01 – Kopyright Liberation Front – The Rites Of Mu
02 – The Justified Ancients Of Mu Mu – All You Need Is Love
03 – The Justified Ancients Of Mu Mu – The Candyman
04 – The Timelords – Gary In The Tardis
05 – The KLF – 3 a.m. Eternal (Primal)
06 – The KLF – The White Room (Primal)
07 – The KLF – Build A Fire (Primal)
08 – Disco 2000 – Uptight (Everything’s Alright) (Discorama mix)
09 – Discotec 2000 – Feel This
10 – The KLF – Kylie Said Trance
11 – The KLF vs. Pet Shop Boys – So Hard
12 – The KLF – Chill Out (3 am Somewhere Out Of Beaumont)
13 – The KLF – What Time Is Love (LP mix)
14 – The KLF – Last Train To Trancentral (Live from The Lost Continent)
15 – The KLF – 3 a.m. Eternal (Live at The S.S.L.)
16 – The KLF – The White Room
17 – E.N.T.K.L.F. – 3 a.m. Eternal (Christmas Top Of The Pops 1991)
18 – The K Foundation presents The Red Army Choir – K Cera Cera (War Is Over If You Want It)
19 – DJ Kuta & C-Row – Deep Shit
20 – Blacksmoke – U.S.A. U.S.A.
21 – Blacksmoke – My Fuckin’ Heart Will Go On
22 – Blacksmoke – Blacksmoke Rising (PTM mix)
23 – Blacksmoke – F.F.F. (Fuck The Fuckin’ Fuckers)
24 – Juno Reactor – Pistolero
25 – Atomizer – Hooked On Radiation
26 – The Orb – From A Distance (12” Z mix featuring The Corpral)
27 – Solid Gold Chartbusters – I Wanna 1-2-1 With You
28 – Custerd – Boom Bang Bombay (We’re Gonna Rock The Boat)
29 – The Black Dog – Babylon (My Pasty Weighs A Ton)
30 – The Black Dog & Black Sifichi – Invisible Things (Greybeard’s Boom Bang mix)
31 – Blacksmoke – Silent Night (BBC Session mix)
Ghost World: A Story in Sound
by Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid
>> DOWNLOAD THE MIX <<
(Right click the above link, then save the file to your computer)
Brian Eno once famously remarked that the problem with computers is that there isn’t enough Africa in them. I kind of think that its the opposite: they’re bringing the ideals of Africa: after all, computers are about connectivity, shareware, a sense of global discussion about topics and issues, the relentless density of info overload, and above all the willingness to engage and discuss it all – that’s something you could find on any street corner in Africa.
I just wanted to highlight the point: Digital Africa is here, and has been here for a while. This isn’t “retro” – it’s about the future.
For the Venice Biennial 2007 I decided to go through a lot of my files of music from around the African Continent to accompany my installation for the Africa Pavilion. I looked through my record collection for non cliche kinds of stuff like the Baka People who make drums out the way they play in water or the “Car Horn Orchestra” of Ghana which has a gathering of many taxi drivers who converge in downtown Accra to make a large symphony of honks from their taxis at the end of the work day or for funerals of drivers.
When I was a kid I went through different parts of Africa with my mother: we went to Kenya, Ivory Coast, Senegal, and Egypt, and this was the first time I’d been to Angola. The mix reflects alot of my interests in electronic music from the continent, and the way they’ve shaped and moulded alot of material in the “New World.”
The “Ghost World” mix is all about the multiple rhythms and languages of Africa, but it makes no attempt to give you everything – it’s from my record collection. That’s why the “story” of the mix is about: polyrhythm, multiplex reality. There’s even more current material like the Kuduru sounds of Luanda (who says Techno doesn’t exist in Africa!?) and old school hip hop like Zimbabwe Legit from the early 90’s of classic “conscious” school hip hop. Yes there’s material from Akon, but he gets mixed with Nelson Mandela, or MC Solaar, but I looked for material of his that combined with jazz, so Ron Carter’s brilliant bass playing worked out with that. There’s even material from my favorite South African composer, Abdullah Ibrahim or vocal outtakes from David Byrne and Brian Eno’s “My Life in The Bush of Ghosts” and various guest appearances by African dictator Idi Amin or the former President of Nigeria, Olusegun Obasanjo talking about democracy in Nigeria.
Pretty ironic, eh? From the Northern part of the continent groups like the Lotfi Double Kanon or the Master Musicians of Jajouka represent radically different approaches to history and contemporary Arab culture’s complex hybridity, as does the legendary voice of Egypt, Oum Kalthoum. It’d be a pretty wild party to see them all hanging out together!!!
