Archive | December, 2009

DJ COLD CASE PRESENTS…."GO DJ…THAT’S MY DJ," a rundown of only the most killing sounds of EDM – Year End Edition

31 Dec

Thinking of what will come in, 2010 I’m reminded of a statement I made to my best friend on a summer night in 2006, that hip hop and electronica were on a collision course. While no one would call me Nostradamus after hearing this, remember that this was before Daft Punk was in a video game and Baltimore club was on BET. Hell, even last night in Hartford, CT my (black) friends were listening to house music…by choice. What the hell is going on?

Going back to that night in homie’s Volvo. It was the summer after junior year and we were both on campus taking classes. He was playing Pharrell’s album, ‘In My Mind’, off of his ipod. The track ‘That Girl’ came on and my eyes widened.

http://www.youtube.com/v/hecM6zhmIEE&hl=en_US&fs=1&

The vocal stutter used at the start and end of the track reminded me of the intro of Tiga’s April 9 2006 essential mix using a cut from Who Made Who – Out The Door [Superdiscount Remix].

http://www.youtube.com/v/TxMpRaXldVg&hl=en_US&fs=1&

Completely different yet very much the same technique, used by two producers who in all likelihood don’t listen very much if at all to each other’s music. Fast forward to 2009. The boundaries between dance music and hip hop have broken down so much we’re no longer surprised at hearing french house on our local radio station.

The epic comedy in all of this is hip-hop has always been dance music, borrowing from disco and house while it grew up from the underground. The sound hardened as it’s popularity grew. There have been flirtations with dance music in the past, popular examples being Dee-Lite teaming up with Q-Tip and Heavy D’s classic ‘Now That We’ve Got Love’

http://www.youtube.com/v/NNEgUPKxk7A&hl=en_US&fs=1&

The difference now is the overall popularity of dance music, electro riffs, and a heavy 4/4 beat across pop, r&b, hip-hop and even rock (if you can call 3OH!3 that), need I even mention Will.I.Am? Let me not hate on the guy, he’s done a lot to open people’s mind’s and opinions of dance music. Even though B.E.P. make me want to gag, his side project Zuper Blahq is pretty dope.

http://www.youtube.com/v/nRJbrLF6_aA&hl=en_US&fs=1&

Further proving my point that the lines are blurring; Chase & Status’s Mad House.

http://www.youtube.com/v/SHxChYgPCzw&hl=en_US&fs=1&

It’s been used as the intro to Rihanna’s album ‘Rated R’, for which they also produced the tracks ‘Wait Your Turn’ and ‘G4L’.

http://www.youtube.com/v/B_I9a2xoqsk&hl=en_US&fs=1&

It’s been given a vocal re-fix by Murs.

http://www.youtube.com/v/ZGzwxuMlD2g&hl=en_US&fs=1&

It’s even been covered by Young Money’s ingenue, Nicki Minaj. I’m not really a fan of hers, but this may be the best use of American Pop-Hop and proper dubstep tune, sorry Snoop.

http://www.youtube.com/v/ZltD0jZXiM4&hl=en_US&fs=1&

I’m excited to hear what this year will bring in this new musical space as producers continue to break boundaries. Wishing love, peace, happiness, and prosperity to you and yours in this new decade.

– Case

ALPHA MALE MUSIC WEEK…Johnny Cash’s Quiet Country Strength

31 Dec

http://www.youtube.com/v/gRlj5vjp3Ko&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

“I fell into a burning ring of fire
I went down, down, down and the flames went higher
And it burns, burns, burns, the ring of fire
The ring of fire”

It takes a “real man” to survive the pain of the universe on the strength of his wits and his faith in God. It takes an even stronger man to admit to his wrongdoings and live with and through them. It takes an even stronger man to survive all of that and rest at peace with himself in the midst of his turbulent lifestyle that led to him living, loving, dying, smoking, shooting, drinking, dying and loving again. However, rare is the man who can live through that and be the most controversial, revolutionary, unquestioned and lauded artist in music history. Johnny Cash is the toughest man that ever lived. No, he never killed anyone or went to jail, or got shot nine times, or mutilated himself. But he did lead a two fisted attack against the slights of his universe with music, creating a canon of songs that aren’t just love songs or hate songs or magnificent story songs, but they’re strength songs. The man literally crafted a career around gaining strength by discussing everything through his music. The magnificence and eloquence of this man is that everything is nasty, hard, brutal and short. Nothing melodramatic or dramatized here. If we were in the era of Jay Z during his career, we could even say, “all pissed everything.” But in his vitriol there’s truth and honesty that shows any man what strength is all about. It’s not always pretty, it’s not always great, but it is the power that guides and heals even the largest wound.

http://www.youtube.com/v/N5Ts4M3irWM&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

http://www.youtube.com/v/M89c3hWx3RQ&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

Everything about Johnny is stripped down. He holds the guitar as if it were a shotgun, likely an homage to his military service, but if you wanted to dream, it’s because he’s shooting down every problem he ever had with a song. Johnny even invented problems for songs, like “A Boy Named Sue,” which is the grittiest tale of redemption ever committed to record. He also fell in love with the concept of prison, though he never served any real time, and in discussing crime and punishment became a legendary artist for the bedraggled, downtrodden and underrepresented in society, his “Folsom Prison Blues” still a champion for the man doing a bid who just dreams about walking the streets again and resuming his normal existence. He wrote about love as well, “Cocaine Blues” being a personal favorite, as “shooting a bad bitch down” when higher than five kites, while not advisable behavior for anyone, is the clear extrapolation of years of angst at a female. “Walk the Line” was his ode to June Carter, the stentorian and authoritative love of his life, the only one who could restore positive strength and honor to the man, when after years of drinking, drugging and whoring, he knew he needed her to ultimately save his life.

http://www.youtube.com/v/2vuGZZhtBy0&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

