Thursday, September 03, 2009
Friday, August 28, 2009
Ky-mani Marley feat Pras-Electric avenue
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Horehound
Horehound is so good I need to write about it. It's been a LONG time since I heard something that really moved me, and this only happens when all the stars align and the right person with the right message with the right bass line and the right melody all coalesce into the one thing that I've been dying to hear but had no idea. The Dead Weather is one of those things. A spur of the moment idea of an album that took around three weeks to make with no prep or logic on how they might tour. Just musicians getting together for the love of music and the sake of experimentation.Now i'll be the first to admit I was suspect when I heard that Jack White was ina new group and he wasn't lead vocals OR guitar (are you TRYING to kill me?) But I trusted him, this was his idea, his vision. It is also the first production off of his new label Third Man, a place in Nashville in which I will make a pilgrimage and is named after White's first job. So if I'm such a fan that I can stalk out this kind of information, where was the resistance to the formation of this group actually coming from you might ask. It's just that lately I've been stuck listening to Ruth Brown, Memphis Minnie, Julia Lee, Sister Rosetta and the likes. I've been stuck in a time warp and want my music to have some sort of authenticity, some sort of history, some sort of... soul. I'm not really a HUGE fan of The Kills or Queens of the Stone Age, and even though I love the Raconteurs, it's just White really that grabs me. So, I was suspect.
The first time I turned this album on... dammit. I hate to start from the end but Will There Be Enough Water, has guitar reminiscent of the great blues Guitarists from Mali, with that slow story telling drawl in the darkness that is embossed with southern spiritual sounding vocals from the back up singers. The drums keep the song focused in the same way a ghost makes you squint at night. I could get lost in this song and never come back. It brought out a grimy, primal, instinctive love that makes me keep coming back. It's simply a masterpiece. The video that accompanies this song is a bit of black and white cinema that reminds me of The Notorious Betty Paige, directed by Mary Harron, Paige was also from Nashville. If you have the time check it out.
The album opens with 60 Feet Tall, written by Fertita and Mosshart. This song is so raw, and Mosshart's raspy voice brings this song right into the era I had already been listening to lately. The thing that was magical that happened on this album was all the elements I had been previously been listening to, were met here. The story telling, the darkness, the bass lines, the vocals... the blues. Which brings me to So Far From Your Weapon. I was NOT ready. This song was instantly inducted to the classics when I heard it the first time. Whatever my opinion of Mosshart was prior to this album, I'll never question her songwriting skills again. I FEEL this song. Not in the omg I'm at a party and this makes me want to move type way, no I feel this in my bones, in my voice, I feel that the bullet was cursed. This song can bring you to a place you might not be ready for if you let it.
I tried to go back and listen to The Kills to try to find more of this but I couldn't, all the elements were just not there. The collective just brought it out of her, all of them, I think. I think this is the kind of work I've been looking for that artists used to do in the 70's, just sit and do jam sessions together, be creative, bounce ideas off each other and collaborate. Only instead of Hendrix and Davis just talking about, these four actually DID it. I'm going to stop rambling and hope that you go ahead and give this a listen. If you really think you love rock, and you really think you know the blues, then this will knock your socks off. I promise.
Sunday, August 23, 2009
never forget you
madcon
noisettes
arctic monkeys
had to feature these new albums, between these two (wild young hearts, humbug) and whorehound, I haven't really been listening to anything else except that madcon song. so enjoy!!! new "indie" (I don't think i can still cal indie if it's super popular).


stay green.
v.
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Ruth Brown
I LOVE this woman. She's awesome and sings exactly what's on my mind... So I thought I'd share. Enjoy!Ruth Brown (January 30, 1928 – November 17, 2006) was an American R&B singer, and actress noted for bringing a popular music style to rhythm and blues in a series of hit songs for fledgling Atlantic Records in the 1950s, such as "So Long", "Teardrops from My Eyes" and "(Mama) He Treats Your Daughter Mean". For these contributions, Atlantic became known as "The house that Ruth built".
Following a resurgence that began in the mid-1970s and peaked in the eighties, Brown used her influence to press for musicians' rights regarding royalties and contracts, which led to the founding of the Rhythm and Blues Foundation.[1] Her performances in the Broadway musical Black and Blue earned Brown a Tony Award, and the original soundtrack won a Grammy Award.
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stay green.
v.
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Punk meets Islam for new generation in U.S.
The guitarist stands in front of a mirror messing with his mohawk. The drummer strikes a wild tempo. The singer rips off his T-shirt and begins to scream the lyrics.
