Wednesday, January 31, 2007

A Sampling of Bob


Bob James. Great Jazz Musician. Great Composer. One of the most sampled artists in hip-hop history. Hopefully we're telling you something you already know, but interestingly enough we found this lil list. Click Here to Check out Bob Jame's Official list of sampled songs

Friday, January 26, 2007

DJ Adlib (Cologne, Germany)


We heard about DJ Adlib through a compilation from Melting Pot Records and found him via the internet for an exclusive written up interview. Not only is the guy a dope producer, but he's already cut tracks with MED (Stones Throw Records) and an accomplished turntablist.Check him out here at his myspace and read the interview for more.






Where are you originally from?

Cologne/Germany.

What current projects do you have out??

just released a 12"inch on turntable jazz/unique records called spread the message with med plus a ep on alphabet zoo called adlibertine.

What is your current favorite piece of production you recommend people check out?
besides the updated dilla ruffdraft ep i´d go for some giorgia anne muldrow, taraach, black milk or flying lotus.

Which did you do first DJ or production? and which do you prefer?

started out as a scratch/battle/team-dj which led me to do beats and productions for break records. from there on i started to do beats for fun and myself.
i prefer the beats nowadays though i still spin a lot and still have fun with it

What is your production setup?

first "production"-equipment piece i ever bought was the Boss SP-202 Dr. Sample...quickly had to get a mpc2000 after that, which i still use combined with cubase (mainly for all the sequencing now) and logic.


Tell us about the Noisy Stylus Turntablist Band:

4 man dj crew consisting of me, dj tobeyer, dj dynamike & dj tre styles, strarted out 97, won the german team dmc championships 3 times + the itf european and vice world championchips.

Tell us about the Ecler DJ-Academy?

its a dj school here in cologne where im a lecturer. we have courses for all kinda of djs, beginners, advanced, teams aswell as mixing and overall djing classes.



What's your connection with DJ Rafik?

were good friends, share the same taste for beats & music, hes one of my favourite djs and we spin togehther. he got some serious beats aswell!!

How did you originally hook up with MED?

he came over for the spread the message tour we did throughout europe with him, rafik, dr,ben & kut-l.


Where did you learn to dig?

i wouldnt even consider myself a digger since im not that big of a collector. if i did learn to find the type of sound im looking for i guess its the record shop i work at (grooveattack) and good friends and people around me.


What is it like digging for records in Germany (ie; are there many stores, lots of people doing it?)

couple of stores, couple of faries, not too crazy though. more of a fleamarket thing i guess.


Tell us your thoughts on the European hip-hop scene and the German hip-hop scene. (ie; is it still alive and growing?)

german hiphop scence kinda dried out a couple of years ago and got media-wise ressurected by a lot of berlin-style "gangsta"-rap stuff.
besides that there still good groups doing there own thing.
there a good beatmakers throughout whole europe and i think the french been kinda dominating the dj thing lately



Who else is making noise out there (or reccomend people look into)?


dem boogie, danny breaks, dj rafik, mark pritchard, steve spacek, ill dubio, skymark, harry swinger, hubert davis, frank west.

Whats in store for the future of DJ Adlib?

just startet to work on my follow up ep for aplhabet zoo.
shure gonna do some more stuff with turntable jazz.
..guess it just comes down to spinning and making beats...

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Download DENT's Blunt Sessions Mixtape FREE

DENT and Joe Thunder teamed up for another Colorado mixtape. Check out the product and hit them up if you like it.

Download the New Mixtape










Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Oh you mad cuz I'm stylin' on you...

Enjoy another rap battle gone wrong...



Peace!

Miss Rachel

Sunday, January 21, 2007

A.V.I.U.S.



Damn. Talk about Colorado Hip-Hop coming up. we'd like to introduce you to Colorado's NEXT emcee, A.V.I.U.S. Backed up with production by the incredibly talented producer Es-Nine (who is by far one of the best producers out in our mountain state), A.V.I.U.S.' debut album is one of the most exciting albums to come out of Colorado. People always talk about how dope they are, how they deserve this or that, or how much work they put in, but all one needs to do is take a listen and hear the talent and quality in this production. I'm talking serious quality production (from the beats, vocal recordings, to the scratches, album sequencing, etc). This ladies and gentleman is how you put out a solid hip-hop album. Look out for A.V.I.U.S.' new album "Patience" on House of Waxx Recordings and
check him out at his myspace page here

Thursday, January 18, 2007

The Future of the (mixtape) DJ

If you don't know by now DJ Drama (a popular Southern Mixtape DJ) had his offices raided by Atlanta Police and was arrested. The following is a post made by prominent Hip-Hop scholar Davey D.

