Posts Tagged ‘wale’

The Singing Lamb Tuesday Twelve: Vol. IV

November 24th, 2009 | By: Guest Contributor

Surfer Blood

Surfer Blood

vitaminsforyou – “Shelter (The xx Cover)”

If I haven’t made it clear over the past few weeks that I love this band, let me make it evident: I fucking love The xx. In just three weeks their self-titled debut album has become a lock for my year-end “Best Album” list, and their covers and various remixes (like this one) just add to my appreciation. So you can only the imagine alarm bells going off in my head, when I read this week that the band recently cancelled gigs because of “exhaustion”, and keyboardist-guitarist Baria Quereshi’s departure for unnamed reasons. However, the band’s tour dates with Friendly Fires are still on – and that’s good news for North American fans. To tide you over until then, here’s an (even more) spaced-out cover of “Shelter” by a gentleman whose stage name also shows a blatant disregard for proper capitalization, Toronto-based producer and musician Bryce Kushnier’s electro outfit vitaminsforyou. If you missed out on getting tickets to the December 2nd show at the Phoenix, The xx will be back in Toronto on April 20th, opening up for Hot Chip (!!!) at Kool Haus.

Hexes & Ohs – “H-H-Highschool (Hexes & Ohs Hip Hop Mix)”

Is anybody else surprised that it took this long for Hexes & Ohs to put out a remix album? The Montreal duo (and perennial Lamb favourites) of Edmund Lam and Heidi Donnelly make ridiculously catchy and hyperactive electro-pop songs, with plenty of keyboards and synths, that seem perfectly suited for remixes galore. Last week, fans of the band finally got a eight-song digital EP entitled SHARE (Remixes), which is only available on iTunes and Hexes & Ohs’ website. As their website describes it, “SHARE (Remixes) is a remix project featuring collaborations between Hexes & Ohs and seven of their admired fellow Canadians friends. They are the Bicycles, Camaromance, DT666 (aka Patrick Pentland of Sloan), Montag, OPOPO, Sloan and vitaminsforyou [see above]. Unlike typical remix albums, this one here is a two way street, Hexes & Ohs have their songs remixed and in turn remix others’ songs. The result became a sort of dialogue between the artists. It’s colorful and diverse, but unified by the common ingredient.” My favourite is the hip-hop rework of “H-H-Highschool”, a song that is pretty damn catchy to begin with, but the remix of the Sloan song is pretty nifty (and slightly unexpected) too. If you are looking for the soundtrack to your next dance party, look no further than this EP.

Wale – “Triumph”

So Wale’s official debut album just dropped, but thanks to the “magic” of Internet leaks, you could already listen to the entire album online several weeks previous. And while everyone was so quick to drool over the Lady Gaga-assisted “Chillin’”, there are plenty more hidden gems on Attention Deficit. The album features a who’s who list of producers including Cool & Dre, The Neptunes, and frequent collaborator, Mark Ronson. This is one of two songs produced by TV On The Radio’s Dave Sitek (the other, the possibly ironically-titled “TV in the Radio”, features K’Naan); who contributes a horn-heavy beat on this one, which perfectly suits the rapper’s jubilant lyrics. Criticize the Washington-born rapper all you like, but you can’t say he doesn’t have his charms: he has a great sense of humour (“She swallows everything like Kirby”? Hilarious!) and has plenty to say (past material has dealt with race relations, misogyny against women and intelligent commentary on the state of rap music circa the 21st century) – something that’s missing for the dreck passing as Top 40 rap these days. On “Triumph”, Wale boasts, “Cause you slumdog, and I’m the millionaire.” Not yet, but he’s getting there. This album should get the attention that Wale feels he’s been missing – what he does with it next is his move.

