiscent of the lush ambient soundscapes comparable to the likes of Goldfrappe and Little Boots, vocally Monica Birkenes has the charm and intrigue of the aforementioned, with hints of Ellie Goulding‘s soft timbres. I really love the sound and her voice…

@MyMrLittleJeans | Facebook

When H5C direct and share videos with their social network -facebook, twitter etc, I always take a peek because I always know I’ll witness something epic! If I’m to be totally honest, a lot of the time the visuals have almost always outweighed the music, but it hasn’t been until now that I’ve seen a partnership flow so organically. I was only five seconds into the video when I fell in live with the song, Suburbs. Upon further research I found that Monica had actually covered an Arcade Fire’s song, but I doubt I’d need to hear the original after falling in love with Birkenes’ rendition almost instantaneously. Perhaps it was the sentiment that matches my current temperament almost absolutely, perhaps there’s something about Monica Birkenes‘ majestic tones weaving its way through such a haunting soundscape. The one thing I’m certain of is that Mr. Little Jeans fits perfectly into my ears, and without sounding mahoooosively cliche, I’d say it’s a match made in heaven…

http://vimeo.com/h5c/littlejeans

Directed By – @H5C | Facebook | Website

The-Jet-Age-Of-Tomorrow-The-Journey-To-The-5th-Echelon

The Jet Age of Tomorrow

This band are fucking ill! Heavily influenced by early N*E*R*D/Neptunes, they’ve somehow crafted their own sound that makes you want to roll up a phat one and float through space. They’re Odd Future related but that doesn’t stop The Jet Age of Tomorrow standing on their own two feet.

The Jet age of Tomorrow - Matt Martian & Hal (Super 3)

I definitely recommend keeping a close eye on this band as I’ve been a fan since discovering them back in March… Late by release standards but hey. Here’s their self directed/filmed/edited/produced video Wonderland… Enjoy.

Tracks I’d recommend as favourites are ‘Thump Thump’, a sinister synth number, ‘Dust Off‘ featuring Hodgy Beats & Mike G, and ‘Lunchbox‘ featuring Odd Future affiliates Vince Staples and JQ, starting with the opening line..

Good morning say hello to the asshole, I guess I must of smoked all the crack that my dad sold.

Voyger | 5th Echelon

Listening to The Jet Age of Tomorrow (also known as Super 3) makes me want to make music, it really is that sort of experience because its not just your bog standard ‘chorus/verse’ its more creative expression. I definitely fuxxx with this sound, being a sci-fi fan with a big imagination, these soundscapes provide me with ample space for my mind to fly… I digress, all I’m saying is give these guys a listen.

K O

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Throwback Album – N*E*R*D: In Search Of…

These are some of my all time favourite songs off of one of my all time favourite albums from one of my all time favourite bands who influenced and worked with practically everyone in the world of pop music and beyond apart from Michael Jackson and Stevie Wonder but channeled what they learnt from studying the music of the greats into creating a signature space infused futuristic nostalgic innovative sound. I fucking love these guys and I also wonder if you ‘clocked’ what I did with the previous sentence without using any commas and full stops… Follow?

2002 rerelease

Tape You

I admire the sleazeeee… Its delivered so politely because doesn’t say

Ayo bitch! Suck my dick and kiss on her boobs while I record you getting naaaastaay!

Nah… No fucking waaaay!!! He’s opened up by saying that its ok to be a bit freaky, whilst reassuring her that she’ll always be the priority before and after -the other girl being gold but she, his wifey, being platinum, and emphasising the fact that its purely his fantasy. It’s genius because for all we know it could be a conversation with his missus explaining the fantasy… Who knows?

Run To The Sun

This song is sweet, it’s one I listen to when I’m feeling kinda moshi -probably the perfect song to send/play/email to the lady you’re loving.

Provider

This song is practically the story of my life, not in the sense that I have any kids to feed but the conflict between taking the moral high road over the ills of fast easy money. Growing up in the area where I’m from its easy to get caught up in a whole lot of fuckry but this song is an optimistic account of that troubled journey over a balancing beam.

Lapdance

I love this song, always have, the adlibs are jokes but yeaaa there’s hella tits and asssss on display! … Well the XXX one that came on late at night in the early noughties haaaa!

