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Video Power: K. Flay – Doctor Don’t Know

Artist: K. Flay
Song: Doctor Don’t Know

New video from San Fran sweetheart, K. Flay – girl has talent, you can’t deny it. Don’t sleep – peep below:

Video Power: Blacklist Royals “Things They Say/Drive On”

Artist: Blacklist Royals
Song: Things They Say/Drive On

The latest video Nashville’s Blacklist Royals, check it out:

Fokis feat. Olu Dara “I Wanna Live Good”

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Nice little track right here from Fokis featuring Nas’ pops Olu Dara. Cop it here.

“To date, only three rappers have recorded and released music with Olu Dara (Nas’ father); Afrika Bambatta NaS and now Fokis.”

Video Power: Elizabeth and the Catapult – You and Me

Artist:Elizabeth and the Catapult
Song: “You and Me”

Elizabeth and the Catapult’s latest video, which is for their track “You and Me,” features a little blue guy looking for love.

If the blue guy doesn’t work out I know a little green guy (with big feet) you can meet:

RJD2 – The Glow Remixes EP

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RJD2 released a free, three-track EP containing remixes of “The Glow,” a song from his previously released, full-length album, The Colossus. Check it out and grab it here.

Emerald, Sapphire and Gold (ESG)

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When you grow up in the Bronx and club in Manhattan, figuring out what’s blasting over the speakers becomes second nature.   ESG is one of those bands that a DJ always rocked in his or her set.  I eventually found out that they were from the Bronx as well, and better yet, an all-female group.  Nice!

Now, the London-based Fire Records has released a double CD of ESG goodness – old and new.  This is a must-have for the beat heads! You know wassup!

Check out one of their seminal tracks “Dance to the Beat of Moody.”

Carol Bui releasing new material

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Washington state native Carol Bui doesn’t give a fuck, but you don’t have to hear her say it! The songstress is set to release her third project, Red Ship, on March 8, 2011 via her own label, Ex Oh Records.  Check out her most recent single, “Geisha Means ‘Open Minded’.”

Can’t get enough? Check out her previously released single, “Mira:You’re Free With Me.” She looks like Bjork and sounds like PJ Harvey (minus the misery).  What’s not to like?

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Evidence: the Fifth Beatle?

Evidence of Dilated Peoples dropped an EP last month, and it’s free!

Peep it and download it here.

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Evidence of Dilated Peoples returns with a new, The Beatles-inspired EP, I Don’t Need Love.  The nine-track album features Rakaa, Alchemist and Fashawn.  The set also includes covers, with Evidence as the fifth Beatle.

Mixtape #24 is coming!

Mixtape #24 is coming, guys! Which means that issue 24 is on its way as well. Get excited!

That said, this is your last chance to get Mixtape #23! You have about a week, so that’s fair warning. Tell all your friends and cohorts to go get it right now while they still can. It’s like 35 free MP3s. How could you possibly go wrong?

Written by Josh Mock
More on:

Amen to Zombie: April 9th, 2010

In a world where experimental electronic music exponentially splinters into a multitude of rogue genres that slowly shuffle the globe from demilitarized dance floors to sleeper cell bedroom studios and back, a team of disparate scientists tracks this solanum-like pandemic while desperately trying to interpret cryptic field recordings of Samhain’s past, not one day at a time, but from Amen to Zombie

ZOMBIE

This will serve as an intro to Bruce Haack as well as me gushing about finding a rare children’s record.  Let’s start with Bruce Haack.

Bruce Haack was a very celestial soul.  Born in Nordregg, Alberta, grew up in Rocky Mountain House, took peyote with Native Americans around age 12, attended Juilliard Music school in New York, composed musique concrète as well as commercial jingles for Kraft cheese, founded Dimension 5 Records with Mrs. Nelson, made his own musical instruments including the Dermatron, which is essentially a human theremin, released a record in 1970 called Electric Lucifer that used a homemade vocoder, in 1982 released Party Machine, a co-lab with Russell Simmons, and died an uncelebrated artist in 1988, save for a few select people/friends including a bunch of douchebags that you can view in a doc called Haack: The King of Techno.  Kids got the point of Bruce’s work though.  There is a nice spot in the doc where Mrs. Nelson is waxing poetic about how many fan letters Dimension 5 Records received over the years.  The visual is of all the crazy album art work spinning behind her head and images of all the different countries that they’ve received mail from.