Johnny Cash’s hero is the fictitious legendary railroad worker John Henry who died attempting to out hammer a steam powered hammering machine. Says a lot about the man. Somehow, even in the face of a perpetually advancing musical universe, Johnny stayed steadfast. Through rockabilly, the British invasion, psychedelic rock, funk, and so many other periods, there was Cash, strumming away, not just a country picker, but a man who was motivated by his adherence to his way ultimately being the best way. Given that nobody before or after him can even approach the uniqueness and frankness of his sound, like John Henry beating the steam hammer and dying, sometimes your point is best made in antiquity. Reflect for a second on the voluminous nature of Johnny Cash’s straight talking discography. You could name twelve iconic Johnny Cash songs and still miss out on 25 more. “Engines don’t get paid for their steam,” but Johnny Cash, like his hammer swinging icon, took the pride in his master craftsman ship as his payment here and in the hereafter.

http://www.youtube.com/v/9aFh_1WXfpc&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

Once saved, Johnny continued to bear the weight of his past with silence, austerity and strength. Recording with Rick Rubin, he plumbed into the depths of his strength twice more for the masterful “God’s Gonna Cut You Down” and his legendary cover of Nine Inch Nails’ “Hurt,” his rambling train of justice the Tennessee Three long gone, the music is more stripped than ever, solitary and plaintive instruments. Cash, in sitting on his throne as the King of Pain lays down the laws of life in solving your anguish, gaining strength, and manning up and being a man about it. No matter the pain, no matter the stress, Cash always survived, with strength to spare.

The musical universe and men worldwide are better for it.

http://www.youtube.com/v/clq01TXQR0s&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

A Dime, A Dozen: Beyonce and Justin Timberlake – Bandstand Breakouts

31 Dec

Round 5 of “A Dime, A Dozen” brings us to a woman of fate and the captain who went solo before his ship sailed out and sunk: Beyonce and Justin Timberlake.


Beyonce and Justin Timberlake: This pair led two of the biggest gold mines of the 2000s before breaking western harder than a Frisco earthquake – but it paid off and thus is why they are indisputable Pop icons of the decade. Destiny’s Child is one of the best selling female groups of all-time (wait imma let you finish <– watch this space). *N Sync, one statistic: 2.4 million albums, 1 week – and Justin still went solo like he had no strings attached. Knowles is like a Diana Ross, and Timberlake like an Elvis who distracts you with an MJ studded glove. These two remained relevant in a decade where their new selves rendered their original selves irrelevant – they were the video that killed their own radio stars.

Beyonce: Beyonce Knowles is a Pop field marshal; we all knew from day the first that destiny’s chosen child was Beyonce. She just lived in a foster home with parents who knew she needed company – no need for the true sibling commitment, that’s Solange’s job. Beyonce ran Destiny’s Child like an army: either file in rank, or get your hand out the piggy bank. My take on Beyonce is metaphorical, which is Pop at its core. It’s a lot of “she’s like this, with a bit of that, and a slight hint of some such.” Even still, it is the mixture of those elements that make an icon – originality is the art of concealing your sources (watch this space). That said, Beyonce is like Colonel Sanders trial and error-ing her way to the perfect secret recipe. She is like Asa Candler – the man behind Coca-Cola – pinpointing a commercial entity and marketing it to unparalleled success as an American staple. She’s like the Clipse “You thought I was a rapper, huh? We’ll I guess that makes me an actor ‘cuz I’d rather clap a gun,” singing to front being a really good marketer and brand. She’s Kelis: bossy; she’s Tyra: mainstream crossover in that Tyra-kinda way; she’s Hattie: making moves, being the first, but being controversial in a top-selling-or-selling-out social impact kind of way; she’s Hillary: the First Lady that will try you; she’s Marilyn: a self-made iconography of female sexuality; she’s Carrie Bradshaw: the low-key person that knows everyone, but no one really knows, yet everyone wants to know; she’s Madonna: universal Pop icon – love/hate/apathetic towards her, it is still understood – for a generation – period; she’s Paul McCartney: fronting a worldwide staple, yet quite disinterested in your personal opinion of said group or individual, and you respect them – within some capacity – for that reason.

Beyonce started off the decade with the 2001 Destiny’s Child release: Survivor. Yes, she wanted to let you know from the jump, that she will indeed be seeing you on the other side of the ten-year hump – though, she can’t make any promises for the other two broads in the video. DC took a three-year hiatus before releasing their final studio album to date, Destiny Fulfilled, in 2004. Yes, she wanted you to know that DC’s destiny is fulfilled – if the bridge is gone when you come back, it’s because I burned it; but don’t get mad, I made you. Furthermore, her personal destiny was fulfilled; Beyonce set herself up for epic things in the future. Should she have faltered in the 90s, she could fall back on the group – teams always share the blame. Now that she perfected the secret Pop recipe for success, she could break out on her own and share the credit with no one but me, myself, and I. 2005 brought a greatest hits album, #1s, to close the casket. Rewind to 2003 though. She went crazy – not crazy crazy, not Britney crazy – but crazy like a fox, and crazy in love. In 2003, she released her first solo album, Dangerously in Love. The way the world fell in love with Beyonce, in negative two seconds, still makes me think she had rock boys lacing her albums – oh wait. Then we celebrated B’Day – marketing: ftw – in 2006. Even when it’s your day, it’s still Bey’s day. What did you want for your birthday in ’06? A cd about someone else’s special day. Then again, that album did begat this:

http://www.youtube.com/v/ISiITAh-J4E&hl=en_US&fs=1&

So, I’ll leave that at that. But wait, there’s more! Two words: Sasha Fierce. I would let you finish, but we don’t really need to start; because even though you met her in 2008 – and put a ring on it within a week – she’s still got you dry cleaning her freakum dress every Monday. She wanted me to remind you that when she calls they better see her on your video screen.