When I got this album in 2004, I got the rerelease from 2002 where all the electronic backing was replaced by backing from the Spy-Mob, a 60′s power pop band, giving it a slightly more futuristic and rocky edge. I’m glad I copped the rerelease because when I heard the album from 2001 I made the ‘unimpressed’ face because it sounded quite flat. There’s so many more gems to be found on this album so I recommend giving it a listen because it’s not quite Hip Hop, Rock, Pop… It’s got elements of everything for everyone. I think the greatest musical piece is the part after ‘Bobby James’, that synth led instrumental is simply beautiful to the ears.

This is a great album, it’s not quite any genre but more amalgamatic-equilibrial-futurism…

No exaggeration, this album was simply ahead of itself.

K O

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J*DAVEY – Evil Christian Cop: The Great Mistapes pt.2

There’s not a lot of music I hear which totally blows my mind to the point of going crazy and wanted to blow the dust off of my two octave usb keyboard, and open up Logic for the first time in what feels like a millenium, but J*J*Davey has managed to do that with Evil Christian Cop.

Jack Davey x Brook D'Leau = J*Davey

If I'm to be totally honest I can't remember where I caught onto this but it must be the team over at JBC Global because I was surfing around their hive as I've been listening to LA Rap in heavy rotation. After downloading the tape I nearly deleted the muthafugga because the opening track was a cover of Nirvana's 'Smells Like Teen Spirit'. Anyone that knows me fully will know that Nevermind's album status is the rock equivalent of classic albums; Reasonable Doubt (Jay-Z), Frank (Amy Winehouse), Beats Rhymes & Life (A Tribe called Quest), Alright Still (Lily Allen), and Equilibria (Sabrina Malhieros), so any attempt to change anything on such an epic album or any of these whatsoever is a severe violation!

I quickly got over the violation when I heard Quicksand, my jaw literally dropped when I heard the weird synth which sounded like it had been tampered with to sound effortlessly cool and playful but the cherry on top of the cake was when Jack Davy sang the opening line:

I do it like quicksand,
Dontcha wanna get stuck with me?

Fair enough, I hear all of your groans and grumbles but you have to actually hear Jack bending her voice around the modulated and low frequency oscillated synth, it’s only then that you’ll understand the statement that’s being made; its an open invitation to have the magical stuff -butterflies, romance, affection, upon being honest at first so she doesn’t throw herself into a mess as she knows you want her but whether you love her or not is whether you get the goods. Follow?

So after having Quicksand, which narrates the theme of wanted to know whether someone wants more than the surface before you laid your cards out, Raincheck continues with sort of the part two to Quicksand. It’s a laid back contemplative track, smooth, containing lots of drifting synths against a slow steady rhythm section telling the tale of yearning for someone but trying to remain sensible in the mist of confusion.

It’s evident from the soundscape of Evil Christian Cop that J*Davey’s sound can be described as a combination of alternative hip hopalternative rocksoulelectronicafusionjazzpunkfunknew wave and R&B futurists. Growing up, Jack Davey was exposed to classic jazz and hints of late seventies jazz fusion before being introduced to the sound of the eighties with R&B and new hip-hop sounds whilst Brook D’Leau came up surrounded by new wave and pop-rock sounds by the way of PrinceRadioheadTalking Heads and The Police. At an early age Brook began to create interestingly melodic instrumental tracks in his father’s home studio after school and on the weekends for fun. It’s only befitting that Brook share his soundscape with us on the jerky rhythmic oscillation that is ‘Trans’. You can sit there listening trying to work out how he was able to get the rhythm so swung to the extreme and play in such fine order but some things must never be questioned I guess.

My favourite track on the release is definitely ‘Lazy Days’. It’s fun, pleasant, upbeat, synthy, and anthemic, it’s been the soundtrack to my movements whilst London’s been hit by the heat wave. I wish they had put the lyrics to this too because I love it that much and I’d really love to see some visuals for this ep!

Here’s how they described their release:

Evil Christian Cop was inspired by the dark undercurrents that exist in the phrase “To protect and serve.” As producer Brook D’Leau explains, “Why should we rely on an evil stranger to protect and serve when you have the power to protect and serve yourself?” The EP features co-production by Greg Wells (“Teen Spirit”), GB (“Lazy Daze”), and LA-based lyricist DefSound. Full of synths, alluring vocals, and distinct production, the seductive twosome provide a dreamy soundscape for listeners to lose themselves in. Jack Davey and Brook leave all interpretations up to the listener. “We cannot provide the message, we simply provide the mental playground for the listeners’ minds to go wild upon,” says Brook.

http://wearejdavey.com

K O

Next up is this guy, Def Sound, who featured on Quicksand…

Stay Tuned…