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Showing posts with label live. Show all posts
Showing posts with label live. Show all posts

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Big K.R.I.T. - 4eva Na Day (Mixtape) and Live From The Underground Album Review

"It's been a really bad year for singles... I keep hoping all the albums are better

-Austin Lovelace"
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Big K.R.I.T. is one of the EmSees to come out last year that, at least to me, is what made last year such a boost for the genre. I won't ever say Hip-Hop lost its charm but it was popping in and out of the dark for a while and it finally decided to crawl out. If anyone is looking for smooth southern rap that sounds out of it's own era, which is what makes it so good, then there may not be a better up and comer; this is your guy!

This tape is the end of a trilogy, the first 2 albums being what launched him to the hype he's sitting at now. When "Home Town Hero" dropped, off the first tape, "K.R.I.T. Waz Here", it was clear that there was a new player on the field. "Number one song and a Grammy, now I'm smashing Maserati crashing, swerving through the trafficWrap it 'round a pole, sell a mil off the tragedy", for K.R.I.T. to come out the gate spitting bars like that over an Adele sample... He made it hard not to like him and  even more so, he made it hard to avoid him. When part 2 came out as a free mixtape everyone took the chance check out the new kid (take a marketing hint from K.R.I.T. and make the album after your hit free). It felt weird to go from paying for a good tape to downloading an even better one, no questions asked. "Return Of 4 Eva" was a project made with no intent on being his next hit, but instead he rode the hype wave and washed the fans into a project that would prove that he could back up his lyrical capabilities with production way past where he started. I don't want to get into a review of an old tape, but I can tell you that that tape left me waiting for his next move (DOWNLOAD IT DAMMIT!). 

"4eva Na Day", as not only the conclusion to a trilogy but a pre-cursor to his debut album, was surrounded by as much hype as the public can muster up. K.R.I.T. was featured on the most recent Roots album, dispelling roomers about a lazy flow by rapping next to Tech N9ne, B.O.B., and MGK in the BET cypher, and beating about every other EmSee in lyrical ability all over the XXL "Freshman Class" cypher as well. He even returned to his older tape series with "The Last King 2: God's Machene" to help keep his fellow southern EmSees relevant over his remixes and beats (this should result in "Country Cousins" a joint mix tape with Yellawolf). Whichever end was reaching out made it hard for him to lose any relevancy in between albums; in less than a year we would get this tape handed to us before we even had a chance to sleep on him.

So if "K.R.I.T. Waz Here" was about introducing him as a star and "Return Of 4 Eva" was our introduction to K.R.I.T. as an EmSee than this tape should be about K.R.I.T. the person. K.R.I.T. knows that each perspective changes based on how he is seen in the other two and as much as each tape is based on one perspective, he has always been able to transition from topic to topic without contradicting anything himself (a skill slowly fading). He will talk about how he's the best rapper in the game knowing that off that cloud he might fall in real life. That idea transfers to this tape just as well, but concentrating on himself as a person takes the bragging down to a much more contextual level. Unless he's spiting about his performances, the context of his last 2 tapes, he leaves the bragging alone and for good reason. By taking us into a day in the life of Big K.R.I.T. we get a really personal project, one even deeper than the last tape.

