Monthly Archives: November 2009

Kev Brown “Making Another Beat” • Video

• via skeet007

Low Budget Crew rep and chop scientist
Kev Brown cooks up a new beat in this vid,
this time with a little help from the
Love Unlimited Orchestra.
Enjoy.

Bilal “You’re All I Need (Feels Like Heaven)” • Audio

photo via pirlouiiiit

Bilal “You’re All I Need (Feels Like Heaven)”

Here’s a cool one for your cool Sunday. Enjoy.

Daniel Joseph / Pretty Ugly In Store at Fat Beats NYC • Video

• via highwaterISmusic

Here’s a vid of Daniel Joseph‘s release party
at Fat Beats NYC. Dude has a nice flow, and many of his
lyrics are cryptic. Cryptic lyrics are good.
Enjoy.

Count Bass D Live • Video

• via uca2525

Musical maverick Count Bass D rips the stage
in this three-part video, truly showing how to use your
equipment as instruments and the surroundings
to your advantage when rocking the crowd.
Emcees, Pay Attention. LAzers.


House Shoes presents Quelle “Blue Mondays” • Download

House Shoes presents Quelle Blue MondaysLink

“Special Ingredient”

“Blue Mondays”

Detroit hip-hop heavyweight House Shoes
recently released this album on twitter and it bangs.
It’s from relative newcomer Quelle, who also
produced most of these songs. Dude is definitely
on one & there are no skippers here, so I’m sure
you’ll enjoy it. Turn it up!

Marvin Gaye “Transit Ostend” aka “Remember Marvin Gaye” • Video

• via kikachannel

A fascinating 1981 documentary on soul legend and messenger
Marvin Gaye, focusing on his time living in Ostend,
Belgium. Directed by Richard Olivier.
Rest In Power, King Marvin!

Culture King Q&A with Buff1 of Crown Royale

Buff1 of the Athletic Mic League
DJ Rhettmatic of the Beat Junkies and
have joined forces to create a hip-hop monster
for all of our enjoyment and appreciation.
That benevolent monster is called Crown Royale.
This Q&A features the vocal half of the duo,
Buff1.

“We Gotcha” • Download

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

∆: Your crew originally formed in Ann Arbor, Michigan and is also based out of Los Angeles. What inspired you guys to move some of your operations to LA?

“It was a couple things.. boredom. Opportunity. Weather.
I think that kinda sums it up.”

∆: Being from the Midwest myself, I’m curious to how you first became aware of the Beat Junkies?

“Umm, I was just listening as a fan of hip hop music and the name kept popping up, doing cuts for different artists here and there, doing mixes/compilations and such. They worked with a lot of my favorite cats so that introduced me to what they do and their turntablism skills.”

∆: So according to Rhettmatic, your crew was handed a cd of his production, which sparked your working relationship.. what was it about the production that stuck out to you?

“Nothing in particular, it was just really good, haha. I have a dope crew of producers called the Lab Techs and it takes a lot for me to be impressed by beats, but his stuff was dope.”

∆: Was the process noticeably different from working with the Lab Techs?

“A little bit. A good portion of the beats Rhett made were crafted for me. Most of the Lab Techs’ beats I just pick from a batch like everybody else. But the process is the same. I get the beats, write, lay it down.”

∆: Your live show is very critically acclaimed. “Get It Up” sounds to me like an instant crown favorite. Was there a particular attention being paid to the live aspect while creating it?

“That’s just me, it’s just in me. I know where I may lack in content or skills, I make up for it at my shows. When I heard the beat it just sounded like a hype joint for shows. Then a couple shows in, I added the “Get It Up Dance” to the set. You gotta check us out live to see what it is, haha.”

∆: Yeah! That was my next question. In my opinion, that reminds me of the Midwest soul showmanship tradition, very Motown.

“Yeah, man, exactly.”

∆: In what ways to you think growing up in the Midwest influenced your creativity differently from other popular hip-hop regions?

