Tuesday 29 March 2016

Anniversary Albums: Edition Seven - A Tribe Called Quest "People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm"


Last week we had the unfortunate news that Phife Dawg had passed away. So as a tribute, this weeks Anniversary Album is A Tribe Called Quest's debut "People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm".
Released on April 10, 1990, Tribe's debut celebrated 25 years last year with a special 25th anniversary re-release. Meanwhile, in twelve days it will turn 26.


This album’s sound held true to the style of hip hop coming out of the East Coast at the time. This took the form of jazz rap, or alternative hip hop with groups such as De La Soul and Gang Starr working with jazz samples and placing a strong emphasis on beats and at times complex production. In Tribes case this was thanks to the production talents of Q-Tip and Ali Shaheed Muhammad.
As well as this, In an age dominated by both gangsta rap and politically charged rap, this album had more of a loose feel to it, with the beats enabling the listener to groove and boogie along to the record. This quickly became a large part of Tribe’s appeal, especially as a counter to groups such as NWA and Public Enemy.


It was also on this album that the duo of Q-Tip and Phife Dawg developed a strong partnership vocally, playing off each other lyrically as seen on tracks such as Can I Kick It and Luck Of Lucian. This was quite a playful, less serious approach to rapping which at times involved little injections of humor. 



People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm was well-received critically but failed to branch out into the mainstream, or gain much commercial success. However, it did give the group a following in the underground hip hop community and built their reputation as an up and coming hip hop act.
It was also this album that enshrined Tribe as a pioneering alternative hip hop group, paving the way for future hip hop acts to follow. The group would also build on this first up effort, with the classic and universally acclaimed follow up Low End Theory. People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm’s place in hip hop history remains strong to this day, with magazine The Source placing it in their list of the top 100 hip hop albums. 
- Sam 

Friday 25 March 2016

Podcast Episode #3 "We Love Kanye"

For our third podcast episode, Sam & I are joined by a special guest - Atereano Mateariki who is a Māori Development in Māori Media student at AUT, 95bFM DJ, news reporter & fellow Kanye stan. We discuss The Life of Pablo, controversies surrounding the recent Grammy Awards, The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and New Zealand Music Awards. It ended up being our most entertaining episode yet, full of jokes and casual banter on a large range of topics. 




Songs featured:

  • Kanye West - "Facts", "Feedback", "Fade", "No More Parties in LA (feat. Kendrick Lamar)", "Wolves (feat. Sia & Vic Mensa)"
  • Kendrick Lamar - "untitled 06"
  • Anderson .Paak - "Am I Wrong (feat. ScHoolboy Q)"
  • Future - "Low-Life (feat. The Weeknd)"
  • Massive Attack - "Voodoo Blood (feat. Young Fathers)"
  • Flatbush Zombies - "Bounce"

Cheers for tuning in! 

 - Karl

Tuesday 22 March 2016

Anniversary Albums: Edition Six - The Beach Boys "Pet Sounds"


This week we are celebrating 50 years of the Beach Boys magnum opus Pet Sounds. It seems appropriate given Brian Wilson is in town performing the album in full this weekend.
Released in May 1966, Pet Sounds was Brian Wilson’s project. He wrote, arranged and produced pretty much the entire album with minimal support from the rest of the band. The other members would only provide vocals, with over fifty session players brought into play on the record.
By this time, Wilson had quit touring with the group and had decided to focus on working in the studio. This caused some friction, with other members not entirely enamoured with what Brian was trying to do on this record.



Sound-wise, Pet Sounds is quite symphonic with complex arrangements and unusual sounds featuring throughout. It was quite a departure from the groups pop sound of previous records, with many critics labelled the sound of this record baroque pop, or progressive pop.
You can also hear the influence of Phil Spector’s wall of sound production on this record, with quite a heavily layered sound throughout. Wilson was also influenced by what The Beatles were doing at the time in making more sophisticated studio recordings.


Pet Sounds received a somewhat lukewarm reception at the time in the States, a market which was still infatuated with singles and not albums. However, it was heavily praised in the UK, with bands ranging from the Beatles to Cream raving about the record.
It was also very hard to replicate live, with only a handful of songs ever being performed by the band. Brian Wilson would subsequently tour the record in its entirety.


Pet Sounds has since gone on to garner significant critical acclaim and is considered to be one of the most influential albums in the history of popular music. Rolling Stone magazine even ranked it second in their list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.
It is also universally accepted to be Wilson’s best work and the Beach Boys greatest album.
In its wake more and more acts would begin experimenting in the studio with different sounds and song-structures. It also set a precedent which helped lead to the birth of album-oriented rock and prog rock, showing that music could be more than just pop, but art as well.