Juelz Santana feat. Yelawolf – “Mixin’ Up The Medicine”

Fair warning: if you thought K’Naan releasing a mixtape which featured him rapping over Bob Dylan songs was a little bit “out there”, than this song is going to probably going to be too much for you to handle. This time its Dipset-affliated, Harlem rapper Juelz Santana (white folks might recognize him from his 2005 hit single, “There It Go (The Whistle Song)”, or more recently from his guest vocals on “You Ain’t Got Nothing”, Lil Wayne’s most gangster song on The Carter III), who bites the chorus and flips the beat from the most unlikeliest of songs: Dylan’s “Subterranean Homesick Blues”. Suffice to say, the line “Johnny’s in the basement mixing up the medicine” takes on a whole new meaning coming out of the rapper’s mouth. Sure, Santana’s original lyrics leave something to be desired, but the way the sample is turned into a hypnotic, drug-addled groove, you can’t help but feeling like someone slipped you some of said “medicine”. Take the trip for yourself here.

Lil Wayne – “I Feel Like Dying (Flying Lotus Remix)”

And speaking of drugs…My roommate recently turned me on to Los Angeles’ Steven Ellison, an experimental multi-genre music producer, DJ, and laptop extraordinaire, who goes by the name of Flying Lotus. He also happens to be the nephew of American jazz great Alice Coltrane. FlyLo’s latest album, last year’s very-stellar Los Angeles, is a mixture of headphone-friendly psychedelia, electronic blips, and hip-hop that you might hear on an Adult Swim program. This is the second time he’s tackled a Lil Wayne track, his “Robo Tussin” remix of “A Milli” is staple in his DJing set. This time he takes the woozy “I Feel Like Dying”, a song which I have to admit isn’t my favourite that Weezy has ever done (that Auto-Tune chorus annoying as hell), and makes the rapper somehow sound like he’s on even more drugs. I’m not one to advocate recreational drug use but if you do, than you need to give this song a listen over at Flying Lotus’ MySpace here.

The Very Best feat. Kano – “Julia (Remix)”

Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you the next big indie music scene: Africa?!?! That’s right you read correctly, it would seem that the newest mecca of buzz-worthy artists and bands, is none other than Joseph Conrad’s so-called “dark continent” (in an semi-related note, is it weird that I actually enjoyed reading that novel?). It seems like these days you can’t click on your favourite music website and/or blog, without reading about the latest face-freshed band from Freetown or Johannesburg. I’ve already featured Jo’Burg’s BLK JKS on the Tuesday Twelve before, but this week I have two new African groups worth your time. Chances are that you’ve heard of The Very Best – Malawian-born, London-based singer Esau Mwamwaya and European production team Radioclit – before, or at least read about them on P4K. The group first came to music media’s attention with Mwamwaya’s versions (sung in his native Chichewa tongue) of “Paper Planes” and Vampire Weekend’s “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa”, which lead to a mixtape (2008′s Esau Mwamwaya and Radioclit are the Very Best) and this year’s debut album, Warm Heart of Africa. Warm Heart of Africa features thirteen sunny, upbeat Afro-pop tracks that also has plenty for hipsters to love – the album features vocal assistance from M.I.A. and Vampire Weekend’s Ezra Koenig, and borrows samples from songs by Architecture In Helsinki and MJ. On this remix, British rapper Kano gives shoutouts to The Streets’ Mike Skinner, references Pretty Woman, and promises a girl, “[that] I’ll never Chris Brown you”. Funny stuff.

Desmond & The Tutus – “Kiss You On The Cheek”

Who’d have thought that a band named after a iconic activist could make music so gosh-darn catchy? It kind of makes you wonder if Nelson & The Mandelas is taken for a band name… My second African band this week is Desmond & The Tutus, a quartet that hail from the city of Pretoria, South Africa. They aren’t quite as well known as The Very Best yet, but these guys are too talented to stay a secret from North America much longer. Desmond & The Tutus want to get you up off your ass and jiving, and their saccharine-laden pop songs full of snarky digs like “Your girlfriend looks like Willy Nelson”, will do just that. “Kiss You On The Cheek” reminds me of Scottish band The View, and features the best harmonica solo you’ll hear this year not on a Bob Dylan record. Plus, you have to love a band whose mission statement says, “You will have fun or else you will die. Not because we’re going to get all offended and poke your eyes out with sharp sticks or anything but rather because you’ll be trampled to a bleeding pulp by all the happy dancers jumping around like little crazies. You’ll dance. You’ll cry. You’ll eat. You’ll touch yourself [maybe]. You’ll cut your hair. And then you’ll dance again.” Give Desmond & The Tutus a listen here and let’s hope we see them on this side of the Atlantic in the near future.

