music clip of the day

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Category: hip-hop

Tuesday, 3/22/11

Yesterday, on the way home from Bloomington, Indiana (where I’d left my son Luke), one of the things that kept me company was this guy’s latest album.*

Black Star (Mos Def, Talib Kweli), “Definition” (1998)

Vodpod videos no longer available.

*Mos Def, The Ecstatic (2009)

Monday, 3/21/11

what’s new
(an occasional series)

Some parents, going for a long drive with their kids, wrestle for control of the CD player. I cede it, happily. How else am I going to hear this stuff?

Yesterday, the last day of his spring break, my 19-year-old son Luke and I drove to Bloomington, Indiana. Here are a couple of the things he played.

This is my favorite song right now.

Mac Miller, “Best Day Ever” (bonus track), 2011

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*****

This is the big remix.

Kanye West (featuring Rhianna), “All of the Lights”
Remix with Lil Wayne, Big Sean & Drake, 2011

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Saturday, 3/5/11

replay: clips too good for just one day

The other night, after falling asleep, my older son Alex (now 22) had an unexpected visitor—this guy showed up and began to play.

Vijay Iyer Trio (VI, piano; Marcus Gilmore, drums; Stephan Crump, bass)

“Galang,” recording session (Historicity), New York (Systems Two Studios), 2009

*****

“Questions of Agency,” live, New York (The Stone), 2007

*****

Playing and Talking about Historicity, 2009

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lagniappe

Presto! Here is the great new jazz piano trio.

—Ben Ratliff,  New York Times (9/9/09)

(Originally posted 6/30/10.)

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take two (or is it one?)

Following up on Vijay Iyer’s take (6/30/10), here’s the original.

M.I.A., “Galang” (2005)

One of the things I love about M.I.A. is that she doesn’t let any of the usual stuff get in her way. Take her dancing, for instance: she’s, uh, not real good at it—at least not by the usual standards. Does that stop her? Nah.

(Originally posted 7/2/10.)


Thursday, 2/24/11

what’s new
(an occasional series)

Have you heard the Lupe & John Legend?

—my 19-year-old son Luke

Lupe Fiasco (featuring John Legend), “Never Forget You” (2010)

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Listening to music that means a lot to someone else gives you an opportunity nothing else does. You get to hear the world through their ears. This song, for instance, coming to my ears through my son Luke’s, makes me wonder: What’s it like to look back on your life, on all that’s come before, when you’re 19 years old?

More Lupe? Here. And here. And here.

More Legend? Here. And here.

Tuesday, 2/15/11

She’s going to be a big star someday.

Nneka, live

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More? Here.

Tuesday, 2/1/11

I can’t make up my mind about the Internet.

Does it make it possible, with simply a click, to travel anywhere in the world?

Or is it just a vast collection of electronic wallpaper?

Are these the right questions?

Baloji, “Tout Ceci Ne Vous Rendra Pas le Congo” (Hotel Impala), 2007

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lagniappe

radio

Having just completed two days of trumpeter Roy Eldridge’s music, WKCR-FM (broadcasting from Columbia University) begins a 24-hour Memorial Broadcast honoring composer Milton Babbitt, who passed away Saturday at the age of 94.

Friday, 1/14/11

what’s new
(an occasional series)

Here’s some stuff my older (23-year-old) son Alex, who heads back to school Sunday, shared with me the other night.

Zoo Kid (AKA Archy Marshall [16 years old, lives in London]), “Out Getting Ribs,” 2010

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*****

Destroyer, “Kaputt,” 2011

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*****

M.I.A., “Bad Girls,” 2010

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More M.I.A.? Here. And here.

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lagniappe

reading table

If humor loosens the grip of logic, and poetry does too, how come there isn’t more humor in poetry?

David Kirby, “The Search for Baby Combover,” Atlanta, 2007

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Friday, 12/31/10

Tonight, at a club on Chicago’s west side (The Empty Bottle, 1035 N. Western), New Orleans dance music reigns.