Beyonce is volcanic. She’s a steady constant: calm, grounded, stable, always present. Just as Cotapaxi sits in the middle of the urban metropolis that is Quito, Ecuador, Beyonce is such a strong force within pop culture, but in a way that has everything else adapt while she rests comfortably. Like a volcano though, she is always present, but most visible when she erupts. Powerful, game-changing, earth-shifting, but at the same time when the lava is cooled it sets on the foundation and becomes another layer from which to build – constantly, steadily growing. The heat and intensity of fire, mixed with the stability and permanence of earth, now that’s a dangerous combination.

Justin Timberlake: This one is a tricky one. He has Michael tendencies, but not really. Okay, he can dance. Right, he was the baby of a successful group that broke out to much greater fame alone. Then, there’s the intangibles – namely the fact that he danced with Michael at the VMAs, often donned Michael gear in videos, and just plain liked Mike. That said, J. Timbs is more of an Elvis character; that premise lies in this sentiment: “I tread a troubled track. My odds are stacked, I go back to black.” Justin really likes black music, but place JT against Thicke – pre or post “Robin,” it doesn’t really matter – and it’s apparent who has the true blue-eyed soul. However, Timberlake knew how to profit off of the urban market – and he did so quite well, for what it’s worth.

Timberlake started with the uberboy-band, *N Sync, and – like Beyonce gained her foundation with DC – Justin made a name for himself within the key teeny-bopper demographic in the early 90s. Then the millennium came – but BSB had the title on lock: womp womp – but not to fear *N Sync came out with back-to-back smash albums No Strings Attached, and Celebrity in 2000 and 2001, respectively. His name a signpost in pop culture, Timberlake went solo in 2002 with the critically-acclaimed, and commercially successful Justified. Justin has a knack for hitting and quitting – like a hustler, but less street cred (read: Punk’d). He turned a broken heart into a breakout single, “Cry Me a River,” that left Britney with a broken reputation (and we all saw where that went). His first single was a sign of things to come, as he enlisted on the Clipse to cameo a verse in “Like I Love You.” His right-hand-man is – then uberproducer, now just uber – Timbaland. Justified also featured Bubba Sparxxx, Janet Jackson, and Pharrell. Honestly, this man switched more black hands than a bottle of Lubriderm in February on U Street.

Then, there was the Super Bowl. The only thing that flew off faster than Janet’s top was Justin from the scene. If that man isn’t the Teflon Don, I don’t know who is. He tore the top off, and she gets banned from the Grammy’s … okay. It is interesting though, that Timberlake – who obviously enjoys black music and creative culture, especially of the Jackson persuasion – exposed Janet’s nipple to the largest television viewing crowd in the world. Like Elvis exposed the world to black music, a hidden unknown until he brought it mainstream; Justin literally exposed Janet’s unknown to the world. Regardless of opinion on her music, Janet Jackson is like a Mitochondrial Eve of Pop by relation to Michael alone. However, what Timberlake did was downright gratuitous; not only that, but the Southern gentleman distanced himself from the situation completely. So it is and here we are, but it’s funny how themes like that link. Either way, Justin took the Christina route of years – and years – in between albums. Nonetheless the downtime was worth it and produced the wildly successful and appropriately titled: FutureSex/LoveSounds. What Timbaland did with Timberlake on that album made me marvel at what could’ve been had Aaliyah still been alive… *moment.* Truthfully the album was noteworthy. Again, Timberlake took it to the roots – not his, but the Alex Haley kind – and enlisted on T.I., Danja, Beyonce, Missy Elliott, Hezekiah Walker – for the song “Losing My Way,” yes, that’s the guilt talking – Three 6 Mafia, and Will.I.Am – kinda counts, kinda not – on his sophomore effort. Timberlake knows what sells, and he sells it well.

Justin is like a little Elvis. His music hearkens to an obvious demographic – sonically. Even when he’s not working on his own material he teams up with T.I., Rihanna, and Ciara – but also Reba McEntire (yes, that Reba), and Madonna. He has his fingers in both pies, but it’s fine. He lays in the cut, until it’s time to surface. His name is still well-known, and he doesn’t get caught up in much self-imposed drama. His look is versatile. He is from Memphis, and was in *N Sync, by birth and early life alone he has the Pop and southern demographic locked. He knew that he needed the crucial urban market to be successful. He knew that urban contemporary was where 2000 was headed, and would remain for a decade; and he hustled to make a name for himself. He makes black music that everyone can vibe on, which works. He brings urban artists to the mainstream with killer collaborations, kudos. But there’s a lacking authenticity, he’s not Thicke – period. If this was a true blue eyed soul comparison, Thicke would win hands down. However, this is about Pop and Pop is about commercial sellability – Justin knows what sells, and sells out – tomato/tomahto it’s just money.

Timberlake is the Wonderbread of Pop this decade: a spectacle of something quite plain, but an American staple as such – but dependent on that with which he’s filled.


Beyonce and Justin Timberlake: these two work because they know how to work the system – period.

A Dime, A Dozen: Britney Spears and T.I. – Southern Troubled Phoenix

31 Dec

Round 4 of “A Dime, A Dozen” finds its focus on The South – and the two who proved that it could indeed rise again: Britney Spears and T.I.


Britney Spears and Tip Harris: these two from the belly of the map went from trendy to trendsetting in two tales of pop glory that had many Northern Aggressors fearing a second coup d’etat from below. However, both Spears and Harris tumbled before reigning triumphant. It’s only a loss if you lose the lesson – or weapon.

Straight shooter Lil’ Wayne once said, “This is Southern, face it. If we too simple then y’all don’t get the basics;” if nothing else, these two embodied the two most basic elements of American Pop this decade: “Sex Sells; Crime Pays.”

Britney Spears: This one I’ve followed since, well, since she became as much a part of American culture as apple pie (read: American Pie’s kind of apple pie).

Spears began the millennium with 2000’s Oops… I Did It Again – and further solidified her place as the commercial mouth for corporate America’s message; acting as the shadow of our human nature, and thus self-prophesying the decade that would follow. Like the original Little Red Riding Hood, Spears walked that path of pins and needles that those pop godmothers before her did – and as she obliviously led the way, we couldn’t help but follow – denying it the whole way.

