Archive for September, 2007

Every time I’ve been involved with the Utopia FM broadcasts there’s always been one song that the whole world seems completely oblivious to that we play all the time. Last year it was the Tiger Picks “Disco Punk Electro Funk”, which was an awesome repetitive dance song walking the fine line between annoying and superb ever-so-well.

This year it’s a summery, European sounding record from Liverpool’s Sonny J. I don’t know much about Sonny J but they/he/she/whoever is somehow involved with MF Doom/DangerDoom - and that’s only ever a good thing… and as I don’t know much I’ll keep this short and sweet.

Here’s the video for their song “Can’t Stop Moving” which we (Utopia FM) are playing all the time, and it will definitely go down as my anthem of this broadcast:

Check some of Sonny J’s other songs out on their myspace page, www.myspace.com/sonnyjmusic.

Pretty old but… What the hell is she talking about!?

She had a bit of a Derek Zoolander moment there didn’t she. There’s no way to defend that answer… it’s just what happens when dangerously pretty people try and be intelligent. Most people probably watched Miss Teen USA on mute, I know I would have… :/

A rather belated video for one of the best hip hop tracks out this year. Termanology burst onto the rap scene last year with “Watch How It Go Down”, a collaboration with legendary producer DJ Premier. “So Amazing” is another joint that they did together… and here’s the video.

Pure awesome.

kanye_50cent_diddy.jpg

This single has been around for months now, but 50 decided to release the official billion dollar remix a week after his album came out. Actually, that’s more to do with Jay-Z, because he didn’t want to give 50 Cent’s album more promotion that Mr West’s. But here it is - 50 Cent, P Diddy and Jay-Z.

Diddy’s flow is pretty gash, and Jay’s verse ain’t the greatest. But it’s still better than everything else being released these days.

50 Cent feat. P. Diddy & Jay-Z - I Get Money (Billion Dollar Remix) (Right Click, Save Target As)

utopialogo.jpg

So me and my good friend Daniel are back on the radio this week, on Sunderland’s 87.7 Utopia FM. It’s student radio, but it broadcasts to the whole city so I’m not complaining!

If you want to give us a listen we’re on 2-4pm GMT, Monday through Friday. You can listen by visiting www.utopiafm.net.

The FM broadcast starts on September 15th and carries through for the rest of the month. So give it a listen.

… unless of course it’s with this guy…

That’s got to be one of the best pranks I’ve ever seen. Top marks.

Here’s the music video for Kanye West’s next single, “The Good Life” featuring T-Pain. I would say this is one of the standout singles from his new album “Graduation” but the truth is that whole album is pretty awesome. The video comes out just days after he performed “The Good Life” at the VMA awards.

Speaking of the Kanye and the VMA awards… here’s the video of Mr West spazzing out backstage for various reasons - because he didn’t win an award, because Justin Timberlake dominated the whole show, had a better stage than him, hell he even had a rant about Britney Spears (although he might have had a point on that one).

Atleast he didn’t run up on the stage this time. That’s an improvement, I guess.

Today is the anniversary of 9/11. You know that. And you’ve probably heard a dozen people say that “we need the truth!” or something to that effect today. Everybody’s writing about it. Everybody’s talking about it. That’s what 9/11 has become in the six years since ‘it’ happened. Nobody’s saying anything new though. If, like everybody else, this date spurs you with energy to seek “the truth” then here’s a couple of websites you can take a look at, each with facts and quotes that lend backing to the theory that something is being covered up. Each is worth reading:

I ain’t got shit to say on the matter except rest in peace to all those that died. My thoughts are with the people who lost someone on this day six years ago.

nas.jpg

Courtesy of XXL:

Nas recently revealed to MTV’s Mixtape Monday that he intends to drop another album before 2007 is out. According to Godson, the as-yet untitled project is already halfway done and he hopes to get it into stores by December. “I’m really into [the idea of having] a summer album,” he told MTV News. “But they say the fourth quarter is for big dogs. I been doing the fourth quarter for years, so I guess I’m at home in the fourth.” Although he previously stated that he would be continue to work closely with producer and Black Eyed Peas frontman will.i.am on the his next project, as he did on 2006’s Hip-Hop is Dead, the Queensbridge native says he has scrapped most of that material and started fresh. Nas also opened up about the fate of the video for “Hustlers,” his collaboration with The Game that appeared on Hip-Hop is Dead. Apparently the video was shot and edited, but ended up being shelved because of timing issues. A video for his long awaited collaboration with Jay-Z “Black Republicans,” which was set to be helmed by legendary director Spike Lee, was also killed because Nas and Spike couldn’t agree on a treatment.

