[Songs of the Day] 2/19/14 (Feat. Schoolboy Q, Major Lazer, Hudson Mohawke & More)

Wednesdays tend to be a bit slow for new music on the web, but we scoured our way through everything ot find some gems that hit airwaves today. Schoolboy Q teased his highly-anticipated debut album Oxymoron with the lead single, "Blind Threats" featuring none other than 'The Chef' himself, Raekwon. The Legion of Dudez got together to spin a remix of their hit single "Diamond Girl" by Blakkass Westley and Chandler London, with fellow LOD member Cadillac Duke dropping a verse on the updated version. We got a solid song from newcomer Joyner Lucas in "That's Okay", Hurt Everybody, the duo of Supa Bwe and Carl dropped "God Shit" and Major Lazer continued to keep fans salivating with another cut from his upcoming album, this time reviving Sean Paul for a cameo spot. GXNXVS gave Sway Clarke II's "I Don't Need Much" a remix, Cosby Sweater, a production duo out of Indiana released "Your Girlfriend's a Stoner" and "Bound 2" producer Hudson Mohawke gave listeners a new track with Olivier Daysoul in "Forever I".

Track of the Day: Schoolboy Q: "Blind Threats" (Feat. Raekwon)

Schoolboy Q: “Blind THreats” (Feat. Raekwon)

Blakkass Westley & Chandler London: "Diamond Girl Remix" (Feat. Cadillac Duke)

Joyner Lucas: “That’s Okay”

Hurt Everybody: “God Shit”

Major Lazer: "Come On To Me" (Feat. Sean Paul)

Sway Clarke II: "I Don't Need Much" (GXNXVS Remix)

Cosby Sweater: "Your Girlfriend's A Stoner"

Hudson Mohawke & Olivier Daysoul: "Forever I"

[youtube id="O6Ih1SNzpk4"]


Klaxons Photo

[Songs of the Day] 2/11/14 (Feat. Wiz Khalifa, Klaxons, The Black Lips and more)

Tuesday got a healthy dose of new music, and we have all of it gathered here for you once again for our 'songs of the day'. Starting things off is the honky-tonk sounds of Denny & The Jets with "Mexican Coke" and Klaxons with their heavy-handed dream pop arrangement in "Children of the Sun". Vic Mensa capitalized on a successful tour with Disclosure by releasing a freestyle over the UK duo's track "When A Fire Starts to Burn" off their album, Settle, and fellow Chicagoans Roman Flowrs and Donnie Trumpet teamed up over a Cam Osteen-produced beat in the soulful "Lake Shore Drive" and theWHOevers round out the middle of the map, offering up a J Dilla tribute in "Sooner or Later". Lil Boosie teases his post-prison plans, getting together with Boston George and Future on "Rich Off Lean" while Mr. Carmack gives listeners a new groove in his instrumental, "Free Baby" and Kelis returns with a new song in "Rumble". Yumi Zouma's “A Long Walk Home For Parted Lovers” gets a remix from Wild Nothings, Harry Fraud remixes JOYWAVE's "Tongues" and we get new tracks from The Black Lips, Beverly, Wiz Khalifa and a talented newcomer in Barney Bones. Check it all out, streaming below.

Track of the Day: Bevery: "Honey Do"

Denny & The Jets: “Mexican Coke”

Roman Flowrs: “Lake Shore Drive” (Feat. Donnie Trumpet) (Prod. by Cam Osteen)

Vic Mensa: "When A Fire Starts To Burn Freestyle"

Klaxons: “Children of the Sun”

theWHOevers: “Sooner or Later” (J Dilla Tribute)

Mr. Carmack: “Free Baby”

Boston George: “Rich Off Lean” (Feat. Lil Boosie & Future)

Kelis: “Rumble”

JOYWAVE: “Tongues” (Harry Fraud Remix):

Yumi Zouma: “A Long Walk Home For Parted Lovers” (Wild Nothing remix)

Beverly: “Honey Do”

Barney Bones: “Crash N’ Burn”

The Black Lips: “Justice After All”

Wiz Khalifa: “We Dem Boys”

[youtube id="vKzwbsI7ISQ"]