“Oops” is another example of how you can in fact bring the future back. Politically, it foretold what we would be saying in 2004, and repeating over and over again throughout the years between then and now. That mentality was more than a moniker; it was a motto, mindset, mantra, and message that almost perfectly summarized this, the Rolling Stone “Decade of Lost Chances.” We hadn’t been this content with clumsy (read: careless, reckless, negligent, downright apocalyptically audacious) since we allowed Urkel to keep asking “Did I do that?” Yes, you did it and you knew what you were doing, as you were doing it – but, spilled milk, sunken city: we all make mistakes… eight years running.

Just like a mini-machine, Spears kept churning out splendific – artificially sweet in every way, sugar-based-but-not-quite-the-real-thing-who-cares-it-still-tastes-great – pop hits. In a decade that saw a peak of “that” pop, Britney reigned as the ultimate passive pipeline. She was a channel for neo-con veils, and distorted and false ideals in theory and greater impact; even on an immediate level though, she was a channel for the likes of Joseph Kahn, Max Martin, Pharrell Williams and the Neptunes, Wayne Isham, Hype Williams, Madonna, R. Kelly, Diddy, and countless mini-Brits. People used Britney as a footstool to boost themselves up a few inches higher and remain relevant – while letting her forever dwell in the eternal vapid void of the du jour, the moment (in dissimilar fashion to another artist of the decade – watch this space). While it worked for the short term, this inch-by-inch boost was done at her – and our – expense. Beyond her music and career, we all used Britney for a quick pick-me-up-by-knocking-you-down.

Take 2000’s “Oops” performance at the VMAs, and 2001’s “Slave” show: MTV dictated the growth of a superstar, and we were happy to oblige. Then something happened: 2003’s Toxic kiss of death. Britney was at her peak when Madonna took her breath away in more ways than one. Britney had shed her virginal facade – so we thought – and at her peak in 2003, she was in her zone. She was comfortable with herself and in her skin. However, the moment that happens, the comfort zone disappears. Ms. Mainstream Maestro herself, Christina Aguilera, saw her career soar after the VMAs. However, the road got rockier for Ms. Spears. Xtina’s road-tripping partner in crime, Justin Timberlake, propelled his career from footstool Britney by spearheading his debut album with the epic single: “Cry Me a River.” By the end of the decade, Britney cried the Pacific. First, the kiss; then, the River; then, Jason; then K-Fed… then: K-Fed. Spears’ life went from Chaotic to catastrophic to borderline criminal.

We all know what happened between 2005 and 2007, for all intents and purposes: she died – well, Blacked out for sure. Then somehow, she came back to life. Not in a special or miraculous way, but in an I’m-not-dead-but-you’re-blind-if-you-can’t-see-that-I’m-damaged way. As such, MTV obliged and Britney took home her first three (yes, all it takes is 7 years of blood, sweat, chewing gum, Marlboro Lights, and tears – a river of tears, mind you) VMA Moonmen at the 2008 show. She didn’t perform, she didn’t do anything crazy or mind-blowing – but she was there, clear and present, and that was the David/Goliath move of the year in and of itself.

You all – we all – know Britney, this wasn’t even necessary to elaborate on high and low lighted events of her career thus far. Why she remains iconic though, is because she was the pre-eminent sacrificial lamb on the American pop/media altar; at a time when we were all bootmakers to the kings, we had this girl lick ours. She was the not-so-virgin-only-in-an-alternate-universe-where-lies-are-veils-to-deter-reality-or-what-some-call-America given to the gods. We may have a recession now, but there was a time when plenty of paparazzi made a killing off of killing the bubblegum icon that popped. Now though, in this crazy Circus called America, now all eyes are on her again. However, now she is the ringleader – kinda, sorta, in a way.

T.I.: Pretense: OutKast notwithstanding, Tip Harris turned the whole country into his own personal trap this decade; just as he rose to the top of the Bankhead ranks, so Tip did to become the King of the South and the Billboard charts. He took the throne and then the pedestal fell out from under, Harris went from the patriarchy to the Pen.

His discography illustrates – more perfectly than most – the ascent, quick but catastrophic descent, and the slow steady climb back to the top. He did not project a future self or false portrayal onto the pop landscape, he merely recounted his glory tales and let the world know who indeed was the King of the South – no, not Flip.

T.I. began the decade with 2001’s I’m Serious; though he may have been, the sales weren’t, and neither was L.A. Reid (yes, that L.A. Reid – watch this space) who dropped T.I. after the debut flop. So, T.I. did what he did best: grand hustled. What more apropos way for Harris to step onto the music scene independently than with an album entitled: Trap Muzik. That’s exactly what it was, and so broke T.I. onto the mainstream music scene with his first hit single: “24s.” Trap Muzik saw Harris flip the sophomore slump, and spit with the swagger of a brand new college kid. In 2003, we ate those tracks up like crackcakes. Continuing to write his own history, T.I. followed up in 2004 with Urban Legend – the underrated, but quite solid third effort. T.I.’s release titles became his nametag, so it shall be written and so it shall be done. So, it should’ve come as no surprise that 2006’s King solidified his place as rap royalty: what you know about that? Tip knows all about that. As the tale goes though, heavy is the head that wears the crown; and 2007’s T.I. vs. T.I.P. reflected the inner turmoil between the two sides of Harris – the gangsta and the gentleman even further distanced after the death of his best friend and bodyguard Big Phil. That death turned Mr. My Love (watch this space) into Macbeth. The increased paranoia – and guilt – led Tip to hoard an arsenal of weaponry in defense of his own self, and those close to him. Yet, so full of artless jealousy is guilt; it spills itself in fearing to be spilt. The amount of guns T.I. had stocked away for a rainy day, brought a deluge of Feds one fateful October afternoon. Tip was arrested on machine gun charges and sentenced to 366 days in federal prison. Again, writing his own history, Tip released his most recent studio release to date, Paper Trail, before serving his sentence.

