Thursday, February 9, 2012

Music Links : Lana Del Rey and Feminism, New Daft Punk Album, Juno Award Nominations, Neil Young Supports Piracy

Links that Sound Good:

M.I.A. is back?

M.I.A. vs. Madonna.

Lana Del Rey and feminism.

The Juno Awards nominations are announced and surprisingly, for the most part, they are pretty good. Though the Juno's definition of 'New' is pretty hilarious.

Is a new Daft Punk album in the works?

Earl Sweatshirt returns from where ever the hell he was.

Neil Young supports piracy and was working with Steve Jobs on a new version of the iTunes store?

A wicked photo gallery of Sleigh Bells live.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Live Review : Shad & Three Sheet @ The Grawood

The atmosphere at the sold-out and jam-packed Grawood on Friday was exciting and celebratory. About half way through their set, Three Sheet started jumping up and down like excited kids on Christmas morning as they chanted "we're opening for Shad, we're opening for Shad..." Both performers seemed genuinely excited to be there; Three Sheet performed with insatiable energy and made some exciting announcements while Shad wore a giant shit-eating grin through out the entire performance.

The Grawood, Dalhousie's student pub, was as frustrating as it was enjoyable. As always, the crowd was full of first-years, as older students seem to develop a healthy phobia of the venue. And though a sea of drunk 19 year olds might be the nightmare of anyone over 20, the acts that the Grawood has been booking this year make it hard to stay away (such as Fred Penner, Mother Mother, The Arkells, etc, etc).

Three Sheet, a local hip hop collective, started the night with their trademark frenetic energy. Three Sheet, as they reminded us a few too many times, has no samples, loops, or drums, instead all of their beats come from the incredibly talented beatboxing-machine of a man, EMC. The addition of guitarist Ryan O'Quinn and bassist Kevin Tilley turn this potential gimmick into an extremely unique and organic sound. Their frontman Expedyte and resident crooner Vanessa Furlong are intimidatingly talented and so full of energy that it can be exhausting just to watch them. Three Sheet is a force to be reckoned with and it wouldn't surprise me if bands are chanting "we're opening for Three Sheet" in the near future.

The last time I saw Shad was at the Squamish Music Festival this summer. His performance there was  lethargic and sluggish making his line "the only thing I love more than rapping is napping" way less funny. But on Friday night, Shad ripped up the stage better than Nicholas Cage can chew scenery, with an ear- to- ear grin permanently stuck on his face. The crowd ate it up, loudly singing along with songs and crushing in close to the stage in violent adoration. When Shad launched into his classic, The Old Prince Still Lives At Home, the crowd knew almost every word and one fan managed to sneak her way on stage, lyp-syncing every word right beside Shad, until a security guard pushed her back into the crowd. Yaa I Get It became an aggressive anthem, and the flurry of pop culture, literature, biblical, and sport references and rap disses were hurled at the crowd with astounding speed.

The combination of Three Sheet and Shad at the Grawood made for an exciting show that displayed the growing health of the Canadian hip hop scene. It was easily one of the best shows I've been to in Halifax thus far and was probably one of the best acts the Grawood will see this year.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Music Links : 30 Rock, Madonna's Dog Vomit, BadBadNotGood and Tyler, The Creator

A Collection of Interesting Links from the Week

Ryan Adams, Childish Gambino, Cee Lo, and Micheal McDonald guest star on a 30 Rock animated segment.

"Have you ever watched a dog vomit and then immediately lap it up?"

Jay-Z fans brace themselves for an upcoming barrage of horrible odes to his child.

The best and most entertaining review I've read of Lana Del Ray's new album.

The Needle Drop comments on the ways that music labels act immorally on the internet.