The story starts at the start of the day with K.R.I.T. doing a spoken word peace about "How much effort a day takes" on "8:04" AM and bringing him self back down to reality on "Wake Up". "Wake Up" has K.R.I.T. singing the hook making it even more connected to the previous tape that ended with "The Vent" (where he sings the through end of the track). I assume the next two tracks, "Yesterday" and "Boobie Miles", are in reference to the early morning deep thinking we all get into before we officially wake up a few hours later (when did this worksheet appear in front of me?). He finds him self thinking about how much he misses the girl he left back at his home town, before he set out on tour; he thinks about Boobie Miles, from "Friday Night Lights", and how one small move could end a career (if you don't know what happened, shame on you, I'm not telling). He spends the next 3 tracks hyped as hell, I can only guess they take place on stage because he's bragging his ass off and the hooks are just infections, repetitive, and loud. In "1986" he continues the song writing style of the last two but he brings it back from a stage performance to the nostalgia of the car he uses to drive from show to show. The skit right before that track helps bring it back to reality when you hear someone walk by his car and start talking about everything that happened during the year it came out. "Country Rap Tunes" fallows it with the nostalgia of talking about the town K.R.I.T. would soon be returning to and grew up in before "Sky Club" starts the story of his return. When K.R.I.T.'s phone is off (just turn it off you'll take off so much faster) you hear the voicemail his girlfriend leaves and his response is a strong summery of his music, as much as a strong emotional response. "I'm like what happened to us, maybe I'm rapping to much" and "it's either you or this music but I can't make up my mind" are examples of how he can separate him as a star and as person without contradicting himself; the contrast between tracks like "Sky Club" and "Red Eye" are what makes K.R.I.T. so honest and so appealing. "Down & Out" is the last bit of fun he has before he touches down back home. The next two tracks, "Package Store" and "Temptation", deal with the problems of his home town, with topics like a crooked priest using church funds to buy hookers, drugs, and guns or the hood that told him he would never make it. "Handwriting" is all about how personal his music is to him and how no one will ever be able to take his style, and, I even clapped the first time I heard him say "2 free albums minus lable support, fired my publicist cause I forgot what I was paying him for". "Insomnia" is when he gets back home to his girl; it's a very sexual song and it's climax was probably just as fun for him as it was awkward for me but as an anticlimactic (it is and isn't) ending it just brings it back to being a true reality and so do the next two tracks (almost copies of the first two).

In terms of style K.R.I.T. is using more guitars the usual, he had on in the studio with him if I'm corrects, and tracks like "Boobie Miles" are a little more jazzy than he's ever gotten but no big changes are made on this tape. I would say the production on this album is less varied than all of his previous projects but because he's telling a story it makes seance for them to be able to cross over each other, a lot like chapters would in a book. The way he tells the story, and even his singing voice, makes me think he took more than a few cues from The Roots when he did that joint on their last album and I can't help but think that's part of the reason that this is my favorite project from him (see the above for more reasons).


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The Note Pad:













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Now this album comes in right after the end of the last trilogy (I will not make a "Phantom Menace" reference... okay fine I did). The reason I chose to review both of these albums together is because I think K.R.I.T. wanted the context for his firs major label debut to be different from where he started, so I had to bring it back to the start. He knows that "Cinematic Music Group" would not let his first radio record be as personal or as distant as his tapes, even  in connection with "Def Jam".

K.R.I.T. is not even trying to make a passion project here. Like any other artists who have changed their style, K.R.I.T. wants to try his hand at a pop-rap album. I try to stay away from that genre because of most of the artists coming out of it recently (I think we know who I'm talking about) but I will say that Kanye West's last album, "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy", is one of my favorite Hip-Hop albums OF ALL TIME. So I thought about judging this on a curve because of what it is, a sort of "it's good for what it is" type of attitude but that wouldn't be fare to the readers or K.R.I.T. himself.

I can't just ask my self how well did he make this kind of album,I have to ask how much do I really like it? I had to avoid all forms of fanboyism to really get into this album, both good and bad. On first listen I found it so disappointing that I didn't even listen to it again until I decided to review it. I felt like the hooks where pretty corny and the beats where not as full as the tapes he putt out before, a comparison not worth making. Before this review, however, I hadn't listened to the tapes (because I listened to them way past enough to form an opinion any way) and after my second listen I was wondering what my problem was. Everything I didn't like was still there but I couldn't hate it nearly as much, at least for the majority of the album.

