Cage hates the road, loves cupcakes

cage_myspace.jpg

Former Agent Orange-turned-Definitive Jux star Cage is heading on the road for a 22-city tour through the eastern United States, including dates in the East, Midwest and South. His touring companions? First there’s Yak Ballz, an emcee best known for associations with Bobbito (via Fondle ‘Em) and Def Jux fam (Definitive Jux Presents II), and who dropped his second album Scifentology last year. Slow Suicide Stimulus, the New Jersey rap quartet featuring former Artifacts rapper Tame One and Dusted Dons, will be promoting last year’s self-titled debut.

The concerts, lovingly titled the “I Hate It” tour, will provide audiences with new material from Cage’s upcoming album Depart from Me. It will also introduce CupCake, a crew of ladies who are releasing a DVD called, coincidentally, I Hate It. Judging from a trailer posted on CupCake’s MySpace page (and the softcore website GodsGirls.com, where they pose as models), they’re a cross between Suicide Girls and Jackass, and display lots of titties, tattoos and stupid pranks. Cage’s skatepunk and knucklehead fans will love them.

Here are the dates:

  • 1/18: Wallingford American Legion, Wallingford, CT
  • 1/19: First Unitarian Church, Philadelphia, PA
  • 1/20: Sonar, Baltimore, MD
  • 1/21: Cat’s Cradle, Carboro, NC
  • 1/22: Orange Peel, Asheville, NC
  • 1/24: Village Tavern, Mt. Pleasant, SC
  • 1/25: Common Grounds, Gainesville, FL
  • 1/26: The Social, Orlando, FL
  • 1/27: Crowbar, Tampa, FL
  • 1/28: Studio A, Miami, FL
  • 1/29: Jack Rabbits, Jacksonville, FL
  • 2/02: Emo’s, Austin, TX
  • 2/03: Haileys, Denton, TX
  • 2/05: Record Bar, Kansas City, MO
  • 2/06: The Rutledge, Nashville, TN
  • 2/09: Abbey Pub, Chicago, IL
  • 2/10: Blind Pig, Ann Arbor, MI
  • 2/11: Mac’s Bar, Lansing, MI
  • 2/13: Penny Arcade, Rochester, NY
  • 2/14: Living Room, Providence, RI
  • 2/15: Knitting Factory, New York City, NY
  • 2/16: Pearl St, North Hampton, MA
  • 2/17: Middle East, Cambridge, MA

www.myspace.com/cagekennylz

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40 Noteworthy Albums of 2006

Year-end lists are a necessary evil. On the one hand, they help catalog twelve chaotic months of listening into an orderly group of bests. They’re also somewhat arbitrary, often trumpeting fall favorites over early contenders that wore out their welcome. And though the title “best of” confers authority, classics are made over time. The past few years in particular are littered with former “instant classics” that now seem just merely great: Eminem’s The Eminem Show, Cam’ron’s Purple Haze — Â…the list goes on and on.

But that’s just my opinion.

Anyway, since Plug One just launched two months ago, this unranked list of noteworthy albums is humbler than most. It doesn’t include any of the year’s leading mixtapes (Lil Wayne and DJ Drama’s Dedication II, Asheru’s Hip-Hop Dock-Trine: The Boondocks Mixtape) nor some of the better mainstream albums (Busta Rhymes’ The Big Bang, Rhymefest’s Blue Collar, Field Mob’s Light Poles and Pine Trees) because I didn’t get a chance to fully assess them. Space considerations kept out several notable independent records, including Aceyalone’s Magnificent City, the Procussions’ 5 Sparrows for 2 Cents, and Lightheaded’s Wrong Way. If 2007 proves as good for hip-hop music as 2006 has been, this list will certainly expand next year.

Having said that, I hope this list makes a statement to those who think that non-mainstream hip-hop, or indie hip-hop, or whatever you want to call it is a moribund genre full of cranks and wannabes. All of the 40 discs on this list are good; some are even great; and a few may someday earn classic status. Most of the selections are left of the dial.

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Review: Nas, “Hip Hop is Dead”

Nas
Hip-Hop is Dead
Island Def Jam

Rating: ★★★★☆ 

Nas is right, ya know. In a society where the individual is little more than a consumer, where truth is subjugated to marketing and hype is accepted as truth, our lives are worth less every day. Art means nothing and entertainment is paramount. But this isn’t a new phenomenon. Nearly everyone accepts this as fact, and almost as many are resigned to do nothing about it. There’s no evidence that this doesn’t apply to Nas. On Hip-Hop is Dead, he uses cultural deterioration as a metaphor for personal loss. If you’re expecting that the album amounts to anything more or less than this, you’ll be disappointed.

The Queensbridge emcee has always been better at telegraphing the details than framing the larger picture. Sure, he can string together a few keen observations that pass as wisdom, but he’s too contradictory and too megalomaniacal to be a leader. The only album where he presented a semi-unified socio-cultural critique was 2004’s underrated Street’s Disciple. On that disk he espoused old-school black separatism: African Americans should shield themselves from white culture, weed out the “acceptable Negroes” and boycott the white man’s politics. As the country was preparing to decide whether or not to give Dubya another four years as the leader of the world, the message didn’t exactly resonate. In a climate where hip-hoppers were encouraged to get involved in mainstream politics, the time wasn’t right for Nas’ message.