The College Dropout 10 Years Later

When The College Dropout dropped, I was 13 years old and in 8th grade. Living in the suburbs at the time, there wasn't a lot for a young hip-hop head to really connect with. Ja Rule was rapping about the "thug life" with Ashanti and Irv Gotti, Ludacris was shouting for folks to "Get Back", T.I. had just hit the scene rapping about twenty-four inch rims and selling copious amount of drugs to make the dream work. Outside of Eminem, who at this point had entered the goofy days of Encore, there was little for me to relate to, and hip-hop began to feel out of touch. Rap had always been from the streets, but often had poetic sensibilities, easily interpreted by a cross-section of communities. We were in the midst of ringtone rap, until Kanye came along. Rap albums weren't considered among works of art in a larger spectrum, T.I.'s breakthrough album, Urban Legend was given a two out of five stars by Rolling Stone. Hip-hop had hit critical mass, it had jumped the shark, the Ying Yang Twins were serious players. I personally hadn't heard anything like "Slow Jamz" or "Through The Wire" in a long time. It was a hark back to the music my parents played growing up: a mix of soul and funk, all rolled together in Ye's signature sample chops. I remember watching MTV for hours in the days before YouTube to catch that collage video that was so Chicago, yet so different. I remember explaining Kanye to my Mom ('well he's a rapper, but he wears a backpack and talks about Chicago') I bought a hard copy of The College Dropout. There is a whole generation brewing right now that will never do that. I subsequently bought every Kanye album in hard copy until My Dark Twisted Fantasy. Kanye brought me back to hip-hop with The College Dropout, and likely shaped much of what I did after hearing it. It was the culmination of a sound that had been crafted by the likes of No I.D. and J Dilla, but which West was able to succinctly package together in one seminal piece of art. Chance The Rapper points a heavy finger Ye's way when influences come up, and he perhaps describes the feeling The College Dropout still evokes today with a line from his song "Tweakin" with Vic Mensa: "Bumpin' Kanye like it just came out". 10 year later, it's still good to that last clink of glass on "Last Call".

Statement from Kanye West on The College Dropout turning 10:

“Ten years ago today we finally released what had been my life’s work up to that point: The College Dropout.

I say “finally” because it was a long road, a constant struggle, and a true labor of love to not only convince my peers and the public that I could be an artist, but to actually get that art out for the world to hear.

I am extremely grateful to each and every person along that road who helped, lent an ear, lent their voice, gave of their heart to that project, and to all the projects that followed, and are to come.

I am honored and humbled by my fans, for the unwavering support and love over the past ten years. I wake up every day trying to give something back to you that you can rock to and be proud of.

Ten years later I am still the same kid from Chicago, still dreaming out loud, still banging on the door. The doors may be heavier, but I promise you WE WILL BREAK THEM.”


[Video] KSRA Live at The Beat Kitchen

Chicago's own KSRA, who debuted her album Petra last month on RubyHornet, released this exclusive video from her RH-sponsored North Coast after party with whysowhite at The Beat Kitchen on August 30. The girl can flat out perform and does her thing on the loop pedals with her song "Bad Habit" and "Red Letter" in this Skyline Productions video. Watch below and catch KSRA tomorrow with Snowmine and Taught Abroad for a set at The Hideout in Chicago.

http://youtu.be/5oS1_clOq18

http://youtu.be/3Gm6kMpgDC4


Nicholas Maggio’s “Wild Hearts, Blue Jeans, and White T-shirts” Project NSFW

Photographer Nicholas Maggio has decided to go forward with a passion project of his that he's had for quite some time. Featuring a variety of models for the project, including the likes of Adrianne Ho, Taja Feistner, Adrianne Ho, Kylie Cusick, Nicholas kept it simple. To sum it all up, the project consists of pretty girls in their white tees going with a natural look in front of a black drop. The results are awesome; you have to admire the simplicity of the photos and the freedom the models had to control how the images would turn out. As Nicholas states, "The idea is to 'strip' everything from these models except for a standard tee, no makeup, no hair stylist, no direction, and take pictures of them being them." For more photos from the "Wild Hearts, Blue Jeans, and White T-Shirts," project visit its Tumblr page here.

[Photos by Nicholas Maggio] [Via Hypebeast]


Scott Hocking Photographs Detroit's Worst Graffiti

Its not often that you see graffiti like this documented and I don't mean graffiti in general because many have documented the art of graffiti in various ways. But when we typically see photographs of graffiti that someone took the time to document its usually huge murals, lots of color, and crazy style, you know a work of art. Photographer Scott Hocking chose to go a different route and decided to document the worst graffiti in Detroit. What he shot was pretty interesting and honestly quite amusing making you think who would write these things, but in the end the project captures someone who wanted their voice heard. Check out the photos and head on over to Vice for the rest of the set here.

[Photos by Scott Hocking] [Via Vice]


The New York Times Highlights Skate Photographer Allen Ying

The New York Times highlights New York skate photographer and founder of skate magazine 43 Allen Ying. The paper continues to have interest in Allen Ying and how he captures the pure rawness of skateboarding through his photography. Ying wants to show skateboarding in another light other than the commercialized competitions and heavily endorsements by energy drink companies. As Ying states, “some kids today probably don’t even know that there’s this part of it — breaking the law and skating.” Ying wants to bring it back to good old fashion skating where it's all about landing that trick and capturing it through his lens something that's organic and not staged.

[Photos by Allen Ying]


[Mixtape] Black Dave: "Black Bart"

We haven't really heard much from Black Dave since he released the Stay Black 'tape back in March. Until now, the New York native had been quietly working on yet another project and making sure the quality was top notch. Today, Dave has decided to finally unleash "Black Bart", his latest body of work, and let fans decide if he lived up to the expectations. Bodega Bamz, Smoke DZA, Boldy James, and RiFF RAFF all make guest-appearances, which should show you how diverse this project will sound. Click play below and judge for yourself.