The single, "I Got This", was the perfect example of what I didn't like about this album but on the second listen (of the album) I was right with him on the hook (with K.R.I.T. on backup vocals); "fuck these hatas, fuck these hoes, fuck these hatas, fuck these hoes", shit he got me cookin' (behind the closed door of my room, of cores). The fist four tracks where just, catchy as hell, bangers and I'll credit "The Needle Drop" in saying "Big K.R.I.T. fight songs where you can't help but but cheer him on". The next track, "Money On the Floor", is easily the track he gave to "Capital" for the radio, but despite how bad the verses are (come on K.R.I.T., 2 Chainz, really?) it is remarkably produced. No matter how much I enjoyed the instrumentals on tracks 5 and 6, I just leave me tired of hearing K.R.I.T. spit below his level and I'm sad to say the next track hits me a little like that too (even though it sequels "My Sub" from "Return Of 4eva").  "Don't Let Me" is a fantastic pick me up though, with it's sole-full guitar solos and vocals in the back and K.R.I.T.'s singing on the hook is better then ever. He gets back to spitting verses like "Porin' up, I swear my liver never be the same, a pint of Hen'll help to ease the pain, world fucked up and I can't seem to leave he game". Sadly Anthony Hamilton delivers some really over-done vocals that sink the next track for me. "Pull up" hits only a little better than tracks 5 and 6 (mostly because of the great features) and "Yeah That's Me" feels like an annoying attempt to re-do "I Got This". The way the pitched vocals lay in the back of "Hydroplaning" make me want to turn off the album right there. The beat on "If I Fall" is beautiful and it reminds me a lot of "C.R.E.A.M.", from The Wu Tang Clan, but Melanie Fiona's hook is just awful and it almost sinks that track for me too. Thank God the album finished with 3 incredible tracks; "Rich Dad Poor Dad" is a great spoken word story with a beat that feels as beautiful as "If I Fall", B.B. King's vocals and lyrics add so much more to "Praying Man", and "Live from the Underground (Reprise)" just proves that K.R.I.T. can sing his hart out. It guides the album to its end perfectly.

I could have endless complaints about this album, I could rant about K.R.I.T. letting his record company stick its fingers too far into his album, and I could complain that the radio tracks aren't a good representation of the artist. The thing is that, just like his tapes, every track that he took full control of turned out so well that they have become some of his best for me and all the tracks I didn't like where only bad for small peaces of the album. Even with the huge sag in the middle of the album this managed to be a very solid release (and the first skit on this thing is hilarious, I can forgive him after a good laugh:)). This is an artists that gave me 3+ free albums and I think it's about time he gets paid so if you like this album pleas go and cop. it.
 
The Note Pad:
More Southern Hip-Hop: (this is a huge category and I'm not well versed in it; I also don't like a lot of it) Cunnin Linguists, Yelawolf, David Banner, Bun B, Ludacris, Outkast (Big Boi and Andre 3,000), Goodie Mob, UGK

Other artists you mite like: The Roots, Aesop Rock, Kendrick Lamar, Black Hippy, Ab-Soul, Danny Brown 

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Translated Live 1

"I've slept a 15 hour night. It is officially summer which means one thing... SKA!

-Austin Lovelace"
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We tend to cover music in record, other than a few links to some live videos. Their is a reason for it... I'm sure you would rather hear about everything we listen to rather than only my favorite artists (come on, who sees an artist they kindove like live, and pay for it) but who cares. We're here to talk about music and in that case I'll promote some artists while I talk about some of my favorite bands. So lets see how some of your, and a lot of my favorite artists translate live.

I spent the last Saturday (5/26/12) visiting a, growing, local music festival called Meadowgrass; this is one of many folk/country/bluegrass/indie festivals based in Calorado Springs. If you live in a decent sized city, navigable by walking but it takes you 2 hours to walk anywhere important from a large neighborhood, than you probably know what I'm talking about. It's one of those, attract a crowd with one 'big' band and one that you probably should have heard of, kind of shows. Otherwise it's regional acts that people on the festival comity know about, have made a name for them selves in the local scene, or ones that are 'pretty big' in other regions and are just passing through. None the less I wish I could have joined them on Friday and stayed till Sunday, but this time I came for the headliner (I'll get to them soon).

... But before I get into anything else lets go through what I've learned about the scene my city, my dad, my dad's friends, and I hove chosen to include our selves in this weekend (remember that any reference to white people includes me as well).

1. If you were wandering where all the white people in The Springs' where, especially the ones in Grateful Dead/Tie Die T-Shirts, I know.

2. Considering the only black man attending was serving watermelon, racism is either dead or it comes alive in a crowd of white hippies.