Big Freedia & The Queen Divas

“Double It” (with Galactic), live, San Francisco, 2010

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“Azz Everywhere,” live, Portland (Oregon), 2010

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TV show (Last Call with Carson Daly), 9/28/10

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(Yo, Rachael—thanks for the tip!)

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lagniappe

[I]nside New Orleans, the genius of sissy bounce is how perfectly mainstream it is; in the world beyond, the genius of sissy bounce is how incredibly alternative it is.

***

The first of Freedia’s three successive New York gigs in May began with a preshow bounce dance class, which should give you some idea of how far from home Freedia and [Freedia’s D.J. and de facto manager Rusty] Lazer were. But “every night it got better,” Freedia said. “They was all on the Internet, posting up the pictures, like ‘If you missed last night, OMG, you missed a party.’ Each night it built, and the last night” — at a traveling dusk-to-dawn festival known as Hoodstock, held on this occasion in a raw space in the Bed-Stuy neighborhood of Brooklyn — “it was just unbelievable. Five hundred people in there. Everybody was dripping wet. The walls was dripping wet.”

Any doubt that that space, like any space in which Freedia performs, quickly belonged to the women in the crowd may be dispelled by a story Lazer laughingly told about a blog post he’d seen the day after their Hoodstock set. It consisted of two photos taken at the show, and their captions: in the first, a group of women were horizontally p-popping in what amounted to a flesh pile. “To the men,” the caption beneath it read, “we don’t need you.” The second photo depicted a woman at the same show sitting on the floor while a man prone in front of her performed a sexual act that might traditionally be described as submissive. “But we like having you around,” the caption beneath that one read.

What strikes Lazer most about the dynamic at these shows, though, is not how unexpected it is but how familiar. Long before he started D.J.-ing, he was a drummer in a series of rock bands; he is old enough to have come of age in the latter days of punk. And when he started playing shows with Freedia almost two years ago — when he started witnessing, over and over again, a same-sex group taking over the dance floor in order to perform an ecstatic act of physical aggression that is both exceptionally demanding and socially unacceptable in other contexts, at the behest of music that’s ritualized and played at seemingly impossible tempos — it all began to remind him of something.

“It’s as if punk had been reinvented for women,” he said, smiling. “I remember going to punk shows when I was 13, slam-dancing, stage-diving. It was a kind of reckless abandon, something you really couldn’t stop yourself from doing. If the girls weren’t just outright afraid of being in there, there was somebody literally shoving them out of the way. Now it’s exactly what was happening when I was young, but in reverse: the girls literally push the dudes right out of the middle. It’s just pure empowerment, physical aggression that’s not spiteful or vicious. I think it’s no accident that the slang term for a gay kid in New Orleans is ‘punk.’ It’s pretty rewarding.”

—Jonathan Dee, “Sissy Bounce, New Orleans’s Gender-Bending Rap,” New York Times Magazine, 7/22/10

*****

reading table

even the stone-hard camphor tree
devoured
by insects

—Kobayashi Issa, 1822 (trans. David G. Lanoue)

*****

radio: last call

Ten straight days of Bach, on WKCR-FM, conclude tonight at midnight.

Wednesday, 12/29/10

The other night, driving home from a family gathering with my (19-year-old) son Luke (we left early to accommodate his hectic social calendar), this jumped out of the radio.

Willow Smith, “Whip My Hair,” 2010

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lagniappe

musical thoughts

A few years ago Bill Gates was boasting that we’ll soon have sensors which will turn on the music that we like . . . when we walk into a room. How boring! The hell with our preexisting likes . . . .

Denis Dutton (February 9, 1944-December 28, 2010), founder and editor of Arts & Letters Daily (long my home page)

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Denis Dutton, The Colbert Report (1/28/09)

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*****

radio

Worn out by the holidays? I know of no better tonic for post-Christmas, pre-New Year’s malaise than WKCR-FM’s Bach Festival, which runs until midnight Friday.

Wednesday, 12/15/10

A Brief History of American Popular Music Since World War II

1950
chicks & cars

1960
chicks & cars

1970
chicks & cars

1980
chicks & cars

1990
chicks & cars

2000
chicks & cars

2010
chicks & cars

Big Boi, “Shutterbugg,” 2010

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