Wednesday 2 September 2015

B.G. "Chopper City In The Ghetto" (1999)


Being a longtime big fan of West and East coast Hip Hop I've recently taken an interest in the southern scene which flourished in the late 90s through record labels like No Limit Records and Cash Money. "Outkast", "Killer Mike" and "Master P" have been great discoveries but I've struggled to find much beyond them that's appealed to me and learning about Cash Money and their history I was brought to this record, Chopper City In The Ghetto. The album cover stood out to me as being one of the better, and most atypical of the trend of that time created by Pen & Pixel Graphics. Now looking horribly dated this first wave of photoshop overkill had a lot of gnarly over effected microsoft word fonts and stitched together images, however this one strikes a fair balance and holds up well, but lets talk about the music.

My first impression of this record has held up play after play, this is a solid collection of instrumentals with a distinct style that has B.G's softer rapping presence accompanying them. Initially I felt B.G was tame, inoffensive and calm but quickly I saw this in a good light. His raps are delivered steady, with a soft tone and controlled energy that comes across as borderline spoken. As the lines, verses and hooks become familiar the subtitles come across as his raps hold up time and time again. There's a lot of street talk, bling bling and boasting and it lacks a meaningful depth at times but that's far from what its about. It enjoyable, fun and easy on the mind. There's an absence of technicality and "wow" moments the occasional overuse of one worded rhymes and over simplistic lines e.g "I go for a walk past the chalk, give me the fork for the pork" but B.G can write a hook and deliver it and his style is enough to make this record work.

The chemistry between beats and rhymes is on point, however the instrumentals get the merit with focused and consistent production from Mannie Fresh who delivers 67 minutes of balanced numbers that bring a distinct mood reminiscent of an espionage, undercover spy vibe to many of the tracks, "Play'n It Raw" reminding me of Goldeneye from Nintendo 64. The compositions show their strength through instruments that sound both dated and fantastic, reminding one techniques and limitation not heard so much anymore. The drum machines are cut hard with rigid kicks and snappy snares that lack reverb or any volume variation yet sound terrific. The accompanying midi controlled instruments, bass, synth, ghetto whistles and plucked leads are on the minimalist side with simplistic, to the point melodies that balance varying degrees of complexity (within simplicity) across a spread of sounds that quietly add up to crafted tunes with depth and a fair use of rhythmic instrument hits (Bling bling) to tie the instruments to the core rhythm.

I'm still very much enjoying this record and will continue too, the features of Big Tymers, Turk and Juvenile is warming me up to more southern artists, especially Lil Wayne who I formerly had a negative opinion of thanks to buying into the "Hes not real Hip Hop" comment's on Youtube video, without checking him out for myself. He's fantastic on this record on features on my favorite song "Niggaz In Trouble" which has an interesting song structure that flips between a bi-polarizing southern hitter and a oldskool rhythmic groove. As the album stretches on I personal enjoy the final tracks more and this one also features the classic "Bling Bling" song. Great record, very happy I found it.

 Favorite Songs: Trigga Play, Play'n It Raw, With Tha B.G, Knock Out, Real Niggaz, Dog Ass, Cash Money Roll, Niggaz In Trouble, Hard Times, Uptown My Home
Rating: 8/10

Sunday 30 August 2015

N.W.A "Straight Outta Compton" (1988)


Just about everything that can be said about this records immense impact on Rap and music has already been said. It set Hip Hop on a new path, put the west on the map and delivered us the phenomenal talents of "Dr. Dre" and "Ice Cube" while forcing Gangster Rap and reality raps into the mainstream. If you have never heard of this record you need to do yourself a favor and read about it, listen and love it. Along with Metallica's "Ride The Lightning" I found this record through VH1 at around thirteen years old and it forever changed my outlook and music direction, so for this blog I thought Id focus on how this record impacted me as a person.

Being a relatively angry and frustrated young person I was initially attracted to the aggression and attitude on display, but as I learned the words the message sunk in quick and I found myself envisioning a reality I would of otherwise never know about. The lyrics depicted the American ghettos riddled with poverty, gangs, police brutality and drug problems. It opened my eyes to reality, I had a fortunate upbringing and I was understanding that the world was a big place with many problems. "Fuck Tha Police" was the song that really blew my mind, I had never heard such anti-authoritarian anger and it taught me to question what the police were and to challenge what was wrong and right in the eyes of the law. From that point on I always gave second thought to my assumptions and it set me on a path to be an open and accepting person who looks for tolerance and compassion over prejudice and judgement.
 