3. White people at 'folk' festivals don't jump unless they are doing something that can only be described as Jim Carry, if he was to dance around a spittoon to the tune of a banjo. (or if your a women you might do that thing that naked fan girls did in the 60s, with cloths on)

4.  Not jumping means weird gyration that is off beat to the music the white people are 'dancing' to.

5. Mosh pit means something completely different to white people when their at a folks festival ( although getting trampled is still possible, but they call it 'the jive').

6. That girl you brought that kinda knows the band does not know the band

7. Botox does not stop the gain of cellulite; Stop bringing your 40 year old girl friend to your hipster festivals, she can't dance and she suddenly thinks she's 15!

8. There are women who have trained their children to pull down their shirt to be fed. The baby is 1.5 years old and walking. Don't you think being a feed on demand mother has to end once the baby knows how to get it?

9. It's okay not to stand up when the band is performing (which is good because white people like sitting in their own lawn chairs). Though, it's still cool that all the bands got there applause no matter what.

in the words of one of my friends (who is also white): "White people are goofy" but lets get to the music....

The 'Meadowgrass' Music Festival, Saturday 5/26/12 Colorado Springs CO
Click here for the full, weekend, lineup 

1. 11:00am - The Hopeful Heroins - From & Based in Colorado Springs, CO

Sorry to say that we didn't get to the show on time so we didn't catch their set but I'm including them because from what I've heard they're a fantastic folk/gypsy/soul group. I wish I could have heard her voice live because the two tracks that I've heard on their Facebook blew me away. They have a really full sound even though they only have a violin and an acoustic guitar, but what can you do.

Don't you just hate lazy mornings :(


2. 12:15pm - The Flumps - From Florence, CO/Based in Colorado Springs, CO

We showed up a few songs into their set but by far they were my favorite act of the whole day (even the headliner). I had to run around a little while they where performing so we could find some of my dad's friends who were meeting us there; long story short I only got to really listen to them right around the time the singer said "How  much time do we have? 10 min.? Awwww fooey" (they had some fun up there).

After only listening to them for about 4.5 tracks (great shout out to We Are Not a Glum Lot by the way) I was hooked. A stand out indie rock act for sure. I'm going to be looking out for your next high energy show for sure. Thanks for your music.


3. 1:30 - Baywood - From & Based in Los Angles, CA

--A band that falls into the "ones that are 'pretty big' in other regions and are just passing through" category.--

A kin to Herman Dune this band is another folk duo that loves (each other) to tell stories just to be fun, catchy and to lift any mood that your life has you in. They have an arsenal of pop/folk numbers telling stories about bubble families, (notably) their mutual love for the actress Emma Stone, and more I can't quite remember. I guess that's a good way to introduce how I felt about the music... Their corny banter in between songs leads a good example; ''this next song is new', I suppose your not surprised' ( they were new to the city so they where playing all new music, their version of an introduction), 'what's it about', 'I suppose this one is about a mutual love of ours', 'should we say who', 'I don't know should we', 'OKAY, it's Emma Stone', 'uh oh I'm embarrassed now', 'uh oh lets just play the song', 'lets'' (of cores I'm paraphrasing). Being one of those groups who's funny because they arrant just makes them a fun break from everything else but they don't have (at least live) what groups like Herman Dune have on every song, which is the feeling that there is something deeper in their song writing.

None the less they got across what they wanted to; in their own words "Two dudes sharing a #bromance and making folk music...". Maybe in the end it's just me not being a fan, yet, because their studio work is pretty good and if your looking for more music in this style here's you ticket.


4. 2:45pm - Grass It Up - From & Based in Colorado Springs, CO

I may have lied earlier when I said I came for the headliner; I came for the main headliner. Not at all saying that this band is a head liner but more of the most important back up band (assuming the others listed before fall under the same category).

Although not at all a tall order for these local legends; well, legends of blue grass (I'm not into blue grass, much at all) but do to repeated visitations by my dad to festivals like these, I know who they are.

I'm lying again, I like this blue grass band (live). Really if your a blue grass fan their essential but if your not (like me) than it needs to be fun and just like a corny name like theirs suggests, they are. It's really just blue grass music but with people who are highly technical in how they play their instruments, I believe I heard something about the banjo player inventing a new way to play?. The banjo player is their Jimi Hendrix no doubt but still the guitarist, you will fear the name Lesley, is a treat too (if you enjoy watching great musicians live). Their just fun to watch and they obviously have fun performing so why wouldn't you tap your foot to it?