Anyway, contemporary Africa is a place of paradox where some of the world most resource rich countries are bound hand and foot by corruption, human malice, and the basic sense that the continent has been left out of the march of progress of many of the “rich” nations of the world.
I made elements of this mix when I was in Luanda, Angola, getting ready for the Venice Biennial, and the sound that was coming out of all the clubs and soundsystems was “Kuduru” a kind of relentlessly fast minimalist rhythm that combines hiphop and techno. I like to think of this mix as a homage to Ben Okri’s novels and the classic works of Amos Tutuola. William Gibson said back in the ancient early 90’s: The future is already here, it’s unevenly distributed. I like to think that the mix is about the future of Africa and its global diaspora as much as it is about the past.
History is never silent, it reminds us again and again and again, that we live its presence in every part of our life every day. The mix is an art project that accompanies my installation at the Venice Biennial Africa Pavilion.
Enjoy!!
Paul D. Miller aka Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid, NY/Luanda 2006-2007
Africa Remix: Ghost World – A Story in Sound
Dj Spooky Presents a Project for the Dokolo Foundation at the Venice Biennial 2007
“In Africa, When an old man dies, it is like a library burning to the ground” a quote attributed to Leopold Senghor
Mega Mix!
Por Por Akwaaba Welcome! Car Horn Orchestra of Ghana
Intro: Lafayette Afro Rock Band “Darkest Light” mixed w/Max Roach and Abdullah Ibrahim “Streams of Consciousness” (NY and South Africa)
Intro collage
African Anarchist Radio
Malcolm X “The Roots of Savagery” mixed w/
Max Roach/Abdullah Ibrahim “Streams of Consciousness” (NY/South Africa)
Tony Allen “Crazy Afro Beat” w/scratches by Rob Swift Vs Dj Spooky (NY and Nigeria)
X Plastaz “Msimu kwa msimu” (Tanzania)
Alif “Douta Mbaye”(Senegal)
K’naan “Soobax” (Somalia)
Kelis “Trick Me” (dancehall mix) (USA)
Fela “Kalakuta Show” (Mix Master Mike, Lateef and The Gift of Gab Remix) (Nigeria)
Lotfi Double Kanon “Bled Miki” (Tunisia)
MC Solaar featuring Ron Carter “Un Ange En Danger” (France/Senegal)
Akon “Locked Up” mixed w/ Nelson Mandela “Moments in Black History (Brad Sanders)” (NY/Senegal/South Africa)
Angola National Anthem – “Angola, avante!” Author: Manuel Rui Alves Monteiro (b.1941); Composer: Rui Alberto Vieira Dias Mingao
Mixed w/Malcolm X “The Root of Civilization”
Dj Spooky featuring Tapper Zukie “Revolution Dub” (NY/Jamaica)
Frederic Galliano featuring Pancha Angola: Kuduru Sound System
Frederic Galliano featuring Pinta Tirru “Entra No Roda” (Angola/France)
Bunny Lee Meets King Tubby “African Roots and Reggae” – (Jamaica)
Cesoria Evora – Angola (original + Carl Craig remix) -Dj Spooky remix (Cape Verde Islands/Detroit/NY)
David Byrne and Brian Eno “My Life in The Bush of Ghosts: Vocal Outtakes” (New York/London)
Fela “Zombie” (Nigeria) (remix)
King Britt “Obafunke Theme” (Philadelphia) mixed w/
Interlude Idi Amin speaks (Uganda)
Orson Welles “Citizen Kane” (L.A.)
President Obasanjo mixed w/”Move” by J Dilla (Detroit)
Ryuichi Sakamoto “Riot in Lagos” mixed w/ Nigerian National Anthem (Japan/Nigeria)
Baka Forest People of South East Cameroon – Water Drums (Cameroon) mixed w/
Foday Musa Suso “World Wide Funk” (DJ Spooky remix) (Gambia)
Master Musicians of Jajouka featuring Talvin Singh “You Can Find the Feeling” mixed w/ Abdul Nasser “Independence Forever” (Morocco/Egypt/India)
Duke Ellington “Afro-Euraasian Eclipse” (NY)
Oum Kalthoum “Hob Eih” (Egypt) – Dj Spooky remix
Mixed w/Tectonic “Heat Sensor”
Charlie Dark “Afro Dreaming”(UK-Ghana)
The Monks of Keur Moussa “Nous Te Louons, Pere Invisible” (Senegal)
Ginger Baker/Tony Allen (UK/Nigeria) – drum solo mixed w/
Drexciya “Polymono Plexusgel” (Detroit)
Zimbabwe Legit “Shadows Legit Mix” Dj Shadow remix (Zimbabwe/San Francisco)
Soweto Gospel Choir “Rivers of Babylon” (South Africa)
Konono No1 “Kule Kule” (Congo)
Abdullah Ibrahim “Mindif” (Dj Spooky remix) (South Africa/NY)
Listen to the Podcast soon here on mix-tapes.de or here NOW (click ascolta)
Artists Statement
“A state of war only serves as an excuse for domestic tyranny.”