They're young. They're punk. And they're rocking both their Muslim and American worlds with their music, lyrics and style.
"A lot of times people say, 'Oh wow, look, brown people playing music' [but] it's more than that," said 25-year-old Pakistani-American Shahjehan Khan, the lead singer for a Muslim punk band, The Kominas.
The Boston-based band is one of a handful of Muslim punk bands that emerged in the United States in the past few years.
The members of this four-person rock group with South Asian roots hold varying views on religion. One says he's an atheist; three others identify as Muslims -- both practicing and non-practicing. For them, punk music is a way to rebel against their conservative cultural upbringing and the frustrations of growing up a young Muslim in America.
"We aren't [just] some alternative to a stereotypical Muslim. We actually might be offering some sort of insights for people at large about religion, about the world," said 26-year-old bassist Basim Usmani.
Blending traditional South Asian rhythms with punk rock beats, they sing in both English and Punjabi. (Kominas means "scum-bag" in Punjabi, according to the band.) Their songs can be at once political, serious, satirical and insinuating.
Their risqué lyrics and provocative song titles such as "Sharia Law in the USA," "Suicide Bomb the GAP" and "Rumi was a Homo" -- a protest song against homophobia in the American Muslim community -- have drawn the attention of Muslims, non-Muslims, fans and critics alike.
"You sort of have to throw it in peoples' faces and be shocking in order to give people a different way to think about stuff," said Usmani.
"These punk, metal and rap scenes - so-called extreme music scenes -- are addressing issues that mainstream music doesn't," said Mark LeVine, a professor of Middle Eastern history at University of California, Irvine, who is also a musician and author of "Heavy Metal Islam."
"[Punk] allows them to rebel against society and their own culture at the same time," he said. iReport: Is Islam at odds with American values?
Before the Islamic punk movement in North America had a voice, it had a story. The Muslim punk scene began to gel in 2003 when novelist and convert to Islam, Michael Muhammad Knight self-published his book, "The Taqwacores" about a fictional Muslim punk scene in Buffalo, New York.
The book opens with a poem called "Muhammed was a Punk Rocker" and describes both conventional and unconventional characters including a Shi'ite skinhead, a conservative Sunni Muslim, a burka-wearing feminist punk and a Sufi who sports a Mohawk and drinks alcohol.
"The punk rock kids I would hang out with weren't even Muslim," 31-year old Knight recalls. "They were so fiercely individualistic -- I wish that I could be a Muslim in that way: not be ashamed of my confusion, not be ashamed of my doubts. Just be myself and be proud of who I am."
The novel's title, "Taqwacore," is a hybrid word stemming from the Arabic "taqwa," meaning "god consciousness," and "core" referring to "hardcore" -- a genre of punk music. It's now a general term for Muslim punk rock.
The popularity of the book, which Knight said was born out of a search to find his identity as a Muslim-American, grew in underground youth circles and online.
It didn't take long before real-life "taqwacore" bands like The Kominas began blooming across the country.
"It makes sense why punk has been the music of choice for young, politically active Muslims who are musical," said LeVine. "The straight edge movement in punk which was about no drugs, no alcohol, was clean yet very intense and political. It's a way for them to rebel against their families in some extreme ways yet still be ritualistically, 'good Muslims.' "
"Taqwacore" gave voice to many young Muslim-Americans who felt muted by circumstances and created an opening for bands like Al-Thawra, Vote Hezbollah, and Secret Trial Five -- an all-girl punk band out of Vancouver, Canada.
In the summer of 2007, five of the taqwacore bands organized a "taqwa-tour" of the northeastern United States. They played in city after city, traveling in a green school bus with TAQWA painted on the front bought by Knight for $2,000 on eBay.
This summer, The Kominas continue to strike a chord with audiences around the country, hitting cities from San Francisco to New York on a multi-city tour.
The taqwacore movement has also inspired two upcoming films - a dramatic feature film based on the book and a documentary.
Many conservative Muslims may peg young taqwacores as heretic for their suggestive and irreverent lyrics. But the musicians say they are just trying to show both cultures how broad the spectrum of belief can be.
Like many young adults balancing their religious beliefs with American culture, some young Muslims in the United States say it's a constant struggle to be accepted in both worlds.
"I had a lot of conflicted feelings growing up a Muslim in America," said 25-year-old Kominas drummer Imran Malik. "It was hard not being able to do the same things that everyone else around you is doing without feeling guilty about them."