I've never grown tired of this record, there's a ferocious energy of anger and rebellion that always comes across and Dre's beats are still rocking today despite some obviously dated aesthetics the core compositions are fantastic, breaking out of the mold thanks to Dre's attentive ear for sampling music. Its him and Cube that make the record for me, MC Ren holds is own and drops some great raps but its Cube lyrics, also ghost writing for Eazy and Dre, and tireless flow that delivers line after line of Hip Hop's most memorable verses. He's raw and unfiltered, and with time developed his word play, flow and delivery but he could never top the impact and relevance of his rhymes on Straight Outta Compton.

I always felt the best of the record was found on the first three tracks and "Express Yourself", although the rest of the record doesn't fire quite with the same intensity its practically impossible to write thirteen tracks of "Fuck Tha Police" but the reality is they overshadow the rest of the record that's full to the brim of unfiltered reality raps and story's not for the faint of heart. Its hard hitting substance of tough times and reckless attitudes that take it all the way to the final track before Dre and Yella's throw back to their DJing days. Its a classic, one that had a profound personal influence on me and if you've never heard it before you should do yourself a favor.

Favorite Tracks: Straight Outta Compton, Fuck Tha Police, Gangsta Gangsta, If It Ain't Ruff, Parental Discretion Is Advised, Express Yourself
Rating: 10/10

Saturday 29 August 2015

Anthemon "Kadavreski" (2005)


A while back I picked out "Dystopia", an all time favorite record of mine, to cover here on the blog. It occurred to me that Id never given their other records much attention. I picked out the follow up record, and subsequently their last, to listen too. It has a very familiar pallet with similar tones, the acoustic and distortion guitars, the operatic vocals and a wall of symphony through the electronics all feel very much of the same page, the only difference are some rougher guttural growls on the opener.

Consisting of four tracks the record opens up with an ambitious 23 minute piece that develops from a majestic traveler into a dark and hasty aggressor accompanied by vicious growls and hammering snare drums as the track unravels back and forth between somber acoustics and doom drenched crawlers crying out unsettled melodies over thick, symphonic chords plastered in distortion guitar. The progression is ever shifting in direction like schizophrenia, as if fighting between different parallels. At around fifteen minutes the song breaks its form with a lush, dreamy laden of piano sweeping in fast flowing, gorgeous form before confining itself to a simple melody that sets a tone for the final part of the track that fails to make sense, or climax the song with any meaning.

The lack of direction or cohesion gives this one an unusual taste, despite being a little erratic and shifting, whatever is taking place sounds great for the most part. The group deliver a similar taste of melody and mood to the predecessor, but not the song structure and emotional narrative. The following songs feel second fiddle to the colossal opener and feel easier to digest and understand in their small length, despite continual shifting mood, melody and tempo that turns in a heart beat. The final track "Weight Of The Feather" has the simplest of song structures present and from the mid point draws the record to a close with a big crunchy riff chugged over and over as the growing magnitude of symphony is cut short by the strike of a gong.

"Kadavreski" is a confusing record, one that's hard to form an opinion on. Its ambitious opener doesn't sit right with the other three songs and they all shift and turn a little to fast to follow. That being said at all times the record provides a lush dense wall of swallowing sound to get lost in, with moody brooding melodies leading the way.

Rating: 6/10

Thursday 27 August 2015

Public Service Broadcasting "Inform Educate Entertain" (2013)


 Thanks to Brady and his Youtube channel Objectivity I was introduced to this fantastic musical project that takes stock audio from national archives and uses it alongside instrumentals to create a retrospective peak into the past using music to guide the mood and narratives of times gone by. Behind the name are two English musicians, Willgoose and Wrigglesworth who have been playing together for five years now and have released an EP and two full lengths, of which this was their first.

An interesting observation to make clear from the get go is that nothing here feels "nostalgic". In the same way Kraftwerk envisioned aspects of society both in the past and future, PSB feels like it "takes you there" more than it does remember it. The electronic leads, dense atmospheric synths and brooding indie guitars build up rocking atmospheres dripped with developing leads that continually grow and interchange with one another in a big layered sound that balances its density carefully.