Hardly concrete like the Wu-Tang news, but don’t be surprised at the sight of a new Nas album come December. The knock on effect of “Hip Hop Is Dead” still has the whole hip hop industry thinking and talking about the state of music, and that was 10 months ago. A new Nas album can only be a good thing for hip hop. Oh, and kudos to Nas for scrapping the material with will.i.am. We don’t need any more Black Eyed Peas shit in the Nas catalogue, half an album was more than enough.

wu-tang.jpg

You know when you first heard that the Wu-Tang Clan were going to have an album out in 2007 and you laughed? Well turns out “The 8 Diagrams” is actually going to be in stores November 13th…

A preview from Village Voice:

First off, and most importantly: The 8 Diagrams exists, and it’s already reached some stage of completion, though RZA apparently is still tinkering with it. By all accounts, the album will be ready by the planned November 13 release date, and hopefully the reanimated SRC/Loud label won’t push it back anymore. This whole thing is almost impossible to believe, but there it is. Since the release of Iron Flag almost six years ago, nobody’s been willing to do anything but tentatively hope for a new Wu-Tang group album. Ol’ Dirty Bastard died, the remaining members publicly squabbled amongst themselves, and the entire group had a tough time reuniting for a large-scale tour without at least one member going AWOL at least some of the time. The group signed a one-album deal with SRC late last year, but I can’t imagine anyone really fully believed that it would happen. It’s happening. Earlier this afternoon, Wu-Tang’s publicists set up a listening session for whichever bits and pieces of the album that RZA didn’t mind letting us hear. In the fourth-floor screening room in an unobtrusive West Village hotel, a bunch of music writers got together today to hear snippets of eight songs: some as short as one verse, others covering what sounded like just about an entire song. The whole thing was only about twenty minutes long, and I have no idea how representative of the whole those twenty minutes will turn out to be. Maybe they cherry-picked the best individual moments and maybe they just grabbed a bunch of random shards; either one would be well in keeping with Wu-Tang tradition. But I sat and listened to those twenty minutes three times in a row, and I could’ve done it all day if I didn’t have to get back to the office to write it up. If those twenty minutes are any real indication, and I hope to God they are, The 8 Diagrams is going to be a hell of an album.

The preliminary reports on the album were a bit dubious. In one interview, RZA talked about how Raekwon had made fun of him and Method Man for making “some Black Eyed Peas shit,” and most of the stories anticipating the album mentioned one song where the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ John Frusciante and George Harrison’s son Dhani would play guitar on a cover of the Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” I don’t know if I heard that Black Eyed Peas-esque song today (probably not), but I did hear most of the song with Frusciante and Harrison; the tracklist I got called it “My People Gently Weep,” but in his taped intro, RZA himself either called it “The Needle Gently Weeps” or “The Beatle Gently Weeps.” Or maybe he actually was saying “the people”; RZA can be tough to understand. Whatever, doesn’t matter. The song is amazing, mostly because it sounds like a Wu-Tang song rather than like a classic-rock crossover-attempt. The guitars are there, but they’re drowned in the murky, off-key mix, buried under a Fender Rhodes that itself sounds like it’s underwater. And Ghostface is on it; the song faded out before his verse was over, but what I heard was an emotional, vividly rendered story about (seriously) going grocery-shopping at Pathmark and spilling milk on his pants.

