You are currently browsing the Amie Street Blog archives for September, 2006.
Rappers Delight
It's not exactly
normal for a nearly unknown MC to get production from the likes of
DJ Babu (Beatjunkies/Dilated Peoples), Evidence (Dilated Peoples),
DJ Rhettmatic (Visionaries), and a whole cast of Hip Hop's elite
beat makers, but Trek Life and his
skills on the Mic are anything but ordinary. Check the verbal
acrobatics over the minimal Babu produced boom-bap of
Hard Work
if you need an example. Spending his teenage years in
the L.A. county suburbs of West Covina, Trek Life became known
locally for his freestyle and battle skills. It wasn't long before
the rest of the U.S. got their first taste of Trek as a contestant
(and finalist) on Showtime Network's reality/battle series
"Interscope presents The Next Episode" Tracks like
Hold Me Down (feat. Champ & KES)
show some of the raw lyrical talent that helped
Trek make his way onto a nationally televised freestyle competition
at the age of... well he might be mad at us if we told you how old
he was. All joking aside Price I've Paid
is an example of what Hip-hop can sound like when it's not all
about the paper-chase, a subject that the melodic, guitar-laden
Still Here (feat. Silo)
touches on.
The Breakestra is on your block
If
you haven't heard the Breakestra's funk-infused
groove, you will. With fans ranging from A Tribe Called Quest to
Carson Daly, the Breakestra is poised to become a modern-day
classic collective. Honestly, take one listen to a song like
Getcho Soul Togetha
- you'll think these guys traveled forward in time
cruisin' in a 1972 Cadillac with fuzzy dice in the mirror and James
Brown riding shotgun. The hip hop orchestra coming from LA is one
of the premier funk bands of our era, mixing their own material and
covering classics so well even legends can't tell the difference -
no joke, the Roots' ?uestlove once sampled a Breakestra track
thinking it was a 30-year-old original! On jams like
Root Down
,
Inner City Blues
, and
Little Old Money Maker
, the
combination of today's hip hop rhythm with yesterday's soul power
is sure to put the jangle back in your jingle.Here’s The Plan
Listen, listen, listen to the
The Seldon Plan because they
sound so fine. Fresh to Amie Street, this Baltimore-based
Indie/Pop/Emo quartet is pitch-perfect and critically acclaimed.
They've been featured on NPR's All Songs Considered, and
have amassed enthusiastic reviews from, among others, On Tap
Magazine, The Big Takeover, and The Washington
Post.
The Seldon Plan will earn your trust with melodious and polished
tracks from their album Making
Cirlces, an inviting production you can enjoy in full.
Start with
Love Again
,
Holding Patterns Are Slow
, and
Westchester
, but don't stop there, check them all. Consistently
catchy and never unimaginative, The Seldon Plan is a certain
pleasure. Welcome them to Amie Street.
And Now For Something Completely Different
Electronics,
jazz, funk, and long twisting songs that take you for a ride rather
than a quick trip around the same block you've seen 5,000
times--
Seed
. Please welcome one of our favorite acts
still bubbling around in the underground: Keston & Westdal.
This duo, consisting of keyboardist Jon Keston and bassist Nils
Westdal have such an original and accomplished sound we were
completely blown away by the fact they didn't have a label backing
them up when we first ran into them. They've since partnered with
Unearthed Music and have plans to do a physical release early next
year, but we're proud to help with the pre-buzz! K&W's music
elicits visual comparison with instrumental Hip-hop that swaggers,
precise brokenbeat rhythms that duck and weave through alternately
edgy/smooth keyboard textures, and a solid yet never static
foundation of expert bass-work throughout. The result is something
capable of moving both the mind and the behind. The sound palette
on Truth Is
Stranger, their sophomore effort, runs the gamut from
the ultrasmooth funk of
Otokoyama
to the edgy latin
infused electro-future-jazz of
Se Fue
. In summation,
K&W bring edgy electronic production to the table backed up by
jazz-theory and the chops to play it. Also, unlike many of their
electronic colleagues they can rip it up live.
Radio’s Back Y’all!
You are now
listening to State Radio, a powerful experience
in Rock/Reggae craftsmanship and social critique. This
Massachusetts-based trio is the invention of Chad Stokes (guitar,
vocals), formerly of the indie music phenomenon Dispatch, and
features Chuck Fay on bass and Mike Najarian on drums. State
Radio's ability to execute songs that combine an instantly
recognizable musical attractiveness with messages of social
activism will make you proud. Please welcome them to Amie Street by
checking out tracks from their album Us Against
the Crown. The singles are
Camilo
and
Mr. Larkin
, but don't sleep on the current site favorite
Riddle In Londontown
. Enjoy State Radio and stay tuned for more posts about
this blazing and important band.