BadBadNotGood and Tyler, The Creator have been jamming together.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Music Links : A Record Player that Plays Tree Rings, Three Sheet, Jay-Z and Feminism

A Collection of Interesting Links From the Week

YEARS from Bartholomäus Traubeck on Vimeo.
 German-born artist Bartholomäus Traubek has created "'Years', a new artwork that takes a converted record player and uses it to "play" cross-sections of a tree, generating sound by scanning the spinning rings on the surface of the wood with a PlayStation Eye Camera. This data is transmitted through the control arm (which has a stepper motor attached) to a computer, which generates a music track based on the surface readings using the program Ableton Live." [Source CBC : George Stroumboulopoulos]

Cracked.com rounds up the "The 7 Least Anticipated Albums of 2012" and it includes ICP and Willow Smith.

The youngest hardcore artist ever?

Drake says that all his friends think he is an amazing actor.

For a very brief time this week, Disney sold a mickey mouse Joy Division t-shirt. That's the same Joy Division whose name comes from the prostitution section of Nazi concentration camps and whose singer, Ian Curtis, hung himself.

The Crunk Feminist Collective talks about Jay-Z, and gender issues in hip hop.

East Coast Music Awards announce the nominations for this year's event. Halifax's own Three Sheet is nominated for Rap/Hip Hop Album of the Year and music video of the year.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Top 20 Canadian Albums of 2011 Part 1 : 20-11

2011 was easily the most interesting year in Canadian music in recent memory. While 2010 was an extremely exciting year in the Canadian indie-scene, as an observer and a writer, by the end of the year I felt like the Canadian scene was becoming a little too uniform. While it was exciting to see the scene thrive and steal Grammy's from the Americans, I was craving variety from the indie-rock-pop template. Thankfully, 2011 seemed to be the year of variety, full of jazz-hip hop, deconstructed and disturbing R&B, hardcore rock-operas, creepy voodoo folk, and overwhelming amounts experimental and avant-garde music. My musical thoughts were also being published for part of the year, so I might be biased, but I feel like 2011 was a landmark year for creating diversity within a growing and thriving scene.

20. Junior Boys - It's All True

On their latest effort, the Junior Boys, a duo from Hamilton, effectively weave together 80's synth pop, R&B, and dance music. Songs like Banana Ripple restore a sense of fun and familiarity to the genre by taking dance music out of the club and restoring it's place at the house-party. Their slower, R&B and pop styled music provide an innocent counterpoint to The Weeknd's drug fueled R&B hell.  It's All True is an exciting and serotonin inducing experience.

19. Feist - Metals
A lot of people really hate Feist and a lot of people dislike this album even more than they hate Feist. It doesn't make that much sense to me, considering that Metals simply sounds like a further development of her previous work. A lot of the arguing seems to be centered around Metals as an extreme deviation from her previous work. Are these people high? Feist continues to make gorgeous pop music that is full of personality. Metals is definitely a stylistic progression from her previous work but it still fits comfortably into the Feist canon.
18. Library Voices - Summer of Lust
When I saw Library Voices, a Regina based band, at the Halifax Pop Explosion they mentioned a John Waters quote: "If you go home with somebody, and they don't have books, don't fuck 'em." This quote seems to sum up Library Voices better than anything I can say. Summer of Lust is earnestly nerdy, quoting literature to bouncy indie-pop but also intellectually rebellious. Their music isn't necessarily all that unique or original, but it is played with such and energy and conviction that its hard to not be carried away.
17. Handsome Furs - Sound Kapital
Husband and wife duo, Dan Boeckner and Alexei Perry, make odd electronica music inspired by their travels. The inspiration for Sound Kapital mostly comes from a trip to Burma, a country that is ran by one of the most oppressive existing regimes in the world with a mad dictator at its center. In Burma they played at secret shows and worked with bands that have to literally play underground. The result is an album that is filled with 80's sounds, lo-fi technology, paranoia, and has a revolutionary streak.