Each song revolves around a set of samples the instrumentals correlate with. For example "Signal 30" is the records most "aggressive" sound with big distortion indie leads taking charge of the track, strumming out burgeoning riffs while archive samples play out sounds of cars crashing and an aggressive chap who's annoyed at a motorist. It may not be the best example but the chemistry between the two works on every track. Despite this the instrumentals could easily stand on their own.

The record has fantastic production. Each track may start with a few gentler shades of sound, but quickly the melodies and layers build up and a flood of sound heads towards the listener, peaking the songs in the big moments that often end the songs. The initial attraction to this project was its concept, but the writing and composition has revealed itself to have much class and depth that can be enjoyed without the samples context. A strong record that will continue to grow on me I'm sure.

Favorite Songs: Inform - Educate - Entertain, Night Mail, Everest
Rating: 7/10

Tuesday 25 August 2015

Commissioner "What Is Commissioner" (2011)


What is Commissioner? That's a reasonable question to ask, but unfortunately the answer is far from. Commissioner is a noisy hash of genre crossing ideas that could of had some chemistry if it wasn't for a horrid execution and lack of emotion. I found this record when researching Suicide Silence's "You Can't Stop Me" record released last year. It was their first without singer Mitch Lurker who participated in this project before his death in 2012. The project is a collaboration with California based producer "Big Chocolate", the man behind "Disfiguring The Goddess" and you can hear a lot of that blunt force trauma vocal production style on this short record.

In an attempt to crossover Deathcore and Dubstep the two create a sour lifeless curdling of blistering noise that lacks any excitement. A continual barrage of wordless, deafening screams play out over a colorless mix of electronics and guitars. The slightly djenty, tonal guitar bludgeons chord after chord without a grain of groove or feeling. The electronics batter away with ugly, awkward textures and alien, industrial noises that are often very unbalanced in the mix and have uninteresting wobbles and noises screeching over what little is going on in the background. Theres a lot of harsh chopping and glitching sounds thrown in too the already clustered and aimless songs, further dispelling any signs of music.

It's truly been an awful listening experience, of the few times I could bare to stomach this record I found nothing in these lifeless noise abuse tracks. On paper a lot of whats going on could work, however the execution seem to suck out all feeling. The heavy guitars could of easily added in a little groove and mosh, but the breakdowns where beyond lackluster and everything about this record just reeked. Its hard to be so critical but there was truly nothing to take away from this experience.

Rating: 0/10

Monday 24 August 2015

Chelsea Wolfe "Abyss" (2015)


Discovering the music of American singer Chelsea Wolfe last year through her previous record "Pain Is Beauty" was a breath of fresh air. Another reminder that there seems to be an endless source of sound out their that can reach you in many different ways. Chelsea's cold, bleak and shadowy music plays off her sweet somber voice like a spirit calling out from dark and on "Abyss" she takes a big step thematically and musically into her darkest sound yet. Accompanied by several members of Russian Circles the album takes the big roaring Post-Metal sound the band play to new territory with monstrous guitar work plunging us into the abyss.

What I previously liked most about Chelsea's music was the juxtaposition between the brighter melodies and the dark, gloomy tones that played off one another. Abyss is stripped bare of anything uplifting and plunges deep into a wallowing despair of darkness as the Post-Metal apocalypse broods sludgy, gritty riffs of ambiguous noise under a rattling kit and Chelsea's lonely cries. Its a hefty, atmospheric sound, but one that wasn't quite as enthralling as its ambition. The riffage falls savage to its textural ambitions and doesn't make anything memorable with the notations.

This is much the tale of the first half of the record and with "After The Fall" the album picks up with a distinct shift in direction as the distortion guitars drop from the focal point. This second half has a lot more melody and driving moments that still focus on an unforgiving despair. "Crazy Love" utilizes a haunting string section that cascades and descends with a tone of horror and evil under Chelsea's soft vocal inflections. Across the album she reveals the dark and tormenting experiencing of the sleep paralysis she suffers from, which a part of this album deals with and contributes to its haunting theme as she shares with us the frozen wakeful state of shadowy figures and being trapped in oneself.

Abyss is an ambitious and focused effort that I cannot criticize, the production works together monstrous distortion and bleak sounds with a clarity that avoids feeling sterile and the music its captured has its direction but for the most part this particular strand of dark isn't as immersible for me as I would of liked. What I like most about her music is that chemistry where the darker sounds smother the brighter melodies within and the first half of the record was devoid of any of that. I'm hoping its just something I'm not in the mood for right now, as I can hear whats great about this one, but right now it hasn't clicked.