Knight, who grew up with a Catholic mother and white supremacist father, converted to Islam when he was 16. He said his message is not one of blasphemy but rather an extension of his discontent with the rigid etiquette that dictates certain practices within Islam and the stereotypes of Muslims in American.
"Muslims haven't been fully accepted as Americans but the American experience hasn't been accepted as something that can contribute to the Muslim world," said Knight.
Knight said writing the book helped him and others connect through shared experiences.
"When I first wrote it, I felt like there would never be a place for me in the Muslim community and that has really turned around a lot," he said. "The book gave me the community I needed, it connected me to all these kids that were also confused and who also went through the things that I went through."
That connection is vital to taqwacore music, bassist Usmani said.
"The music is great, but the conversation is the key to all of this. The dialogue that we have inspired is really invaluable."
"I don't think Islam is ever going to go away, I'm just trying to see how it best fits in my life."
(thanks Rob for the contribution)
Monday, August 10, 2009
Sunday, August 09, 2009
those down home blues
I Haven't been this excited to do a show in a while. But this one grew on me. I was in Toronoto, Canada listening to some calypso from 1912-1956 and I had this resurgence of older passionate music come to me. It was craziness. I came home and started playing some of my old Sister Rosetta, Memphis Minnie, Julia Lee, Lee Hazelwood, and what do you know I almost forgot that The Dead Weather was coming out. HOW could I forget Jack White?! If youknow anything about him then you'll know his roots are in the blues, and MAN does this album deliver. Hopefully at the end of the set you'll see (hear) how these initial singers, influenced all of us.
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Lee Hazlewood (born Barton Lee Hazlewood[1] July 9, 1929 – August 4, 2007) was an American country and pop singer, songwriter, and record producer, most widely known for his work with guitarist Duane Eddy during the late fifties and singer Nancy Sinatra in the sixties.[2]
Hazlewood had a distinctive baritone voice that added an ominous resonance to his music. Hazlewood's collaborations with Nancy Sinatra as well as his solo output in the late 1960s and early 1970s have been praised as an essential contribution to a sound often described as "Cowboy Psychedelia" or "Saccharine Underground".[3]
The son of an oil man, Hazlewood was born in Mannford, Oklahoma[1] and spent most of youth living between Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas, and Louisiana. He grew up listening to pop and bluegrass music. [4] Hazlewood spent his teenage years in Port Neches, Texas where he was exposed to a rich Gulf Coast music tradition. Hazlewood studied for a medical degree at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas.[1] He served with the United States Army during the Korean War.[1]
Following discharge from the military, Hazlewood worked as a disc jockey in Arizona while honing his songwriting skills. His first hit as a producer and songwriter was "The Fool", recorded by rockabilly artist Sanford Clark in 1956. Hazlewood partnered with pioneering rock guitarist Duane Eddy.[1], producing and cowriting an unprecedented string of hit instrumental records, including "Peter Gunn", "Boss Guitar", "40 Miles Of Bad Road", "Shazam!", "Rebel Rouser" and "[Dance With The] Guitar Man".
Memphis Minnie (June 3, 1897 – August 6, 1973[1]) was an American blues guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter. She was the only female blues artist who matched her male contemporaries as both a singer and an instrumentalist. Born Lizzie Douglas in Algiers, Louisiana, Minnie was one of the most influential and pioneering female blues musicians and guitarists of all time.[1] She recorded for forty years, almost unheard of for any woman in show business at the time and unique among female blues artists. A flamboyant character who wore bracelets made of silver dollars, she was the biggest female blues singer from the early Depression years through World War II. One of the first blues artists to take up the electric guitar, in 1942, she combined her Louisiana-country roots with Memphis blues to produce her own unique country-blues sound; along with Big Bill Broonzy and Tampa Red, she took country blues into electric urban blues, paving the way for Muddy Waters, Bo Diddley, Little Walter, and Jimmy Rogers to travel from the small towns of the south to the big cities of the north.
Julia Lee Born in Boonville, Missouri, Lee was raised in Kansas City, and began her musical career around 1920, singing and playing piano in her brother George Lee's band, which for a time also included Charlie Parker. She first recorded on the Merritt record label in 1927 with Jesse Stone as pianist and arranger, and launched a solo career in 1935.
In 1944 she won a recording contract with Capitol Records, and a string of R&B hits followed, including "Gotta Gimme Whatcha Got" (#3 R&B, 1946), "Snatch and Grab It" (#1 R&B for 12 weeks, 1947, selling over 500,000 copies), "King Size Papa" (#1 R&B for 9 weeks, 1948), "I Didn't Like It The First Time (The Spinach Song)" (#4 R&B, 1949), and "My Man Stands Out".