 
16. Hey Rosetta! - Seeds
Hey Rosetta! sound like a younger, more polished, less intellectual, and more immediate version of The Weakerthans. While this comparison comes with a lot of caveats, its hard not to hear a connection between the two bands. Seeds is an extremely well-made set of pop music that takes inspiration from every direction, most notably Jeff Buckley. The folky-pop music is full of interesting and profound reflections on life, love and aging. The entire production has a sheen that U2 would be proud of but is somewhat detrimental to Hey Rosetta! Seeds' production could definitely benefit from a little less polishing, but the damage is heavily outweighed by the beautifully orchestrated composition and thought-provoking lyrics.

15. Dirty Beaches - Badlands 
Alex Zhang Hungtai aka Dirty Beaches has not necessarily created an album on Badlands, instead he has created an entire universe on his lo-fi debut. One that is populated with dead crooners, noirish atmospherics, and a cast of characters that are as scary as they are fascinating. Musically, Dirty Beaches takes a lot of it's inspiration from 50's rock, songs like A Hundred Highways begin with Hungtai's cracked-out version of a 50's rock' n' roll crooner before collapsing into industrial noise and distorted guitar feedback.  Badlands sounds like a long lost David Lynch movie soundtrack. The album is as weird, disturbing, and intoxicating as the movies his cinematic counterpart makes.

14. The Rural Alberta Advantage - Departing
The Rural Alberta Advantage is easily one of the best bands making music in Canada (based out of Toronto, strangely enough). Departing, unfortunately doesn't live up to the lo-fi charms of Hometowns and is never quite as interesting or addicting as their debut. But despite these facts, Departing is an exceptional collection of emotionally driven rock. The album starts off with the violently melodramatic Two Lovers, as Nils Edenloff basically tells his lover that his love is going to crush the life out of her. The rest of the album is so full of grandiose statements and dramatic stories that Arcade Fire comparisons might not be unfounded.

13. BadBadNotGood - BBNG
BadBadNotGood is a jazz band from Toronto that covers rap songs. Or, at least thats what they say they do, BBNG creates something that is so novel and unique that to call it a cover seems like, not only, a disservice but also inaccurate. The music has a hip hop edge by the nature of their sources but also through the use of live sampling and even using a 40oz. bottle as percussion. But the album also has an improvised sound and a synchronicity between musicians that can only come from jazz. BBNG is not only a thrilling and enjoyable listen but it also shows a lot of promise for even better things to come in their future.



12. Destroyer - Kaputt

The descriptions that I read of Kaputt, unfortunately made me avoid this album for the better part of the year. Schmaltzy 80's smooth jazz is not something I'm ever in the mood for. But, the conversations and written pieces surrounding Kaputt were eventually too interesting to continue ignoring the album. Critics and listeners have attempted to explain what they liked about Destroyer's new album and mostly failed to properly articulate anything about it. It's true that Kaputt takes the cheesiest parts of 80's music and makes an album worth listening to, but the album is closer, spiritually and musically, to Leonard Cohen than Kenny G. I'm not necessarily guaranteeing that you will like this album but the discussions surrounding the aesthetics of this album are too interesting to not be involved.

11. The Weeknd - House of Balloons
I feel like I have written so much about The Weeknd lately that I don't know if I have much more to say. And honestly, it was listening to his latest mixtape/album Echoes of Silence that inspired me to start writing about music again. It was such a captivating, menacing, and disturbing deconstruction of mainstream R&B that I felt compelled to say something about it. House of Balloons is where the incredible journey of The Weeknd project started this year. The album starts with High For This, which at this point seems like more of a meta statement about the project itself than anything else. The song plays with the lines of consent, drugs, and sexual depravity, but listening to it now I feel like The Weeknd is offering advice to his listener and possibly even commenting on his own ways of dealing with the pain and emptiness that are featured on the majority of his music.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Music Links : Die Antwoord/Celine Dion collaboration, NIN, Drake vs. Common


A quick note about the next couple weeks: I have been overly busy with school related crap so the new material on the blog has been kind of sparse and I apologize for that. But I will make it up to you over the next couple weeks, starting with my much belated top 20 Canadian albums of 2011 list on Friday, which will be split up into three part, and of course lots of new reviews in the coming weeks. And thanks to everyone who has been checking out my blog and making this a success so far.