Favorite Tracks: After The Fall, Crazy Love, Simple Death
 Rating: 5/10

Sunday 23 August 2015

Birocratic "Beets 2" (2013)


Following up on the first "Beets" record I got exactly what I was hoping for. The first was short, too reminiscent of Nujabes and showed a spark of a unique sound which has blossomed on this record. NYC producer Biro has put together a second, short, installment of instrumentals clocking in at just seventeen minutes. "Frontusis" and "Ergo" two lush, melodic, sleepy Jazz Hop numbers that are decent but once again emulate the Nujabes style to the point of deception. They are great instrumentals, but the other six tracks all follow Biro's unique sound and further experiment with the vocal chops that made his tracks stand out on the first record.

Putting the best first, the record kicks off with two unforgettable beats, "Since You've Asked" flirts dangerously with compression as the baseline, kicks and vocal samples compete for volume, pushing one another back and forth, poised in an entrancing manor. Between the beat and bass two female vocal lines harmonize and play off one another as Biro chops and churns the lead vocals to end the audible lyrics with half cut words that play a charming melody with a quite genius touch to it. "Prismatic" follows with an upbeat moving track full of groove and jive with a zany melodic lead that hits hard like a hook. The song eventually breaks to a smooth, phased vocal cut that build the atmosphere up for one final kick of the zany lead before a seamless u-turn transition leads into "Round 1".

With the other tracks on this record Biro demonstrates more of his unique chemistry for matching chopped up vocals and samples. On "Herocratic" we get a taste of a break composed of chopped piano and synth to craft a new tune that sounds like a straight cut on first listen. These strengths are blossoming and Biro is showing much promise, the production was tight and consistent for a short collection of instrumentals showcasing his talent. Beets 3 is out, its longer and I'm now rather excited to hear what it has to offer!

Favorite Tracks: Since You've Asked, Prismatic, You Were
Rating: 5/10

Saturday 22 August 2015

Wayne Shorter "Speak No Evil" (1965)


 American Jazz saxophonist Wayne Shorter may not be as well remembered today but hes one of the music scenes most acclaimed with an astonishing ten Grammy's in his belt. Hes been at it since 59 and is still making records today with releases spanning a whooping seven decades. "Speak No Evil" is his sixth release and one of four in the year of 65. Seeking another Jazz record to enjoy, this comes from the recently discovered list of "Jazz Classics".

It starts of as a harder hitting album with an ambitious, striking saxophone singing out hooks over mellow, laid back piano and drums before delving into a typically improvisational avenue that lets the saxophone take lead with a variety of scales, usually drifting between flat and conventional melodies. Its atmospheric, chilled out but fairly uneventful. The album takes a while to get going with the title track brightening the mood with orchestrated leads that brings the piano to the forefront with the two dancing around one another in tandem in the songs opening construct. The last two tracks really pick up for me with milder moods and slow, steady leads that are much more telling than the first half. When coming at a steadier pace the words and feelings are in the saxophones voice. There's much sadness and sorrow in "Infant Eyes" with an observant tone, as if caught in the aftermath of tragedy with acceptance in mind.

Much of Jazz is hard for me to put into words. I enjoy it, as much as I enjoy whats mysterious and distant about it, the free flowing drums and soothing nature of their relation with the pianos create a pleasurable canvas for a lead to glide and pale through on its own accord but somewhere in that chemistry I feel rather at the mercy of my own ignorance. Despite listening to a lot of Jazz in recent years and very much enjoying the vibe it brings, I struggle to find the words as I did with this one and as I'm sure i will with another Ive been listening to frequently. Enjoyable record with a few "go to" tracks for that particular mood.

Favorite Tracks: Speak No Evil, Infant Eyes, Wild Flower
Rating: 6/10

Friday 21 August 2015

Cal Chuchesta "The New Calassic" (2015)


 Anthony Fantano, AKA "The Needle Drop" brings his much loved idiotic, clueless roommate character into the spotlight with a mixtape record of songs to make you chuckle and laugh as Cal Chuchesta fumbles through a collection of rap numbers exposing his confused and dimwitted mind. The record is a collaborative effort with Fantano calling on his friends from the music parody scene to help produce and feature on the record, giving it some immersion and atmosphere as the features play in on the joke and give it some continuity.