- Sam 

Monday 21 March 2016

Review: Auckland City Limits




As you might have read over on our facebook page, yesterday I was the “mole” on the ground at the inaugural edition of Auckland City Limits. This was actually my first experience of a major music festival, Big Day Out had never been my thing. But Kendrick Lamar? Headlining? There was no way I was missing this. I got in quick with an earlybird ticket, which wasn’t even that much cheaper than the regular GA ticket. Didn’t matter to me. Kendrick was the centrepiece, everything else was a bonus. And there were certainly a few bonus highlights from the very first Auckland City Limits. I arrived at about midday, amongst a small stream of attendees. I’d estimate there were less than 5000 people when I got there, it wasn’t until 5pm that the crowd really started to fill up Western Springs Park. But first things first.


After wandering and exploring somewhat aimlessly around the venue, the first act I saw was Canadian-born, New Zealand-based Tami Neilson, and it was a rousing, rollicking beginning to my experience at the festival. Her band was smooth, particularly the trumpet and saxophone sections which wandered in and out during her set as needed – “It’s so difficult being surrounded by so many gorgeous men”, she quipped a few times during the show. “Walk (Back to Your Arms)” and “Texas” sounded superb live, but I loved the closing rendition of “Hound Dog”, or as Neilson put it “this one’s by Big Mama Thornton, but it was also sung by this obscure guy called Elvis”. Plenty of soul and countrified pedal steel guitar goodness.

I heard snippets of Kinetic while looking for something to eat, and what stuck out to me was their participation and banter with quite a smallish crowd, “Okay now touch somebody’s bum”, “Smoke weed every day, hey I smell weed guys! Oh no it’s on stage, sorry everyone” and closing their set with 2Pac’s “California Love” was an unexpected but pleasant bass-heavy jam to hear rolling through Western Springs Park. Most likely it was as a tribute to the West Coast-based headliner.

I have to admit to partially forgetting much of Che Fu’s musical output since The Navigator came out, so getting to rediscover that album again live was a massive nostalgia trip. His skills as a rapper, smooth singer and DJ – yes, he was scratching and mixing like mad – have not waned in the slightest. It was essentially the matinee performance to the main hip hop spectacle later in the night, but Che Fu rocked the house, pity that he wasn’t scheduled at a later time when he could’ve done so with a bigger crowd.

Arguably the finest performance, and undoubtedly my personal favourite was by the jazz saxophonist maestro himself, Kamasi Washington. Joined by Miles Mosley on acoustic bass, who extracted some of the funkiest plucked notes I’ve ever heard from a stand-up instrument. Kamasi was also accompanied by his father Rickey Washington on soprano saxophone, and soulstress Patrice Quinn who sang spectacularly on “The Rhythm Changes”, which might’ve been my top moment of the festival. Unfortunately Quinn’s mic was set too low for the first half of the performance, meaning she was drowned out by the additional instrumentation, only noticed by Rickey Washington who managed to alert the sound crew. I was a little confused by that, surely it would’ve been noticed during the sound check. Otherwise it was a flawless spectacle by Kamasi and his band which just completely floored me. I’ve never heard live jazz quite as powerful or passionate in my life, it genuinely shook me. In a good way.

At the end of the night I asked someone what they made of Action Bronson – “he swears a lot, doesn’t he?” Yes he certainly does. After chants of “Bronson, Bronson!” from a crowd that had swelled following Broods’ synthpop and electronic anthems at the adjacent Spark stage, the man with the beard & the belly swaggered on as casually as ever, opening with the piano-rocker “Brand New Car” from Mr. Wonderful. Bronson was solid – he didn’t disappoint, but I wasn’t blown away either. His stage antics were arguably more memorable, lighting a joint and throwing it into the crowd, (security dealt to it, much to Bronson’s chagrin) tossing his hat into the mob of people and saturating himself with water multiple times – the guy must be burning some serious calories on stage.

Getting towards the business end of proceedings, I prepared myself to endure the indie rock trifecta of The Phoenix Foundation, Cold War Kids and The National. In hindsight I probably made it worse for myself by going to see those particular three in a row (I kind of regret not seeing Girl Talk, by all accounts it was a festive occasion involving confetti and people being invited on stage to dance) but it felt like an incredibly long wait to see the man that I came to see in the first place. I’ve got nothing bad to say about those bands, but they just weren’t my cup of tea. It was definitely better being amongst the crowds for all three, the attendees were incredibly energetic and psyched, which made it all somewhat more bearable.