As these titles suggest, she became best known for her trademark double entendre songs, or, as she once said, "the songs my mother taught me not to sing". The records were credited to 'Julia Lee and Her Boy Friends', her session musicians including Jay McShann, Vic Dickenson, Benny Carter, Red Norvo, Nappy Lamare, and Red Nichols.
Although her hits dried up after 1949, she continued as one of the most popular performers in Kansas City until her death in San Diego, California, at the age of 56, from a heart attack.
*****Stone cold Dead In The Market was made with Ella Fitzgerald and Jordan Louis forming the Tympany Five in 1946. It was on the charts #1 for five weeks and was recorded in Trinidad.
The Dead Weather is an American alternative rock super-group formed in Nashville, Tennessee in 2009. Comprised of Alison Mosshart (of The Kills and Discount), Jack White (of The White Stripes and The Raconteurs), Dean Fertita (of Queens of the Stone Age) and Jack Lawrence (of The Raconteurs and The Greenhornes)[1], The Dead Weather was revealed to the public at the opening of Third Man Records' Nashville headquarters on March 11, 2009. The band performed live for the first time at the event, immediately before releasing their debut single "Hang You from the Heavens".
stay blues.
v.
Monday, July 27, 2009
i agree with meth & red on this one
kelis, you should go somewhere and stfu for a while.
this was dirty and you know it.
you just pissed of every REAL HIP HOP HEAD in the world.
you ain't THAT fine.
someone offends the super hoe
you spend your life talking about men's private parts in detail and you get mad at the anchor for lightweight calling you a hoe...wow
Sunday, July 26, 2009
high tech blitz and ass
dj shadow
the team
jahcuzi
kid cudi & 88 keys
zion i & too $hort
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arctic monkeys start shows with warren g... whaaaaaat!!
snoop dogg & buzz aldrin - rocket experience
why e drink
stay green.
v.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
alternatively thinking
the kickdrums
empire of the sun
pheonix
maroons
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Pheonix - 1901
empire of the sun - standing on the shores
stay green.
v.
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Michael Jackson & Billy Mays
I can't take this.
anyway tonight I have my dedication to MJ, and my not so common hits
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Also, I need to send a special dedication to Billy Mays... Charm City needs to run a special election. We've lost our mayor. We'll miss you.
you're so not ready for this.
stay green.
v.
Thursday, June 25, 2009
oh my god michael jackson is dead!
this is epic.
the king of pop is dead.
the last time i felt like this was james brown.
man.
this guy has influenced EVERYONE in my generation.
This is truly a loss.
Here's my dedication.
videos of my fav mj songs.
smooth criminal
scream
jam
remember the time
i have to stop here...
there's just not enough time.
v.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
back from Boston
hipsters need soul too: dj graffiti & buff1
ahhhhh I was happy to be a place with minimal hipster influence. If you haven't done new england it's awesome. cape cod, boston and maine are pretty friggin awesome in the summer.
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my friend Batman made this with his brother. omg
stay green.
v.
Sunday, June 07, 2009
it's not the complaint department
el michels band
major lazer feat santogold & lexx
mos def
lykke li
drake feat lykke li
so I"m finally back on track and able to upload again. it was horrible.
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lykke li interview with nardwuar
prince zamboo freetyling over major lazer :hold the line: beat
drake - best I ever had
enjoy ;)
stay green.
v.
Sunday, May 17, 2009
we insist
zoe keating
a story told in classical
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zoe keating - sun will set
stay green.
i do.
v.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
I've Got A Spell on You
the whitest boy alive
adele
ella fitzgerald (the awesome)
she & him
Slowing it down.
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adele - cold shoulder
the whitest boy alive - island (live bootleg)
look around you - sulphur (omg i gotta thank my brother for this one)
stay green.
happy mothers day.
v.
Sunday, May 03, 2009
I've never met so many nuts
k-os
k'naan
chester french
jill scott & lupe fiasco
zion i
more new music! I'm excited, 2009 is producing some good ones
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k-os - 4321
k'naan on somali pirates
lykke li - little bit
stay green.
v.
Sunday, April 26, 2009
live from nowhere
dj jazzy jeff
I'm experimenting with new software, so I'm seeing how long of a mix I can edit and post.
Cheers to like 73 minutes of awesome 90's classics!