Harris is a changed man though, and like a grown man he blames no one but himself. We went on that entire journey with him, in real time – but more importantly, in real life. When he gets out, we will no doubt continue along with him where we both left.

Tip is a martyr, as is Britney. They are on this list because they ripped the veils off assumed celebrity this decade – assumed celebrity detachment from real problems, and real consequences. These two from below the Mason-Dixon gave us the living breathing novel of how one can propel to prominence higher than the Georgia Pine, only to fall back down to the belly of the map – and beast – and claw their way back with a Sherman-like fervor; but also a sapience, over shock value. Sex eventually sells out, and crime’s paychecks bounce at some point. Brit and Tip were our reminder that you can always bounce back and become a better version of yourself – no matter how burned. As Sunday Palms are sacrificed to the fire for Ash Wednesday, so these two were sacrificed to show that, even after Hell on Earth, your purpose remains – even if your shell doesn’t.

South: risen again.

ALPHA MALE MUSIC WEEK presents… Freddie Gibbs and the Return of Gangsta

30 Dec

You could probably write a thesis on the alpha male in hip-hop (if be_gully hasn’t already written said thesis, there should at least be an abstract on the subject here soon). Some combination of money, women, drugs, and guns are lyrical mainstays of rap for a reason. Reveling in such pure id is escapism of the highest degree. When it comes to lyrics that are exciting and engaging, transgression is better than introspection.

Which brings us to the class of 2009. The much-debated freshman class of hip-hop as editorialized by XXL (alphabetically: Ace Hood, Asher Roth, B.o.B., Blu, Charles Hamilton, Cory Gunz, Curren$y, Kid Cudi, Mickey Factz, and Wale), for the most part, are big into beta. So, for fans of hip-hop that demonstrates both street authenticity (Gucci Mane) and rapping talent (not Gucci Mane), who is out there fighting the good fight?

Enter: Freddie Gibbs. Born and raised in Gary, Indiana, the 27-year-old is out to prove that gangsta isn’t dead. After being dropped by Interscope Records, Gibbs produced and released two mixtapes within months of each other this year: The Miseducation of Freddie Gibbs and midwestgangstaboxframecadillacmuzik (a third, The Label’s Trying to Kill Me, is a compilation tape that cuts-and-pastes from both). Right off the bat, the title references touch on a desire to be a part of the pantheon of rap classics rather than on the level a mere mortal.

Gary, Indiana is fucking hard. The crack age coupled with the decline of American industry have left Gary harder hit than either East St. Louis or Baltimore. There is no silver lining. And this is the crucible in which Gibbs has been forged: “Sixty percent unemployment / Why you think we sellin’ dope?” The facts of his environment are inescapable, physically for many and mentally for all. Gibbs’ lyrics are unapologetically about this life, not to glorify or to educate, they just exist, familiar stories that are so outrageous they seem fictional. The themes are classic alpha male rap: dealing drugs and smoking weed (“Boxframe Cadillac”), scamming chicks (“Bussdown”) and killing dudes (“Murda on My Mind”).

Stylistically, Gibbs’ hardened voice and smooth flow take many forms: at times, it’s the Southern syrup of UGK, at others the rat-a-tat of Midwesterners like Bone Thugs-n-Harmony. The beats range from pure g-funk (“Talkin’ Bout You”) to trap-hop (“Summa Dis”), paying reverence to a by-gone era with tasteful samples (Biggie’s “Beef” shows up on “Standing Still”). Contrast this with the constant, braying namedropping of the Game: which is a better (and more alpha) tribute to the golden age of gangsta?

For a song that encapsulates Freddie Gibbs the artist, take this alpha male manifesto from the chorus of “Womb to the Tomb:” “From the cradle to the grave / the womb to the tomb / Imma get it win or lose / I’m just out here making moves / from the womb to the tomb / the cradle to the grave / till I jack up out this bitch / I’m out this bitch / get paid.” Sure beats “Man, I love college.”

http://www.youtube.com/v/YTWMtdFSR_0&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

DISPATCHES FROM SUBURBIA: Rusko in Miami

30 Dec

As the cliché goes, all good things must come to an end: my nearly two week vacation in South Florida is over. I’ve gone from 70 degrees at the beach to 40 degrees in DC, from a nascent scene to a more developed one. And while the DJ nights, singer-songwriters, and local bands were pleasantly surprising, I’m happy to be home.

But before I left, I trekked down to Miami once more, this time for Rusko: DJ and dubstep producer extraordinaire, and one of the winners of 2009 (a more complete list of things that didn’t suck in 2009 is coming tomorrow – procrastination for life!). The 24-year-old is one of the driving forces in a style that we at TGRI Online think will be huge next year, and while I have seen Rusko rock a room before, I couldn’t miss a stateside gig in my backyard.

Ever since 2 Live Crew decided to be as nasty as they wanted to be, Miami and bass have been forever intertwined, influencing local scenes and styles from Atlanta to Baltimore. So I was interested to see how bassheads in the 305 would react to the distinct wobble crunk that the Leeds-born, LA-based Rusko generates.

Just down the street from the Vagabond in Miami’s Design District is White Room. The venue is basically a warehouse adjoined to a large open-air space that holds canopy lounges that wouldn’t get much use anywhere else this time of year. After a few local dubstep producers and MCs warmed up the crowd, the mullethawked feature DJ took the stage.

Rusko is one of the most active DJs I’ve ever seen. At all times, he’s either jumping up and down or air conducting, convulsing as if his movements control the treble, mids and overwhelming bass pouring out of the speakers. The crowd eats it up, doing their best to dance along to a style that is admittedly not the most dance-centric electronic music. The few kids trying to light show with glow sticks were dismissed out of hand: “Why don’t you wait for fucking Ultra for your twirly little shit?!” However, the pseudo-ravers were hardly the worst audience members: a few couples decided to demonstrate crowdfucking – or something close to it – and it wasn’t pleasant.