“I think the Midwest influenced me musically. Of course, Motown, but also the brand of hip-hop. Dilla/SV (Slum Village) was a huge influence, still is. There’s also the work ethic that comes from the midwest, the grind, the hustle. And then, once Motown left we all started to make our own history ’cause there’s really no industry here like it in LA, NY or ATL.”

∆: What do you think are the pros and cons of that lack of industry presense?

“Pros: work ethic, it builds a sense of family cuz we all have to help each other, and it leads to the want/need to reach out and not just be known where you’re from. But all that is kinda a catch 22 cuz they can lead to the cons: it makes it a lil’ more difficult to make it out, since opportunities are slightly limited it can lead to a cut throat mentality, and some people feel like they have to go away to make it. I think because of the cause and effect the pros and cons can somewhat be looked at as one and the same.”

∆: Right. I think the pros you just mentioned address this somewhat, but what is it about Michigan that has you guys hitting the hip-hop market with so much dope music? Where does the creativity come from?

“There’s so much dope music and competition it forces you to be dope and hold up your part also. For those that are from Detroit, some may see the D as desolate, not much there. That can lend to some of the creativity that comes from there. I know being from Ann Arbor, there’s really no traditions here. Nothing to fall back on, so we had to kinda make up our own foundation. AML and couple of our comrades were really the only ones making music back in the day so we had no one to look up to making music.”
 

∆: Duos are iconic in hip-hop. what is one of your favorite duos in hip-hop and why?

“I know u prooooobably mean producer/emcee duo but… OUT…. KAST. My all-time favorite musicians ever. Why? Every album they ever put out has been in-house produced, they made “underground” classics, they made “hits”, sold tons of records, change it up everytime from album to album, and Big Boi is extremely slept on as an emcee and (Andre) 3000 is the greatest of all time. Period.
Ok, I’ll give it a rest now, haha.”

∆: I’d like to go through your discography and ask what were circumstances, stories, etc surrounding their creation. Pure.

“I look at that album as if no one never heard me before or may never hear me again, that’s what I want to represent me. AML asked me to do solo stuff and I was a lil’ hestitant at first, but after 2 mixtapes I got in a groove. That album is just very human, good, bad, highs, lows, all that. I said before it came out if it wasn’t well received I may call it quits. Here I am, 2.5 years later still at it, haha.”

∆: Why do you think they asked you to do solo material?

“I’m still tryin to figure that out, haha. If I had to guess, it’s ’cause I kinda encompass all aspects of AML. The humor, the showmanship, the content, the delivery. And at the time I was the only one who had the time/drive to go 110% since other cats had kids, wanted to go back to school full-time, had girls, was working, wanted to focus on production, whatever the case may have been.”

∆: “Pretty Baby” is very vivid in it’s storytelling. What for you goes into telling a good story in song form?

“It has to sound like a real conversation that either you’ve had or you’re having when you’re telling the story. I try to communicate like I’m talking to you when I rhyme anyway so I try to do the same when I tell a story. And it has to sound real and believable even if it’s somethin spaced out and sci-fi or just fiction, or a real event.”

∆: The One & Only Mixtape and Small City Big Name.

“Both were kinda me warming up on the solo thing, starting with The One and Only Mixtape. Both were about having fun and just letting people see what my voice is as a solo artist.”

∆: Why did you go the route of original material vs. covers of other songs?

“Well, I did a lil’ bit of the popular instrumentals, but I also wanted people to know me and I don’t think you can properly do that over someone else’s beats. I wanted to mix it up and make sure you got some of my original material.”

∆: Athletic Mic League Thrill Of Victory, Agony Of Defeat.

“Wow, we goin waaaay back, haha. That was AML’s introduction, really our introduction to Ann Arbor, just to let everybody around the crib know that we rapped, haha. That was just on CD-R burned cds. Then we got good feedback from that so we remixed a couple song and added a couple new ones and made that into The Thrill Is Gone, got it pressed up for real and started to reach out to Detroit and other cities around the Midwest and started getting love on the internet.”