Then it was finally time. The man, the king, Compton’s own, Kendrick Lamar. I deliberately evacuated the final 15 minutes of The National’s set to try and reach a decent vantage point at the adjacent Spark stage – think it made a difference? Hell no. It was sardines no matter how hard you tried, manoeuvring was just about impossible. I had to make do with a completely blocked view of the stage/screen. Suddenly it was 9.30. The National had bowed out. 9.35. Crowd still buzzing in expectation. 9.45. Where was Kendrick? His band was already on stage. All sorts of chants broke out, “We gon’ be alright!”, “Pimp pimp! Hooray!” to no avail. 9.50, people were starting to get restless. But not long after 9.55, his four-piece band spontaneously came to life, and Kendrick entered the stage. “For Free?” opened proceedings, followed by “Wesley’s Theory”, an inversion of the sequence on To Pimp a Butterfly. Everything about Kendrick’s act was brilliant – the funkified jams of “These Walls” and “Complexion” made us all swerve and groove, the crowd-pleasers “Backseat Freestyle”, “m.A.A.d city” and “King Kunta” had everyone yelling, waving their arms around and snapping fingers, unified in a journey through these explosive renditions of tracks from good kid, m.A.A.d city and To Pimp a Butterfly. It was a shame that technical difficulties had cut short his act by 25 minutes – he had planned to invite a crowd member on stage to freestyle, and given how many times he made reference to the “day one fans” I expected to hear something from Section.80, likewise there were no “untitled” songs either. “i” was Kendrick’s closing statement – or was it? Something was missing, and we knew what it was. Within seconds, that iconic chant which has been adopted by protest movements spread across the ground – “we gon’ be alright” and sure enough that was the encore. And it BANGED like nothing I’ve heard, the ground was literally shaking as Kendrick treated us to the hook over and over, and then with one final burst it was done. But the vibrations and energy from the performance continued to linger on, even as I write this 24 hours later. It couldn’t have been a better finale, courtesy of one of the best live acts going around.

So in closing - the bar has certainly been set for next year’s edition. Hip hop and indie rock fans certainly got their fill this year, so where the next edition goes will be interesting to see. 25,000 is the reported attendance figure, which is respectable. I came for the music and the festive atmosphere, and that’s what I got – so there’s no major complaints from me. Kamasi Washington and Kendrick Lamar were the standouts from my perspective. If 2017’s version can fill the lineup with musicians of their calibre, it should be in good stead for a while.

- Karl

Tuesday 15 March 2016

Anniversary Albums: Edition Six - Billy Bragg "Talking with the Taxman About Poetry"


This week's Anniversary Album is Billy Bragg's "Talking with the Taxman About Poetry" which is celebrating 30 years this year.
This was the British singer-songwriters third studio album, and marked the moment where Bragg, the master of the protest anthem began to get wider exposure.
Despite singing politically charged folk-influenced anthems, Bragg's music is not straight out acoustic folk, but is in fact a mixture of styles that blended aggressive punk guitar with melodic pop song-writing at times.


This album also marked a bit of a turn musically for Bragg. On previous albums it was mainly just Bragg by himself on guitar. However, on here he brings in other musicians to play, including The Smiths Johnny Marr who plays guitar on the album opener, the jangle pop-influenced "Greetings To The New Brunette".



By the time of this record, Bragg had developed a strong reputation in the UK as a protest singer, with his songs tearing into Thatcher’s England and the sociopolitical climate of the time.
He was involved with the political activist group Red Wedge, while his music was tailored towards left-wing causes and encouraging the youth to get involved in activism and political causes.
The track that probably captures this the most on this record is his cover of a traditional protest song "There Is Power in a Union."


"Talking with the Taxman About Poetry" has proven a popular record in Bragg’s cannon over the years.
It is his second highest rated album on Rate Your Music, while it also cracked the top 10 of the UK album charts, something Bragg has only achieved twice in his career.
This record is undoubtedly one of the most important singer-songwriter albums of the 1980's and was an important collection of songs that explored the political and social climate of the UK at the back end of the decade.

- Sam 

Sunday 13 March 2016

Tracks of the Week 5: 7/3 - 13/3



Sup listeneaders/readisteners! Now onto the fifth straight week of new music tracks, having fun with this series, hope you’re enjoying hearing these tracks too. Yet again, it was a pretty varied & interesting seven days, it seems as if the more attention and effort you put into searching for new tunes, the better gems you’ll find. As is the case with this week.