If you can get through the spaced out narrative of The King of Techno and DJ Me DJ You, it’s a good way to get some good info about Bruce’s life while hearing some of his music.  DJ Me DJ You is especially bad.  The doc comes on the heals of the one about Robert Moog, so I think it tries to show that all these super cool musicians love Bruce’s music and so should you the way that the Moog doc shows just how influential the Moog synth was in reshaping the musical landscape.  Problem is that Bruce made most of his instruments just for himself to use and that he was mainly an artist whereas Moog was mainly an engineer, though both men moonlighted as various other personas of course.

Honestly you really don’t need to take it from Beck or Stereolab.  Once you hear Bruce’s music it’s obvious how fun and entertaining it is.  The bulk of the gushing for Bruce comes from his Dimension 5 records.  I leave you to discover those gems for yourself.  The impetus is that Bruce and Mrs. Nelson were putting out records for kids to learn about motorcycles and body parts and things like that but with the aid of psychedelic music.  Brilliant.  The music was also to spark a child’s imagination and serve as a positive influence for kids.  So it should come as no surprise that Bruce scored and performed the music for an animated adaption to one of the Harold and the Purple Crayon stories.

That and our record this time around are from the Scholastic company that actually gave the Dimension 5 crew a shot at legitimacy (or money).  Bruce’s latter work, Electric Lucifer, Haackula, and Bite take on a more transcendental and serious tone.  The sad punch line is that during his lifetime he got disillusioned with the music industry and I’m guessing mankind in general.  Abused drugs and stopped producing or maybe just releasing music for the larger portion of the 1980′s.

Which brings us to:

The Witch's Vacation

Story and Pictures by Norman Bridwell

Music by Bruce Haack

To be honest, I’ve only got an mp3 of the story (which clocks in at about 6 minutes).  I wish I could have found a record or cassette of the story.  Lots of Bruce’s work goes for big bucks, mainly due to the fact that the internet knows how much it’s worth to some people.  Your local library rummage sale doesn’t know, so if you want to try and find some of the vinyl check there or be prepared to pay out the nose.

The story is about two kids who live happily with a witch.  The two kids go to summer camp and the witch goes on a vacation.  They end up meeting at the same beach.  The witch has fun with the two kids at camp and performs magic to aid the kids.  There’s a lot of folly such as horses and water, as well as “magic” sounds that are cool to listen to.  The BGM isn’t as psychedelic as the Harold and the Purple Crayon stuff, but it’s still entertaining.  I think it’s a nice little 45 to find.  It’s a nice flight of fancy for kids to listen to.  It might be view as a watered down version of Bruce’s music or Dimension 5.  But I think it shows that Bruce has the talent and restraint to make something commercially viable (although commercially viable from a company such as Scholastic kind of seems like an oxymoron, although I do remember shilling out for monthly book club books…) and still be pure and trippy and entertaining.

I realize that the Dimension 5 records are supposed to be for sale, but they were made explicitly for teachers in classrooms.  Or maybe for kids to listen to. Point being that Dimension 5 had it’s audience targeted and wasn’t too worried about making a dollar.

It makes me wonder more about how Bruce lost faith after making such groundbreaking and amazing stuff in the early 60s.  Alternatively, The Witch’s Vacation could be Bruce just trying to make ends meet.  The recording came out in 1974, he had already put out a volume of his own kids music as well as written music for TV commercials and released a “rock” album on Columbia records.  All of that should have been enough for an industry based on artistic merit to support him.

Also, did I mention that he used to write pop tunes before he started experimenting with electronics?  I think the best way to end would be a quote from The Witch’s Vacation:  ”My brother built a sand castle but a bigger kid knocked it down.  It didn’t matter though.”  Cue jaunty electronic music.

Goodnight out there, whatever you are.

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