Still, we were able to enjoy the dubstep clinic that Rusko put on, much like he did at Hard NYC. From contemporaries Zomby and Doorly, to remixes of Gucci and Kid Sister, the set included everything that demonstrates dubstep’s promise right now. The best part is initially recognizing a song, before it devolves into the glitched out sounds of the apocalypse that have come to define dubstep. And it was good to see it work where bass was born.

ALPHA MALE MUSIC WEEK presents…Kid Rock, Limp Bizkit and The Nu Metal/ "Crap Metal" Man Fest of 1999

30 Dec

http://www.youtube.com/v/1Q72gvldxoA&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

If you negate the influence and importance of “alpha male music” upon the psyche of adolescent males and males wishing to engender those post-pubescent emotions, then you’re ultimately negating one of the key elements of the success of music as an art form. The angst of rock and rap music at their most vitriolic has always been a great source of allowing adolescent male anger to rise to the surface and be expressed. This hearkens to the 1950s when early rock and roll’s rebel influence of melding sexual and moral impropriety with pleasing melody turned American parents off, but turned the youth culture of the universe on, and let their temperatures rise. Rap music did the same thing. Taking breakbeats often from aggro rock classics and eschewing singing for harder, spoken voices discussing crime, sex, angerand depression (and violent answers to it), it took the rock impulse and pushed it even further, to a level that music had arguably not seen so prevalent in the mainstream in almost 20 years.

So what would happen if angry rap met motivated rock head on? The question had early answers, like Public Enemy and Anthrax’s legendary “Bring the Noise,” but, even more telling was rapper Ice-T’s Bodycount, who released iconic “fear fusion” hardcore metal tracks like “Copkiller” and “There Goes The Neighborhood,” songs that took the male aggressive impulse to its most extreme out of the gate, using Ice-T’s gangsta pimp persona mixed with the racial implications of black men playing heavy metal (presumed by Ice-T to be a lily white boys enclave) to push forward socio-political revolutionary music. That’s certainly all well and good if you’re making music at that point for music’s sake, but what if you want to make money from it? What if you see rap and metal as an idea that can stack paper? What to do then? The movement continues to 1993’s legendary Judgement Night soundtrack, one of the most hyper-aggressive albums ever released, as combinations like Onyx and Biohazard, Helmet and House of Pain, Slayer and Ice-T, Living Colour and Run-DMC, and Faith No More and Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E. recorded important albums that would later be the harbinger to a generation defining moment.

Now let’s take all that history and apply it to 1999. Things were a bit different back then in life and music. Bill Clinton was getting grilled about Monica Lewinsky, album sales were still terribly high, Americans had a good sum of money still left in our pockets, and there weren’t REAL reasons for anger in many suburban areas of the country, just the general slights of everyday life, alongside utter boredom and the seeds of cynical and ironic discontent with the universe starting to show. From this pocket arose two very different acts, with very similar aims that turned music completely askew for a four year period from 1998-2002 that many would argue that our beta male revolution in music is the direct answer to. Kid Rock and Limp Bizkit. 55 million domestic album sales between them, and though you may laugh now, at the time, they were easily the two most important musical acts in the world. In being white guys with an understanding of the urban condition, their route to mainstream acceptance was certainly easier than Ice-T brandishing pistols and kicking gangsta flows, or even white and black together in a message of face melting unity. When it comes to the nature of full aggression in music, especially when taking it mainstream, image, not content is often everything you need. Happy Tom and Sue Homemaker certainly can stomach someone costumed in a manner similar to tales of urban life a lot easier than someone entrapped in it. Sad, but true.

Kid Rock actually took things really seriously, but couched everything he did fully in the most ridiculous of stereotypes of both genres. Record with Run-DMC? Check. Marry Pamela Anderson? Check. Rock ultimately had no choice. Always seeming to be fully aware of his skin color being a route to his opened doors, he became the master of his domain. Rock’s roots in hip hop date back to his 1990 Grits Sandwiches for Breakfast days, opening for KRS-One. He wasn’t a rookie with a gimmick in the game at all. But knowing his rap history, and starting the Twisted Brown Trucker Band, employing a full rock setup with a DJ, and writing really meaningful and thoughtful rhymes with hooks that variated from entertaining to pure nonsense, but always solid, he was destined for this success, regardless of era. “Bawitdaba” is likely the first time a 13 year old understood anything about heroin abuse. And with those guitars and melody and Stephanie Eulinberg smacking the skins like a pissed off pimp, you have no choice but to listen. Also, “I Am the Bullgod” is all about angst and power, and has hooks and breaks falling all over themselves in hasty order, a nu metal masterpiece in a genre that nobody probably would believe has them. Yes, you can argue that as Kid Rock became more musical he truly became a more noteworthy artist, but if you want a great example of one man being strong, obstinate and powerful against society, go back to this man at the start of his mainstream rise. The music is angry, honest, accessible and real. Macho, powerful and earnest, the very code of masculinity that we stereotypically build this country upon. Kid Rock is likely an iconic figure to many men in this universe, and with good reason.

http://www.youtube.com/v/3m0EbOSzX_g&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

And now for the flipside of the coin, Limp Bizkit. The first time I ever saw Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst was on MTV, and I was blown away. Here was a dude who looked just as regular as any other dude on my college campus at the time, screaming his face off to George Michael’s “Faith.” The guitars were thrashing, and in the crowd at Korn’s “Family Values” tour, was a sea of nothing but dudes moshing and kicking the shit out of each other. Limp Bizkit excelled as the “impulse” band of that era. Sure, they fell off hard and fast, but in taking the feelings that adolescent males feel the first time they hear metal, punk or hardcore, and mixing it with the feelings of being introduced to hip hop’s hardest edges, they were an undeniable success. Let’s not forget that at their height they recorded with Method Man, Redman and DMX. I don’t care who you are, the track record speaks for itself. And “Nookie?” Their biggest mainstream smash? Hooky, giant and pulse pounding, fish thumping anger, all over getting laid. Yes, this isn’t the deeper material of Kid Rock, but yes. It’s very male, very alpha, and while Fred’s red Yankees cap is no a universal symbol of idiotic “wiggerdom,” due to Fred and the band’s beta male insistence on starting petty beefs, getting caught up over girls, and releasing really plaintive ballads, but certainly at a time it was the symbol for young males to rally around and know they were heard and understood.