The record starts off pretty strong, delivering some amusing lines and themes over some solid beats. As the album draws on things get a little stale, but it can be hard to stomach Cal for to long, especially as someone who doesn't listen to much comedy music. Its a difficult chemistry to achieve, matching good music with laughs but there defiantly moments where Fantano gets it right with some terrific lines "Got people calling me a parody, but no rapper compare to me" and "Iluminium rappers, plans get foiled". There's plenty of amusing lines throughout the record but rarely are they strung together through an entire track. The line "Rappers don't ride bikes, because they cant handle bars" could pass for a legitimate rap, reworded a little.

Behind the comedy the beats are pretty decent with the exception of one or two. Generally they have a modern sound with deep sub kicks, snappy snares and sharp hi hats. Makes for an enjoyable listen with Cal's inoffensive tone drifting into the background if your focusing on other things. Some of Cal's best moments come from his backup voice reassuring his raps and sometimes interacting with him directly, exchanging unusual dialog. The ending skit with Anthony and Cal is hilarious with Anthony talking to the listeners while Cal groans and cry's in the backdrop. Its a comedy record, we can't take it to seriously but it could of delivered more. A couple of tracks deliver humor you can return to over and over but the most if is mildly amusing and doesn't have much replay value.

Favorite Songs: Hot Dinner, Cocoa, I Need My Friends
Rating: 4/10

Tuesday 18 August 2015

Mindless Faith "Eden To Abyss" (2015)


I was engulfed by a wave of excitement when I saw this record pop up in my feed. I can't remember how exactly I found this American band from Maryland, but back in 2012 I got hold of their record "Just Defy" and was impressed with the striking balance of Industrial Metal and EDM the band achieve. Leaning more towards the Neue Deutsche Härte style they fuse mammoth guitars with pulsating dance kicks and Aggro-Tech saw wave electronic leads. As the name suggests "Mindless Faith" muse over critical observations of human behavior when it comes to religion, money and consumerism, with a peril outlook.

"Eden To Abyss" develops the groups sound further into its electronic side with the big crunching guitars drifting behind the synthesized leads that sound thick and dense. There presence is richer and decorates the tracks with layers of tinkering industrial noises that latch around the main drum beat while aggressive leads run the show. The bass kicks thud and pound away like the heart of the track, continually aligning a dark rhythmic energy underneath that makes you want to move. Singer Jason delivers his words with steady passing as his rough distorted delivery bleeds into the track, making for a nihilistic sound.

Aesthetically the group have made a stronger, bolder record with louder instruments, ramped up aggression on the synths and made a more appealing vibe however its not quite there on the songwriting front. On "Just Defy" track after track rolled by making a resounding impression, often peaked by the lyrics. On this one the lyrical themes didn't hit as hard and often the songs drift into themselves and loose their hard hitting momentum. The more ambiance oriented moments are enjoyable but its pounding tracks like "Shit Show" that make the record work. Despite some criticism, there is some improvement and progression between records and overall makes for a very enjoyable listen if your looking for dark and heavy Industrial EDM.

 Favorite Tracks: Shit Show, The Fluffer
Rating: 6/10

Monday 17 August 2015

Adrian Von Ziegler "Wanderer" (2011)


Adrian Von Ziegler is a Switz composer who has gained popularity for his music through the Youtube platform. Adrian composes compassionate, scenic, neoclassical ambient music that touches on Scandinavian folk, nature, mythology and fantasy themes of that variety. Upon first hearing his music I knew instantly it was for me and of the twelve plus records I picked up this was the one to jump out at me first and I'm hooked.

I will summarize "Wanderer" up quickly, its an ambient, atmospheric record consisting of three twenty minute songs that settle a natural, harmonious mood and drift on through with melodies and tunes poised for depth and meaning, while remaining subtle and calming. Progression is irrelevant, the songs hold a moment in time, a feeling without trying to climax and break the mode. Its quite simply wonderful and charming.

The execution is remarkable, Adrian breaths life into these songs with the sounds of bird chirping, rivers flowing, soft winds, the squawk of crows in the distance and the occasional owl. Alongside soft and lush stringed, plucked instruments and gentle synthesizers composed with love and care, these songs come to life on a "go to" record for relaxation, ambiance or that need for a natural connection to the beauty of nature.

Rating: 7/10