If you must find meaning, think of Hip-Hop is Dead as more of a personal eulogy than a public polemic. Nas has lost his youth, which he conveniently conflates with a social movement. To that extent, the most revealing track is “Not Going Back.” It begins with a scene of Nas driving away from a shootout with Kelis in tow. Wifey is hot, claiming that the gun exchange was unnecessary and dangerous. Nas knows this, but he’s still charged, and it’s clear that he resents a life where he is coddled and isolated, where existence is sterile and mundane. He yearns for a return to hood life, but knows that’s impossible. Like most of his listeners, he experiences that life vicariously. He might “buy the projects,” but he’s “not going back.”

The flip side of this dynamic is the excellent “Hold Down the Block.” The despair is in the details. Here, “brothers disappear,” “feds feast on street dons” and “rain hurt niggas bones who been shot.” It’s different from Nas’ other ghetto surveys because the focus is on over-the-hill dons who hold “38s in their forties.” He respects their grind, and enshrines their struggle, but he’s also glad that he’s not in their shoes and wants you to respect that. As he says on “Let There Be Light,” “I can’t sound smart/cuz y’all run away/They say I ain’t hungry no more/And I don’t talk about yay/Like there’s no other way for an ex-hustler/Â…I beg to differ.”

It’s not surprising that the album’s most viscerally immediate track, “Money over Bullshit,” is largely a technical exercise. Nas reels off images of “scarred grills, skully hats, and gaspy fullies.” He rhymes “pure euphoria” with “death to all y’all,” and calls out “snitches in rap” that get their “tails snapped and trapped.” By the third and final verse, where the QB emcee unleashes his flow, the listener is hypnotized. It doesn’t really matter that the lyrics amount to little more than a litany of money porn, subliminal disses and murder fantasies. It’s “deep by sound alone,” and it doesn’t matter if the themes aren’t original or insightful.

For those in need of the usual rap crit rhetoric, here goes: This is the best New York hip-hop album of the year. Nas’ collaboration with Jay-Z, “Black Republicans,” clinches that. Hip-Hop is Dead also ranks among the best of Nas’ career. It’s certainly no Nastradamus, his only true misstep, and rarely has the emcee been as consistently on point as he is here. Even when he latches onto a bad idea, as on the detective noir allegory, “Who Killed It,” the lyrics are too riveting for one to completely dismiss it. But despite the album’s greatness, fans will be let down. They expect Nas to resurrect Illmatic, something that was always more of an idea than an actuality. Like youth, that era is gone forever.

— Sam Chennault

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Review: Clipse, “Hell Hath No Fury”

Clipse
Hell Hath No Fury
Re-Up Gang/Star Trak/Zomba

Rating: ★★★★☆ 

If you like good beats and rhymes, you will like this record. If you like lyrics about selling cocaine, you will really like this record. On Hell Hath No Fury, Clipse further the marriage between rapping and “pushing weight” with style and finesse. Just when it seemed that every avenue of word play had been explored in regards to talking about coke, Virginia brothers Malice and Pusha T legitimately raise the bar while glorifying the lifestyle.

Instead of the ever-so-common braggadocio found in cocaine rap, Clipse bring an element of sympathetic guilt. Throughout Hell Hath No Fury, there are a number of religious references that let the world know the
brotherly rap duo have consciences. “Sorry Heavenly father/Once again I hate to bother/Its ‘P’ the evil creeper sending some to the grim reaper/Meanwhile me and my mistress like Solomon and Sheba,” raps Pusha T on “Mamma I’m So Sorry.” They make clear, however, that they are young, rich and more concerned with Bapestas and Ferraris, so they’re going to enjoy it while they can.

The premier track off Hell Hath No Fury is unquestionably its lead single, “Mr. Me Too.” Pharrell must have bought a new production tool to make the “blunted” effects of the song. Still, I thought that after “Frontin” everyone agreed Pharrell shouldn’t sing on recordings anymore, but here the brand of a man is at it again in
“Hello New World.” With tracks like “Ain’t Cha’ and “Nightmares,” he almost makes up for it –Â… almost.

Regardless of where your opinions over cocaine rap lie, Clipse undeniably destroy each track. Some of the aggression on Hell Hath No Fury may go deeper than just an assault of hungry emcees, and relate to
their frustration in dealing with Zomba Records, which constantly delayed its release. But now, with Hell Hath No Fury finally out and drawing universal acclaim perhaps Clipse might find peace now with their moral dilemmas.

— James O’Connor

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RJD2 rolls across the land

RJD2_xlrecordings.jpeg

As the year winds down, RJD2’s The Third Down is starting to work its way through the DJs, newspaper and magazine hacks, college radio geeks and Internet whores that will be summoned to publicize its strengths to the international heads. As we wait in anticipation for its arrival we wonder: Will his singing surprise us with its remarkable depth? Or will it sound as weird as “Through the Walls” from Since We Last Spoke? No matter how it all turns out, he deserves some props for being a brave and fearless artist.

While you wait to hear it (with an open mind, of course), RJD2 is assembling a live band to take it on the road. The short tour winds through March, and will undoubtedly include a pit stop in Austin for SXSW. A longer excursion (Maybe another Definitive Jux package tour? Just kidding…) should follow later in the year.