Alexander Solzhennitsyn
A couple of years ago, a Saudi oil minister made what has become one of the more prophetic statements to come out of the Middle East in a long time: “The Stone Age didn’t end for lack of stone, and the Oil Age will end long before the world runs out of oil.” It was a lament, an acknowledgement that a day of reckoning was coming that would change the global balance of wealth and power. The mix I created for the “System Error” show is a reflection of a series of geographic interventions that looks at that statement from the viewpoint of sound – it envisages an audio theater in the tradition of John Cage, with his 1939 composition “Imaginary Landscape,” that was the first work written for turntables, or composers like Duke Ellington with his “Afro-Eurasian Eclipse” symphony that quoted music from around the world. Essentially, this is a work that represents a practice of diaspora based on the hidden linkages in sound from a world that responds to the politics of perception. From the production processes of the information age’s collision with the values of the 20th century – mass media, mass production – to the digital ethos of the 21st century – rip, mix, burn, mass customization – the basic fact that music is a de-materialized experience for most of us that runs through everything from the Ipod playlist to the networks that people send mp3’s, videos on Youtube, or life on Flickr, brings us full circle into a world where you are what you consume. I like to think of this mix as a mirror I’ve held up to society: it’s a reflection of the way we live now. Perhaps, just perhaps, that Saudi oil minister was right.
In the 21st century, parables of warfare information control systems like George Orwell’s hyper-revisionist “1984,” have now become commonplace. In the 21st century we’re faced with a world where “newspeak” refracts what we thought about as even the origins of the Iraq conflict blur beyond any sustainable logic – weapons of mass destruction have become weapons of mass distraction in the U.S. media. Who are we at war with? Oceania or Eurasia? The Axis of Evil? Hugo Chavez? War is diplomacy by other means. It’s been said that “architecture is nothing but frozen music.” I want to reverse engineer that phrase and unpack some of the sonic issues that collage brings to the global stage – what happens when music becomes liquid architecture? Apply that scenario to info war and music, and you arrive at “System Error.” The “For Promotional Use Only (Al-Yamamah)” project that accompanies this catalog is a social sculpture of radically disparate voices: it exists in the tradition of Grandmaster Flash’s “Adventures on the Wheels of Steel” or Afrika Bambaata’s “Death Mix” – classic hip hop that completely destroyed what people thought “mix culture” was about. “System Error (For Promotional Use Only)” isn’t about simply re-ordering facts and numbers – it shuffles the contemporary imagination like a deck of cards and, in the process, subverts the “rational arrangement” of systems of media. The project explodes linear narrative so that some other meanings can manifest. In the realm of “fair use” that dj culture comes out of, the “System Error” mix synthesizes a fictional realm where people like Turkey’s Mercan Dede, London’s Roots Manuva, Brooklyn’s Matisyahu, Israel’s “Subliminal and the Shadow,” Jamaica’s Mutabaruka, Iran’s Sussan Deyhim, Pakistan’s Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Lebanon’s Clotaire K, California’s Zack De La Rocha, the minimalism of Irannian composer David Abir, or the jazz of Evan Parker’s saxophone, or the people of the hip hop diaspora like Saul Williams, DJ Shadow, Rob Swift, Asian Dub Foundation, or scribes like Arundhati Roy can coexist as data points in a constellation of digital information. All these figures inhabit a place where sound functions as a palette for creative endeavor.
How do you use the media to tell a story? At heart, “System Error” paints a tale of the last several years – of media disinformation, for example – highlighting Bush’s statements as found sound, or sampling various “maqam” songs from Iraq mixed with hip hop, which show a simple connection between how music reflects the data-aesthetics of information networks. It presents rumors of war: I like to think of it as data-bootlegs, the currency of a world economy of sound filtered through regional concerns. Think of it as contemporary art that brings you the world from fragments of sound. It’s a tableau made of soundbites collaged, dispersed and condensed into material that reflects a realm of infinite possibility. Marcel Duchamp, James Rosenquist, Jeff Koons, David Hammons, Joseph Kosuth… the list of visual artists with a relationship to “appropriation” art is almost a catalog of the major art movements of the 20th century that the 21st century has inherited. I just wanted to look at the issue from the viewpoint of acoustic space. What happens when this type of collage is applied to sound? Maybe that’s a question that Nam Jun Paik was striving to answer with his “Global Groove” mixes 30 years ago.