Die Antwoord wants to team up with Celine Dion. Yeah, you just read that sentence right.

Trent Reznor is taking a break from making movie soundtracks to make new Nine Inch Nails material!

The Drake vs. Common beef confuses the D. Request.

Coachella is sold out already and The Flying Lotus will be releasing a new album this year. So is Kendrick Lamar, Odd Future and Tyler, the Creator, and AraabMuzik.

Das Racist member Heems releases his new mixtape Nehru Jackets. You can grab it here.

Also, a new mixtape from a producer who is affiliated with The Weeknd and the XO crew, Dropxlife has been released on The Weeknd's Tumblr.

The trailer for the LCD Soundsystem documentary, Shutup and Play the Hits.

Taylor Swift's new song sounds like she has decided to join the alt-country crowd. This will probably be the only time I ever plug Taylor Swift.

Also in Youtube related links, the Shins release a new song for the first time in five years: Simple Song.

David Bowie's face is currently currency in Brixton.

 The new Lana Del Ray music video: Born to Die.


Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Music Links: I See Dead People, Remixing Culture, and Leonard Cohen's New Single


An art project that removes the dead artists from their album covers. The results can be funny or heartbreaking but mostly both.

Coachella anounces their ridiculously stacked line up.   Prepare for a lifetime of regret if you aren't able to go.

An awesome video series on how all creations are essentially remixes of previous creations.

Danny Brown and his producers talk about the making of XXX. A fun read if you are a music nerd.

Spin breaks down the numbers on the files that the FBI kept on the late Ol' Dirty Bastard. It makes me wonder how many files they have on the makers of "rap type music."

Rick Ross releases a new mixtape: Rich Forever. I understand why people hate this guy, but for some reason I have a soft spot in my heart for his ridiculous boasts, brags, and fictional stories. Download here.

New single from Leonard Cohen's upcoming album Old Ideas. 

Leonard Cohen - Darkness by leonardcohen

New music by the Canadian alt-country band The Wooden Sky:

The Wooden Sky - Child of the Valley by curlybecs

A wicked mashup of the Notorious B.I.G. and Kanye West:

Biggie x Kanye - Suicidal Thoughts (White Lotus Runaway Mashup) by DJ White Lotus

Friday, January 6, 2012

Top 10 Mixtapes of 2011

2011 felt like an amazing year for hip hop. The year kind of felt like watching one empire fall while a new one began to emerge from the rubble. Watching the old kings of hip hop flop around like fish on dry land, gasping for air while trying to find a new puddle to pollute was kind of pitiful. The bloated excess of Kanye West and Jay-Z's collaboration was particularly alienating, their diamond-crusted and gold-plated grasp for relevancy sounded like Marie Antoinette saying "Let them eat cake." In the face of recessions, deep-seated poverty, and Occupy Wall Street protests they released an album that was filled with Donald Trump style arrogance.

Thankfully, a lot of other voices emerged this year who refuse to be limited by the old barriers that divided up the hip hop world. Not only that, but a lot of the amazing music that was released this was for free. This list is by no means definitive and if you have any suggestions for what I've missed feel free to leave your suggestions down below. Also, I have provided download links for almost all of the mixtapes, but there are a couple mixtapes that aren't being given away for free anymore, for those ones you will have to figure out your own way of getting ahold of them.

