Jun 302010
 

Deepchord presents Echospace – BCN Dub

Deepchord‘s first full length, The Coldest Season from 2006, remains a defining dub techno moment. It’s the ultimate atmospheric album, ideal for the overpowering beauty of cold, desolate arctic landscapes.

This year’s Liumin takes us into other territories. Where Season was meditative, complete-in-itself, this album is adventurous, groove-centered, with samples and street noises masterfully leaked in, layered in the mix discreetly, tastefully, connecting each track to the following. Much more of an urban album, Liumin opens with In Echospace, an atmospheric build-up with a very thinly sketched beat coming in towards the end, and is defined with the following Summer Haze. Like most tracks on here it moves forward in another way, still meditative but not sedative; not desolated, but populated. Water is dripping from faucets, trains are passing by, we hear the wind, records played in the distance, voices in different languages. It makes for the ideal soundtrack for a confused, disoriented walk around town.

Burnt Stage and Firefly are the dreamiest of pulsating-expanding deep house tracks, returning to those melancholic pads that we know and love from Vladislav Delay and Yagya. Sub-Marine, Maglev and Float on the other hand seem to have gotten distracted into rather formulaic undercurrents, aimlessly flowing through the ocean of standard techno sounds. Far from bad, but hardly something that I’ll come back for in the future. The same goes for the entire second disc, which is ambient music built around Japanese field recordings. Some parts are very beautiful, but it needs the right time and place to be appreciated fully. Not the kind of stuff I play daily.

Having already betrayed all expectations of how an Echospace album is supposed to sound, DeepChord are allowed to drift further in the direction of dub music, too. Thus, they can sample. Something it seems like they’ve been waiting years for. Very discreetly they introduce (what I presume is) a classic roots reggae trumpet into BCN Dub, camouflaging it with edits, delay, echo, virtuously creating depth and building atmosphere bit by bit, and not letting the sample play out fully until nine minutes into the song. It’s a beautiful moment, and also a respectful tip of the hat to the dub masters of decades past.

Jun 272010
 

The mind is so complex when you’re based. 32 levels. Welcome to my world. Like I said, I’ve been ready, and it feels good to be here now. Finally realized who’s the rawest rapper: Lil B. (…)

To anybody that thought they had it, need to think again. Throw your hands up, it’s Lil B for Little Boss. I need all the based energy I can.

The production of rap music has gone through changes over the years. From pre-industrial years of block parties to rapping over disco beats to renegade producers taking control over the studio environment and rap taking over the charts. To increased commercialization and the struggle for structural independence and artistic integrity.

One big structural change in recent years is that A&R people have become obsolete. Labels will only do business with artists already established independently and locally. A hundred thousand mixtapes sold, then you can sit at the table with these people. Gone are the A&R professionals who actually sought out and coached new artists into greatness.

Complex: Why do you take that approach? Most of your songs aren’t available for download. There’s a song here, a song there. You have a random 250-song mixtape. It’s chaotic and there’s no order to it.

JonRaff If you think about it, @LilBTheBasedGod’s song collection is like the Pokemon. You have to go on a journey to collect them all. #Based

Just like Marley Marl sampling James Brown had a certain economic advantage over Brown himself plus band, Lil B has arrived steps ahead the mixtape rappers. He has further rationalized the production of rap, with himself on 24 hour www-fueled creative frenzy and with his fans performing the A&R function. They are to select and promote and spread and copy the music. Taste will be made on the internets, copied out onto the streets, copied back in. New scenes and structures are created.

A Swedish blog talks about the cultural black hole where influential rock journalists used to be. Some kind of youth project leader is quoted. He sees a lot of talented kids coming by, but everything they record come out so generic. These kids started watching MTV after the Chill Out Zone got shut down and YO! MTV Raps was ran off the block by the strip club muzak. His point: these kids have no point of reference as to what people have done before. Their ignorance of tradition limits their creativity, as to what music can be. Blog continues:

Regarding the freely copyable culture forms it seems rather that each genre or style is characterized by seperate pockets that rarely communicate. Specialized idiots in their own small section. (…)

They have all the MySpace pages in the world but nobody that guides them in pop culture. No editor, no map reader, nobody that highlights what is good, no matter if it sells in 10 copies, 1000 or 100 000.