We all laugh or thumb our nose in retrospect about this time in culture. Rap music and rock music are the two most important expressive constructs of the 20th century. We were all so young, so musically uncultured, so unaware of the breadth of the sonic universe that this was our rallying cry. In growing up to be men, it can be argued that all boys need to play with guns and punch each other. Well, by 1999, political correctness had taken all of that away. So what were the youth left with? As always, music. “I did it all for the Nookie (come on) the Nookie (come on) /so you can take that cookie and stick it up your (yeah).” “And I’m headin’ out west sucker…because I wanna be a Cowboy, baby /With the top let back and the sunshine shining / Cowboy baby / West coast chillin’ with the Boone’s Wine / I wanna be a cowboy baby / Ridin’ at night ’cause I sleep all day / Cowboy baby / I can smell a pig from a mile away.” Therein lies the beating heart and wanderlust of the average male. 55 million sold can’t be wrong.

ALPHA MALE MUSIC WEEK presents…Streams of Consciousness on Iggy Pop and the Imagination of Male Aggression

30 Dec


http://www.youtube.com/v/IbLRf0j80wU&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

If one wishes to discuss aggressive alpha male archetypes in music, there’s really only one place to start in the mind of this author but none other than the lead singer of 2010 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee The Stooges, Iggy Pop. The Detroit native, with quite the solo background as well, Iggy Pop IS rock music. No, I don’t mean this in the sense that the iconic, slow rising and heavy burning fury of “I Wanna Be Your Dog” is a better rock song than anything else, but purely from the standpoint of rock music being wild, unkempt and deviant, expressing with blunt honesty the depravity of the human condition. Yes, I do enjoy a power ballad, and I love pop melodies, but, at the end of the day, if you’re talking rock, I enjoy it most when scary, frightening, in your face and charismatic to the edge of panic. Check The Stooges’ “Search and Destroy,” and you’ll see exactly what I mean. The Stooges released just three albums, but in that five year period Iggy rose to the forefront of the international consciousness to hold that most vaunted of positions prior to the dissolution of the digital divide, “Scariest Man in Music.” No greater sources than former Black Flag and Rollins Band lead singer Henry Rollins and Nirvana’s legendary frontman Kurt Cobain refer to their incredible and thoughts of danger inducing 1973 album Raw Power as the greatest album of all time. Noted and legendary rock and roll scribe Lester Bangs states that their live album Metallic K.O. “is the only album where you can hear a beer bottle breaking on guitar strings.” Both of these statements are due cause to be listed as someone most worthy of being considered a master auteur of “Alpha Male Music,” but, the truth of the belief of Iggy being easily the best lies far deeper.

http://www.youtube.com/v/kD5X5OGLySI&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

There are those who would argue that Iggy Pop invented punk rock. Or that the ribald behavior of the scene was a direct descendant of his antics. He also invented stage diving. He also performed while spreading hamburger and peanut butter on his ripped physique. He also cut himself with glass shards and writhed in it. The visceral male impulse of all of thse shows why Pop is an alpha male musical legend. Sensitive? Yes. Emotional. Yes? But only in the angriest or most completely twisted of expositions. Iggy’s greatness lies in his complete adherence to progressing the aggression of his exploration into the imagination of male aggression. By bathing himself in the ocean of masculine stereotypes, he literally went from man to superman. Not enough? Well, he experimented with androgyny and was produced by David Bowie, yes, Bowie at the height of his own androgyny, the Ziggy Stardust era. Being the protege of the world’s most sexually daring man of the era exposes the depth and scope of his understanding of the male ideal, as Pop elevated his performance style and high concept nature of his music in this era, growing even darker and more controversial in subject matter, creating an essence not just primal, but fear instilling as well. As well, in having the courage of his bizarre and macabre convictions, the perpetually heroin addled singer once checked himself into an insane asylum to quit a heroin addiction.

http://www.youtube.com/v/jWyGb4uao2g&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

Iggy Pop’s life is defined in the most “manly” and steadfast of ways by defeating the odds by merely being either stronger than the universe, or just being constituted of something other than human. I opt for the latter. Iggy Pop is THE rock frontman extraordinaire. He doesn’t so much sing songs, but in some way he deeply amplifies the emotions of the instruments surrounding him, his voice serving as an even greater lead guitar than the chords being strummed by a guitarist. Listen to his voice on “Lust For Life,” the insistent jangling jammer of decadence. It hammers home everything you need to know about the man, and it guides the song to the realm of the personal, deviating from the expectation of being a generic power rock standard. Such talent bespeaks a man who set an archetype that guides the unquestionably macho heart of a genre and in many ways, of an industry.

http://www.youtube.com/v/BD_XCECbAEU&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

TGRIONLINE.com presents ALPHA MALE MUSIC WEEK

30 Dec

TGRIOnline.com is on a mission. It is the fervent belief of three of the writers on this site that something rather unfortunate is occurring in popular music. The death of the alpha male archetype. Remember it? Remember music as being defined by tales of sex, mayhem, insanity and cocksure arrogance? Remember those days? Well they’re apparently dead. In their stead, sadness. A coy wink at egoism, but certainly gone are the days where a band like The Beatles could proclaim themselves to be “bigger than Jesus” and cause a stir. We’re trapped in an era of beta males. Men have always had feelings that have been exposed on record. But, somewhere between Kanye West’s mother dying and him enduring the breakup of a long term romantic relationship and letting his soul bleed on record, and pop bands whose entire musical genre was based upon high powered lamentations, we’ve lost our way. Hip hop, once the genre defined by competitive levels of absurd arrogance and success as defined by the defilement of women on record or proclamations of financial largess has become the realm of sad, sensitive young men showing signs of being unable to even approach a beautiful woman, let’s not even move to the level of pleasuring a woman so well that they “put that ass to sleep,” like qualified OG alpha male Ice Cube did in “It Was a Good Day.”