  • 3/09: Wexner Center, Columbus, OH
  • 3/10: The Dame, Lexington, KY
  • 3/11: Exit In, Nashville, TN
  • 3/14: Haileys, Denton, TX
  • 3/17: Warehouse Live, Houston, TX
  • 3/19: House of Blues Parish, New Orleans, LA
  • 3/20: Variety Playhouse, Atlanta, GA
  • 3/21: Cat’s Cradle, Carrboro, NC
  • 3/22: Satellite Ballroom, Charlottesville, VA
  • 3/23: 9:30 Club, Washington, DC
  • 3/24: Sonar, Baltimore, MD

w/Happy Chichester

www.rjd2site.com
www.myspace.com/rjd2

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Brother Ali is “The Undisputed Truth”

Brother Ali_Skye Rossi.jpg

A few days ago, a publicist who shall remain nameless joked to me that all Rhymesayers MCs sound the same. But of course that’s not true. Brother Ali, for example, can carry his own with just about any underground rapper out there. And yes, that may not be saying much to all y’all backpack haters/Lil Wayne dick riders. For those that appreciate the Minneapolis albino, however, prepare for his first new album in four years, and first release since 2004’s Champion EP.

The Undisputed Truth is set for a March 20 release on Rhymesayers. A particularly strong cut, “Original King,” was posted on his MySpace page a few months ago. Unfortunately, it’s not on the promo version of the album.

Here are the tracks:

  • Whatcha’ Got
  • Lookin’ at Me Sideways
  • Truth Is
  • Puzzle
  • Pedigree
  • Freedom Ain’t Free
  • Letter from the Government
  • There
  • Listen Up
  • Take Me Home
  • Uncle Sam Goddamn
  • Walkin’ Away
  • Faheem
  • Ear to Ear

March 20 looks to be a big week for noncommercial rap, as El-P (I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead), J-Dilla (Ruff Draft) and Evidence (The Weatherman) will all drop albums that week. Save some allowance money for Brother Ali.

www.myspace.com/brotherali

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New k-os album to be released in U.S.

kos and feist_MySpace.jpg

The last time Americans saw k-os (meaning knowledge of self) was at SXSW 2006, where he headlined a bill at Antone’s. Supported by a band that included, oddly enough, onetime Smashing Pumpkins bassist Melissa Auf Der Mar, he closed his set by announcing he would no longer record for Astralwerks, the EMI imprint that issued his first two critically-acclaimed albums.

Some heads thought that this might be the last time the Canadian artist would get a full-fledged domestic release of his work and we’d have to find it on import, like most of Buck 65’s catalog. But we forget that k-os is a superstar in his country. When his new album Atlantis debuted in the top 5 of the Canadian albums chart last October, it was clear he’d get another chance to crack the U.S. market. And so it is that Atlantis hits our territory on February 24 via Virgin, another arm of the EMI conglomerate.

In a press release, k-os described the disc as a more personal effort in contrast to the “hip-hop is life” themes of his earlier discs. “As an expressionist, I get to cleanse my emotions and thoughts through music so that they don’t fester and become toxic,” he said. “When an artist expresses their truth honestly and with a pure heart, they can end up speaking for a myriad of people. From a very specific experience can come a general understanding and healing.”

The first single from Atlantis, “Elektrik Heat,” is already gathering spins on VH-1 Soul. You can check out a stream of the song and the video through the link below.

Stream: Elektrik Heat (audio)
Stream: Elektrik Heat (video)

December 19 update:

Before Atlantis is released, k-os will journey throughout North America as part of Gym Class Heroes’ national tour. Here are the dates:

  • 02/17: Avalon Ballroom, Boston, MA
  • 02/18: Revolution Hall, Troy, NY
  • 02/20: Ohio Room – IU, Indiana, PA
  • 02/21: 9:30 Club, Washington, DC
  • 02/22: Webster Hall, New York, NY
  • 02/23: Douglas Hall, Rochester, NY
  • 02/25: Trocadero, Philadelphia, PA
  • 02/26: Norva Theater, Norfolk, VA
  • 02/27: Freebird Live, Jacksonville, FL
  • 02/28: Culture Room, Fort Lauderdale, FL
  • 03/01: The Club at Firestone, Orlando, FL
  • 03/02: The Masquerade, Atlanta, GA
  • 03/03: Rocketown, Nashville, TN
  • 03/04: Bogart’s, Cincinnati, OH
  • 03/06: House of Blues, Cleveland, OH
  • 03/07: The Intersection, Grand Rapids, MI
  • 03/08: St. Andrews Hall, Detroit, MI
  • 03/09: Opera House, Toronto, ON
  • 03/10: Le National, Montreal, QC
  • 03/11: Babylon, Ottawa, ON
  • 03/13: Newport Music Hall, Columbus, OH
  • 03/14: The Irving Theater, Indianapolis, IN
  • 03/15: House of Blues, Chicago, IL
  • 03/16: Pop’s, Sauget, IL
  • 03/17: Granada, Lawrence, KS
  • 03/18: First Avenue, Minneapolis, MN
  • 03/20: Gothic Theater, Denver, CO
  • 03/21: Avalon Theater, Salt Lake City, UT
  • 03/23: El Corazon, Seattle, WA
  • 03/24: Hawthorne Theater, Portland, OR
  • 03/25: The Boardwalk, Orangevale, CA
  • 03/26: House of Blues, West Hollywood, CA
  • 03/27: The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA
  • 03/28: Soma, San Diego, CA
  • 03/29: House of Blues, Anaheim, CA
  • 03/30: Marquee Theatre, Tempe, AZ
  • 03/31: Rialto Theatre, Tucson, AZ
  • 04/01: Sunshine Theater, Albuquerque, NM
  • 04/03: Gypsy Ballroom, Dallas, TX

w/Gym Class Heroes, P.O.S., RX Bandits

www.k-osmusic.com
www.myspace.com/kos

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Busdriver escapes from L.A.