There are a couple of issues driving this scenario – theater, memory games, and the early Surrealist game of the “cadavre exquis.” I like to think of it as additive synthesis in a digital media context: it’s art culled from the viewpoint of collective memory. First, let’s begin with a sense of humor. This project comes out of a discussion I had with the artist/curator Naeem Mohaimen about why South Asian music blends so well with contemporary hiphop. I simply explained that the Caribbean is the central point of diaspora with this situation – its rhythms have reached back to every region of the world – from the from the Rai music of Algeria, to Bhangra and Qawwali of South Asia, from the Afro-beat of Nigeria, to the Kwaito of South Africa, to the dubstep of London, the echo of the Jamaican soundsystem ethos of tape collage and bass minimalism defines most of what we think of as “modern music” in today’s digital culture. I guess you could say that Jamaica is the “loudest island in the world” and the British Commonwealth is an echo chamber of the elements I chose to mix for this particular project. But there are other elements like, for example, the West Point Drum Corps (they don’t exactly jam with Sufi mystics like Mercan Dede everyday!). Second there’s the irreverence that children of the digital age show for historical boundaries – why not go to the Souk in Tunis and hear young kids rhyming in Arabic over Rai music remixes of Dr. Dre beats, or for that matter, listen to groups like Cold Cut sample Yemenite-Israeli singer Ofra Haza for their classic remix of Eric B. and Rakim’s “Paid in Full?”
I want to nudge people to think about art not just as objects, but as a collective endeavor where memory is translated through the filter of sound. This kind of collage looks at the words of the singers, the sounds that I scratched into the rhythms, the beats and elements that I put in collision with one another, as a simulation of history: it’s all a soundtrack to the end of the Oil age. Loop, repeat, refract: its just modern storytelling by other means. By the way, Al-Yamamah means “the dove” in Arabic, it’s the name of the project at the heart of a recent series of scandals in the U.K. involving slush funds, oil sheiks, Swiss banks, kickbacks, blackmail, bagmen, arms deals, war plans, climbdowns, big lies, Dick Cheney and Tony Blair – it’s a scandal that has it all, corruption and cowardice at the highest levels, a festering canker at the very heart of world politics, where the War on Terror meets the slaughter in Iraq. Yet chances are you’ve never heard about it – even though it happened just a few days ago. The fog of war profiteering, it seems, is just as thick as the fog of war. This is a soundtrack that maybe, just maybe, might get you to think that another world is possible. For me, music isn’t music – it’s information: that’s what art is about – this is just a start. As information, it fits into a complex niche in today’s modern digital economy, a place where data is the most pervasive and intangible feature of the everyday world we inhabit. War is, regretfully, a system made of information control systems, and this mix is an essay on the topic of how music filters through the networks of modern info culture – it charts a cartography made of invisible flow charts, graphs, and statistical data bases (after all, sampling is a mathematical model for analyzing large amounts of information like population growth for the census, etc etc). Remember – the “System Error” mix is strictly “for promotional use only.” Think of this mix as a memetic virus, and spread the word!
