In this beautiful exploration of revival through Drum-N-Bass, Jungle, and especially the use of the Amen Break in this subculture of internet sound; Dr Bastardo is a breakcore heavyweight through just the use of four tracks.
Death To All False Rave !!! is a 2008 release that holds an immense breakneck speed to the style of juke and rave. Rugs can get serrated into bite-sized pieces by the end of the 20-minute record, and the brass majority of synth horns blasting through the speakers are delightful to the powder-stricken ears.
Opening with “Cocaine Babylon,” Death To All False Rave !!! is just fast enough to be flaunting and attract the eyes and ears before dissipating into smoke. “Cocaine Babylon” especially has a real sense of attractiveness to it. The all-percussive release takes the method of making obscene hits of 808s mix well with authentic percussion.
Dr Bastardo never finds a moment to have silence or stillness in the production, Death To All False Rave !!! This forceful nature is similar to firework displays or the wires of a massive server room catching flame. At times, Dr Bastardo can come off as overwhelming, but using fades to the mix throughout, “Cocaine Babylon” almost entirely is enough to stand for the record.
The complex patterns, the overbearing punch through, and the rapid snares are enthralling and push to this unknown center point of experimental pressure. The following track “Dubplate Assault” is a quick transition into a similar use of force but through different methods.
The glitched and stuttering nature of “Dubplate Assault” is sporadic and holds the listener at more attention to adaptation. Dr Bastardo becomes this warped chaos on Death To All False Rave !!! as the record continues. The stumble through harsh kicks and sudden breaks continues to evolve more and more fluent with each track.
Perhaps the most explosive and utterly chaotic is “Revenge Is A Dish Best Served With A Brick In The Face” where the rising and falling snare tones are hellish over the blown-out bass. Death To All False Rave !!! makes a point to be aggressive and directly in tune with the audience, never stepping out of swinging range.
However, “Revenge Is A Dish Best Served With A Brick In The Face” mixes the action slightly and drops into this agitated EDM swing beat where the breaks are ignored for a moment and the boom-snap of snares and crushed delays become the norm. Dr Bastardo finds no peace within Death To All False Rave !!! and as the title suggests, the comedic beauty of breakcore finds a slumber with the final track “Death Brap”
Still immensely overwhelming as a percussive stance, “Death Brap” has this build-up that becomes intense when the boiling point is reached. With this dwindling mix of consistent 808s on the eighth note, “Death Brap” opens the floodgates at one point and forms this large-scale warfare of sound.
Truthfully gorgeous in sequencing, Dr Bastardo takes one last look into this abyss of breaks and smashes through the glass on Death To All False Rave !!!.
Between the broken and impossible to track at time percussive bursts to then the formation of all puzzle pieces to fit, Death To All False Rave !!! is the remnants of fun on wax in a perfect, bite-sized package.
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“A playlist of tracks that were featured on MattsMusicMine.com from the week of October 17th – 23rd. From Reviews to Streams, never miss a track with these playlists that are uploaded every single Sunday till I drop dead.”
Featuring: MIKE, Earl Sweatshirt, Kill Alters, Lust$ickPuppy, The Garden, Lil Uzi Vert, Wiki, Subjxct 5, Sister Nancy, Shygirl, Nicholas Craven, Boldy James, Drakeo The Ruler, Sideshow, Bill Waves, Full Of Hell, Kendrick Lamar, Sampha, LUCKI, Dry Cleaning, Nikki Nair
Track List: weight of the word*, allstar, time warp, Chainsaw The Door, Just Wanna Rock, Mista, Ain’t No Stopping Nancy, Bam Bam, Shlut, Town & Country, DRAKEO Not Drake-O, alarmed!, PIANO GHOST, Blinding Erasure, Worldwide Steppers, Father Time, 13, Don’t Press Me, Plug
Listen Here – BandCamp
Listen Here – BandCamp
Listen/Watch Here – Youtube
Listen Here – BandCamp
Five years to wait for greatness doesn’t seem like a lifetime, but in the case of waiting for Kendrick Lamar’s newest record, Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers, a lifetime of waiting would still be worth it.