----------------- Bulletin Message -----------------
From: Davey D
Date: Jan 18, 2007 1:28 PM


As stated earlier, many are starting to suspect that there are deeper implications to the RIAA Raid. DJ Drama's sister Aishah Shahidah Simmons who did the incredible documentary 'NO' lays out some compelling thoughts in the essay 'Thirty Strong And A Gun To His Head…Pay Attention?' following my remarks that all of us need to think about.

As I noted in my first reports on this incident- The raid on the offices of DJ Drama and the Aphilliates WAS NOT about mixtapes, this is about inserting power. Please bear in mind that over the past year, many deejays from all around the country have been quietly organizing and weighing their options while assessing their collective power. For example, last month several hundred deejays met at a highly publicized West Coast Summit. Already we have TJDJs, The pioneering DJs who are down with Tools of War, The Core DJs, The Heavy Hitters,The Big Dawgs, The Beat Junkies Nasty Nesand the RappattackDJs and The Bum Squad DJS all running profitable businesses and working in a collective fashion. Some of these DJ Collectives have been behind the scenes organizing to demand Health Care and other provisions from the industry. When folks got together in LA, it was to start demanding more work opportunities. In all these DJ collectives, they have been asserting that they 'run the industry' because the deejay has the ability to make or break records.

In case many of you have not noticed, the DJ is what started off and put Hip Hop culture in motion. It was DJ Kool Herc, DJ Afrika Bambaataa, DJ Grand Wizard Theodore, DJ Grandmaster Flowers, Pete DJ Jones, DJ Hollywood, DJ Lovebug Starski and DJ Grandmaster Flash who people went to see back in the early days of Hip Hop. When the record industry got involved with Hip Hop, the DJ was cut out. Ever since then the DJ has morphed into a producer and behind the scenes man.

In recent years the DJ has returned to being a front and center entity. In 2007 the DJ has become more popular then many of the artists, radio stations and labels that put out material. What makes the deejay collectives so potentially powerful is the fact that their members all have direct income sources which allows them to make moves. The most prevalent being the mixtapes. As these deejay collectives began to further organize, it was only a matter of time before you could see people moving in a direction where they could act totally independent of the Record industry. The fact that record labels CAN NOT break music without mixtape deejays is a problem for some in power. The fact that A list artists are dealing directly with popular mixtape deejays is a problem for those in power. With the advent of new technology, the DJ in 2007 has all but perched to move to higher levels and seriously change the game. This was definitely a dream for the late Justo Faison who started organizing mixtape DJs

If you follow the industry closely you can catch glimpse of this potential power being excercised. It may show up in the form of Latin Prince who heads up the Bum Squad DJs being hired as amain marketing VP for Universal Records. It may be people like DJ Skee (Game's DJ) putting together sold out car shows and other events that draw thousands. This is without the major record labels. You can see people like Jazzy Jeff working quietly behind the scenes to develop new radio formats or people like DJ Revolution working with new companies like M-Audio to develop new products for DJs. In the case of DJ Drama, many artists from the South would not have made it without his mixtapes being the the crucial introduction to a public that has become increasingly fickle and dissatisfied with commercial radio. The list goes on and on.

From the K-Slays to the Whoo Kids to the DJ Clues to the DJ Warriors and DJ Vlads we seen DJs all over the country seriously step their game up and get involved with everything from setting up their own Internet Radio stations on down to sparking off their own TV shows. Many of the popular regional music movements like Hyphy, Snap, or Chopped and Screwed would not have surfaced had it not been for the deejays. And this is just the mixtape DJs. We haven't even begun to talk about the stuff jumping off with DJs who call themselves turntablists like your DJ Q-Berts. In fact let me rephrase that-Many of the DJs were forced to be independent of the industry because they weren't getting paid and definitely weren't getting benefits.

At the end of the day all this potential power that can be a problem if you can't control them, buy them off or keep them happy with happy with crumbs. We caught a glimpse of this potential power of these deejay collectives when Young Buck got into a altercation in Atlanta with a popular club DJ. A conference call had to be set up and Young Buck had to do damage control as deejays from around the country stepped up and were ready to start boycotting Young Buck and G-Unit. We saw DJ collectives step up and intervene when Benzino got into beef with Funkmaster Flex and the editor of Ozone Magazine Julie Beverly.