∆: There’s Only One

“My last album was kinda me throwing my hat into the realm of the greats, wanting to be mentioned as one of the best doing it right now. I wanted to stop looking up to the posters on my wall and become the poster on somebody’s wall. It was a lil’ more hubris on this one, but that’s just hip hop, haha. I also continued along the path I already started of speaking on things that other people don’t really speak, trying to again show the many sides of me and humans in general.”

∆: What’s on the horizon for and from Buff1?

“I got another mix comin out next month titled It’s a 1derful Life. Free download mix of a few of my guest appearances from this year and a few exclusives. Then Crown Royale early next year, then a new AML album. And shows/tours all up through and around those.”

Massive Thanks To Buff1 For Participating In The Q&A!
Big Up!

Culture King Q&A with DJ Rhettmatic of Crown Royale

Crown Royale Rhettmatic

DJ Rhettmatic of the Beat Junkies and
Buff1 of the Athletic Mic League
have joined forces to create a hip-hop monster
for all of our enjoyment and appreciation.
That benevolent monster is called Crown Royale.
This Q&A features the production half of the duo,
DJ Rhettmatic.

“Get It Up” • Download

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

∆: How did you and Buff1 meet?

“Basically, I met Buff thru the guys from Now On. They’re all from Ann Arbor, Michigan and ironically, they’re also from the Athletic Mic League. Now On moved to LA a few years ago and I would start running into them at a couple of events and whatnot. Buff would come out to LA and they would introduce him to me and that’s how we met.”

∆: When and under what circumstances
did the idea of Crown Royale form?

“Well, the idea of Buff and myself of working together came from the 2/3 of Now On: Jackson Perry and Dj Haircut aka Mayer Hawthorne. Around that time, Buff just dropped his 1st solo album and they were asking him what’s his next move. And at that same time I was starting to branch off doing production outside of my other group, The Visionaries.

A lot of people knew me more as Battle Dj/Turntablist and not for my production, though I have been doing some production for quite sometime. I actually gave a beat cd to Now On to do some work. Next thing I knew, Jackson and Haircut came up to me and said ‘we would like you to do an album with Buff’. I believe they did the same thing with Buff. He said ‘if I like the beats, I’ll do it’. He already got an in house production team with the Lab Techs: 14KT, Haircut, Vaughn T, etc… so he was spoiled. And those guys got slaps. I knew it was a go when he sent me the first song recorded and done. Luckily he liked my beats, LOL.”

∆: How early was “Get It Up” done?

“Late last year, and that was actually the first song. He recorded the vocals
first in Michigan, then we redid it when he came back to LA.”

∆: How did you guys come up with the name?

“It’s actually a funny story. At the time, we didn’t have a name for the project or group. During that same time, Magestik Legend, another dope MC/Producer from Detroit, wanted to do a group project with Buff. On Buff’s 1st album,
Buff would always wear a crown so Magestik wanted to name the group
‘Crown Royale’. Ironically, I was brainstorming myself with names and all
and I also came up with the name Crown Royale, and literally called Buff
the week after Magestik shot him the idea. And I didnt know that Magestik
hit him up for the idea. I was a fan of Magestik’s work but I never met him in
person, so it was crazy when Buff told me what Magestik approached him with.

Then later on, like 2 months later, Magestik goes to LA. We all met up at Fat Beats LA and during an instore Buff introduced me to Magestik. I really wanted to name the project or group Crown Royale, so we all had a pow wow with Magestik. By the grace of God (and us doing a lot convincing), Magestik was kind enough to let us use the name and in return, we have him on our album. And that’s how the name Crown Royale came about.”

∆: Wooow, lol. Being that Crown Royale is a duo,
what is one of your favorite hip-hop duos and why?

“Mine is GangStarr…..Buff’s is Outkast. But also, I love EPMD, Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince, Run-DMC, Low Profile… I don’t know, we can go on forever. You would have to also ask Buff that question, but i do know his favorite group is Outkast.”

∆: What’s a particular reason you can say about GangStarr?