As one of the strongest voices in music through the generation, Lamar has been on radars for well over 10 plus years now, breaking into mainstream success with good kid, m.A.A.d city, and gained national attention with both To Pimp A Butterfly and DAMN. Now 10 years since good kid, m.A.A.d city, and what feels as if decades between modern events, Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers takes an introspective grasp into writing and production from Lamar.
Truly one of their most expressive and impressive records, Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers has hidden gems throughout the LP where both lyricism and exemplary instrumentation shines as a new high for Lamar.
“United In Grief” is simple in approach, but after initial handshakes, Lamar paints layers on top of a canvas to illustrate this rapid-fire machine gun of constrictive nature on sound. Sam Dew is actually the first vocals on Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers who describes, “I hope you find some peace of mind in this lifetime. I hope you find some paradise.” As Whitney Alford interrupts Dew and describes, “Tell them, tell ‘em, tell them the truth… tell ‘em, tell ‘em, tell ‘em, tell ‘em you’re –” as her dialogue is abruptly cut.
When Lamar finally enters the frame, he illustrates in this somber, nearly disconnected tone, “I’ve been going through something, one-thousand-eight-hundred-and-fifty-five days. I’ve been going through something, be afraid.”
The production then changes from the subtle and soft vocalization with layered backing into this breakneck dip and sprint of percussion where tinted windows roll down and reveal a firing squad at Lamar’s command. Instead of Valentine’s Day Massacre, the audience is instead riddled with a lyrical barrage.
Lamar explains, “The new Mercedes with black G-Wagon, the “Where you from?” it was all for rap. I was 28 years young, 20 mill’ in tax. Bought a couple of mansions, just for practice, five hundred in jewelry, chain was magic.” The real centerpiece of the verse comes in the refrain that continues to etch into the speakers, “I grieve different, I grieve different.”
A struggle of man vs. self and man vs. nature proceeds to rear its face on Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers, transferring onto the track “Worldwide Steppers” where Lamar is flowing over a simple, but ultimately engaging piece produced by TaeBeast, J. LBS, and Sounwave.
A singular bassline bumps along like a jazz house nightclub as whispers and samples of “What the fuck” from Radel Ortiz play over Lamar’s lines. In the first verse, Lamar explains this inner struggle of paranoia and dissociative pain between writer’s block, the horrors of what lurks outside the glass at home, and the anxiety of stares in public.
This inner struggle becomes external when Lamar aims closer toward the media and inner workings of the music business. He illustrates, “Hollywood corporate in school, teaching philosophies, you either gon’ be dead or in jail, killer psychology. silent murderer, what’s your body count? Who your sponsorship? Objectified so many bitches, I killed their confidence, the media’s new religion, you killed the consciousness.”
Moving into just about the midpoint of disc one on Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers, “Father Time” becomes a lift of spirit instrumentally even when the subject matter is straight in the gutter.
Aggressive, hard-headed, and impossible to reason with, “Father Time” is a beautiful two-part revelation with Sampha on the feature. To see Lamar illustrate these characteristics that explain, “…I got daddy issues, that’s on me. Everything them four walls had taught me, made habits bury deep.” As the piano roll cuts in and the immaculately gentle percussion knocks along, Lamar can continue on.
He explains, “that man knew a lot, but not enough to keep me past them streets. My life is a plot, twisted from directions that I can’t see.” This helplessness turns to the realization of knowing to be a fractured narrator and using verse two as a revival of self.
In a heartbreaking discovery, Lamar returns after a brief intermission from Sampha and is able to be compassionate and show growth between verses. He illustrates, ”I got daddy issues, that’s on me. Lookin’ for ‘I love you,’ rarely empathizin’ for my relief. A child that grew accustomed, jumping up when I scraped my knee. Cause if I cried about it, he’d surely tell me not to be weak.”
Following in verse two, Lamar admits his faults and comes to a compromise within the verse. He describes, “…guess I’m not mature as I think, got some healin’ to do. Egotistic, zero-given fucks and to be specific, need assistance with the way I was brought up.” He advances on to describe, “What’s the difference when your heart is made of stone, and your mind is made of gold, and your tongue is made of sword, but it may weaken your soul?”