For Promotional Use Only: Podcast Aesthetics Listen to the Podcast here on mix-tapes.de soon
System Error (Al-Yamanah mix)
by Paul D. Miller aka Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid
Ghost in the Shell excerpt
Intro – Mercan Dede “Sahname”
Afro-futurism intro
Arundhati Roy – “Suspicion of Nationalism” mixed with Clotaire K “Maqam”
Asian Dub Foundation – “Rivers of Dub/Strong Culture”
Meat Beat Manifesto “Basic Beat/Timebomb”
Clotaire K “Lubnan”
Evan Parker “Gees Bend” mixed with the West Point Drum Corps “Field Flourish”
MC W vs Guvnah Arnold
Rob Swift “Mad Bombers/Terror Wrist”
Dj Shadow “Drums of Death” /mixed with GW Bush press conference
DJ Shadow w/Zack de la Rocha “March of Death”
Matisyahu “Beat Box”
The Clash “Guns of Brixton/Return to Brixton”
Bob Marley “Soul Rebel” (Dj Spooky remix)
Badawi “Jihad” (Dj Spooky remix)
Nightmares on Wax “Summer Love”
Azeem “Bush is a Gangsta”
Evolution Control Committee “Rocked By Rape”
Dj Siraki “Azaadi”
Asian Dub Foundation “Culture Move”
Asphalt Jungle “Sensation”
Ges-E & Visionary Underground “Extaa”
Oum Kalthoum “Hob Eih” mixed with Dj Spooky “Break Beat”
Saul Williams “Not in Our Name” mixed with Tectonic “Heat Sensor”
Black Star Liner “Yemen Cutta Connection Dub”
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan “Tracery” mixed with hip-hop break beat by The Molemen
Lofti Double Kanon – “Kleb”
Navdeep “My Technique”
Subliminal & The Shadow “Divide and Conquer/Hefred U’mshol”
Coldcut featuring Roots Manuva “True Skool”
Tino Corporation “Magic Dub” mixed w/Mutabaruka “Dis Poem”
Sussan Deyhim “Meykhaneh (Wine Cave”)
Cheb i Sabbah “Violin Solo”
David Abir “Lesson 1 Movement A (Study1) excerpt”
Arundhati Roy “The World in Other Terms”
Vijay Iyer “Postlude Prayer” mixed with Susie Ibarra “Solar Drums”
Ghost In The Shell excerpt
Listen to the Podcast here on mix-tapes.de soon or herehere NOW (click ascolta)
King Midas Sound: Surround Me
Distance: Traffic
M.R.K.1: Grit
DJ Matoa: Split
The Antiserum: Top Shottas
Matty G: Bitter Love
Misk: The Deep Ones
Babylon System: Loaded
Massive Music: Find My Way
The Bug: Jah War feat. Flowdan – Loefah Remix
Ale Fillman: Bomb the Selecta
Babylon System: Dancin Shoes
Resynthesize: C4 Crash
Marlow: Road Kill
Mathhead: Parasites
Ed Solo & Skool of Thought: Sludge
Ooah: Tubstomper
Playlist:
01. DJ Cam - Friends And Enemies02. Little Dragon - Turn Left03. Roddy Rod - Geeda Speaks04. Prefuse 73 - 17 seconds interlude (ft. Tobias Lilja)05. Georgia Anne Muldrow - Killa Peach06. Peven Everett - Flowers And Candy07. Bilal Salaam - Overthought08. Roddy Rod - Take N Stride09. All Natural And Lone Catalyst - The Renaissance (instrumental)10. The Shape Of Broad Minds - It Lives On ft. Count Bass D11. Brotherly - One Sweet Life12. Hudson Mohawke - Apple Cores13. Kaman Leung - As Hope Fades14. Jay Dee - Busta (Much More Re-Edit)15. Moka Only - Hey Now16. Srong Arm Steady - One Step (Produced by Baqtoven - instrumental)17. Wio-K - We Nah Easy (Instrumental)18. Sa-Ra - A Sonf 4 Jay19. Dabrye ft. Jay Dee And Phat Kat - Game Over (Flying Lotus Remix)20. W. Ellington Felton - Roll Out Young (ft. Auragin)21. Sotu The Traveller - Travels To Mars22. Frank N Dank - Ruff Rugged & Raw (instrumental)23. Jneiro Jarel - Nasa24. Moka Only - Gettin Over25. The Paranorml - Stylus One (Freestyle Bonus)26. Hanif Jamiyl - Electric Boogie (Instrumental)27. Flying Lotus - Message Situation28. Roddy Rod - Kivin Conditional (ft. Eric Krasno of Soulive)29. Moka Only - Its Done Pt. 230. Oh No - Mad Piano31. Shape Of Broad Minds - Love Continous (ft. Capital Peoples)32. Kettel - And Unrequited As Well33. Black Pocket - Cyborg34. Black Pocket - Look Over Honey35. Modaji - 3 Wheel Hooky Instrumental36. DJ Mayonnaise - The End Of The Beginning37. Aril Brikha - Anna's Theme38. Cinematic Travels - Spaceship39. Little Dragon - Forever40. Black Jazz Consortium - Seeing The Way Through41. Flying Lotus - Dance Floor Stalker42. The Shape Of Broad Minds - They Don't Know (ft. Stacy Epps)43. Koushik - Too Much Tenderness44. 1000names - Play45. Prefuse 73 - Spaced + Dissonant46. The Shape Of Broad Minds - It Aint Dead!
check out more mixtapes
This mix follows from the first Cuts of Culture compilation which was released in 2005. Once more the idea was simple – to put together and showcase a selection of who we rate as the best and most interesting artists today working with turntables. As is always the case we weren’t able to get everyone we wished, but after 6 months of hard work in early 2006 2tall was able to put together this mix showcasing some of our favourite established and upcoming artists.