King Khan & BBQ Show – “I’ll Be Loving You”

You know who’d I love to hang with out? That King Khan dude. I can only imagine what spending a day with the Montreal-born, Berlin-raised Arish Khan would be like, but I’m guessing he would first teach me his fashion and guitar-playing secrets, followed up by jamming out with his good musician friends whom include Black Lips and GZA, and our day would end with taking magic mushrooms with BBQ Show (also known as Mark Sultan) and his manager and probably end up in jail (on second thought…). Until that day comes, I’ll have to make due with Khan and Mark “BBQ” Sultan’s new album, Invisible Girl. If you know these guys, then you know what to expect: Khan’s Little Richard-style vocals, 60s doo-wop, and straight-up psychedelic garage rock with delightful double-entendres and a message of love. Sweet album artwork too. Check out the video for the song, which features the duo playing in a demolition site, over on Pitchfork here.

Surfer Blood – “Swim (To Reach the End)”

Has the quickly approaching Canadian winter got you feeling all gloomy and down? Want to get away from it all, but the deteriorating state of the economy has left you too poor to afford your annual vacation to Cancun? Never fear, ’cause I have the band for you! Surfer Blood are five twenty-somethings from Florida – guitarist and lead singer John Paul Pitts, drummer Tyler Schwarz, guitarist Thomas Fekete, bassist Brian Black, and percussionist Marcos Marchesani – who make reverb-heavy, lo-fi garage pop tunes that sound like they were recorded in someone’s basement. Their forthcoming debut album, Astro Coast (scheduled for a January 19th release), was actually recorded in the band’s dorm room during their freshmen year at the University of Florida. And although these guys hail from West Palm Beach, singer Pitts’ Brian Wilson-esque harmonies and hooks that are reminiscent of early-Nineties Weezer, make the band sound more like they are from the West Coast than anything else. These guys had a major coming out at New York City’s CMJ Music Festival this year, and these songs should fit nicely into the iPods of fans of Japanese Motors and Japandroids (who Surfer Blood is opening for on the Vancouver duo’s upcoming American leg of their tour). So slip on a good pair of headphones, make yourself a nice tropical drink, put on this song, and let your thoughts take you to a warmer place. The shoveling can stand to wait a few more hours.

Dr. Fox’s Old Timey String Band – “Kids (MGMT Cover)”

One of MGMT’s biggest singles, covered by a banjo-fuelled Irish outfit? What kind of strange, alternate universe is this? There’s not much info to be found about this band, other than a MySpace page (on it, there’s also a version of “Man of Constant Sorrow” from the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack), and this incredibly catchy take on “Kids” that is now making the blog rounds. It shouldn’t work as a novelty cover, but it kind of does, and that’s enough. In MGMT-related news, the New York duo recently announced their new album (entitled Congratulations), will be out in early-2010. Mark that down on your calendars and get pumped.

Woodhands – “Electric Avenue (Eddy Grant Cover)”

Its hard to believe that Toronto-based label Paper Bag Records has been around for seven years. The little indie label that could started in 2002; and has been responsible for launching the careers of Broken Social Scene, Tokyo Police Club, and European acts like Denmark’s Under Byen and Swedish-Italo disco singer Sally Shapiro, among others. To help celebrate their seventh anniversary, the label has put on an EP of rare and previously unreleased covers by Paper Bag artists, which is available as a free download here. The Seven Year Itch EP includes Toronto darling Laura Barrett’s tinkling kalimba version of Beck’s “Gamma Ray”, Montreal’s Winter Gloves covering Nirvana’s grunge classic “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, and Outkast’s “Behold A Lady” like you’ve never heard it before, as re-imagined by Toronto’s one-man-show Slim Twig. But the highlight here is Woodhands’ electro-pop take on “Electric Avenue” – originally sung by 80s one-hit wonder Eddy Grant – a song that perfectly suits the duo’s high-energy performances and one that has been a regular in their setlist since early summer (On a semi-related note: guys, new Woodhands album in 2010? Please?). So here’s to Paper Bag Records – can’t wait to see what the next seven years bring.

