Archive for November, 2006

the dfa are way ahead of their time

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Automato - The Single 2004 Automato - Cool Boots 2004

It’s a little weird to be blogging about The DFA, as they hit their stride about the time the terms critical darling and blogger favorite became synonymous. The production trio of James Murphy, Tim Goldsworthy and Jonathan Galkin started their takeover of the indie dance scene by turning a shitty garage-punk band called The Rapture into the leaders of a dance-rock revolution. The first single was “House of Jealous Lovers”, and if you haven’t heard it, you are sleeping on some of the greatest cowbell work since “Lowrider”. As a de facto record label, they released a number of great, weird singles, including The Juan Maclean’s “Give Me Every Little Thing”, which is so good, it’s kind of scary. The DFA also put out and remix incredible albums and tracks by LCD Soundsystem, Cut Copy and Hot Chip. Now they’re making custom music for Nike.

Anyways, I’m walking through my local record spot in 2004 and imagine my surprise when I see Automato’s self-titled debut with a big fat green “produced by the dfa” sticker right there on the digipak. It’s not too surprising these dudes would fuck with rap, as Goldsworthy was half of the team that founded Mo’ Wax. And, given their indie pedigree, it’s no surprise they’d fuck with a bunch of white dudes making live rap. But The DFA are a perfect fit for a live rap group who strive to “make an album that sounds and feels like the sample based hip hop records they love”. Their style is filled with Madlib-esque happy accidents and incidental keyboard squeaks. The awkward scratches that run throughout “The Single” sound like a dj fucking around after hearing “ok let’s try that again” from the control booth.

Ultimately, Automato is a little conservative as a DFA production, generally lacking the Kraftwerk and Moroder influences that make their shit so great. “How to Read A Person Like A Book” is still a typical post-underground Primo bite, all chopped pianos and boom-bap. “Hollywood and Vine” is like Jazze Pha goes to New York, with the acoustic guitar and triangles. Even “The Single” sounds a little typical, but the strange cuts and echoing piano come together particularly well with the synth that might be a guitar. The best DFA-makes-underground-rap track is “Cool Boots”, whose cheap drum machine/organ intro could have come from any of their productions. The way the song opens up with blips and drums at the end is a highlight of the whole album.

(By the way, I’d like to point out that emcee Jesse Levine (BBYO stand up!) does a great job of not embarassing himself on the mic. His ability to pull off “if it aint soul music / then it aint my music / take a hit of my music / get high, now vibe to it” without making me want to slap him like Suga Free is uncanny.)

I say the DFA are ahead of their time because this would not be the last time they would make rap, or something like it. But by the time rap came calling again, it was looking for the DFA sound itself, not the DFA’s take on hip-hop. It also came in the form of Justin Timberlake, and you can download the My Love (DFA remix) at Discobelle. Honestly it’s not one of their better works, but it’s more faithful to their sound.

It’s hard to say enough about these cats, but it will have to suffice to say that they simultaneously resurrected disco, a stagnant indie rock scene and forgotten percussion like rototoms. Hatin-ass rap-only dudes should do themselves the big favor of checking them out. Their second compilation is a good place to start.

ps: welcome to the new site homies!

NYOIL

While I'm slacking on updates, I'll share this recent interview with NYOIL recorded on WBAI's Hip-Hop Takeover. It's fairly brief and pretty interesting if you've never heard him speak before. He seems passionate and genuine. I'm not yet decided if he's a dope MC behind the relative shock-value, but it's nice to hear someone with some substance and thought behind their rhymes, so I'll keep listening for now.



NYOIL interview on WBAI



A Tribute to Ignorance has had a few entries on NYOIL, including his controversial videos and some heated discussion that the artist himself has gotten involved in here, here, and here.



I don't know if these interviews are mad boring to everyone, but I like them when it's a charismatic guest with a good story to tell. Regardless, I will try to focus on some more music soon.

Where the party at?

Back like Clipse, back like Hov, back like Serena...