Average Rap Band – “Fly Casual”


Tom Scott’s current project Average Rap Band is in the process of releasing their next effort El Sol, and dropped this track in advance yesterday. Along with the earlier promotional video, the visuals in “Fly Casual” are packed with 1980s/1990s nostalgic aesthetics – including neon-clad rollerbladers, 32-bit video games, TV advertisements and old school hip hop videos. The track itself, feeling like an alternative R&B/hip hop fusion, aims for a mellow, chilled vibe and pretty much nails it. 3.5/5

Flatbush ZOMBiES – “R.I.P.C.D.”


FINALLY! 3001: A Laced Odyssey is here, the debut LP by Flatbush Zombies after years of mixtapes from the Brooklyn collective. It’s something of a coincidence to see a track titled “R.I.P.C.D.” seeing as Kanye West tweeted about the “death” of CDs a few days ago. Though I often consider the so-called ‘demise’ of physical formats from a collector’s POV, there is another dimension as well – how it affects musicians, as Eric Arc Elliott says on the hook “RIP to the CD, can’t even play my hits / Cause new computer shit without the means to play the shit”. Potential line of the week from Meechy Darko as well – “My semi-automatic will splatter a nigga like Jackson Pollock”. 4/5

Joey Bada$$ – “Brooklyn’s Own”


March 9 marked the 19-year anniversary of the death of Notorious B.I.G., the undisputed king of Brooklyn. Joey Bada$$, who would have been just 2 years old when Biggie died, dropped this track as a way of tribute, another teaser for what I can only assume to be a new project following B4.DA.$$. In comparison to the tougher, aggressive & confident track “Ready”, this sees Joey back in his comfort zone – jazzy, laid-back beats with a catchy hook, straight out of the Digable Planets/A Tribe Called Quest playbook. 3.5/5

King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – “Gamma Knife”


GAMMA! Aussie psych-rock outfit King Gizzard’s next full-length Nonagon Infinity is due next month. “Gamma Knife” bursts with electrified walls of psychedelic guitars, barking “uhhrrrwooo” vocals and a slightly manic rhythm section. It’s like Pink Floyd’s “Let There Be More Light” amped up by several more notches – maybe even up to 11. Syd Barrett would’ve definitely been tripping out to this, front & centre – facepaint, cult robe and everything. 4/5


PJ Harvey – “The Community of Hope”



Alt-rock/folk-rock queen PJ Harvey’s The Hope Six Demolition Project isn’t far away – about a month to be exact, a short space of time considering the 5-year gap after Let England Shake. It packs quite a bit in for a 2:24 track – strong guitar & rhythm sections accompanied by forceful yet melodic vocals from Harvey and backup singers on the chorus. It’s slated to be the opener on the new album, detailing a small township or community negatively affected by government and corporate development projects, ironically called “The Community of Hope”. Will be interesting to see how this concept plays out through the rest of the album. 4/5

 - Karl

Tuesday 8 March 2016

Anniversary Albums: Edition Five - Steely Dan "The Royal Scam"


The Royal Scam is the fifth studio album by American jazz rock band Steely Dan. Released in May 1976, this album is often overlooked in the Dan’s cannon as it was released the year before the all time classic Aja.
Despite this though it forms part of Steely Dan’s classic streak of albums between 1972 and 1980, one of the best album streaks in popular music history.



By the time of the recording of this album, Steely Dan was very much Donald Fagen and Walter Becker’s project, with the other original members removed in favor of a revolving cast of session musicians (22 played on this record).
With this, they had also mastered a slick jazz rock sound which would reach its zenith on the following album Aja. Some would malign this style labelling it yacht rock, or as I like to describe cocktail jazz.
Despite the cynical labels, in all honesty this was some of the best music to come out of the 70’s and at the end of the day who doesn’t like drinking cocktails while slick studio jazz rock plays in the background.

Despite developing this slick studio sound, Fagen and Becker left a lot of the jazz influences out on this album instead favoring a more guitar-heavy sound, whilst also bringing in funk and reggae influences.
Prominent jazz fusion guitarist Larry Carlton provided a lot of the guitar licks on the record, with his solo on the opening track Kid Charlemagne voted #80 in Rolling Stone’s list of the 100 greatest guitar solos. 


The Royal Scam is probably the least rated Steely Dan record with many saying it didn’t represent any musical advancement from previous records. This doesn’t mean, however, that it is a bad record (is there such a thing as a bad Steely Dan record) and given what came before and after it, it still holds up well musically with some stunning tracks and slick studio arrangements. 