Various Artists – Indie Music Filter Presents: Hand Drawn Dracula Mixtape

While I’m on the subject of Toronto-based indie labels, there’s no way I could go without passing on mentioning this free online collection of songs from the folks over at Hand Drawn Dracula Records. The label was formed by Toronto artist/musician Casey Mejia and Holy Fuck frontman/solo artist Brian Borcherdt, and has a small-but-talented roster of artists and bands (mostly from Toronto), all of whom appear on this mixtape in some fashion. The mixtape includes songs from By Divine Right (whose debut album on HDD, Mutant Message, is scheduled to come out next month), folk-pop sweetheart Julie Fader, newest HDD signees and definitely a band to watch for Bishop Morocco, experimental trio of a dozen genres Off The International Radar, Montreal meets Halifax rock band Contrived (members of Holy Fuck and Wintersleep), and of course, Borcherdt himself, who seems to be pretty damn prolific these days (I spoke to him several weeks ago at an in-store, and he told me that a new H.F. record is on the way next year). All of these artists have played, toured and recorded together, which makes Hand Drawn Dracula feel more like an extended family rather than a Canadian record label. And though the days are getting colder, listening to these songs is like the musical equivalent of cup of hot chocolate – they make you feel warm and content inside.

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The Singing Lamb Tuesday Twelve: Vol. I

September 8th, 2009 | By: Guest Contributor

Shad

Shad

Welcome to the first edition of what I hope to make a regular weekly feature on the Lamb; the Tuesday Twelve, twelve new songs that you need to hear immediately, with no adherence to genres (this week we have everything from dancehall reggae to Canadian hip-hop to scuzzy blues rock), themes, or nationalities of the artists/bands.  What I’ll be doing is searching through the blogosphere (yes, that does include Pitchfork and Hype Machine), podcasts, magazines, radio stations, my own personal iTunes, to bring you the coolest new tracks that’ll make you want to sing, make you want to dance, make you want to cry (maybe even all three at the same time).  As always, feel free to comment if you liked (or disliked) a track I recommended, and tell me about the songs that you think I should hear.  Enjoy!

Ghostface Killah & MF DOOM – “Chinatown Wars (Oh No Remix)”

This just in: Wu-Tang still ain’t nothing to fuck with. On this track – written as the theme song for the latest in the Grand Theft Auto video game series – Ghost (who from the likes of this track, and his recent appearance on MSTRKRFT’s “Word Up”, is having a timely career revival) spits battle raps like a true veteran, over a bubbling beat cooked up by Oh No and fake blood-in-the-streets news broadcasts. MF DOOM is no slouch on this track either, as he raps about twisting some unfortunate soul’s limbs “like pilates” – nice to see that the man who has a affinity for hiding behind a mask can rhyme about more than food and NSFW Adult Swim cartoons.  If you’re maintaining any beefs with anyone at the moment, you need this song on your iPod.

Shad feat. Dallas Green and TLO – “…in the Black of Night (Freestyle)”

See folks, this is what happens when you gather a bunch of awesome artists, throw them in tour buses, and get them to play all across North America during the summer:  you get awesome collaborations like this one between Calgary rapper Shad, Alexisonfire crooner Dallas Green, and his DJ TLO.  Recorded during a late night on the punk rock carnival that is the Vans Warped Tour, Shad spits some clever rhymes about touring, recording and of course, Wu-Tang.  Show of hands, who would like to see guest rappers on the next Alexis album?  That’s what I thought.  Credit to EXCLAIM! for this one.

