Thursday, October 11, 2007

kanye west [new music]


Good goddamn, Kanye's a crazy fuck. Did you see him on SNL a few weeks back, where he forgot his lines and started spitting a totally atrocious freestyle? Or last year, at the Europe VMAs, where he shit-talked Justice and essentially everyone in Europe (after which he bit their style and their video director; see below)? Or two years ago, on that Katrina telethon, when he blurted out his (entirely rational and justifiable) feelings about our dear Presidente? Yeah? Who the fuck cares. Continue making music this fine, and it really doesn't matter what E! and various hip hop bloggers have to say. Consider it thus: he's certainly less clinically disturbed than Brian Wilson, Daniel Johnston, Don Van Vleit, etc., and we don't question their street cred. Phil Spector (allegedly) murdered someone, for chrissakes, and we still love him for his production skillz. Kanye: yeah, he's got an ego, but at least he isn't on trial for second degree murder.
Graduation isn't as musically dense or satisfying as Late Registration, which could be due to Jon Brion's notable absence (he's around, but not to the same degree). However, it's still a fascinating, forward-thinking, solid record. Kanye seems to approach his craft as a producer the way Radiohead (yep, I said it) approach their song creation: the ultimate focus is the furtherance of their art and the cohesion of their work. If the resulting record is critically acclaimed and/or a chart-topper, all the better. And no, it's not an electro record (if you haven't heard it yet; I was slightly surprised), but it does abound in synths. Italo-disco-style synths, to get more specific, as opposed to Swizz-Beats-style synths. That's where his newfound love of electronic music, beyond the overplayed Daft Punk sample, comes in. "Flashing Lights" is a hip-hop-meets-house club banger in the style of the Streets "Blinded by the Lights." Several other tracks utilize the same aesthetic, and these are by and large my favorite on the album, none more so than the outstanding "Good Life" (linked below). Granted, there are weak spots (every hip hop album has them): Lil Wayne has a lame, out-of-place cameo on the unremarkable "Barry Bonds," and Kanye wastes a perfectly good beat on the head-scratcher "Drunk and Hot Girls," an argument against the titular ladies, as if there was some unknown party out there straight representin' for shitfaced sluts. Then there are the odd, tender moments, especially the closing "Big Brother," a song-length love letter to Kanye's mentor Jay-Z. Never before, and likely never again, will we hear such vulnerability from a rapper; it's totally against everything hip hop careers, including Kanye's, are built on. It's these moments, though, that set Kanye apart. Any rapper alive can pull off the swagger and braggadocio, most less successfully, but few even bother baring their souls this way.

Kanye West [ft. T-Pain] - Good Life [from Graduation, 2007]

I would be remiss in not also sharing the video for this track, somewhat ironically directed by Ed Banger art director So-Me:

Saturday, September 15, 2007

bangers & cash + lcd + soulwax [new music]


A few dance party jams for your weekend:

James Murphy is a busy boy. Constantly touring, he's got a live mix LP coming out as part of Fabric London's FABRICLIVE series, and he's also soon releasing the Bunch Of Stuff EP under his LCD Soundsystem moniker. Appropriately, this comp includes a bunch of stuff, including this lovely Soulwax remix of my favorite Sounds Of Silver track. True to form, our boy Soulwax tweaks it just slightly to the benefit of all, throwing in handclaps and synth patches and drawing everything out to make it even more dancefloor-perfect. Enjoy.

LCD Soundsystem - Get Innocuous! (Soulwax Remix) [from the Bunch Of Stuff EP, 2007]

On a slightly dirtier tip, Spank Rock's been a busy boy as well. Fresh off his own FABRICLIVE mix (and an excellent one at that, traveling from Kurtis Blow to Yes to Justice), he's delved whole-heartedly into a new project with Benny Blanco: Bangers & Cash. Look at that cover. Yes, kids, it's like 2 Live Crew. Is Miami bass the new Italo-disco? You be the judge.