Busdriver_Kim Ryan.jpg

Busdriver likes to wear a T-shirt that reads, “Sorry, underground hip-hop happened 10 years ago.” Personally, I don’t like to take such a hard stance against new jacks and toys. But I will agree that Project Blowed, the weekly freestyle sessions in Leimert Park, represented a zenith in hip-hop expression.

Busdriver carries that spirit with him throughout his projects, whether it’s the Weather with electronic dandy Daedelus and zipper-rapper Radioinactive; or his upcoming Epitaph album RoadKillOvercoat, which is already garnering strong reviews. To promote the latter, he’s taking off for a cross-country jaunt. And just to show how crazy he is, he’s touring as an opening act for Deerhoof, the Bay Area-based experimental rock trio. Hopefully hip-hop heads will embrace the weirdness and give both acts a chance.

Here are the tour dates:

  • 1/24: El Rey Theater, Los Angeles, CA
  • 1/26: Irving Plaza, New York, NY
  • 1/27: Metro, Chicago, IL
  • 1/30: Great American Music Hall, San Francisco, CA
  • 2/16: Jack Rabbits, Jacksonville, FL
  • 2/17: The District, Miami, FL
  • 2/18: Crowbar, Tampa, FL
  • 2/19: The Social, Orlando, FL
  • 2/20: Common Ground, Gainesville, FL
  • 2/21: 40 Watt Club, Athens, GA
  • 2/22: Mercy Lounge, Nashville, TN
  • 2/23: The Warehouse, Winston-Salem, NC

w/Deerhoof, Harlem Shakes

www.busdriversite.com
www.myspace.com/busdriver

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The Roots bring new shows, Questlove projects

The Roots_MySpace.jpg

After enjoying the afterglow of their criminally underrated masterwork Game Theory, perennial road warriors the Roots are finally going on tour. The four month jaunt has already begun in Great Britain and winds through Ireland, South Africa, Japan and Canada before reaching the U.S. in February. It will represent the group’s nationwide tour since Game Theory dropped last August.

As an added bonus, Chicago skateboard enthusiast Lupe Fiasco will open a handful of U.S. dates. Though he has completed several spot dates since issuing Lupe Fiasco’s Food & Liquor in September, fans will have to wait a little bit longer for a full-fledged national jaunt.

In related news, Questlove has wrapped up an intriguing remix of Pharrell Williams’ solo debut In My Mind. Similar to what the Neptunes did to the original version of N.E.R.D.’s In Search Of… by adding Spymob to the mix, Questlove reworked an album that drew mixed reviews and disappointing record sales. (However, it did get a Grammy nomination for Best Rap Album.) He also logged studio time with the Rev. Al Green.

While we’re on the subject of Grammy nominations, the Roots garnered two nods for Best Rap Album and Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group (for “Don’t Feel Right”). Lupe Fiasco logged three nominations, too, for Best Rap Album, Best Rap Song and Best Rap Solo Performance (“Kick, Push”). Despite the nominations, however, it seems like one of the greatest hip-hop bands of all time deserves more.

Here are the U.S. tour dates:

  • 2/03: Showbox, Seattle, WA
  • 2/05: Crystal Ballroom, Portland, OR
  • 2/07: The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA
  • 2/08: The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA
  • 2/10: Gibson Ampitheatre, Los Angeles, CA
  • 2/12: House of Blues, San Diego, CA
  • 2/14: House of Blues, Anaheim, CA
  • 2/16: Harry O’s, Salt Lake City, UT
  • 2/17: The Fillmore, Denver, CO
  • 2/19: Gypsy Tea Room, Dallas, TX
  • 2/20: Stubbs, Austin, TX
  • 2/22: House of Blues, New Orleans, LA
  • 2/24: House of Blues, Orlando, FL
  • 2/25: Revolution, Ft. Lauderdale, FL
  • 3/03: House of Blues, Myrtle Beach, SC
  • 3/04: The Tabernacle, Atlanta, GA
  • 3/07: Norva Theater, Norfolk, VA
  • 3/08: Meyerhoff Hall, Baltimore, MD
  • 3/09: Constitution Hall, Washington, DC
  • 3/10: Radio City Music Hall, New York, NY
  • 3/13: Avalon, Boston, MA
  • 3/17: Chicago Theatre, Chicago, IL
  • 3/18: The Rave, Milwaukee, WI
  • 3/20: Myth, Minneapolis, MN
  • 3/22: The Pageant, St. Louis, MO
  • 3/24: Kool Haus, Toronto, ON
  • 3/27: Metropolis, Montreal, QC
  • 4/03: Kimmel Center, Philadelphia, PA
  • 4/04: Kimmel Center, Philadelphia, PA