That brings me to another great thing about The 8 Diagrams: Ghost is on it. Ghost has no-showed some recent Wu-Tang shows, and there have been plenty of rumors that he hasn’t been getting along with the rest of the group, that he wouldn’t have any verses on the album. But he appears on three of the eight songs I heard, and he’s in top form. Actually, everyone is in top form. Raekwon sounds as hard and opaque as he ever has. Method Man has stopped playing the clown, sinking back into the gravelly menacing energy that made him so compelling in the first place. The ODB dedication “Life Changes” could’ve come off maudlin and cheap if these guys did maudlin and cheap. Instead, it’s a touching piece of work, grief-stricken but level-headed. GZA’s verse, where he talks about recording in the studio where ODB died, hit me especially hard: “I cried like a baby on my way to his place of death / Hate not being there the moments before he left.” And the second-string guys all come hard as fuck, some of them (Inspectah Deck on “Watch Your Mouth,” U-God on “Wolves”) spitting the best verses I’ve heard from them in years. For the first time in a long time, every last member of the group has something to prove, and it shows.

Maybe even more importantly, The 8 Diagrams actually sounds like a Wu-Tang album. It’s dark and swampy and eerie and gothic and mysterious and heady in a way that, say, Iron Flag wasn’t. I don’t know if RZA produced the whole thing or not, but all the tracks I heard certainly sounded like RZA tracks: creepy minor-key horror-movie strings, broken pianos, shuffling head-crack drum-loops, ghostly vocal samples, chanted choruses, kung-fu movie dialogue, clashing sword sound-effects, the whole thing. It’s not catchy, not at all, but it absorbs. According to one publicist, Cappadonna and Street Life both get verses on the album, but there are no non-Wu guest-rappers. One song, though, immediately jumped out, partly because there’s barely any rapping on it. “They Want to Stick Me For My Riches” is an amazing pseudo-reggae soul song with only one rap verse (Meth: “Since mama held me in her arms to tell me / That it’s a cold world, I always packed heat”). The rest of the time, some singer wails intense and paranoid personal-memoir shit about coming up hard and poor and desperate; lush strings well up at all the right moments, but RZA keeps the sound low-key and dark and evil the whole time. Nobody from the group was at the listening session, and none of the publicists could tell me who the singer was. In a way, that’s almost better. The Wu-Tang Clan should be mysterious and inaccessible; they should be able to bring in some incredible guest-singer without actually letting anyone know who that singer is. The 8 Diagrams sounds like an album out of time, and I have no idea how they expect it to do in a commercial marketplace that’s become unrecognizable since the time these guys were able to sneak past the gatekeepers and become unlikely pop stars. But fuck it: it’s a thrill to hear these guys, every last one of these guys, get back to the stuff they do best, markets be damned. If this album hits stores sounding anything like what I heard today, it’ll be a gift to a lot of people who have waited a long time.

And Billboard.com’s take:

George Harrison’s son Dhani and funk legend George Clinton are among the guests on the Wu-Tang Clan’s first album in six years, “The 8 Diagrams,” due Nov. 13 via Wu Music Group/Loud/SRC/Universal.

Billboard.com previewed eight unmastered tracks from the project today (Sept. 7), including “My People Gently Weeps,” which features Harrison and an interpolation of the Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” Clinton pops up on the fast, old-school-sounding “Wolves,” a showcase for group member U-God.

Producer RZA’s trademark dark, symphonic samples are at the core of “Weak Spot” and “Thug World,” the latter of which also features a number of his memorable lyrics (”I love my b*tches like Chachi loved Joanie / f*cked 200 p*ssies but I still feel lonely”).

Raekwon adds grit to “Watch Your Mouth” (”I’m from a boulevard where n*ggers get jacked and peed on”), while Method Man is showcased on the soulful head-nodder “They Want To Stick Me for My Riches.” On “Take It Back,” the group raps about reasserting its hip-hop dominance, with Method Man noting, “Before you even had a name, you was screaming Wu-Tang.”

As previously reported, the album includes a tribute to the late Ol’ Dirty Bastard, “Life Changes,” highlighted by heartfelt couplets from GZA: “Now I’m in the booth 10 feet from where he lay dead / I think about him on this song and what he might have said.”

Click Here!
Having just completed a summer tour on Monday at Seattle’s Bumbershoot festival, Wu-Tang is expected to play additional shows before the end of the year in support of the new album. Ghostface Killah will also be on the road in October and November with the Hip Hop Live! Tour, featuring Rakim, Brother Ali and the Rhythm Roots All Stars.

I’ve never been the biggest Wu-Tang groupie but this is great news. I just thought I’d share it with y’all. Time to bump some 36 Chambers.

Close
E-mail It