The struggle to find a positive force of nurtured love on Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers is a continuous reoccurring theme. And while Disc One is an emotional standout for performance from Lamar, Disc Two is a graceful demise that wraps the spirit in white cloth and is anointed in precious scents, showing a baptism by fire and necessity.
Listen Here – BandCamp
Recorded With: Kevin Bernstein at Developing Nations
Mixed By: Taylor Young at The Pit Recording Studio
Mastered By: Will Killingsworth at Dead Air
Artwork By: Zachary Hobbs
Track List: Aurora Leaking, Swarming Hornets, Blinding Erasure
Listen/Watch Here – Youtube
Featuring: Sideshow
Produced By: dj blackpower
Shot By: findjordy + evan cahill
Even within the vast world of music sampling, production, and now the mass quantities of records that are both created and pressed in 2022. There was once a record stemming from the Kingston dance halls in Jamaica that captured a feminine breakout vocalist who would slowly but surely influence much of the shift in artists in modern times.
Sister Nancy at the time was a young, and primarily unknown artist outside of Jamaica, but her debut record originally released in 1982 contained a track that would be sampled in well over 100 different songs since its release.
Focusing more on the record One Two, the 10-track LP is a fantastic dive into the Dancehall Reggae performances of slowed-down grooves and heavy focus on the bass and percussive pieces. Sister Nancy who was born Ophlin Russell is the center spotlight and is the main MC throughout One Two.
Her introduction is a powerhouse on the title track, “One Two” where Sister Nancy is able to rip lyrically with confidence and protruding strength. The shining jewel is how the movement is always present in One Two and there is rarely a period where the feet stop. While “One Two” opens to be a shuffle rather than controlling performance, the following track “Ain’t No Stopping Nancy” becomes a favorite for its grasp that Sister Nancy displays.
“Ain’t No Stopping Nancy” has this pushing groove on the bass from Errol “Flabba” Holt and these piano keys that pluck along like a playful bounce. When Sister Nancy finally jumps into the frame, she shouts almost immediately using scat singing and onomatopoeia to fill gaps between her verses and lines.
She begins, “Said, there ain’t – ain’t no stopping Nancy, Bang! Bangadang! Because I’ve been DJ’ing from I was 15 years old. Tell them, heel them!” As the instrumentation adds more percussion and bass into the mix, Sister Nancy uses this to orchestrate and add vitality to her first verse.
Illustrating, “Ain’t no stopping Nancy now, me lawyer say, there ain’t no stopping Nancy now. I tell and I say, my father is a farmer, everyday him gone plow.” Sister Nancy continues on, “And when him go a yard, him gone. Buy pick-a-pow, hey. Him and me mother start yeah, me tell them, him and me mother start, yeah.”
Of course, eventually, One Two comes to the track that made Sister Nancy into the instantly recognizable influence, “Bam Bam.” Sampled at the end of Ye’s “Famous,” used in “Bam” by Jay-Z, and even “Lost Ones,” by Lauryn Hill. The original from Sister Nancy immediately forces a smile to the face. Her vocals are precious here and bump into the speakers almost as if it was a birth of a sound.
The beauty of One Two shows that even through age, the power of performance and the story of Sister Nancy continues to be one of success after so much time. But even when the sun fades, “Pegion Rock” is one last splash of sunshine over the listener.
The percussion here is important to focus on for a moment as the snare becomes reverbed and echoes behind Sister Nancy’s glowing vocals. The pure distinction behind the low-tuned bass and the percussion bounces energy from Sister Nancy and back to the band. Flourishes of horns flash like oil in a hot pan and create a roar of life into the mix. One Two uses “Pegion Rock” as a method to blast one more ecstatic thrill before disappearing into the Kingston streets once more.
Lisen Here – BandCamp
Recorded By: Mike Shabb
Mixed By: Roberto Viglione
Artwork By: Stack Moolah
Calligraphy By: Shokey
Listen Here – Youtube