10. Kendrick Lamar - Section.80 
Section.80 is probably the only 2011 hip hop album you will listen to that is framed as a critique of Ronald Reagan's economic policies. Kendrick Lamar has the unique talent placing himself within the stream of events, often avoiding many of the typical problems that 'conscious rap' runs into.  He never sounds like he is lecturing or sermonizing, instead he simply makes observations about himself and his generation. A.D.H.D is probably the best example of this strategy, where Lamar places himself as both an observer and a participant of a party. In between lines about doing drugs and having a good time he intersperses his observations about the erosion of values within his generation. A flirtatious encounter with a women becomes an opportunity to critique the war on drugs, or the intake of drugs is used as a way to explain generational apathy. While Lamar always situates gangster culture as a product of economic and cultural forces he also raps about the influence it has had on himself and the youth around him. "I used to want to see the penitentiary, way after elementary, thought it was cool to look the judge in the face when he sentenced me," he raps on Poe Man Dreams. The narrative depth on Keisha's Song is as interesting as the plot of a novel and the twists and turns are heart-breaking and chill inducing. Section.80 isn't without its problems though, and Lamar can go from sounding like a young prodigy to embarrassingly immature in matter of a few sentences. Certain parts of Section.80 are cringe-inducing, whether it is the over earnest skits or his attempt to make a political statement out of a high-elevation sex fantasy. These stumbles are forgivable, partially because Section.80 is clearly designed to be a mixtape. One of the most fascinating aspects of this album is watching Lamar try out different styles and voices, and his growth and experimentation as an artist is already clear.

9. AraabMuzik - Electronic Dream

Electronic Dream is essentially a collection of remixes that seem relatively simple until you try and explain them. AraabMuzik has taken Top 40 style club songs and cut them up into what could best be described as electronic shoegaze hip hop.  Even though most of the songs feature vocal tracks, the majority of them feel like instrumentals. The world that AraabMuzik inhabits reminds me of what The Weeknd has done this year, though their music is extremely different in style and method they have both created sonic worlds that are insular, dangerous, and nocturnal. It probably isn't hard to tell that I am struggling to describe this album and I think it speaks to how familiar yet unique this album sounds. This is an album of paradoxes, warm yet chilly, paranoid yet comforting, accessible yet challenging. Araabmuzik strips down dance songs to their melancholy cores, revealing the dark heart of club music.

Download at this link:
http://hulkshare.com/f0rgsyvjaekf

8. Death Grips - Exmilitary
Exmilitary begins with a sample of Charles Manson ranting over an ominous base line. To hear Manson say "the game is mine, I deal the cards" is blood-chilling but that statement is also the easiest way to describe the rest of the following album. Its a chaotic, noisy, challenging, and uncomfortable listen that challenges every genre convention of a dozen musical genres. I've heard this album called punk hip hop or punk rap and while those labels have a certain amount of accuracy, for me it brings up unfortunate images of nu-metal or other rap-rock creations. Exmilitary doesn't really fit into any genre, instead the Death Grips seems to use and discard genres for a purpose that lies outside all genres. Their vision seems to be an extremely aggressive one that mixes mythic metal style imagery with sludge and industrial rock. Except this is a hip hop album that regularly samples classic rock and punk rock. "Cold blood night of serpent's breath exhaled like spells from the endlessness," the MC yells at the top of his lungs as he declares "I am the beast I worship." Listening to Exmilitary can be exhausting but the determined listener will find a lot that is rewarding here.

Download at this link: 
http://thirdworlds.net/exmilitary.php

7. The Weeknd - Echoes of Silence
Over the course of the year, The Weeknd has released an entire careers worth of material. Not only was it all free, but the quantity seemed to have little to no negligible affect on the quality. This plus, The Weeknd's disturbing material and his ambiguous and low profile made him one of the most talked about artists of the year. Echoes of Silence has its fair share of disturbing material, some of it, including songs about gang-rape and emotional abuse is easily the most disturbing ground he has carved out yet. But at the same time Echoes of Silence includes some of The Weeknd's most accessible moments. Songs, that if they are taken out of the context of the album, can be listened to without the moral balancing acts that The Weeknd often forces his listeners to do. Not only that, but some of these songs, including the superb Montreal, are beautifully created pop songs. Echoes can certainly be viewed as part of a series of mixtapes, but it also deserves to be evaluated on its own. Unlike The Weeknd's sophomore act, Thursday, Echoes is a piece of the puzzle that is even more interesting when viewed outside of its larger concept.