2/17, 3/04, 3/08-3/10, 3/17: w/Lupe Fiasco

www.theroots.com
www.myspace.com/theroots

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Jemini tells “Memoirs of an Emcee”

Memoirs of an Emcee.jpg

Whatever happened to Jemini the Gifted One, the man who helped give the world its first taste of Danger Mouse via Ghetto Pop Life? According to Lex Records, he’s set to appear in a documentary about his career called Memoirs of an Emcee. Produced by Trans Hudson Films and directed by photographer T. Hopkins, Memoirs of an Emcee follows Jemini, underrated Philly rapper the Last Emperor (remember “Echo Leader”?) and newcomer Script.

Emcee is about intelligent, thoughtful, faithful men who happen to make their living rapping. All too often, the featured image of young black men is that of apolitical, oversexed ignoramuses. Script, Emp and Jemini are iconoclastic by their very nature. They are all well-read and versed in a variety of subjects and never ‘dumb down’ for street credibility.” There’s no word on when Memoirs of an Emcee will be released, but you can view preview clips at the film’s MySpace page.

In related news, Jemini is working on a new solo album with UK producer Repeat Ophenda. It should come out on his Stone City Entertainment label next year. You can hear a sample of his first single, the blissed-out “Sunshine,” on Jemini’s MySpace page.

www.mcmemoirs.com
www.myspace.com/jeminithegifted1

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The Coup requests donations following bus crash

Boots Riley_coupmusic.jpg

A week after a bus crash ended his tour with Mr. Lif, the Coup’s Boots Riley posted an update on his MySpace page. The post gave further details about the accident that injured several people. Since the tour, which was scheduled to run through Dec. 19 in Philadelphia, ended prematurely, he and his crew are nearly broke, with little money to replace equipment or even buy Christmas presents for family members. He also made a request for donations through a PayPal site.

The full text of the post is below.

“So, we got on the bus after doing a show at The House of Blues San Diego as part of The Coup/Mr. Lif tour. As the bus took off, I thought that I would go lay in my bunk, listen to my Ipod, and write. But then Zhara, Mr. Lif’s friend and the tour’s merchandise seller, announced that she had “Anchorman” on DVD. Oh Shit. Will Ferrell or writing? Hot 16s would have to wait tonight…Good Night San Diego! So I stayed up in the front lounge of the bus and, even though I’ve seen this movie twice, commenced to laugh my ass off. Almost literally, because of what happened next. Shortly after the acapella singing of “Afternoon Delight” by Ferrell et al., a big bump, then another, then plummeting down as we tipped over to the left. I was sitting in the diner-like booth that many of these buses have in the front. I held on to the table with one hand and tried to guard my head with the other, all the while thinking that I was probably about to die. I don’t remember seeing everyone flying and flipping around me as it was happening, but Carter’s (the road manager) and Wiz’s face were covered in blood, and everybody seemed to be laying around hurt. The bus was on it’s side, with the entrance door up. I called for people to say there names so we could get a head count of who was conscious or not. Silk E, Q (drums), Riccol (bass), and Metro (Lif’s hype man) were trapped in the back lounge because the doors connecting the front and back lounges to the bunks were electrically powered and didn’t move with no power on. They ended up ripping and squeezing their way out of a tiny little window and jumped down off the bus as the rest of us got out the front. If anyone had been sleeping in the bunks, they would not have been able to get out. I was the third person to jump off the front of the bus, as I hung down to make the jump shorter, I saw that the front of the bus was on fire. I yelled to everyone, saying to get off the bus immediately because the bus was on fire and it could blow up. We all did. No one was killed. The bus was totally engulfed in flames. For a while no one stopped to help, supposedly because the thought we were “illegal aliens” crossing the border. Eventually some great folks stopped and helped. Silk E has two broken ribs and a punctured lung. Wiz has a broken nose, two deep lacerations to the head, and a shattered knee. Zhara has injuries to her hand and had to undergo surgery. Carter had to get stitches to his head and lip. The driver, Glenn, has a broken jaw. All the first three will be in need of follow-up treatments. We all have aching backs, legs, heads etc. Many of us are on pain killers.

“We lost everything in that crash and fire. We were packed to live and do shows on that bus for a month. Most of us had every stitch of clothing we owned on there. We lost clothes, computers, recording equipment, cameras, IDs, phones, keys to cars and homes. We lost cash.We lost all our damn instruments and equipment to perform with. We were and are happy to walk away with our lives. But now we’re home. Most of the band touring with The Coup has kids, rent that won’t quit, bills, and holiday expenses coming. We need money, because like I said the band doesn’t have the tools that they make a living with. Not only did we lose cash and material things on the bus, but we also were depending on this tour for money to make it through. It may take a year for us to see any money from the insurance company.

“I have set up a Paypal account so people can make donations for The Coup. The money will be split between Me (Boots Riley), Silk E, Q, Steve Wyreman (guitar), and Riccol. Mr. Lif is setting one up on his site and when I have that info, we’ll let you know.