This is what is called “The Death valley problem“. (…)

Everything can be found on the internets. The whole history of the world’s art, music, literature and so on is well represented. But where do you look? Someone needs to bring you the news and point out what’s relevant. You need an introduction. The cultural landscape has changed, and most of the generation born in the late 80s and early 90s has been lost in between. If nobody’s there for you, helping you, guiding you in the right direction – face down (ass up) in the mainstream.

Just like there are no real hardcore, working class men standing in the streets around the neighborhood anymore, setting examples, telling kids what right and wrong, and no mothers telling off her friends’ kids as well as her own, there are no hardcore cultural ambassadors standing in the media mainstream passing the torch to the coming generation. Real talent is not afforded there anymore (but takes it’s escape to blogs and trash print media, where less dogma apply, with the following result of either joyous newness or total perversion). Everything that’s not straight from the market division of the record companies or an absolute freak show gets no love. The economic streamlining of the media has all but done away with what is usually referred to as “the fat middles”. Continued translation from Swedish:

A lot of this type of really talented artists gained a popularity that lifted them out of obscurity saleswise, thanks to the attention that this type of open minded but at the same time autistically passionate journalists and editors could give them. That passion seems to have away somewhere else now. Many blame this on an increasing surplus, but at the same time we have the technological conditions to navigate in this surplus today. At least in theory. Until now Myspace and p2p are too decentralized and fragmented, while newspapers are too centralized. Heck, one of the most connecting forums on the net today is as a matter of fact The Pirate Bay.

Jun 262010
 

This is his first American interview since 2006, because he has better things to do — engulfed in a ceaseless surge of creativity, sleeping only two or three hours a night and fueled by coffee and Lucas Valley OG, the strain of medical marijuana he’s currently incinerating. (…)

“He has records from almost every nation,” says his frequent collaborator, hard-boiled Detroit rapper Guilty Simpson. “He doesn’t just buy them to sample. He wants to understand each song. He doesn’t need to know the language to realize musicality.” (…)

“He’d make do with what he had. There was an upright bass with just one string and he’d still use it effectively. He was insane on the drums too. I’d wake up to the sound of him playing to jazz records for hours. He seemed to be doing it because he loved it, not because he necessarily wanted to improve.”

I’m getting Öyvind Fahlström vibes reading this interesting but overwritten interview with Madlib.

Jun 252010
 

You rarely hear scratching and techno beats together. A shame, since it’s actually a good combo. At least when that combo consists of Per Hammar and Besh-One. And especially when you have the good judgement of pulling out your funkiest, most bass heavy dancefloor tracks and at times letting the scratches reach the point of abstraction (“is that a scratch? or a synthesizer?”). It’s almost time for a hiphouse-revival (not sure that would be a good thing).

Like they said over at Discobelle: “I’m looking forward to dance to this combo at some late night fiesta this summer.” All this scratching is making me itch.

Jun 242010
 

Jag fick vänta tjugo minuter på pendeltåget. Det hade börjat regna. Jag satt under taket på perrongen och såg ut över duggregnet och bilarna på Stationsgatan. Skulle någonting hända nu?

(s. 17, Nyår)

Jun 222010
 

Uppfinnaren av begreppet kopimi och skaparen av världens bästa affischer och hemsidor har gått bort. Jag kände inte honom, träffade honom aldrig, men hans nätvaro var exemplarisk. En nod i datahavet har slutat att blinka åt oss.

När man på något sätt bidrar till den här våran mellannätskultur gör man det inte ensam. Rummet man befinner sig i är redan befolkat. Det man tidigare tagit in bestämmer vad som kommer ut. Vi tar en tyst minut här. Öpnna inga nya flikar, pausa dina torrents, stäng av bildskärmen. Och tänk på de som fört dig hit.

Du kan se mina nätinfluenser på den här bloggens högersida. Men det finns andra vars nätväro likt Ibi Botanis är för karg eller vildvuxen för att snyggt kunna kanaliseras genom ett bloggflöde. Det passar bra att tacka dom nu också. Så vi inte glömmer. Här är inspirationen, andra som har varit viktiga, utan rangordning. Tack till Linus Walleij, VSU-Ulf, Altemark, Johannes Nilsson, Future/Past-Tomas, Enbris-Johan, Bo Cavefors, Vertigomannen.