The Rural Alberta Advantage – “Don’t Haunt This Place”

It seems that every other week, we are hearing about the next big indie rock band that hail from Toronto.  Here’s the truth: a lot of the hype about these new bands is bullshit.  Not to dump on the city’s incredibly rich and diverse music scene, but many of these indie rock bands are just boring, generic imitations of better bands before them.  Fortunately for us, The Rural Alberta Advantage (also known by the space-saving acronym, The RAA), aren’t one of those bands.  Consisting of  lead singer and guitarist Nil Endenloff, keyboardist and backup singer Amy Cole, and drummer Paul Banwatt (you know him as the drummer from Woodhands), the band has seen their stock steadily rising, which has so far culminated in being signed to indie powerhouse label Saddle Creek, re-releasing their stellar debut folk-rock album Hometowns, and a (by all accounts) huge recent hometown show at the Horseshoe this past July.  Expect big things from this trio in the near future.

Joel Plaskett – “Through & Through & Through”

Returning home for the first time in eight months, only to find that I had become a stranger in the eyes who people who I had once considered friends. Working in the kitchens of a summer camp that was plunged into swine flu paranoia, after several campers showed signs and were quickly quarantined.  The godawful summer weather that Nova Scotia experienced throughout all of July, which is only now beginning to look up in August.  Yet, for all the terrible (and terribly boring) stuff that I’ve gone through the past two months, the song that will always remind me of summer ’09 is this breezy, upbeat tune from Nova Scotian guitar troubadour Plaskett.  And if there’s a pop song this summer that had better (or more Nova Scotian for that matter) lyrics than, “You be April Stevens, I’ll be April Wine /You be Israel, I will be Palestine”, than I’ve yet to hear it. Could Plaskett’s recent ambitious triple-album, Three, finally be enough for voters to give him his first – and very deserved – Polaris Prize?  Only time will tell…

Apostle Of Hustle – “Eazy Speaks”

Recently Apostle Of Hustle’s frontman Andrew Whiteman told CBC Radio 3 that this song – named after the infamous rapper Eazy E – was inspired by a rock spray-painted with the words “Eazy speaks” that the band saw in rural Quebec while on route to a show in Prince Edward Island.   Myself, I think its a fantastic thought:  what if dead musicians could give us advice from beyond the grave?  Michael Jackson would then be able to inform us of the pitfalls of facial reconstruction surgery (sorry, too soon?), Elvis would tell us to stay away from Vegas and over-eating in general, and Kurt Cobain would advise us to never, ever, <i>ever</i> trust anyone named Courtney Love.  In this case, it would seem that Eazy told Apostle Of Hustle to “keep your friends close and your enemies closer” and write a catchy, riff-filled number like this one.

Major Lazer feat. T.O.K. and Ms. Thing – “Bruk Out”

Bawdy sex raps!  Pitch-tweaked vocals! Off-the-wall futuristic Jamaican dancehall reggae!  It can only mean one thing: globetrotting DJ extraordinaire Diplo and his fellow co-conspirator, the producer Switch, are back with a whole new bag of tricks.  I’ve recommended Major Lazer – Diplo and Switch’s latest project featuring a slew of guest vocalists that you’ve never heard of (and some that you have) – to you before, but if you haven’t picked up their album Guns Don’t Kill People…Lazers Do, you should make that a priority.  Just in time for summer house parties, comes the duo’s blunt-smoking, skirt-chasing (sample line from this song: “I met Jill/She was a stripper/She said she wanted to undo my zipper”) love letter to Kingston’s dancehall and reggae scene.  Plus, you know you’ve made it when GQ magazine features you and recommends Red Bull and vodka as the “appropriate companion drug”.  This is some next-level shit right here folks.

Grizzly Bear vs. Lil Wayne – “2 Weeks ’til Prom (The Soundmen Mashup)”

Strangest mashup album ever?  New York City outfit The Soundmen recently released a three-song EP, which mashes songs from indie rock darlings-of-the-moment Grizzly Bear and the always bizarre, but usually entertaining Lil Wayne.  The title of this album? Vecktaflyest.  Perfect.  Listen to this one for yourself and decide whether its a trainwreck or not, but anything that manages to pair “Two Weeks” and “Prom Queen” together is worth a listen at least once in my books.  Download the album and read more over at Paste here.