Bangers & Cash - B.O.O.T.A.Y! [from Spank Rock & Benny Blanco Are Bangers And Cash, 2007]

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

breakwater [old music]


Look at that album cover, and you might be thinking, "What the fuck?" What the fuck, indeed.
The short answer: this track is the sample source for Daft Punk's stellar "Robot Rock."
The short response: oh, how interesting. They lifted those riffs wholesale. The Daft Punk track is still pretty great, though.
The long answer: not only are Daft Punk brilliant producers with their ears permanently glued to the dancefloor, they're also extremely savvy crate-diggers who managed to unearth this gem in spite (or perhaps because) of this ridiculous album cover. It's moot that they lifted the synth riffs wholesale; had you not been informed as to the sample source, you never would have known. That's the art behind the French masks.
Nor is it right to ignore the standalone greatness of the original track here. Existing somewhere in the overlap of hair metal, the heaviest Tower of Power funk, and Edgar Winter's "Frankenstein," "Release The Beast" is a call to arms. The titular beast is the ever-elusive "funk," or "Da Funk," as Daft Punk themselves might put it, and don't you want to get up out your chair? Do it, release the beast, and thank Breakwater later for it. On the music snob tip, Breakwater was a funk band from Philly, active in the 70s, with at least eight members. That's about all I can tell you. Oh, and Wikipedia makes a point of mentioning that "'Release the Beast' features the sound of an oscillator sync patch on an analog synthesizer." Word.

Breakwater - Release The Beast [from Splashdown, 1980]

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

tiga + zombie nation + justice [new music]


I'm sure this track has already been and gone on Hype Machine's top 10, but I've never been anything but a latecomer, and that certainly doesn't deplete the awesomeness of this club banger. Justice certainly wouldn't be blamed for getting lazy recently, what with their constant touring, remixing, and generally being the darlings of the "nu-rave" circuit; however, this remix finds them in full, brilliant form. I've been a Tiga fan for a while (especially "Good As Gold" and his LCD Soundsystem remixes), but I regret to say that I've never heard the original of this collabo with the excellently-named German DJ Zombie Nation. Regardless, this track's remix is the epitome of the current wave of indie electro dance party music: chopped synth samples, bleeps, even a tight vocal exhalation fade in and out just when you want them to. Generally, tension builds and releases very predictably in dance music, and not that it doesn't here, but it does so at the perfect places: this ain't some 1997 Paul Van Dyk cut. I can't put it better than the headline from Tiga's website: "It will wash your brain clear of all witchcraft...prepare to dance you slugs!"

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

liars + crystal castles [new music]


Just a tiny taste until I get together something more substantial...

Liars just released a new, eponymous album today, which I can't wait to hear (and will certainly post upon when I do). Thematically, here's a lovely remix by the opulent Crystal Castles to tide us over. They take the hugely theatrical cut from Liars' last album and flip it into a four-on-the-floor club banger. It's a serious remix, but strangely true to the original. They haven't completely abandoned the subtle effects and minor-key progessions, and the added beats and tones are entirely in-line with the album's general aesthetic. A rare club remix that truly synthesizes without destruction.

Liars - It Fit When I Was A Kid (Crystal Castles Remix) [from the Alice Practice EP, 2007]

Sunday, August 26, 2007

delinquent

I apologize profusely for my blogginz delinquency. Los Angeleez, I'm Yours will return with new music stylez this week. Stay tuned: new music mind-blowing and old music education is sure to come.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

retta young [old music]


[Short post this week. Business is a little hairy here in Los Angeleez.]

A homie commented to me that a previous post was "venom-filled." I take umbrage at that; I am an admittedly arrogant music snob, but I vowed to Michael Plus that this blog would ascribe to Believer ethics: enthusiasm for all things I write about, ignoring the negativity--the Polyphonic Spree of criticism, a more academic version of "if you can't say anything nice..."
Kids, let me clarify and recapitulate. I merely wanted to point to the roots of what is currently hip (my favorite thing to do). If you love T.I., you should also be listening to mid-90s UGK, for instance. Related to that post, then, let me give you a lovely slice of the purest disco.
I know absolutely next-to-nothing about this Retta Young lady. She was married to Al Goodman from the Moments, recorded for the All-Platinum label (Sylvia Robinson's pre-Sugar Hill foray), and she scored a UK chart hit with "Sending Out An SOS" (not the ABBA song) in 1975. I do, however, know that this song is disco brilliance. Deliciously breathy vocals, sweeping washes of strings, chromatically rising vamps, and that fat, luscious backbeat. From the bottom of my heart, enjoy.