Hip hop’s most shining contribution to the definition


I’m not sitting here advocating a love of only misogynistic or purely self-aggrandizing behavior. However, what I am positing as a theory is that music has lost its balance. There are two sides to every story, and one is definitely being woefully undersold at the present moment. It’s clearly gone too far. However, if you feel the same way that Bess “Be_Gully” Gulliver, Chris “Lenins Tomb” Kelly and I feel, then you’re certainly in for an enjoyable week. Sit back, relax, enjoy and read the tales of the Alpha Males contained herein, and how they defined, and in some cases, can save popular music.

ALBUM REVIEW: Ke$ha – Animal

29 Dec

The ball has yet to drop in Times Square, but I can already tell you that 2010 in music is going to be Ke$ha’s time to shine. Her debut album Animal really isn’t a personal victory for her, so much as it’s a victory for the record industry that has studied with curious eyes the dual rises of DIY leaning hipster rapper/singer chanteuses and the electro pop of Lady Gaga, and derived an answer tailor made for the ears of middle America. And it’s working. The Florida native has already hit number one in six countries with lead rap/pop single “Tik Tok,” and with an album produced and written by Dr. Luke, Benny Blanco, Shellback and Max Martin, of the combined 34 number one hit songs between 1996 and 2009 between them, it’s quite certain that there are plenty more where that comes from.

Stylistically, Ke$ha isn’t anything groundbreaking. She’s a barely adequate rapper with a more than adequate voice who is armed with an arsenal of songs that the world really wants to hear right now. On that level, she’s a hard partying “it” girl morphing from teen to woman in front of our eyes with nary a care in the world. While not plumbing the shallow end of the pool as Lady Gaga does masterfully, this is the girl who wakes up and brushes her teeth with Jack Daniels in “Tik Tok,” and has a love for partying at “rich dudes’ houses” as a song title so simply states. This is absolutely not high content material, and if there were a tipping point for the end of the electro hipster party era, Animal is it. Unlike the Black Eyed Peas who at least have embraced the culture’s most noted practitioners to seal an attempt at authenticity into their sound, Ke$ha’s a carpetbagger. I’m fairly sure she never went to a Hollertronix or TaxLo party. I’m also sure she couldn’t pick David Guetta out of a lineup even if he was the only person speaking French there. But, by being a pretty face in the right place at the right time surrounded by the right production, she reaps the benefits of the dedicated work of those before her that deserve it. It’s really not fair, but it really is music.

http://www.youtube.com/v/iFakO7paiPY&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01

The album itself clocks in at 50 minutes of pop confection. In not employing any of the hipster DJs of the moment on this album, the sound is generic and mainstream. Yes, this is the same exact sound that was “fresh and innovative” when we heard the Black Eyed Peas’ “Boom Boom Pow” and “I Got a Feeling,” but let’s just say that 2009 has bludgeoned us all over the head otherwise. Yes, Ke$ha tells us of a place where “they go hardcore and there’s glitter on the floor” in the wannabe dancefloor anthem “Take It Off,” which is officially the point where finally we get the moment where whitebread American imaginations get an idea of the concept of partying at LIV in Miami, Pacha in NYC or Body English in Las Vegas is like. Millions have tried this year to convey this, but as with much of this album, Ke$ha creates dance music for the lowest common denominator. Not bad financially, but certainly not advancing the cause of progressive EDM styles in the mainstream. This is not the sonic equivalent of Rick Dees’ “Disco Duck,” but it absolutely feels like this is dance pop for your mother to like.

This album is not without merit though. “Stephen’s” indie pop sound would make Matt and Kim blush, but is a serviceable keyboard and synth pop ditty. “Party At a Rich Dude’s House” is a guitar laden pop romp that has hit single written all over it, as the hook is so blatant and fun that it should bowl over the teeny bopper set. “Dinosaur” may be the only song about getting hit on by an old dude at the club that features a redux of the whistling chorus of The Bangles’ “Walk Like An Egyptian.” “Backstabber,” with racing synths and big horns is a pop winner for sure, but with lyrics that discuss being “bored, stoned and sitting in the basement” with a cheating boyfriend, well, I guess if Lady Gaga can “get him hot, and give him what (she’s) got,” this is the clear next dimension.

A note on the songwriting. It’s exemplary. Max Martin and Dr. Luke have forgotten more than most would ever hope to remember about crafting three minute pop melodies, and between Max Martin’s power pop excellence dating back to the days of Britney, N’Sync, and the Backstreet Boys, and Dr. Luke’s ability to amplify the wanton brat in any pop diva from Kelly Clarkson to Katy Perry, they push her through words into but not through any of the doors already opened with frankness by Peaches, Gaga, Amanda Blank and the underground milieu she so blatantly emulates. By coyly knocking at those doors, she maintains a certain innocence to the brazen hysteria caused by her obvious competition.

In final, this is a solid record. It will sell a multitude of albums based off of its sheer accessibility alone. But it’s blatant, pandering and obvious at every turn. It perfectly strikes every high note of the popular reigning musical culture, but at the lowest pitch possible. This album is the tipping point for hipster culture and the mainstream underground and dance culture as a whole. Very, very, very soon, to quote Jay Z and Swizz Beatz from Blueprint 3, it’s going to be time for the universe to be “On to the Next One.” As certain as I am of this, I’m also certain that this pop starlet will be there, too, just as masterfully as she is here. As I stated earlier, it really isn’t right, but it really is music.

THREE STARS OUT OF FIVE