“It’s easy. The DJ and the MC combo, Guru and Preemo. They’re a perfect example of a classic hip-hop group. Preemo is one of my fav top producers, as well as a DJ.”

∆: What are some artists and songs you’ve produced
that the masses need to be aware of?

“Hmmmmm…….. let’s see….. Divine Styler ‘Triple Irons’ (WordPower 2), Aceyalone ‘Keep Rappin Keep Spinnin’, Aloe Blacc ‘Find A Way’ (B Ball Zombie War comp – Stones Throw)… I’m trying to think… RBX ‘Stop That’. Pigeon John ‘Freaks Freaks’. A lot of stuff are like b-sides and album cuts, I wouldnt say obscure but you would have to know the artists. But I worked with alot of cats that people know. I have alot of stuff that hasnt come out officially yet or it’s in the vault. Let me see…Trek Life ‘All Times’ (Price I’ve Paid)”

∆: Did you produce “E=MC5″ (Key Kool & Rhettmatic
feat. LMNO, Ras Kass, Meen Green & Vooodu)?

“Yeah, that was my 1st official record.”

∆: That was my shxt.

“Word? Thanks. I did that on the SP1200.”

∆: Word. From producing songs for artists to producing a full album,
what is your approach? In particular, your approach for producing a full album.

“Hmmm…that’s a good question. In terms of producing an album, I would try my best to make the album flow from beginning to end. Make it interesting like a good mixtape. Try to make it have sometype of continuity. I would put it together like i was putting a mix routine together. It has to make sense. And in terms of the beats, it varies. When i give a beat to an artist, I either would have an idea or concept or I would just let the artist dictate what he or she wants to write, whatever emotion the beat elicits from that artist. And when it comes to adding scratches, I either ask the artist whats the title or the concept of the song, and I would go base it off of that idea. Unless the artist have something in mind, then that makes it a lil bit easier.

Btw… all you rappers out there that think it’s easy to put a scratch hook together… no, it isn’t. That takes time. Diggin for records, listening to records, writing down phrases, then working on putting it together, then tryin to record the scratches until we get it right. Djs/producers are very meticulous. Just like for emcees that want to get the best take and their best rhymes out there. Us dj/producers are the same, for the most part. I just wanted to add that….LOL.”

∆: Word! What’s on the horizon from DJ Rhettmatic?

“Hmmmmm…..It seems I got alot on my plate now. Well, of course,
the Crown Royale debut album on Myx Music Label in early 2010.
I also have another project that I do with Eric Bobo of Cypress Hill.
It’s a DJ/Percussion combo. I actually finished an ep with Frank Nitty
(Frank N Dank). I’m doing a producers’ album with J-Rawls
of Lone Catalysts. I got a 10″ single that I did with MED
that The Do-Over is putting out in 2010.”

∆: When you say a “producer’s album”, what do you mean?

“J-Rawls and myself will be doing production together and we will be having artists on the album rocking over the instrumentals that we produced. We already have a song with Trek Life & Kam Moye aka Supastition, Renee Neufville from Zhane.”

∆: Damn, dope.

“Yeah, it’s been an off and on project. We recorded already 5 songs,
we just haven’t had the time to work on it. And of course my work with
the Beat Junkies. Beat Junkie Radio, our NIGHTLIFE events… and maybe, one day, a group album (which we’ve been saying for the last 10 years….LMAO!). Mix cds…etc.”

Massive Thanks To DJ Rhettmatic For Participating In The Q&A!
Be sure to check out Part 2 tomorrow with Buff1!
Big Up!

Sylvia & The Moments “Sno’ Nuff Boogie Pt. 1″ • Audio, Download

sylvia & the moments

Sylvia & The Moments “Sho’ Nuff Boogie Pt. 1″ • Download

Here’s a cool one for your cool Sunday. Enjoy.

Invisible Black Face • Video

• via kry716

My suggestion:
Step 1: Watch this video.
Step 2: Throw your TV away.
Step 3: Think for yourself.
Step 4: Love yourself.
Step 5: Prosper.