Your Gat is back, all producers, all the time.
Update your favourites to http://www.canibringmygat.com.
All RSS heads get your feed on at http://www.canibringmygat.com/feed/.

This address will cease to exist so scuttle over to the new site for good. Very good.

In a major way...

Crazy C

Goodie Mob_ATL

Goodie Mob - Soul Food (Crazyhouze Remix Feat. 8Ball & MJG) 1996

Above The Law - 100 Spokes (Fresh On D’s Remix) 1996

Houston’s Crazy C came to peoples’ attentions producing for Rap-A-Lot artists in the early 90s. Scarface, Too Much Trouble, Willie D, all the good ones. As with any RAL producers it’s hard to tell which tracks he produced himself as the albums generally credited all the producers for the album rather than individual tracks. One thing’s for sure though, by the time he struck out on his own with production and remix work for established national acts in the mid 90s, he epitomised the Texas sound.

His remixes were very much regional mixes. Translating the alien sounds of Outkast or the Wu-Tang into fluent Houston using church keys and hard snares. Not slowing the music’s speed like the later Screw phenomenon but rather taking the top down and letting the sun’s rays cast a different light on it.

The distance between Atlanta and Houston was greater in 96 than it is now and Crazy C’s remixes for Outkast and Goodie Mob were part of a greater southern unity appearing in the mid-to-late 90s. He even reached out west to Pomona’s Above The Law and north-east to Naughty By Nature (”Craziest” Crazy C Remix) and the Wu-tang (”Method Man” Crazy C’s Suthun Fried Mix).

Houston, like the Bay area, is no longer a local-only scene. The rest of the world no longer considers them “just the Geto Boys” or “just Too Short and that’s due to ambassadors like Crazy C and his Crazyhouze studio creating those links between cities back in the mid 90s.

My favourite Crazy C beat that I’ve heard, and there’s a lot of underground Houston shit I’ve never heard, is Above The Law’s “100 Spokes” remix. It’s one big tip of the hat to old school West Coast rap, with electro percussion, coldhearted synths and simple rhythmic scratching. It’s exactly what you’d want someone from Houston to do if you asked them to remix a classic Cali rap act, the beat still sounds Texas but it’s got cousins in Carson.

Crazy C now runs his label Soul Muzick Recordings with an aim to promote local Christian rap and RnB after Crazy C’s conversion in the late 90s.
I couldn’t find him on MySpace but I’m sure he’s there somewhere.

Further reading: Crazy C on Discogs

Two songs (1, 2 -- thanks, dude) are profoundly affecting my life right now. Make that three.

Also:

  • Kathryn Johnston, 92, is (was?) a FUCKING GANGSTER! Don't mean to make light of the situation, but this is a bit nuts.
  • It's about time somebody started looking out for us white folks.
  • Hot topic -- again, race related -- at UCLA right now.

Catching Up

In the last month I've...
  • Masqueraded as Borat
  • Mocked people openly
  • Seen two Bears' wins
  • Witnessed Kevin Smith passed out sleeping on the floor

No lie.

Termanology

Sorry for the delay in posts...shit is rather disorganized here.



Termanology dropped a tremendous 12" this year, thanks in no small part to beats from DJ Premier and Statik Selektah, and a guest verse from Trife Diesel. Despite a penchant for looking like a corny bastard on his cover art, Term is pretty nice on the mic himself. Here are three verses from his appearance on WNYU's Halftime Show earlier this year.



Termanology on the Halftime Show

verse #2

verse #3



Apparently he's dropped a few mixtapes; has anyone heard them? I'll have to check a couple out once my self-imposed hiatus from buying any new music ends.
To continue our little excursion into Spanish hip-hop, let's turn to another wordsmith from the former Alta Escuela camp. When Alta Escuela disbanded and Juaninacka started his solo career, Tote King also got to work on his own material. After a tape that was never properly released, he teamed up with his younger brother Shotta in 2002 to put together this first album called "Tu madre es una foca"