5. 4:30 - Alela Diane - From & Based in Portland, OR

Introduced by one of the heads of the festival, this first headliner was essential. I mean, she must have been something amazing to the comity; being the only artist that needed to have a special set up to play. Don't get me wrong I was wowed by her performance but I was also put way off by the placement of it.

I'm sure you can guess that we're dealing with a singer song writer here and one with an amazing voice that matches her honesty, but honesty at that level it gets pretty sad. Singing the lyric about Colorado "When you left me for her, you left me in the snow", is the best example of the turn this festival took with her at the helm.

My mane thought through the whole performance being, 'she would have been such a great opening act', is what should tell you what I wished I would have experienced. I hope that I'm making it clear that I have nothing against her music or her performance, meaning you'd be best to check her out, but her placing was a kin to Bon Iver playing after The Mighty Mighty Bosstones. Just a little bit of a bummer if you went only to have fun, but her statement 'It just occurred to me that I write a lot of dark songs, that may not be appropriate for a sunny day like this' should tell you she has a seance of humor about it.

I need to see her again when I know what I'm getting myself into...

6. 6:15 - Big Daddy Love - From & Based in Sparta, NC

The second headliner, introduced as the band that would rock your socks off, is the same band that wants to show you every side of the festival they were invited to. Given their previous act it didn't seem like their enthusiastic introduction, 'pleas join me in welcoming BIG... DADDY... LOVE...', was out of place. Immediately getting the applause, that wouldn't have been appropriate for the last act, they went into a rocker; it was hard to keep me from laughing when the lyric 'my doctor told me to change my ways, but she never told me nothin' helpful anyway', was sung at haste. Spending no time acting as glum as my favorite song in their set, Mortality, which goes something like 'we all gotta deal with the pressure, we all gotta deal with the pain', they had fun every moment they where on stage.

Easily defined as blues, that last song is only a slight clue to what you can expect from them; blues, rock, country, folk, and blue grass all shoved into a compact 2-4:00min is about what you can. As you can imagine there is a lot of variety so the same gos for quality. Trying not to sound to critical of a band that clearly deserves it's fans I would say a lot of their material didn't exactly make me want to listen to anything besides the songs I loved, but that's just the studio. These guys where the best summery I could've asked for and a great last act before the the band that had to close stepped up.

7. 8:15 - Son Volt - From & Based in St. Louis, MO

I promised this earlier given that this is the headliner. The band that was meant to attract people to the festival in the first place.

Half of Uncle Tuplo fame, this band and Wilco have found and kept a consistent audience that will fallow and see them wherever they go and my dad is one of them. Not to say that before the show I had never heard of them before; being my dad's son I've heard all he has from and about this band but I would only call myself a casual fan. They've always had songs I liked but as a band I always thought they where just okay and up until this show, much like Farrar's hair cut, that hadn't changed.

If you ever wondered why it takes so long, a headliner gets all the time the need to set up while every other band gets as ready as they can before they get thrusted on stage. It's the easiest way to say that they got everything up to studio quality and they did a great job of it. They got up on stage picked up their instruments and played their songs just like they did in the studio. Fans got what they came for, which was a louder version of what they heard on CD, but I'm not a fan. I wanted to see this show so that the band could get up on stage and rock out; I was hoping they would change my mind but they where stone cold up on stage. They acted like performing was their job, granted it is, but that's not what I wanted to see. I was given the impression that they would rock the house (tent) down with stories like how they where so loud at The Folks Festival that they drove half the crowd away. They ended up boring me for the first half of the set accept the songs that I liked on record. I didn't go to the  to hear a record or to see men bored by their own music, whether they were or not it looked like it.

It's a big complaint but I did enjoy the second half of the set but it's because I liked those songs on record. The second half was when the front man, Jay Farrar, picked up the guitar and gave me what I was expecting, but only in sound. They sounded great but I still didn't get the active live performance that I was expecting. They changed my mind about their music; I enjoy listening to their records now so I congratulate them on great sound quality but I have serious doubts about weather I want to see them live again.

-Austin Lovelace