Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Ricky Powell



Ricky Powell is that dude. I finally picked up a copy of his book from the Powerhouse book shop under the Brooklyn Bridge when i was there last August. This is an interview he did for Dithers.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Money Mark


Its amazing what you can find under your bed. Clothes, dvds, cds and a whole bunch of other stuff that i thought i had lost. Amongst the many things i rediscovered was this Money Mark album on Mowax from 1995. Mark's played keys with everyone from the Beastie Boys, to Beck and even Danger Mouse and MF Doom.
Its a trip into the mind of money mark. Quirky and eccentric in places. Funky in others but always enjoyable.

Money Mark Don't Miss The Boat mp3

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Tim Mabin Jimmy Jam




This is killer boogie from 1984 Pittsburgh. Original press was limited to 500 copies on Sapphire Records. This rip is from the official repress.



Tim Mabin Jimmy Jam

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Drum and Bass


So being a little late discovering hip hop only in the waning years of the mid 90s ( I actually had some Hammer, Vanilla and Young MC tapes but that dosn’t count). I was only a couple of years late in the explosion of a new style of break beat music that was to become known as Drum and Bass.
Drum and Bass a genre born through the union of hardcore raves dark sounds and the frantic drum break of the Winston Brothers Amen break(Much like Baltimore is based on the Sing Sing and It Takes Two breaks). This was music where engineering and production excelled. Drums were chopped, compressed, gated and equalised into the sound of the future. Admittedly a slightly dark version of the future but uplifting as well.
Now back then as many of my peers are at pains to explain. There was no Internet. MP3s and social networking sites did not exist. There were only two ways for cutting edge dance music to be distributed to the general public: Community radio and the clubs. Being young and broke the former became the lifeblood for this music hungry youth. 2SER FM was at the forefront with its many genre specific DJ orientated dance shows. Many late night hours were spent with my finger hovering over the pause and record buttons of my tape deck. Producing countless mixtapes that would fill many shoeboxes. One such show, which aired on Monday nites, was Montage. Hosted by the one like DJ Vaughn. Montage played the latest cutting edge tunes from Drum and Bass’s finest. Artists like Dillinjah, Lemon D, Goldie, Doc Scott E Rush and Optical, Roni Size, Adam F and many more had me addicted to this new futuristic sound. Not working at the time I could only collect songs by recording onto my trusty tape deck. I all but wore out my parents and many sets of my own. I prided myself on my knowledge and artists and labels. Happy with every bit of knowledge I gleamed. I became both a connoisseur and critic.
I wasn’t the only person addicted though and there were a number of nights, parties and Djs you could go out to hear the sounds of the Jungle. Jungle Massive Australia. Represented by The Cleaner and Frenzie amongst others. Dave Edwards’s Bass Code parties. 4th and West crew. Matt and Kayla. DJ Mechwarrior who always used to offer a nice change of pace at the Jungle Punk techno parties. DJ V-Tek who eventually took over Montage when Vaughn moved on.
Eventually around 2000 the whole tech step sound, which I had embraced along with jump up, and a myriad of other sub styles. Drew the scene to the same ugly state that was befalling techno. A harder, faster more minimal style, devoid of innovation funk and soul. The genre that was born of innovation became stale and I grew disinterested. Many of my favourite mix tapes were over dubbed (an unfortunate economic necessity) by different music.
Ten years later. New technology has allowed me to go back and revisit many of the artists and tracks that I loved so much. Among many that I had missed as well. Its nice to find that music still stands the test of time and sounds as cutting edge now as it did back then.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Glebe Record Fair


Okay normally when there is a record fair on Im either a) broke b) Working c) Blissfully unaware. So now its time to get off the internet and actually go looking for records. Finally i can use my portable record player !

Monday, April 13, 2009

Tony D RIP



Tony D one of the most slept on producers in hip hop recently passed away. Responsible for makin beats for PRT, YZ and Boulevard Mosse amonst others. The man could rap as well. Check out his Droppin Funky Verses LP on 4th and Broadway for proof.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Dj Revolution @ O-II-SHI


After having released his sophomore album King Of the Decks which was one of the best hip hop albums of 08. DJ Revolution hits our shores again to play at O-II-SHI's 12'th birthday and final event. I have fond memories of O-ii-Shi parties from the late 90's through to the early 2000's. So much fun you were always guaranteed good music and a mixed crowd. Props to Kavi for bringing something dope to sydney we're going to miss it for sure.
Head down to the Manning Bar Saturday nite. Click the flyer for more details.
Also check out Do My Thing ft Guilty Simpson and Royce Da 5'9 from Revolution's King Of The Decks.

DJ Revolution Do My Thing

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Easter Weekend Madness

Looking For Things to do on the Easter Weekend ? Here's some ideas.

Keepin it on the Soul, Funk and Boogie tip.

Hope to see some heads out and about

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Nutcase and Pappachubba Flex


I've been on this bass driven instrumental tip lately. Im really diggin the sparse bass driven nature of heaps of dubstep which owes just a little of its stylistic approach to the musical forms of drum and bass and jungle. This quest for bass had me diggin through my old cds, One of the titles i found was Nutcase and Pappachubba's Flex. This was an Australian duo one half being Paul Mac from Booboo and Mace and Itch-E and Scratch-E fame. The latter being famous for winning an ARIA in 95 and thanking the ectasy dealers of australia. I remember hearing flex being rinsed on 2SER's Montage show when it came out in 97. Its a solid excursion into sub bass driven melodys, dark synths and uplifting vocals and of course the amen break being chopped up and processed through a thousand different effects. I couldn't find an image online but interestingly enough the cd is availble through several european music stores and seems to go for around $50 Aus dollars. Not bad considering most australians have probably never heard of the group.


Nutcase and Puppachubba Flex