“To make a donation, hit button in the “about” section on the front page of this profile, right below the paragraph and above the “We Are The Ones” video. This allows you to donate even without a paypal account.
If you have an account, ours is thecoupbuscrash@gmail.com.

“Thank you in advance to anyone who does this, this is a really crazy situation. I never thought I would would be doing something like this. I also never thought that we would almost die like like that.We’re grateful for anything you can do.

“Thank you,

Boots Riley”

“P.S. Thank you for the messages of love and warmth we’ve been receiving. It makes a difference.”

www.thecoupmusic.net
www.myspace.com/thecoup

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Evidence is “The Weatherman”

Evidence_MySpace.jpg

After parting ways with Capitol Records, L.A. trio Dilated Peoples is set to rebound in 2007. Evidence will drop his long-awaited album, The Weatherman, on March 20 through ABB Records. The first single “Mr. Slow Flow,” produced by Joey Chavez, is available at iTunes now. The B-side is “Hot and Cold,” produced by the Alchemist.

Along with The Weatherman comes a DVD, The Release Party, that compiles footage from Dilated Peoples’ various world tours. Decon Media and ABB will release it early next year.

Earlier this spring Dilated Peoples dropped its fourth album 20/20. The disc drew respectable reviews from publications like The Source, Entertainment Weekly and Spin. But it didn’t have an underground hit on the scale of “This Way,” the Kanye West-produced single from 2003’s Neighborhood Watch. Dilated Peoples have yet to announce its new label home, but ABB will presumably be involved in some way.

www2.dilatedpeoples.com
www.myspace.com/dilatedpeoples

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RJD2 presents “The Third Hand”

RJD2_xlrecordings.jpeg

Last fall, RJD2 left his longtime home Definitive Jux for XL Recordings, home to artists like Thom Yorke (of Radiohead) and Dizzee Rascal. The Philly-based beat maker gambled that XL will be a more suitable home for his new recordings, on which he mixes his DJ Shadow-like production with actual vocal numbers in greater quantity than his last album, 2003’s Since We Last Spoke.

Now RJD2 will release his third album, The Third Hand on March 6. Two tracks from the album are posted on his MySpace page. “You Never Had It So Good” is reflective of the droll, slightly nervous singing style RJ trumpeted through an interview with Pitchfork, and is reminiscent of Since We Last Spoke’s “Through the Walls.” The second track, “Get It,” seemingly returns to his yearning instrumental style. According to XL Recordings’ website, The Third Hand was entirely recorded by RJD2. He composed its music with an MPC 2000XL sampler/sequencer, analog synthesizers, electric pianos and guitars.

In a press release RJ explained, “Leaving Jux was a hard decision for me to make, both personally and business-wise, but for the folks who follow that kind of thing (labels and such), I think it will make sense when you hear the new record as it’s not hip hop.”

On the sound of the new record RJ added, “It’s more lushly produced, with vocal harmonies and grooves. Like the Zombies, Steely Dan and Daft Punk having some brews in a hot tub. It’s sort of a garage-y produced pop record, that’s got vocal harmonies, some bad-ass guitar tones, very slight riffage, just enough piano, and some tough ass drums. I think it sounds more like real human beings playing instruments than anything i’ve ever done. Maybe its kind of like if King Crimson went to a therapist, and came out really happy and optimistic about the world, and was just walking around giving out hugs and shit.”

www.rjd2site.com
www.myspace.com/rjd2

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Black Panther hearkens “My Eternal Winter”

Black Panther_MySpace.jpg

New York producer Black Panther (no relation to the Marvel Comics hero) announced he’s releasing his second album, My Eternal Winter, on his newly formed imprint Manekinko Pro. For those that don’t know, Black Panther has worked with C-Rayz Walz (Ravipops [The Substance]), Immortal Technique (Revolutionary Vol. 2), and Celph Titled. His first album, the mostly instrumental The Darkest Night Ever, dropped on Third Earth Music (Kimari Rogers of The Masterminds and Roosevelt Franklin’s old label) back in 2003. My Eternal Winter drops March 13.

Winter showcases a more progressive approach in his production and varied musical styles such as R&B, Hip-Hop and Rock/Pop,” reads a press release distributed via the ubiquitous MySpace. Guests scheduled to appear include M-1, J-Treds, Maya Azucena, Oktober and Shabaam Saadiq. The first single, “All Falls Down” hits digital stores on January 30. In the meantime, you can get yourself acquainted with Black Panther on his MySpace page.

www.djblackpanther.com
www.myspace/blackpanther

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Review: Flying Lotus, “1983”

Flying Lotus
1983
Plug Research

Rating: ★★★½☆ 

The luminous cluster burst that is Flying Lotus’ debut 1983 resembles other phenomena: the romantic indulgences of Daedelus (who contributes a hopped-up remix of the title track), the vocal chops and edits of Scott Herren, and the breakbeat soul of Madlib, Jay Dee and many others. But his vision is original. Indeed, his debut album unfolds with such severity and grace that it takes repeated listens to fully comprehend; it burns and disappears like a shooting star.

