So, I’ve long been a fan of Fulgeance, which led me to Souleance – his side projcet with DJ Soulist. They have a new one out this week, called, simply, ‘Le Beat Tape.’
It’s funky music made by and for DJs. Something to go with their other old vinyl music. Its soulful, funky, and just fun sample-heavy material. So, since going green is the name of the game these days, go download these recycled-funk jams and crunk the funk out with Souleance and their unique and original ReFUNKontexualization of old vinyl music. Yea, kind of a stupid word. Hmm… Ah well.
I enjoy this release, in all its crunchy, organny, synthy vintage splendor. Fun and random vocal samples and big retro breakbeats that would give Fatboy Slim an erection, ‘Le Beat Tape’will make you want to dance like it was 1999, when people were trying to dance like it was 1979.
The whole record is 20 tracks long, but here are a few of them, for a preview – (and also, click HERE for an MP3!)
So, I’ll get to the mixes in a second—but first, here’s the scippety-scoop: I was getting ready to do a ‘Top Ten Juke Songs,’ and then decided, ‘OK, how about a top ten for the LAST SIX MONTHS…,’ and then, in the process of discovering some new juke, I was tipped off by Keri Bellybelle about DJ Spinn’s new release, ‘TEKLIFE Vol. 2,’ which I proceeded to listen to – and it is REALLY good! I recommend checking this one out! Its got some dope material from DJ Spinn, DJ Rashad, & DJ Manny.
….and what good would this fucking site be if I only told you about it but didn’t provide you with a LINK!!!! <–!!!!
Here’s one of the trax, She Turnt Up, from the album:
OK, so what else is there from DJ Spinn, beyond this awesome new release? Well, seeing as he is a DJ, he has lots of mixes to listen to, and here are a few of them from the last couple of years..
RASHAD SPINN WE TRIPPY MANE MIXTAPE pt1
The wire mix snip 12 Dj Spinn part 2
DJ Weekly Podcast 22: DJ Spinn
Math + Science: DJ Spinn Guest DJ Set & Interview
That last one is pretty interesting, too; a long mix + a great interview with DJ Spinn. Very fun! Hope you enjoy these great mixes from one of Chicago’s dopest juke DJs!
I’ll be posting a lot more juke in the next few weeks, definitely. But for now, have fun with these DJ Spinn trax!! They should keep ya goin for a bit!
If you’re a juke producer, or want to put some juke flavor into your tunes, consider the juke samples pack by StrangeFlow, on the graphic link just below.. One hundred and fifty beats, and lots of greats melodies and other goodies, and it’s on sale for sixteen bucks! Check it out :) (there’s also a free demo pack with a few of the sounds, to give you an idea of what’s in it, as well as a demo track I made.)
Well, Yuri has been sick for awhile, but he’s *unfortunately* healthy again, and back into video production. The world HAS been waiting….
Well, Yuri came into my office, and immediately, I stopped him, saying, “Yuri, you’re not going to sneeze on me again, are you?” Yuri looked at me like I was insane, spit in my face, and handed me a reel-to-reel video of his newest production tutorial. In it, he starts a worldwide beef with thousands of producers as he claims to be the inventor of Chicago juke music (which is an… *interesting* claim…) and in this video, he shows how to make a juke tune.
I have to admit, the tune isn’t really too bad, except for his style of serenading… The backing instrumental beat is pretty good, though – because Yuri sampled (stole) it from Kid Logic. So, uh… sorry, Kid Logic, but I couldn’t stop Yuri. He is simply a menace, and terrorizes music so often its impossible for me to stop him…
ANYWAY, here’s the newest CONTROVERSIAL Yuri video…
btw..
THIS is the dope juke tune that Yuri sampled, its called Wood in the Hood, by Kid Logic, and you can find it at WorldWideJuke.com! Please do NOT confuse the dope musical stylings of Kid Logic with the.. uh.. ‘hurricane-of-douche’ stylings of Yuri. The two are oppsites.
This is a demo pack for “StrangeFlow and Simteks’ North Korean Neuro Bass Bombz From Outer Space.”
If you enjoy these FREE BASS BOMBZ – i.e. if these bass bombz are bombin’ enough for ya, please consider getting the full package..
The entire package is about 450 MB – which is, to say the least, an extraorinary value for $20 USD. The full package includes all of the samples found in THIS demo package, offered below – as well as many more samples – (except, instead of being piled together, one after another, they’re organized by folder – because there are TONS of bass bombz in the complete package, and you gotta’ keep your bass bombz organized, after all!)
To check out some of the specifications for this package, go HERE…
Below is a tune that Simteks created with the full package of “StrangeFlow and Simteks’ North Korean Neuro Bass Bombz From Outer Space.” Its a test track to guide you through the arsenal of bass bombz available, and hopefully you’ll enjoy some of the sounds you hear!