Download at this link: 
http://the-weeknd.com/

6. Keys N Krates - Blackout EP
Including the Blackout EP on this list definitely stretches my definition of a mixtape, so while this is an EP I think the fact that it is legally free hip hop music is justification enough for it to be on the list. Also, Keys N Krates is a really interesting band that deserves to be written about and they fit in but stand out from the revitalized instrumental hip hop scene. Keys N Krates is a Canadian live remix band from Toronto that consists of a drummer, keyboardist, and a DJ for live sampling. While the results aren't always as interesting as one would hope, certain songs stand out as some of the most exciting music of the year. Uncle Otis takes the Otis Redding sample that Kanye and Jay-Z used on Otis and uses it in a much more creative and interesting way. The sample grunts and yells over top of malicious-sounding synthesizers. The sounds of old and new juxtapose violently which makes Redding's vocals sound aggressive and intimidating. The best song on the EP is easily Luv To Luv You which initially sounds like a long lost Daft Punk hip hop cut before it bursts into triumphant pop styled chorus with epically pounding drums and cut up trumpet and pop-diva samples. The manipulation of these samples is a masterwork as the band uses the same sample cut slightly differently to convey different emotions and layer complexity. Like their peers in the instrumental hip hop...(I hesitate to call it a scene, maybe more of a movement or trend) Keys N Krates are hard to define and deftly maneuver through genres with songs that defy them.

Download at this link: 
http://www.toflo.com/category/all/music/download-keys-krates-blackout-ep/

5.  Cities Aviv - Digital Lows
Digital Lows bounced around my top ten list in the making, at one time sitting in last place and another time sitting in first place. Digital Lows is a frustrating and rewarding listen that constantly confounds expectations. Beats unexpectedly lurch in between smooth jazz and industrial beats built out of Depeche Mode samples. Sweet love songs are sandwiched in between misogynistic shock-rap songs. Cities Aviv is fairly representative of the change that was felt in hip hop this year. Artists seemed to reject the expectation of conscious, gangster, club rap or any other cultural or musical expectations. It seems to have come out of the necessity to not be pigeon-holed to one subject or to one type of material. Instead rap music this year has been messy, expansive, unpredictable and most of all exciting. Digital Lows is exactly that, an album that will keep the listener on their toes, never allowing the listener to completely relax or settle into a groove. Digital Lows is mostly about everyday living whether you are negotiating cultural expectations or just trying to stay alive for another day. While there are fantastical elements and hilarious brags such as "in this eight-bit world I'm Bowser," but Cites Aviv's raps mostly sound like he is walking through the city making observations. The journey that he leads us on through this "beautiful hell" is profound and fascinating.

Download at this link: 
http://citiesaviv.bandcamp.com/album/digital-lows

4. The Weeknd - House of Balloons
With the release of House of Balloons this year, The Weeknd created one of the most fascinating anti-heroes in an artistic culture that has recently been populated with many Walter Whites and Don Drapers. The Weeknd's character stands out partially because the world he inhabits is gorgeously created that seems to be an intentional subversion of the current themes that are being played out in popular music. But also partially because he is one of the most despicable and least sympathetic anti-heroes to stand apart from the sleazebags that inhabit HBO dramas. House of Balloons starts with one of the catchiest/creepiest songs I have ever heard, High For This. The song mostly consists of The Weeknd advising a girl that she will be able to better deal with the horrible things he is about to do to her if she was high. From there on in, things don't get any less despicable, but The Weeknd never seems to try and get our sympathy or glorify his party life style. The Weeknd truly sounds miserable when he describes the parties he is at. The title track has him singing "this is fun" on the chorus but he sounds like he is trying to convince himself as much the listener. At the end of the night on Glass Table Girls, the cocaine comes out and he sounds desperate and trapped, looking for escape. The music stutters and shakes and when he sings "bring out the glass tables" there is the sound of fear in his voice. There have been many critics who have condemned the actions and situations that The Weeknd describes on his trio of mixtapes but I'm pretty sure that is the very point.