Remember the Recording Industry made moves to eliminate the DJ and focus on the rapper. The DJ made a return for the better. The fact that so many of these deejays were forced to step up their 'poli' and 'econ' games is the fault of the industry that would do things like hire popular popular deejays to do mixes on commercial radio stations at 25-50 bucks a mix with no benefits. And that was considered good pay. Meanwhile these deejays who garnered street cred and large followings, would help these stations move up in the ratings, but not have enough to eat themselves. Thus they stepped their game up and discovered they could do things on their own. DJ Drama moving 50 thousand mixtapes is major. This not about mixtapes-its about power and a fading industry doing everything it can to create the illusion they are in control. The key word here is illusion. Remember the RIAA works for the major labels. If some of these head label honchos aren't stepping up and telling the RIAA to fall back and ease up and let DJ Drama and DJ Canon go free and return their equipment, then like that great urban philosopher Flava Flav would say-You know what time it is. -It's gonna be time for the industry to step up their game even more and totally change the game.

Written by
Davey D

Thirty Strong And A Gun To His Head…Pay Attention?
By Aishah Shahidah Simmons

There have been and probably will be numerous articles on the January 16, 2007 RIAA raid of the Aphilliates Music Group studio and arrest of my brother Tyree (DJ Drama) Simmons and DJ Don Cannon. There have been and will be numerous articles on what the implications of this raid will not only have on the Aphilliates Music Group but on the entire mixtape business/game.

In the midst of those ongoing discussions, let's not forget the reality that racism and sexism are alive and well in Ameri-KKK-a.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007 marked the first day of my supporting a three day fast that Black Women in Durham, North Carolina organized to expel and heal from the ongoing collective trauma that many of us who are victim/survivors of rape and other forms of sexual assault have been experiencing ever since members of the predominantly White Duke LaCrosse team were publicly accused of raping a Black woman in Spring of 2006. Little did I know, that while I supported my Spirit Sister-Survivors in Durham, North Carolina, that another assault against a member of my Blood family was about to happen.

No one will ever be able to explain to me why the hell a SWAT Team of at least 30 strong went charging into the Aphilliates Music Group studio as if they were doing a major drug or an illegal arms bust? Why did they need to put my brother Tyree (DJ Drama) and his cohorts face down on the ground with guns to their heads? Did the agents need to ransack the studio, confiscate cd's featuring artist sanctioned original music not bootlegs, disc drives, computers, cars, ultimately stripping the studio of everything with the exception of furniture

Based on the January 16, 2007 Fox Atlanta News edition
http://www.myfoxatlanta.com/myfox/pages/Home/Detail?contentId=2083928&version=1&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=VSTY&pageId=1.1.1, when one of the agents said "Usually, we find other crimes during these types of busts." Clearly the agents expected ( possibly wanted) to find drugs and/or illegal arms. K-9 dogs whose noses are trained to sniff and find drugs, were ultimately board with nothing to do.

So the question for me and the rest of the Portnoy-Simmons-Thwaites family is was a SWAT team needed? Was this solely about mixtapes? Would this have happened if this wasn't a Black run company? One of the claims is that Tyree (DJ Drama) was racketeering. Well, this alleged racketeer is a legitimate businessman who played and continues to play a pivotal role in the careers of numerous known and unknown hiphop artists, which by direct extension helps the recording industry immensely. Tyree ( DJ Drama) is also a partner, a father, a brother, and a son.

When I think about all of the scandals in corporate Ameri-KKK-a (Enron and WorldCom to name a minute few)…I don't ever recall hearing about any SWAT enforced raids. I don't recall any images of Ken Lay or other top executives of corporations being forced to lay face down on the ground surrounded by SWAT agents with guns to their heads and K-9 dogs sniffing them. For a detailed expose on the evils that corporations all around the world do and get away with legally and illegally, check out the powerfully gripping documentaries "Enron: The Smartest Guys In the Room," and "The Corporation."

As Tyree's (DJ Drama's) sister and as a radical Black feminist lesbian social activist, I am beyond outraged at how the RIAA handled/orchestrated the raid. If he or anyone in the Aphilliates camp didn't follow the directions of the agents, asked the 'wrong' questions,'or made the 'wrong' move during the raid, he and/or his cohorts could've been murdered in a twinkling of an eye. And for what? Selling mixtapes, which feature artist sanctioned original music?

The RIAA should be held accountable for their actions. They need to know that their violent response to addressing their accusations of racketeering was unacceptable.

There was (and is) no covert operation going on with the business of the Aphilliates; and yet the Aphilliates were treated as if they were public enemy number one.

I am explicitly clear that the music entertainment power structure has a very serious problem with people of Color making profits, on their terms, off a multi-billon dollar international industry hiphop that they created.