AND THEN….
If you like what you hear, feel free to check out the full package, which is available here. Like stated earlier, the full package is being offered for just $20 USD.
Well, the title of this article pretty much sums it up nicely.. Simteks drops demo tune to show off the massiveness that is the ‘StrangeFlow and Simteks Present… North Korean Neuro Bass Bombz From Outer Space,” – a sample pack filled with tons of electrified and funktastic beat, bass, and one shot drum samples!! The entire kit, including EVERYTHING in the package, weighs in at around 450 MB… which is pretty fucking hefty.. Anytime you can get close to half a gigs worth of usable audio material (much of which can be used to create music in the style of Opiuo, Tipper, or KOAN Sound) and only pay $20 USD, you pretty much have to consider it.
Here’s the incredible demo tune, below:
Below is the sample pack that Simteks used (and helped CREATE!) to make his demo that you’re likely listening to right now in that soundcloud widget above. All the samples are in WAV format, and for specific details, click the image below!
This March marks the 20th anniversary of when this funky ‘n futuristic anarchistic pop gem was first released:
Yes, this gem of a jam seems to have proven itself throughout the last couple decades, outlasting pretty much any other 90s song you can think of. It still has a freshness to it, and I think a lot of that can be understood with a twofold explanation…
For one thing, it really is singular; there wasn’t anything else out there quite like it, with its forward-thinking fuckery and random audio samples mixed with a chorus line about sucking at life, along with an unprecedented flow in rap lyricism at the time (the ambiguously sarcastic/ironic/lazy-sounding Generation X sound of his verses).
Beck seemed as though he could go way out of his way to create something truly unique and unparalleled, whilst at the same time, making it look easy, and making it look as though he really didn’t give a fuck.
The second thing to think about, when considering how it has managed to stand the test of time, is in the fact that almost no artists since Beck have really strived for true originality in music the way he has. And he has again and again and again.
MTV and Rolling Stone and all the other Rock-Music-Narrative-Creators always try and shove a notion down everyone’s throats that Kurt Cobain WAS the 90s rock icon to pay attention to. True, Nirvana was incredibly important, and helped break the Seattle rock sound to a national audience. Plus, Nirvana made some damn catchy and provacative tunes, and I’m not arguing against that – but one thing that is often forgot about Cobain was that people were starting to get REALLY sick of his egotistical cranky heroin-addict bullshit right before he died and became a rock martyr. If he hadn’t died when he did, people likely would’ve moved away from Nirvana anyway. Well, suffice it to say, as far as originals in 90s mainstream music go, that story was definitely NOT the case for Beck.
Beck continued to reinvent himself time and time again, with a tongue-in-cheek humor about himself, and about music in general – and one of the most endearing things to consider about Beck’s musical diversity (and, for fuck’s sake, its REAL hard to argue against his musical diversity when you consider the fact that he had 3 minute songs that jumped from jazz to hip hop to metal to country, all with an efficiently-acidy cut-up mastery that would’ve made the Beatles jealous and throw away their White Album out of fear of it being considered mediocre) was the fact that Beck was DAMN good at every genre and instrument and style of music he played. He didn’t just pay someone to play a saxaphone – he knew how to play that shit, himself!
It was the perfect combination of technical musical mastery, thoughtful artistic originality, and a well concocted, “I probably don’t give a fuck,” attitude that made his music truly one-of-a-kind, impossible to emulate, as well as perfect for the time period.
An important influence in Beck’s music that isn’t always considered (well, it is vaguely considered, but not often outright ) is the influence his grandfather, a dadaist artist, likely had on him. As stated in the first paragraph, Beck made a kind of anarchist pop music, and I mean that in a very real sense, as dada art was, at it’s time, a very rebellious and “fuck the art establishment, here’s a picture of a toilet,” type of affair. Beck’s schizophrenic musical structures and playfully-bored-aesthetic set the stage for a decade of experimental pop music. And when I say ‘playfully-bored,’ a good example is the track, “MTV Makes me Wanna Smoke Crack,” where, halfway through the song, you can hear Beck getting tired of the tune he’s playing, and then, out of nowhere, the song launches into a coffee-house jazz rendition of itself, for no reason at all, complete with upbeat crooning about ‘getting all uptight,’ and ‘smoking crack.’
Half the lyrics don’t mean a damn thing; and for whatever reason (maybe as a sheer reaction to the overly-serious rock ballads of the time?) it just feels so refreshing, hilarious and Zappa-esque that listening to it only once just doesn’t cut it.
Though he cultivated an image of radical freeform slacker-ish-ness in his early work, I suspect it was also carefully, consciously, and meticulously designed that way. Beck has stated that ‘Loser’ was actually a joke – but damn, wouldn’t you love to make a joke track that was THAT good, and blew up as much as it did?