[Songs of the Day] 3/5/14 (Feat. JODY, Big Sean, Leather Corduroys & More)

Wednesday brought about more music, and it's all here for you to enjoy. Big Sean got quite a canvas from which to spit as Kanye West and DJ Mustard teamed up on the production side for "Sanctified", a soul-entrenched sample piece that has everyone's distinct skills on display. The talented duo of SaveMoney rappers Kami De Chukwu and Joey Purp dropped a new track, "Dat Strong" as their alias Leather Corduroys (what is hotter than a pair of leather corduroys?) which premiered on Fader. PARTYNEXTDOOR got a remix of his song "R A I N" by Rochelle JOrdanBig K.R.I.T. continued to stream out new music, this time linking up with A$AP Ferg for "Lac Lac" which dropped on Rap Radar earlier and BADBADNOTGOOD offered up a new one in "Can't Leave The Night". JODY dropped a gem in their latest single, "M.I.A" and Freddie Carrera teamed up with Taylor Bennett for a new one in "20 More".

Track of the Day: Jody: "M.I.A"

Big Sean: "Sanctified"

Leather Corduroys: "Dat Strong"

PARTYNEXTDOOR: "R A I N" (Rochelle Jordan Remix)

Big K.R.I.T.: "Lac Lac" (Feat. A$AP Ferg)

BADBADNOTGOOD - Can't Leave The Night

JODY: "M.I.A"

Freddie Carrera: "20 More" (Feat. Taylor Bennett)


[Songs of the Day] 2/27/14 (Feat. Chance The Rapper, King Krule, LIZ & More)

It got colder in the Midwest today. And new music came out. As I sit shivering at my computer, I can only be glad that the Internet brought us some heat today. Ace B8gie gave fans a new version of the instant classic "Fuck A Plan B" enlisting the likes of Creative Control, Young Giftz & Saba for the remix while Chance The Rapper hopped on the soundtrack to the new movie "Divergent" by hopping on "Fight For You" with Pia Mia. Zella Day gave listeners a light new song in "Sweet Ophelia" and RAC released "Tear You Down" featuring Alex EbertEvian Christ dropped the first single off his upcoming album in the glitch-filled ride that is his latest track, "Waterfall" and LIZ celebrated the drop of her project in style, tapping Tyga for "Don't Say". We also got a remix of King Krule'"Neptune Escape" from Travi$ Scott and another solid new track from newcomer Joyner Lucas in "Jurisdiction".

Track of the Day: LIZ: "Don't Say" (Feat. Tyga)

Ace B8gie: "Fuck A Plan B" (Feat. Creative Control, Young Giftz & Saba)

Pia Mia: "Fight For You" (Feat. Chance The Rapper)

Zella Day: "Sweet Ophelia"

RAC: "Tear You Down" (Feat. Alex Ebert)

Evian Christ: "Waterfall"

LIZ: "Don't Say" (Feat. Tyga)

Joyner Lucas: "Jurisdiction"

King Krule: "Neptune Estate" (Travi$ Scott Remix)

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[Mixtape] Justin Rose: "RoseWaVve Vol. 1"

Late last year we profiled New York City product Justin Rose as part of our First Look series. At the time, the 23-year-old producer was hard at work on his debut, while also finishing work on frequent collaborator Kris Kasanova's project. Today, we finally get the product of that hard work as Rose's follow up to last year's release, 22kt: The Instrumental Tape, RoseWaVve Vol. 1 hit the net today with a premier on his own website, Rsgldthewrld.com. The latest features Rose both producing on the back end of the tracks and gracing the songs with his own flow. Tearing down the wall between producer and rapper can be a tightrope job, but Rose does it admirably here. On "Fear and Loathing" Rose transitions between rhyming in a variety of cadences while also helping on the hook. Here he sounds like what I believe Chief Keef might have been had the lean and bad decisions not gotten to him, with a wavy feel to it. Kasanova links up with him on "On It (How 2 Make It In America)" for what is a kick back in itself. The production alone is something to take note of as well. "Moving Tho" is an airy alternative r&b beat that floats off with a dreamy guitar line. The waves are certainly present here and Rose's latest is not to be missed. "Party4Me" is a potential club banger with huge drums paired with a clever hook and interesting inverted guitar riffs, showing the project can straddle several situations.

As artists across the country are coming up with more talents at their disposal, Rose's latest project proves he can hang with the best of them in this stepping out from the boards.  Hit the link below to get the free download for the project and keep an eye out for much more to come from Justin Rose.

Download Here


Death Grips & Local Natives Release Stems For Free

The trend of releasing music for free is not a new concept, but in the past six months even, the practice has taken on a whole new attitude and usefulness. Death Grips, never ones to wilt to social norms or adhere to expectations or ethics, released both the a capella and instrumental versions of their albums, Government Plates (click here) and NO LOVE DEEP WEB (click here) for free via their Twitter account. While the move is similar to Beyonce's instantaneous release of 14 songs and 17 music videos as one entity, it is a different kind of openness.

Local Natives also followed suit, dropping the stems from their album Hummingbird (click here). While Bey gave the world a host of new entertainment to sift through, Death Grips and Local Natives offered music geeks and production nerds an endless amount of material to work with, encouraging remixes and the use of their work. It is the sort of openness that breeds new genres and new sounds and is honestly a responsible move on the behalf of both acts and it will be interesting to see where the stems lead in the near future.


Austin Celebrates "Free Week"

There's no better price than free.99 and the eclectic residents of Austin, Texas seem to know this better than anyone, as they town embarks on "Free Week" a seven day run of free shows around ATX that help celebrate the start to a new year. Fitting, for a city that seems to never turn the music off. On the site's website, the event is promoters say, " Since 2003, Austin has held the tradition of partying to no end during the first week of January."

The decade-old tradition is a perfect example as well of the current state of music in America, as giving it out for free seems to have begun the norm for the large swath of artists trying to come up in the industry. The week-long mini-fest features a smattering of independent acts, both local and not, that come together to start the year off right, for free. For a full list of shows, venues and activities, click here.


Russell Brand Releases DVD on The Pirate Bay

The Pirate Bay is like the Napster of the contemporary Internet era. Founded in Sweden in 2003, the BitTorrent site has skirted the edges of the web, providing free movies and music to the masses and becoming public enemy No. 1 for recording companies, film studios and actors and musicians alike. With this as the backdrop, it's interesting that comedian Russel Brand chose to release his latest DVD,  Messiah Complex, via the unapologetic piracy website.

Interestingly, the stand-up DVD is available online on Amazon or BBC for £10. While he stands to lose money that could be made from the actual sales, Brand is somewhat following in the footsteps of fellow comedian Louis C.K. who released his 2011 stand-up routine, Live at the Beacon Theater online in an easy-to-pirate format, simply asking for $5 with a request not to steal it. Surprisingly, C.K. made just over $1 million in the course of a couple days with the ploy-perhaps spurring the move by Brand.

While the entertainment industry continues to persecute the open-source piracy community, it will be interesting to watch how certain aspects of free releases have seeped into popular culture. Today, musicians put out free releases everyday in the forms of mixtape and albums-whose to say we can't see a similar trend begin to occur in the film/comedy realm as well? It's not completely out of the question and may be a breath of fresh air.

Before Sean Fanning and Napster turned the Music world on its head in the late 90s, record labels dictated who was hot and what was good-today music is as open as its ever been, allowing fans to dictate prices and artist's popularity. With movies these days getting less and less creative as directors increasingly pull from remakes, maybe a few free releases wouldn't be the worst thing.

[via Complex]