Download at this link: 
http://the-weeknd.com/#

3. Big K.R.I.T. - Return of 4Eva
Return of 4Eva is a mixtape that you will probably see in second or third spot on a lot of top ten lists this year. Part of that has to do with the fact that Big K.R.I.T has created a mixtape that sounds more like a complete statement than any other mixtape released this year. It doesn't sound like a mixtape, it sounds like an album. It also speaks to the level of professionalism that K.R.I.T. brings to his work. It makes his work more accessible and often more satisfying than a lot of other indie rappers but at the same time it makes him less exciting and more predictable. But K.R.I.T. also refuses to stick to one genre or musical statement like his indie peers he mixes conscious raps with club bangers. The perspective as a black rural southerner is one that is fairly novel. Musically, Return of 4eva is gorgeously produced southern hip hop, but not necessarily anything that breaks the mold. A lot of criticism around Big K.R.I.T. and this album has been based on the idea that as an artist he doesn't necessarily do anything that truly stands out or breaks the mold. And for the most part that is probably true, but it also ignores the fact that K.R.I.T. is mixing old and new hip hop sounds and themes to create a sound that stands out as  different from both.

2. Danny Brown - XXX
Danny Brown claims that 50 Cent wanted to sign him until he saw how tight his jeans were. Whether this story is true or not, it is one of the most telling stories about Brown, rap's most fascinating weirdo. Brown is charismatic and clever, but also disgusting, violent and scary. He can sound silly yet scary, often at the same time. Danny Brown is most interesting when he is describing growing up in poverty in Detroit. In Fields he describes being mugged for food stamps or being beaten up for living in the wrong area of town. In the chorus he describes the areas of Detroit that are rapidly becoming ghost towns, "and where I live it was field, field, house..." "Sitting on porches of abandoned couches or sitting on the field of bed bug ridden couches. Its like they all forgot, man, nobody care about us," he raps, describing the plight of living in an area most of us will only see on Google Maps. His observations from this point of view allow him to note that the no wins "the gun games" and only the mothers lose. On Scrap or Die he describes the process of stripping abandoned houses for scrap metal, these desperate measure rarely seem to help though because he is either ripped off by construction companies or busted by the police. Most of XXX is populated with some of the most vile and disgusting shock raps you will ever hear. Brown's narritive is one that always contains the threat of violence, even when he is at his most charismatic or silly. The perspective that he brings to hip hop is a fascinating one and the way he describes poverty is realistic and brutal.

Download at this link:
 
http://www.foolsgoldrecs.com/xxx/ 

1. Clams Casino - Instrumental Mixtape
Clams Casino is a producer who before this mixtape had done some notable work with Lil B. Instrumental Mixtape removes the mostly inane rapping of Clams Casino's collaborators and lets his music breathe and come to life. The result is easily one of the most beautiful and atmospheric records of the year. The samples used on the mixtape are mostly unrecognizable and Clams Casino has kept mostly tight-lipped about them, but the source hardly matters because the songs that he has created here have become something entirely different from their ambiguous sources. Clams Casino has the incredible talent of taking a sigh, a breath, a tiny vocal sample and then echoing it through the entire song, using distortions, reverb, and filters to build an entire narritive out of the smallest pieces. To me, the album evokes the experience of wandering through a fog covered ghost town. The music is cloaked in mystery but also filled with emotion. If nostalgia had a sound, it would be similar to this album, the strange mixture of joy and pain that makes up the process of looking back on one's memories. Instrumental Mixtape has made Clams Casino the new face of instrumental hip hop and arguably the most important artist within the genre.

Download at this link: 

http://hulkshare.com/10nsi8mxqvzw