Building on the first release, this time we also wanted to showcase more worldwide talent and so we have not only established names from the US and European countries, but also upcoming talents from Poland, Japan, South Africa, Hungary and Germany. In addition we also wanted to put more focus on the production work which these artists do, after all the turntable is only a means to an end, another production tool. Something we’ve done by featuring collaborative tracks between tablists and producers including the likes of Bayaka (Japan), Exile (US), Thrash (UK), Evil Ed (UK) and Bichi (Denmark).
Exclusive tracks come from the likes of D-Styles, Excess, Tayone and Bungalow Zen, ie.merg_, Netik and Dq alongside tracks which are available in all good shops, and which we urge you to check out if you like what you hear.
Rounding off this showcase of musical talent is another posse cut masterminded by 2tall – following from his first posse cut on the previous volume, this time his ‘Sharpshooters Convention’ features renowned and not so known cutters including Enfoe, Taim, Unkut, Square One, Rafik, Captain Cavern and Netik.
As we’ve said before the aim with Cuts of Culture has always been simple and we hope that once more we’ve managed to achieve it. Show that there is so much more to this scratching thing than what people might first think and provide a platform for people to showcase their work to the public at large. The mix, and compilation, is now just one year old, having been originally planned for a late 06 release and while it’s taken some time to get it out we reckon it’s still sounding fresh.
To accompany this download we’ve made available the original liner notes and tracklist in pdf format as well as a hi res version of the cover, which you can download and print should you want to (see links below).
For more on 2tall and all the artists and releases check the liner notes which include links and all release info (links are clickable directly from the pdf file).
Cuts of Culture 2 mix by DJ 2tall
2tall – Intro
Eprom aka Base Bizzard – Action Break
Netik – Synthesiz
Dq – Strike Part 1
DJ Baku – Vandalism
Real Tablist – 6 DJs + 1
DJ Majestik feat. Rizkay – Harmonia
K-Delight feat. DJ-JS1, J-Red, Woody, Profound & Ironcyde, Universon, Krash Slaughta, Eddie Scratch, Evil Ed & 2tall – Scratch Club
DJ Exile & DJ Day – A Day In Exile
DJ Happee feat. Dinoh – Get My Point
Lamont – Senses Overloaded
A.D.S – Cold Mornings
ie.MERG – Midnight, NYC, July, 90 degrees
Taim & Faltmeister – Rendez-Vous
Excess – Ask And I Shall See
Noisy Stylus – Kindness
Manipulate & Thrash – Strontium Sleazewave
Bayaka feat. D-Styles – Edomachen
Phonomorphia – Planète Cerveau 44-3
Bungalow Zen – Frequency
Bichi – Clouds Are Parcelled Out Across My Vision
2tall – Sharpshooters Convention ft. Enfoe, Taim, Unkut, Square One, Rafik, Captain Cavern and Netik
The file is 154mb, .mp3 format, 320kbps.
Direct download link (right click and save as)
Cuts of Culture 2 Liner Notes and Artwork – pdf format
Cuts of Culture 2 hi res cover art work – jpg format
So that’s it for Cuts of Culture 2 – the last statement from ourselves, but far from the last you’ll hear of us. We’ll be back next week with one last round of secret downloads for you and after that you can look forward to a very special Japan show as well as a return to our usual podcast format. Next show should hit late september and the Japan special will follow in early October
As promised, here is the show myself and Wrongtom recorded late last month, which was due to be aired this Saturday as the first show back on Resonance’s FM airwaves. Sadly though delays have meant we won’t now be back on FM airtime until Friday 21st (at the new 4pm time!) so we are going to podcast this show for your delectation instead…
This show followed the usual format of the Trick/Tom monthlies, with each of us selecting 2 old and 2 new tracks to air and discuss. Tracks aired this time included Son Seals, Paul White, King Curtis, The Telescopes, Cactus… and the theme tune from legendary Ronnie Corbett sitcom “Sorry!”. No, seriously.
When we last had Wrongtom in as a guest selector, the response was amazing. We got loads of people saying how much they enjoyed it, and the podcast download became one of our most popular to date. Thing is, we enjoyed doing the show too, and hence we resolved that Tom should come back and do it all again. This time though, we resolved to do two versions: a 60min. long one for FM broadcast, and a longer “Director’s Cut” version for podcasting, which finally weighed in at 2½ hours.
So, here is that longer version for your delectation, in which Tom selects anything from Arthur Lewis to Yello, Gary Bartz to Simple Minds. Yes, you read that correctly – Simple Minds. Just trust us on this one!