Wale feat. Peter, Bjorn & John – “Nothing To Worry About”

Everything about this track screams “official hipster summer anthem”.  The newest single from Sweden’s biggest pop music export since ABBA, the whistling, Grey’s Anatomy-endorsed trio Peter, Bjorn and John?  Check.  Behind raps from Washington, D.C.’s next-great-hope, Wale, who so far in his career, has free-styled over Justice, managed to find a use for Lady Gaga’s sex-cyborg “singing”, and released an excellent Seinfield-themed mixtape? Check.  On a hot new mixtape called Back To The Future, produced and mixed by 9th Wonder and Nick Catchdubs, available online for the very agreeable price of free?  Check.  For all the hype surrounding Wale, there’s no denying the man has serious skills on the microphone.  We’re still waiting for his hotly-anticipated debut full-length, Attention: Deficit, which is scheduled to be out September 22nd, but this ought to be enough to tide us over until then.

Jay-Z feat. Rihanna & Kanye West – “Run This Town”

Is there anybody worse in the musical world than Mr. Shawn Carter, aka Jay-Z, when it comes to this “retiring” business?  The man’s put out two albums (the critically-maligned Kingdom Come and the much better American Gangster) after he said he was leaving the game for good, and on the not-so-subtle release date of September 11th, we can expect the third. The Blueprint III has rumoured to have been in the works for quite some time, and now some of the new songs are starting to leak, much to the delight of serious fans who consider this album to be akin to the rap equivalent of the Holy Grail.  This one has Jay rhyming like he’s just getting into his prime, a nice poppy hook from Rihanna (the role she was born to play), and some hot lines from Kanye, who also produced the album.  This album’s going to be a monster.

K-OS feat. Emily Haines & Murray Lightburn – “Uptown Girl”

Replace Jay-Z with a soulful K-OS doing his best Michael Jackson impression, Metric’s mistress Emily Haines filling in for Rihanna, and The Dears’ frontman Murray Lightburn providing Kanye-worthy backup vocals (okay, that one’s a bit of a stretch), and you basically have the Canadian version of “Run This Town”.  While this is the second single from K-OS’ latest record, Yes!, it serves as an excellent showcase for all three artists on the track, who are arguably at the peaks of their careers. Lightburn and The Dears just put out their well-received fourth album, Missiles.  Haines and her boy in Metric also have a hot new album, and have been playing summer festivals here there and everywhere, not to mention an upcoming show at Toronto’s legendary Massey Hall in October.  As for K-OS, he’s been playing packed shows from coast-to-coast and this new album should solidify his reputation as one of the country’s best rappers.

Arctic Monkeys – “Crying Lightning”

They got us to put on our dancing shoes, taught us that “D Is For Dangerous”, and still think you look pretty damn good on the dancefloor.  Yes kids, that’s right: everyone’s favourite Sheffield garage-rockers, the Arctic Monkeys, are back and once again preparing for world domination…I mean, a world tour.  This one is in support of their upcoming third album, entitled Humbug, which is being produced by Queens of the Stone Age head honcho Josh Homme, and is scheduled to be in stores on August 25th.  You can listen to the new single, “Crying Lightning”, over at the Monkeys’ MySpace here.  The Toronto stop on the tour is September 28th at the Sound Academy and if you don’t have a ticket, well…tough luck.

The Dead Weather – “Treat Me Like Your Mother (Diplo Remix)”

Unless you’ve been living under a rock the past few months, you probably know already that this is Jack White’s new band.  And if you know anything about me, or the type of music I usually listen to (you’ve read this far, haven’t you?), than you know its impossible for me to remain unbiased about The Dead Weather.  I’ve been a fan of Jack, and a true believer that anything he touches turns to gold, ever since my father brought home The White Stripes’ White Blood Cells several years ago.   As frontman for the Stripes (and of course, later The Raconteurs), he’s a true Guitar Hero, and is hopefully destined to go down in musical history as the Robert Plant or Bob Dylan of our generation.  And can you blame White for getting Alison Mosshart to play a Nico-esque muse to his Andy Warhol?  As the female half of The Kills, Mosshart is gorgeous, and has the pipes to match her looks.  Throw in Dean Fertita of Queens of the Stone Age and a Raconteur (Jack Lawrence), and you have yourself one hell of a band.  Download Diplo’s remix of Horehound’s first single for free over at RCD LBL.com.