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So on a side note,
I was in Vegas last weekend and ran into two of these guys, who you may know from Real Chance at love. Anyway I had no idea of them or the show, and after I embarrassed the one with the long luxurious hair we came back to the hotel and when they tried to explain who they were this photo came up. Turns out they also sing some hip hop/country type music. very interesting.
its pretty awesomely bad, and they won't even let me post the video
the stallionaires
their being equestrians makes sense now lol
stay green.
and entertained.
v.
Monday, April 20, 2009
ahhh chillout after the party music
streaming mix, from Ibiza
this is a good one
cafe mambo ibiza 08 mixed by andy cato groove_armada
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stay green.
v.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
coming soon
have fun.
this kid is great. I think this made the song better.
Sunday, April 05, 2009
she loves everybody
the beatles
elvis prestley
the knux
chester french
mos def
it only seems random till you hear them together.
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the knux - bang bang
chester french - she loves everybody ("live" at solange's 22nd bday)
better than the original video (courtesy of j. emir)
human steps lalala - amelia (courtesy of irahk)
stay green my peoples.
it's almost legal ;)
v.
Sunday, March 29, 2009
It's Blitz!
muppets
d'angelo
daniel merriweather
yyy's
so OMG new D'Angelo, new Yeah Yeah Yeahs, new Mark Ronson. I'm kinda excited... just waiting for new Mos Def! (I need Pharrell to do a video with Mr. Def. I'd be QUITE happy about that)
So I'm only late cuz I couldn't get online last night.
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iron and wine - boy with a coin
from ALau
avenue Q - everyone's a little bit racist
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
It's a Black People Kind of Day
Cheers.
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stay green.
v.
Sunday, March 15, 2009
keeping it Bay
a hyphy mix
so i got slightly ridiculed for rockin my Raider jacket the other day, effin LA people, so in response, I'm reppin the Bay on my Jam session. Enjoy. An hour of the Bay's Finest.
Stay Purple ;)
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short rant:
1. "My greatest pain in life is that I will never be able to see myself perform live." fuck you Kanye. I see why Pharrell secretly laughs AT you. Not WITH you.
2. My sister and I had some weird revelation, separately (which makes it weirder) that Lil Wayne will be this generations Kurt Corbain. Watching him perform drunk on the BET Awards (yes I watch that crap) was amusing till I envisioned him choking on his own vomit in a hotel room somewhere. Anyway a rock album? Really? Wait, I might actually listen to it. I think it has WAY better potential than his rap career.
3. Rihanna, from one woman to another, leave. I read the affidavit, he's fucking crazy. Not like omg girl he didn't mean it, he was drunk, you can get past it kind of crazy. I mean like he bit you while he was choking you AND driving kind of crazy. WTF? Tell him he's invited to this super exclusive party at this warehouse in Deep East Oakland. Tell me a date and I'll handle it from there. Seriously. It's about the principle.
4. Totally nerdy moment: Rock Band: Beatles Edition YEAAAAHHHHHH
5. Not music related, but I REALLY need to meet Darren McFadden.
Sunday, March 08, 2009
west coast supremacy
blu feat. the alchemist/evidence/talib kweli/kid cudi
cloud nice feat. thee satisfaction
madlib
busdriver feat. of mexican descent
zion i
a very rare ALL hip hop jam session. and yeah, they're ALL west coast.
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busdriver - the troglodites win
(what's with the I heart men shirt)
zion i/the grouch/mistah FAB - hit 'em
blu & exile - blue collar worker
stay green.
v.
Thursday, March 05, 2009
little wing
I just felt the need to post this today.
It's still my favorite song (and favorite version).
stay green.
v.
Sunday, March 01, 2009
the return
the doors
lula queroga
nancy sinatra
the spinners
james brown
these are the acts that get you through the day.
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movies I recommend for the weed... i mean week.
Choke : From the author of Fight Club... A wickedly colorful dark comedy about mothers and sons, sexual compulsion, and the sordid underbelly of colonial theme parks. Victor Mancini (Sam Rockwell), a sex-addicted med-school dropout, who keeps his increasingly deranged mother, Ida (Anjelica Huston), in an expensive private medical hospital by working days as a historical reenactor at a colonial-era theme park.
available on The Pirates Bay
Frozen River : A woman on New York's Mohawk Reservation takes up illegal-immigrant smuggling to survive.
available on The Pirates Bay
for all my hip hop heads
Dead Prez - The Animal In Man (Animal Farm)
stay green.
speaking of which:
with love.
v.