The “Space is the Place” vibe of the title track, which opens the disc, unfolds into “Sao Paolo,” a series of handclaps syncopated into percussive funk. The minute-long “Bad Actors” suite and its backhanded homage to Flying Lotus’ native L.A. morphs into “Pet Monster Shotglass” and an unfocused stutter-step beat. There is the final epiphany of “Untitled #7” and its soft, synthetic patter, the psychedelic ballad “Unexpected Delight” (voiced by Daedelus’ partner Laura Darlington), and the Daedelus remix. That’s eleven songs, 33 minutes, and one mostly instrumental journey into laptop metaphysics.

Born Steven Ellison and reportedly a nephew of Alice Coltrane, Flying Lotus has appeared in random spots: an Adult Swim-certified beat here, a Mia Doi Todd remix there. 1983 truly comes out of nowhere, however. While its parts aren’t genius, the whole of the album is impressively realized. It evokes a distinctly Los Angeleno haze, carrying your imagination from one end of the city to the other. Much like Daedelus, who seemingly burst onto the scene with Invention in 2001, Flying Lotus is a fully formed artist. Future perfection, it seems, will come when he pays closer attention to the details.

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Papoose protests NYC shooting with “50 Shots”

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Last Friday during his Hot 97 show “The Drama Hour,” DJ Kayslay debuted “50 Shots,” a hastily-recorded track by Papoose. The song instantly made its way around the Internet and drew commentary from several publications, including the New York Times, the Village Voice and Rolling Stone’s “Rock and Roll Daily” blog.

“50 Shots” speaks on the Nov. 25 incident where five undercover New York Police Department officers fired 50 shots at Sean Bell, Joseph Guzman and Trent Benefield as they drove from a strip club in Queens. While facts surrounding the case are under dispute, the three men, whom were part of Bell’s bachelor party, were unarmed. Bell died from gunshot wounds, while Guzman and Benefield remain hospitalized.

The shooting drew widespread protests and condemnation, with many calling the act an example of police brutality comparable to the 1999 Amadou Diallo shooting.

“No justice no peace/Another black man shot dead in the streets,” raps Papoose over a sped-up sample of Sam Cooke’s “A Change’s Gonna Come.” “If your reason was you thought he carried a gun/That mean you killed him for nothing ’cause he ain’t had one/I’m sick and tired of being sick and tired, son/Hope the change get here before the revolution come.”

Papoose, who is a part of Kayslay’s Streetsweepers camp, is working on his Jive Records debut The Nacirema Dream for release next year. A popular rapper on the mixtape circuit, he’s considered part of the New York street rap renaissance alongside Jae Millz, Grafh, Maino, Saigon and the ever-growing Dipset crew.

www.papooseonline.com
www.myspace.com/papoose

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Review: De La Soul, “Impossible: Mission”

De La Soul
Impossible: Mission
AOI /Traffic

Rating: ★★★½☆ 

De La Soul fans are nothing if not obsessive. To the hardcore, the fact that Impossible: Mission is more a mix tape than proper album makes it all the more essential. This 20-track CD isn’t exactly the Rosetta stone to De La’s lyrical hieroglyphics, but it does mingle clever exposition of crusty relics amidst a handful of modern-day bangers. In doing so, it counterpoints their DA.I.S.Y. age frivolity with the more pressing social concerns of their newer work, and proves exactly why De La has long been one of the most innovative and relevant groups in hip-hop.

Unlike their Native Tongue peers, De La never fell off. If anything, their later albums crystallized all the assets people love about them. The three “What the F@ck” moments intro’ed by Posdnuos as unreleased outtakes from around the De La Soul is Dead days reveal just how far they’ve come. So do De La 2.0 tracks like the J-Dilla-produced “Friends” and “What If,” both of which float along on Dilla’s lighter-than-air jazz riffs and minimal beats. Also worth noting is a masterful collabo with up-and-coming MC Butta Verses, a Fort Lauderdale mainstay encountered by DJ Maseo after moving to South Florida a couple years back. That track, “You Got It,” reinvigorates the title’s James Brown shout-out and blows it into Generation Next, proving De La can still unleash the funk — beatwise, lyrically and thematically — like nobody else.

— Jonathan Zwickel

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Bus crash derails Mr. Lif & the Coup

In a Mon., Dec. 4 news post on Definitive Jux’s website, label co-CEO El-P announced that the Coup and Mr. Lif were involved in a bus crash after completing a Fri., Dec. 1 concert at the House of Blues in San Diego. Four members of the artists’ entourage — among them Lif’s DJ Big Wiz and Bay Area soul singer Silk-E — were hospitalized with injuries. While the Coup and Mr. Lif escaped serious harm, they subsequently canceled the rest of their tour together.

“Approximately 40 miles outside of San Diego the tour bus carrying Mr. Lif, The Coup, DJ Big Wiz, Metro and friends, flipped over and burst in to flames,” writes El-P in the news item. “Miraculously, everyone managed to escape with his or her lives. There were injuries suffered to different degrees ranging from minor to serious but everyone is essentially OK and getting treated in various hospitals. The bus and everything in the bus was destroyed in the fire. The most serious injuries were sustained by DJ Big Wiz (Def Jux), Zarha (friend and merchandise assistant to Mr. Lif) and SILK-E (The Coup). They are all being looked after now and beginning the process of recovery.”