Chachi: Dedicated
The Chachi Interview:
Part 2 of 2
In Part 1 of his interview, Chachi spoke about Rhode Island and its Hip Hop scene. Now he speaks about his inspiration, upcoming projects, and his mission.
Part 2 of The Chachi Interview also coincides with the world
premiere of his latest CD Mind the Gap. It's
only on Amie Street, so check it, starting with these tracks:
heaven sent prod. by j depina
,
i gotcha open prod. by j depina
,
mary wanna break prod. by j depina
and
let em in feat. casius
.
How'd you get into Hip Hop? Who or what inspired your dedication to music?
When I was younger, my cousin Vic used to break dance with a local B-boy crew. I was trying to mimic the moves; I was getting into the groove. Also movies like Beat Street and Wild Style, just seeing and feeling the culture.
Rap wasn't really accepted in my household so I had to sneek out to hear Run DMC. Hip Hop was rebellious when I was growing up. I'd pop in a Hip Hop tape in my Dad's car and he'd throw it out the window onto the highway. That was inspiration. Why doesn't Dad like it? My rebelliousness grew.
Friday Night at NYC’s Cutting Room
"An
unbelievable night of music," said Gabe Goodwin, an Amie Street
user. "The bands were unreal. Looking forward to the next one."
All fans attending Amie Street's first showcase in New York City
this past Friday night shared these sentiments as the music flowed
from the Cutting Room stage well past 2am. Over a hundred people
listened as Andrew Fox and The
Emergency opened the show with
Love Letter to Calypso
, a beautiful
arrangement of earthly folk and playful soul.
Joe Whyte followed,
changing the musical direction more towards acoustic folk rock. The
crowd felt it, as fans sang along with Amie Street favorites such
as
Let Me Down
and
Best Of Me
.
Never the Nines closed the
showcase with forty minutes of unrelenting rock and left everyone
wanting more. NTN's set included Amie Street tracks
Liar
and
Out & Through
, as well as newer, more
groove-based songs. The Amie Street Showcase was a great success,
both in attendance and musical contributions. Thanks to everyone
involved. Stay on the block, live cuts from the showcase are coming
soon.
Amie Street Showcase at Black Rep
Amie Street
presents Eclectic Soul at the Providence Black Repertory
Company.
Who: Eclectic Soul
When: Tonight. Saturday, 9/16 8PM
Where: 276 Westminster St., Downtown Providence
(map)
You Need A Haircut
Never pay 20
bucks for a haircut again. Instead, try 50 Cent
Haircut, Amie Street's premiere punk-country fire breathers.
Haircut's superb tracks
Elliott Smith Blues
and
Perforated
have been recent site favorites, but last night the band unleashed
a maximum honky-tonk, live showcase titled Live at the
Pitcher House. Don't miss this fabulously raw and raging
set.
50 Cent Haircut's Bryan Stone not only puts the ass in bass, but also enjoys Amie Street under the username UniversalStone, so feel free to request him as your friend or send him a message. Let him know you dig his band.
For your listening pleasure, scope
Haywire
,
Black Car
,
Hit Like a Girl
, and
Atomic Anti-Star
.
Chachi: View From The Vacuum State
The Chachi Interview, Part 1 of 2
Chachi,
the dynamic and entrepreneurial force behind the slept-on
Providence, RI Hip Hop scene, rolled through the Amie Street office
this week for a Q&A. In case you don't know, Chachi was an Amie
Street first mover, dropping his tracks on the block from the get.
If you haven't heard
2 FLOOR YACHT feat. SWANN
,
GROOVE feat. ICEY
or
THATS MY BOY feat. SWANN NOTTY
you must.
What's up Chachi? You're in Providence now, but where are you from originally?
I'm from Pawtucket, next door to Providence. Same thing that's
going on there is going on here.
There are a lot of people out there who don't know anything
about Rhode Island and Providence. How would you describe the
nation's smallest state and its capital city?
I like to call Rhode Island the "vacuum state". It's easy to get wrapped up in a lifestyle here. Rhode Island is so laidback; they're a lot of open minded people around here. If you want to live in the fast lane, you can. If not, you don't have too. A lot of people who move out of Rhode Island end up coming back, and a lot of people who move in, for school or whatever, end up staying. There's so much going on, so many cultures, it's so diverse.