Mr Kopimi själv får avsluta det här, och må han fortsätta skina över oss likt 2pac över rapparna:

Låt oss därför börja där Jag står: Tidigt varje morgon ställer Jag mig i kö vid internet och när turen kommit till mig använder Jag internet hela dagen. Ända till kvällen. (…) Jag lägger ihop symboler och skissar figurer. Jag flyttar kontext från maskiner in i mig själv och ut ur mig själv. Jag filtrerar. Planterar och skördar. Infiltrerar. Det händer även att jag skapar filer mellan enheter som ännu inte lyckats finna varandra. Ibland är jag själva hindret. Oftare länken.

Jun 192010
 

Samma dag som Hacknight #2 sätter igång på Utkanten rullar den gamla världen ut sitt mäktigaste propagandaspektakel i genren adelns och borgarnas blodsriter: Det Kungliga Bröllopet. Verkligen symboliskt. Ett tecken i tiden.

Medan andra mer fetishistiskt och kitschigt sinnade anordnar motspektakel råder i hackercirklar som alltid annars obryddheten. I gives a fuuuuuck. Psykos mot hypnos.

Avsaknaden av reaktivitet och rättshaverism är några av denna breda hackerrörelses starkaste kvalitéer. Som om de står över, bortom och vid sidan av sån skit. Orka med moralsnack. Ingen döms här (förutom genom praktik den gamla världens värden). Det handlar om etik. Istället för ändlöst parlamenterande vill man bygga saker, och upptäcka nya sätt att göra. Ett hackerspace har inget uttalat verksamhetsmål. Upprätta först infrastruktur, uppfinn sedan projekt.

Det sossemoderata samhället litar inte på denna anda. Verksamheterna måste vara redovisade och kontrollerade. Medan vi tvärtemot söker efter rum som både är avprivatiserade och avförstatligade.

Lite om detta ska Samira Ariadad tala om ikväll under rubriken Netbased Commons (hon hade även med en förträfflig artikel på samma ämne i det nya numret av Brand, skriven tillsammans med Rasmus Fleischer.) Förutom detta kommer Goto80 att demonstrera C64:ans potential som musikmonster, Mats Kolmisoppis bror ska att orda om The Pirate Bay, och bloggaren Christopher Kullenberg vill berätta om krypotoaktivism (en fysisk motsvarighet till detta vore också bra, för att inte bara försvara data men även datorer!) Vi ska även lära sig att blogga snyggare.

Ikväll kommer det att bubbla på Forsken, men först ska vi njuta av hur Det brusar i parken.

Jun 182010
 

Back around the year 1993, in my tiny hometown on Sweden’s second coast, my ears suddenly burst wide open for rap music. My best friend had Naughty By Nature’s first tape, which I copied and played all day. Then I bought Doggystyle, which I’m still playing. Friends provided me with taped copies of Black Sunday and Välkommen till förorten (and I got the t-shirts, the VHS tapes, and tried to never miss an episode of YO! MTV Raps)

Those who were cooler than me listened to Ice-T – “the final level of the game“. Though the New Jersey-born, Los Angeles-bred rapper had reached his peak some years before, he still out-hypnotized newcomers Snoop, Warren G and Dogge Doggelito with pure iconic power.

After yesterday’s ponytail chock (the last one to rock the pimped out 80s swagger has given in, I am told), I knew I had to pull out some classic Iceberg material while cleaning up the apartment. His five first albums are so strong (and the following three, all the way up to Gangsta Rap are surprisingly worthwhile). My favorite is Original Gangster, but today it was time for The Iceberg / Freedom Of Speech… Just Watch What You Say.

The production on this album is an interesting synthesis of Marley Marl’s James Brown-interpretations, the riot funk of The Bomb Squad, and the ice cold electro beats that Ice-T had been rapping over on Reckless and Colors. You have to love the thick moog-basslines nestling through the dense soundwall of Lethal Weapon, the hectic drum programming on Hit The Deck.

Besides acting as a spokesperson for his generation, his social class, his city – never afraid of breaking taboos, mixing genres, and telling stories nobody wanted but everybody needed to hear, that is, executing the Gangsta Rap formula to its fullest – Ice-T was also an ambassador. He showed it by putting on east coast talent such as Lord Finesse and Everlast (and smelly old punk rockers like Jello Biafra!), always bigging up peers Big Daddy Kane, Public Enemy, BDP, Slick Rick, Too Short – but also by encouraging dialogue on wax. Freedom Of Speech has two good examples of this: You Played Yourself and This One’s For Me.