Mr. Lif posted a notice on his MySpace page titled “All remaining US tour dates cancelled.” (Appropriately, the mood of the post is “Happy to be alvie [sic].”) “The tour bus ran off the road for a 30 foot drop. Everyone is alive, but four need extensive hospitalization & surgery. We appreciate all concern and would like to thank everyone who was planning to attend our shows,” he writes.

Plug One sends its thoughts to the artists and their families.

www.definitivejux.net
www.myspace.com/mrlif
www.myspace.com/thecoupmusic

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Review: Frank N Dank, “Xtended Play version 3.13”

Frank N Dank
Xtended Play version 3.13
Chisel Sound

Rating: ★★★½☆ 

It has been a little while since we’ve heard from the Detroit rap duo. Their last appearance was on Jaylib’s 2003 project, Champion Sound. That same year, FND also put out their debut LP, 48 Hours, an album initially booked to come out on MCA before the group left the label. With Xtended Play, the Motor City rappers have expanded their list of collaborators and stayed true to their approach of fuzzing the line between club music and basement sounds.

Some assistance comes from Toronto producer Kemo on “Wit FND.” Somewhat Madlib-esque, the neck jerking groove might be the first of more to come from Kemo if he keeps on the grind. And speaking of the grind, or hustle rather, I know the cool thing to do is to rap about stacking paper, but how many more uninspiring songs do we need to hear on the matter? Didn’t Jay-Z finalize who’s the best and close the case? With “Wit FND’s” chorus — “We get money each and everyday/Chase that money each and every day/There’s only one thing left to say/It’s time to hustle” — there’s only one thing left for me to do, which is throw my hands in the air and hit “next” on the CD player. In their defense, though, FND says Xtended Play exposes how “hood life is much the same everywhere. It’s soul music for players.”

Probably the most noteworthy hit off Xtended Play, “My City,” is a Dilla crafted banger that describes life in their hometown, “the D.” This track comes correct for Motor City residents who need a little pick-me-up after the Tigers returned home without a World Series title. When the break on the mellow “Blaow” first hits your ears, it’s hard not to note that People Under the Stairs previously used the same drums on their track, “A Fly Love Song.” But FND hold their own as they describe how they live up to their responsibilities of providing for their families.

Frank N Dank aren’t going to blow minds with complex rhyme schemes or challenging content. What they are going to do is give their fans what they’re looking for. It’s not gangster and it’s not backpacker. It’s not quite underground yet it’s not mainstream. Xtended Play is just good hip-hop, straight up.

— James O’Connor

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Review: Lupe Fiasco, “Food & Liquor”

Lupe Fiasco
Food & Liquor
Atlantic

Rating: ★★★½☆ 

The term “backpacker” has become a pejorative. Originally used to describe early 90s rap groups like Black Moon and Lords of the Underground, who rocked backpacks in “Who Got the Props”-era publicity stills, it is now used as code for hopelessly “underground” artists who seem angrily out of touch with current trends. Lupe Fiasco may be the most popular MC in recent memory to embrace the insult. Near the end of the video for “Daydreamin'” the Chicagoan hops onto a skateboard, a gleaming cream-colored backpack casually swinging from his left shoulder. That an artist as sleek and cool as Lupe Fiasco could be regarded by some rap fans as a nerd (along with Kanye West, whose high-school years were more Ferris Bueller’s Day Off than Weird Science) speaks considerably to the increasingly limited roles African-Americans can successfully adopt.

On Food & Liquor Lupe aka Lupin III is painfully conscious of his otherness, a skateboarding, drug-and-alcohol free Muslim amidst a generation of self-proclaimed crack rappers. His insecurities, which he masks as universal truths, fuel an album that is not only fresh and exciting, but hectoring and heavy-handed. It bears resemblance to West’s Late Registration, with sweeping orchestral strings typical of a Hollywood movie score. Newcomer Gemini (an R&B artist on Lupe’s boutique imprint 1st and 15th), Sarah Green and Jill Scott pepper the choruses with plaintively heartfelt vocals, making for songs as soul-searing testimony. Sometimes the formula works: On the graceful anthem “Kick, Push,” Soundtrakk’s weighty backdrop turns Lupe’s narrative of growing up as a skateboard kid into a profound tour de force. Elsewhere, as with “Sunshine,” the same producer proves too overwhelming.

With the stage set for performance as consciousness-raising, Lupe’s verses often feel weighted down, even when he’s tossing off rhymes as deft as the third verse on “Just Might Be OK,” where he describes the mind state of a young thug in Westside Chicago. “I’m cool/ I don’t foretell bests/I ain’t the nicest MC/I ain’t Cornel West/I’m Cornel Westside/Chi-Town Rivera/Malcolm eXorcise the demons/Gangsta leanin’/Who traded in his kufi for a new era/Chose a .44 over a motherboard/I ain’t accredited, institute graduate/I ain’t from Nazareth/My conception wasn’t immaculate/I didn’t master no calculus/A good addition to the rap audience/I backflipped on the mattress they slept on me on,” he raps.

If only a few of the songs are standouts (like “Kick, Push” and “I Gotcha”), then none of Food & Liquor is truly disappointing. Lupe’s raps are consistently amazing, from the U.S. government-indicting “American Terrorist” to the hip-hop lament “Hurt Me Soul.” Food & Liquor’s ambitious scope nearly overshadows him, but his dexterous wordplay shines through.

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