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The Mixtape Isn’t Dead

January 14th, 2009 | By: Guest Contributor

Mixtapes?

Mixtapes?

Whatever happened to the mixtape? It used to be the ultimate gesture of love; the hours spent choosing what songs would win over the object of your desire, the careful sequencing for maximum effect, and of course, the homemade artwork and handwritten track-listing – but the last few years have not been kind to the mixtape. If video killed the radio star and MTV killed the music video, than surely MP3s and file-sharing websites have a hand in the downfall of the mixtape.

That said, I am going to make an attempt to prove to you loyal Singing Lamb readers, that the mixtape isn’t dead, with the help of some artists that are putting mixes together these days to promote their own material and help introduce new artists to the world. Sure, the tape cassette may have all but dropped off the face of the earth, but there are still plenty of mixtape-styled CDs available in stores and often free online.

So I found myself a few weeks ago in Play De Record, on Yonge Street, on an assignment and got a chance to talk with an employee by the name of Ryan Stevens about the record store. If you find yourself in the downtown Toronto area, be sure to check it out – they specialize in all sorts of music from dance to local hip-hop to soca & reggae – not to mention a large selection of music production equipment and classic and current vinyl. To make a long story short I ended up walking out of the store with a copy of the stellar new Top Ranking Santogold – A Diplo Dub mixtape. Featuring a whopping 35 tracks, including songs from The Clash, Aretha Franklin and Three 6 Mafia – not to mention plenty of unreleased material and remixes from Brooklyn’s Ms. Santi White herself, it flows smoothly thanks to the master touch of the pride of Philadelphia, Diplo. You can get it here without paying a cent.

While we’re on the subject of Diplo, if you haven’t checked out his Mad Decent Radio podcasts on his websiteor available for free on iTunes, you should definitely do that. Look out for his Diplo In a Trainwreck remix of Radiohead ‘s “Reckoner” while you’re at.

The king of the mashup, Girl Talk aka Greg Gillis, was in Toronto last week and everywhere you went you could see his face staring back at you on the covers of Eye Weekly and NOW magazines. According to iheartcomix, France’s Leam is “kind of like the French version of Girl Talk, only not as over the top.” Listening to his Your Fucking Melting Pote Vol. 2, which includes French pop, club bangers and timeless classic hits, I’d be inclined to agree.

Alright, we’re getting there, I promise. Finally we have Washington, D.C. hip-hop artist Wale (which is pronounced wah-lay, as in not the large marine mammal) who in collaboration with DJ Nick Catchdubs, have released several well-received mixtapes. The first was 100 Miles and Running which has the best remix ever of “D.A.N.C.E.” with Wale rapping overtop, and now we have The Mixtape About Nothing. That’s right folks; it is indeed a Seinfield-themed mixtape. However for those of that typically wouldn’t have anything to do with hip-hop, Wale just might surprise you. “The Kramer” samples Michael Richards’ racist rant at a comedy club back in November 2006, and sees Wale weighing in intelligibly on the “n-word” and race relations in the United States.

More recently released mixtapes

The Hood Internet – The Mixtape Volume 3
The Kickdrums – Things Don’t Change
Weird Tapes – Blue Skies Captain
DJ K-Tel podcasts (especially the Bad Ass Blue Bees and Punk Ass Bitches mixes)

So hopefully this public service announcement didn’t fall on deaf ears, and I urge you all when you’re finished here to go and make your own mixtape for someone that you care about (or your sworn enemy, whatever floats your boat). As for myself, you’ll excuse me while I finish mine for my friend, which hopefully I can get finished before his birthday on the weekend.

Cheers,
Max

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