On a technical note, we must apologise for some strangeness on Trick’s mic throughout the show which seems to have made him sound like he’s inside a box. We were monitoring the mics at the time, but somehow when committed to disk the mic decided to play up. So, sorry about that – gremlins abound it would seem!
If you’re not a subscriber to the podcast, click here to download (141Mb) and then subscribe to our show (tip: if you’re an iTunes user, just step over to http://itunes.resonancefm.com to launch our special area in the iTunes Podcast Directory)
Mr Trick presents: Dang In Dub 2: The Curse of the Black Ark
With summer finally showing its face around here (London, UK) I thought it was high time to bring a fine dub selection for your ears to enjoy. So, following on from my Dang In Dub mix that secured some 10,000+ downloads over the last 12 months, I bring you the sequel: The Curse of the Black Ark.
This is my personal selection of the finest Upsetter dubs from Lee Perry’s legendary time in his Black Ark studio. As a mix, this one is straight-up: 100% live off my 45s (replete with skips, crackles and more!), armed only with a reverb unit and a space echo to aid blends in true dancehall style. These tracks speak for themselves: heavy heavy dubs that can be enjoyed on your walkman, on the stereo or preferably loud as hell in your backyard via some homespun yard system comprising guitar amps, 12″ bass cones and god knows what else.
But enough talk – enjoy the music and spread the word!
Inspiration from this mix came from a bunch of places, but mainly from a series of mixes I’ve been listening to regularly for the last 8 months or so. These are the Blogariddim mix series, Grievious Angel’s Dubstep Sufferah series, Mr Trick’s Dang in Dub mixes and DJ Pain’s film based series. While taking inspiration from all these, I’ve tried to still keep my own mix original and different to them, but they have all influenced me on some level or other. I can’t recommend all of these enough if you like serious mixes.
As for the mix itself, as I said it follows on from last year’s ‘Packing Shit Up’ mix (which is still available here). Various styles mashed over 2h25, covering electronica, hip hop, dub, dubstep, grime and some other things thrown in for good measure. There’s a few exclusives in there as well, from Kode 9, Lone Wolf, Vex’d, 2tall, Various Productions, Forensics and ENA – big ups to them all for the hook ups. In addition I’ve also added a lot of vocal samples from various sources: a Noam Chomsky lecture from 96, Bill Hicks and Richard Pryor live, Greg Palast, Madlib interview and Sun Ra interview. This time I also wanted to get cuts on there, which I didn’t do last time, so I ropped in some help from 2tall and DJ And who came correct with some amazing cuts. Different styles, be sure to check them when you get a minute, as well as all the artists featured on there. If you like what you hear I recommend them all.
Let’s face it, the checkpoints are all there: influenced by DJ Pain (and yes, my Dang In Dub mix, I was humbled to read), featuring the likes of 2tall and And (he of the amazing 45 Selection mix that scored massive downloads on here some time back)… its got “gonna be liked by readers of this blog” stamped all over it.
Here then, is part 1 of the mix – all 1hr 12mins of it. Part 2 will be podcast/linked for download in coming days. BTW – its worth noting that this mix comes to you in full, technicolour 320kbps MP3. Boom!