- Sam 

Sunday 6 March 2016

Tracks of the Week 4: 29/2 - 6/3



Yo! I got some more choice cuts from new music released over the past seven days. Just as last week, I was really impressed with the quality of new music that I've been hearing recently. If you liked/hated any of these selections, let me know with a comment. That being said, here are my five favourite new tracks.

case/lang/veirs – “Atomic Number”


Teaser single for the upcoming project by Neko Case from The New Pornographers, country/pop superstar k.d. lang & singer-songwriter Laura Veirs. Although I do particularly like the backing instrumentation of acoustic guitar, light percussion and string sections, what really struck me was the trio of female voices weaving in and out through the piece, each distinct in their own way. Makes for a captivating concoction of pop, country & indie pop aesthetics. 4/5

JMSN – “Cruel Intentions”


Smooooooooth soul. Feels like a classic D’Angelo joint from the Brown Sugar era. Featuring some bluesy guitars, punchy horns & laid-back grooves, it’s the quintessential slow jam. JMSN croons as if he was born to dish out heavy doses of soul. 3.5/5

Kendrick Lamar – “untitled 06”

 

Okay, so I had a tough decision to make here. Kendrick’s untitled unmastered. has several standout tracks, and I’ve been noticing a lot of hype around 02, 05, 07 and of course 08 a.k.a. “Blue Faces”. But as a massive fan of OutKast, it was 06 that stood out to me the most. It plays like something out of Aquemini (is it a coincidence that Kendrick muses about his star sign – Gemini – on the intro?) with Cee-Lo singing the hook, and production handled by Ali Shaheed Muhammad & Adrian Younge. It’s definitely added a LOT of hype for me in regards to his upcoming performance at Auckland City Limits. 4.5/5

Yeasayer – “Silly Me” 


Brooklyn-based psychedelic/electronic quartet Yeasayer aren’t a group that I’m all that familiar with, but after hearing this track ahead of their fourth album Amen & Goodbye due out on April 1, I might have to start diving into their discography. It’s surprisingly catchy considering how odd and heavily layered the instrumentation is, and the vocals really give me vibes of Andy Bell from 1980s synthpop duo Erasure. 3.5/5

Your Old Droog – “Hip-Hop Head”



Had a good laugh while listening to this. Your Old Droog delivers a couple of funny verses about a girl he meets that really loves hip hop, hence the title. There are some fairly clever humorous lines, for example “Fuck with Bun B, then she givin up the Buns, B”. It’s produced by Alchemist, who gives it an old-school style beat with some druggy horns and a steady backbeat. It’s the kind of comedy rap that I don’t hear very often in modern hip hop, akin to what Biz Markie was doing during the 1980s. 3.5/5

- Karl

Tuesday 1 March 2016

Anniversary Albums: Edition Four - Gil Scott-Heron "Pieces of a Man"


This week on Anniversary Albums we are taking a look at the debut studio album from the amazing New York singer and poet Gil Scott-Heron, "Pieces of a Man".

Released in 1971, Pieces of a Man was a new musical direction for Scott-Heron whose previous work was largely spoken word.
The songs on this album, apart from a couple of exceptions were recorded largely in a more conventional song structure.
It was also his first collaboration with multi-instrumentalist Brian Jackson who he would form a long-standing musical partnership with.


Musically, the material for this album is very much rooted in jazz, soul, and blues. The songs are characterized by quite a mellow instrumentation with electric piano and guitar the driving forces, while on occasion some free jazz arrangements and solos appear.
The songs also tend to feature quite soulful vocals from Scott-Heron as he showcases his singing ability, pushing his vocals to the fore.



Pieces of a Man was not a commercial success and received very little critical attention at the time. However, it has since gone on to become a universally acclaimed record. It has garnered massive retrospective critical praise, with many acknowledging its influence on fusing difference genres together such as jazz, soul, funk and proto-rap.
It also inevitably had a massive influence on genres such as hip hop and neo-soul, something that was largely due to the fusing of different genres in the music, as well as Scott-Herons lyrical artistry and political and social awareness across the album.


The albums legacy was also undoubtedly enhanced by the opening track “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised”, a political spoken word track that some say was the first ever rap song.
However, Scott-Heron himself was critical of the over-inflation of “Revolution” compared to the other tracks on the record . He said “Revolution” ended up overshadowing the other material on the album leading to other songs being heard less as a result.


- Sam