I am also clear that since the founding of Ameri-KKK-a, this type of state sanctioned racist and sexist treatment towards men and women of Color happens every single minute of every single day. Unfounded police raids are nothing new to countless communities of Color across this country.

So while we debate and discuss the legalities of mixtapes and the long term impact of what the January 16, 2007 raid of the Aphiliates studio will mean, we must not ever forget that innocent people were terrorized and incarcerated in the name of protecting the Recording Industry Association of America.


Aishah Shahidah Simmons is a Black feminist lesbian documentary filmmaker and social activist who recently completed the award-winning documentary NO!, which unveils the reality of rape, other forms of sexual violence, and healing in African-American communities.

www.NOtheRapeDocumentary.org
www.myspace.com/afrolez
--
NO! is an award-winning feature length documentary, which unveils the realities of rape, other forms of sexual violence, and healing in African-American communitites.

View the NO! Trailer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRGESU0CuvI

Read "Color of Violence: The INCITE! Anthology"
http://www.incite-national.org/resources/covanthology.html

AfroLez Productions, LLC
PO Box 58085
Philadelphia, PA 19102-8085
215.701.6150
www.myspace.com/afrolez
www.NOtheRapeDocumentary.org
www.NEWSREEL.org

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Pharoahe Monch - "Gun Draws"

We're plenty hyped for Pharaohe's new album. Here's the latest







Lazyeyez

Sunday, January 14, 2007

D.O. the Fabulous Drifter - "Wake Up"

D.O. the Fabulous Drifter and Dow Jones are holding it down for the Mile High City. This is the video their new song "Wake Up". Check them out at www.fivepointsplan.com

A Diamond in the Rough.

Happy 2007, ya'll!

I'd like to give some love to all of our readers and listeners, welcome to our new blog!

Last year, we were blessed with many solid albums, and there's been a few have earned their permanent spots in my rotation. I hope you have enjoyed hip hop as much as I have in the past year. Check out one of my favs & let me know what you think!

Amongst nominees, The Roots and Ghostface, Pack FM rocked the undergroundhiphop.com 'Best of 2006' poll to the fullest. You may have caught him here in Colorado as he performed at the Akomplice Clothing's Season 05 preview, with openings in Denver, Ft. Collins, and Aspen. Having seen all of your favorite rappers perform, I can say that I've never seen a show like his, and his stage prescene alone captivated the whole crowd.

His debut album, Wutduzfmstand4? on QN5 Music, offers guest spots from Extended Fam, Icon the Mic King, and more. You can check out QN5, who hosts other artists such as Tonefeff, The Cunninlynguists, Mecca, Kynfolk, Session, and Mr. SOS here.

Check Pack FM out @ myspace.com/packfm. You can also check our archived shows for an exclusive interview with Pack FM and the Cunninlynguists on our homepage.



Like what you hear? Purchase his album @ undergroundhiphop.com

In other news, Colorado fam, be sure to check out my birthday extravanga pt. 2 on February 3rd @ The Shelter.... All of you who showed up last year know what to expect...

More details to come!

Much love,
Miss Rachel

We Found It, So you don't have to.

For the Boot Camp Click Fans





Thursday, January 11, 2007

Out Tha Box TV: Out Tha Box TV is Colorado's Newest online TV show.

Showcasing national and local acts set in the square state of Colorado (hence the Box) Out Tha Box has several episodes including: This year's 2006 Colorado DMC DJ Battle, Interview with N.O.R.E., and an interview with fresstyle legend Supernat. Click here to view the site

DJ Low Key presents Mixing In Action : DJ Low Key has been hustling on his new Mixtape "Mixing in Action Vol. 2" featuring exclusives from Tanya Morgan, Mr Man (Bush Babees), Main Flow, Free Speech, Che Grand, and more. Click here to view the site

Basementalism in DIRT Newspaper

Basementalism featured in DIRT Magazine (Boulder, CO) This week's DIRT Magazine (a free magazine in Boulder), and Friday's Daily Camera Newspaper featured great articles on your favorite radio show, making both the cover and feature story for DIRT and the Daily Camera's Friday Magazine. We're on the move so keep up! Shouts out to Aimee Heckel for the great writing.

Click Here for the online DIRT Article

Click Here for the Daily Camera Article

The LOST XMAS Episode

Missed Episode : Man, so every year we all get together at Basementalism with Staff, Friends, Locals, and even a few bums to have a christmas party. What we do is we do a pre-recorded show LIVE from the party and air it. This year with so much snow in Colorado, The Holidays, and server problems we weren't able to put up the show.....until now. By far some of the best sets all year, tune in Now. Click here to listen to the show or right-click save target as to download