Tracklist:
DJ Vadim – Talk To Me vs Noam Chomsky intro (Kper Tokyo Refix)
O.N.O – Drumsutra – Tha Blue Herb Recordings
Dabrye – Smoking The Edge – Ghostly International
+ Telefon Tel Aviv – Bonus Beats (Prefuse 73 remix) – Hefty
+ 2tall ‘Prefuse Alto conform’ cuts
Dabrye ft. JDilla + Phat Kat – Game Over – Ghostly International
DJ Cam ft. Cameo – Love Junkee (J Dilla Remix) – Inflammable
Aesop Rock – The Greatest Pacman Victory in History (instr.) – Def Jux
Foreign Beggars – Black Hole Prophecies – Dented Records
BleuBird – Rocket Mouth (DJ Baku remix) – Endemik
D-Styles – Millions of Locuts Swarming – Bully Records
Romanowski – Flat Picker – Future Primitive
Birdy Nam Nam – Too Much Skunk Tonight – Uwe
TTC – J’ai Le Son – Big Dada
dDamage ft. SIN – S.I.N – Tsunami Addiction
Amon Tobin – Esther’s – Ninja Tune
Modeselektor ft. Paul St. Hilaire – Fake Emotion (Dabrye Remix) – Bpitch Control
Wax – Sleng Proto Riddim – unreleased
Razor X Productions ft. Cutty Ranks – Boom Boom Claat – Rephlex
Milanese vs Virus Syndicate – Dead Man Walking – Planet Mu
Telefon Tel Aviv – I lied – Hefty
Kode 9 – Victims – Hyperdub
The Bug ft. Flowdan – Jah War – Ninja Tune
Vex’d – Gunman – Planet Mu
+ Rumi (Prod. By skyfish) – Heso-Cha – Pop Group
+ Sileni – Twitchy Droid Leg (Vex’d Remix) – Offshore Recs
+ Loefah – Mud – DMZ
+ 2tall ‘Filth’ Cuts
Lone Wolf – Uproot – Bloodied Blade
Mala – Changes – Deep Medi Musik
Wiley – Bow E3 – Big Dada
Plastician ft. Fresh, Shizzle, Napper – Cha Vocal – Planet Mu
Vex’d – Fire (Dj Blood One remix) – unreleased
+ The Perceptionists – Let’s Move (acc.) – Def Jux
Virus Syndicate ft. Fallacy, ears, Trim, Jammer – Major List Mcs (Jammer Remix) – Planet Mu
+ Shackleton – I want To Eat you – Mordant Music
Machine Drum – Grime – The Inside
+ 2tall ‘Machine Funk’ cuts
Boxcutter – Chiral – Planet Mu
+ Bass Clef – Bass and Drum Makes My Heart sing – Blank Tapes
+ 2tall ‘Boxcutter Bounce’ cuts
Plaid – Bar Kimura (Vex’d remix) – Sony Music
Vex’d – Third Choice – Planet Mu
+ Appleblim – Gold and Silver – Skull Disco
+ Dj And ‘scratchee’ cuts
Goth Trad – Swamp – Skud
+ Various Productions – Fortune – Various
+ Massive Music – Find my Way (kode 9 remix) – Hyperdub
+ The Perveralist – The Grind – Punch Drunk
+ The Bug ft. Flowdan + Killa P – Skeng (Kode 9 remix) – Hyperdub
+ Blackdown – Lata – Keysound recs
Forensics – Prophecy – unreleased
+ ENA – Country Dub – IAI Recs
Burial – Versus – Planet Mu
YT – England Story – Sativa Records
2tall ft. Kashmere – The Most High – THTC exclusive
Romanowski – Romjack Steady – Future Primitive
Busdriver – Casting Agents and Cowgirls – Epitath
Third Sight – Anti Happy – Disgruntled
Exile + DJ Day – A Day In Exile – Ill Boogie Recs
Various Productions – Emma’s Mix – Various
2nd Class Citizen – Wishing Well – Equinox
DJ And – Sad Song vs Noam Chomsky outro
Sven Swift is the maker of the label 12rec. His mix is like a colourful salad bowl filled with fresh music pieces of different styles. He’s starting with some nice uptempo vocal songs, but later he’s bringing it down to really relaxed chillout tracks.
DJ set download
HERE:
Playlist:
01 – Orange Crush – Across The Breeze Archaic Horizon 002 (www.archaichorizon.com)
02 – Stig Inge – Influences Customized Music 027 (www.custommusicrecords.com)
03 – Bobby Baby – Bobby (Rupert’s HighVoltage Disco Remix) Corpid Extra 007 (www.corpid-label.de)
04 – Super Multifaros – We Are Giants Signora Franca 037 (www.signorafranca.com) 05 – El Senor Ciuf Ciuf – I Think I Saw A Dead Person Walking Yesterday 12rec 029 (www.12rec.net)
06 – AMbandet – Hours Disappear When You Are Dancing Here Alces2 007 (www.alces2.info.se)
07 – Bubblyfish – Peripheral Retinascan 061 (www.retinascan.de)
08 – Lukas Scholler – Milchig Trüb unreleased
09 – Ellul – Blood (Heezen w/ xn Remix) Sounds Are Active 042 (www.soundsareactive.com)
10 – Emil Klotzsch – Geteiltes Sein One 032 (www.one.dot9.ca)
11 – MB-ent – Izhevsk:Somehand ElectroSound 030 (www.electrosound.ru)
12 – My First Trumpet – D. Kitt Aerotone 009 (www.aerotone.net)
13 – Tsukimono – Black On Grey Arterija Colours Series 009 (www.arterija.org)
14 – Porcelain In The Backpack – Silent Giants unreleased
15 – Biathalon – Warm Front Expanding Electronic Diversity 022 (www.electronicdiversity.com)
16 – Herzog – Perhaps She’d Like To See Me Fall Apart Serein 010 (www.serein.co.uk)