In the first he does something that’s very healthy for the music, but frowned upon these days. They call it hating, but it should be called telling the truth, and not caring about who you piss off – even your own people. Tracy Marrow introduces the listener to the dumb rapper, the failed mack, the spoiled rapper, and the drug addict. This kind of moral folklore is arguably the most important thing in rap music, but the industry has all but deleted it.

How you gonna drop science? You’re dumb
Stupid ignorant, don’t even talk to me
At school you dropped Math, Science and History
And then you get on the mic and try to act smart
Well let me tell you one thing, you got heart
To perpetrate, you’re bait, so just wait
Till the press shove a mic in your face
Or you meet Boogie Down or Chuck D
Stetsasonic or the Big Daddy
And they ask you about the game you claim you got
Drop science now, why not?
You start to sweat and fret, it gets hot
How’d you get into this spot?

You played yourself…
Yo, yo, you played yourself…

(…)

Spendin’ money’s what I’m talkin’ about
But you fool out, your pockets got blew out
And after the date, no boots, you got threw out
Mad and shook cos your duckets got took
Call her up, phone’s off the hook
But who told you to front and flaunt your grip?
You can’t buy no relationship

You played yourself…
Yo, homeboy, you played yourself…

(…)

You think you’ve made it, you’re just a lucky man
Guess who controls your destiny, fans
But you diss ’em cos you think you’re a star
That attitude is rude, you won’t get far
Cos they’ll turn on you quick, you’ll drop like a brick
Unemployment’s where you’ll sit
No friends cos you dissed ’em too
No money, no crew, you’re through

You played yourself…
That’s right, you played yourself…
You played yourself…
Yo, yo, you played yourself…

(…)

And then you get an idea for a big move
An armed robbery…smooth
But everything went wrong, somebody got shot
You couldn’t get away, the cops roll, you’re popped
And now you’re locked, yo, lampin’ on Death Row
Society’s fault? No
Nobody put the crack into the pipe
Nobody made you smoke off your life
You thought that you could do dope and still stay cool? Fool.

You played yourself…
You played yourself…
Ain’t nobody else’s fault, you played yourself.

Chuck D once called rap the black CNN. Using the music and the culture to come to terms with problems, talking them out and drawing out plans, doesn’t seem to be part of the plan now. Even an underground legend like Bumpy Knuckles, who once proposed the formation of a hiphop government, prefers twittering over talking man to man. An open dialogue, an all-attended conference, is what’s needed the most. A first step is making more songs like this, bringing back honesty and substance (and getting better at conversating).

Now I’m known and respect as creator of the crime rhyme;
but my lyrics are deeper
Because I’m the one that makes you think before make a move
I wrote “Pusher”, “High Rollers”, and “Colors” just to prove
that I could kick game, and drop knowledge at the same time
But one L.A. station wouldn’t play my records one time
I’m tryin to save my community
but these bourgeoise blacks keep on doggin me
They don’t care about violence, drugs and gangs
KJLH, you ain’t about nuttin
You just a bunch of punk bourgeoise black suckers
and this one’s for me

(…)

That’s what the matter with black people anyway
We ain’t down with nothin, I don’t care what you say
yell or lie, don’t even bother
How low will a brother go for a dollar?

(…)

I gotta speak my mind, it’s time to unload
on this so-called government we’ve got
If I lied like them, I think I’d get shot
They sell drugs to kids and say it’s us
And when the cops are crooks, who can you trust?
You only see young brothers in a drug bust
Ashes to ashes, and dust to dust
My homey got a year for an ounce of weed
while Bush sells weapons to the enemy
You gotta be stone blind not to see
“Our government is honest!” Nigga, please
Cocaine can’t be made in the United States
Kickin facts like this our government hates
The young kids on the streets ain’t the enemy
They’re just ghetto youth after money
They sell drugs, but who sells drugs to them?
Try the C.I.A. my friend
or the F.B.I. or even Bush
Somebody’s gettin rich, damn sure ain’t us
We’re just killin ourselves while others laugh
Look at the street, it’s a cocaine bloodbath
We gotta realize dope is pure death
Mess with drugs, you’re breathin your last breath
Sellin drugs is straight up genocide
They’re gonna laugh, while we all die

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