LIVE PHOTOGRAPHY – DEATH VALLEY HIGH LIVE AT THE REX THEATER, JUNE 3RD, 2018

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LIVE PHOTOGRAPHY – TODAY’S GONNA BE MINE : HOUSE SHOW, JUNE 2ND, 2018

Happy Birthday Matt’s Music Mine…

You let me do things I didn’t know possible…

Shout out to all my friends for supporting me, working with me, and for being there…

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New Music – Crash Test Genius

AAP-Rocky-Hun43Ad-Feat-Dev-Hynes-mp3-DownloadFrom the calibrating bass that clicks and warps along to form the first moments of A$AP Rocky’s new album, there is a confusion set about. For fans that were playing the Jimmy Fallon snippets, to those who awed in the pure detail and originality in the video for “A$AP Forever”, Rocky held some real surprises with his newest record, TESTING.

In an eager display of some of the best hip-hop verse writing and production selection to date from any A$AP member, Rocky shakes the ground with TESTINGand illustrates an experimental mix to shaping the perfect record. With the strong strides of the opening “Distorted Records”, Rocky ruins speaker systems and creates swirls of action in the arena-grasping introduction.

“First things first, I done heard the worst things. Like if I’m in your top ten, mine’s better be the first name…” Rocky explains in one of the more energized verse and production combinations that rely on this crushing and pulverizing bass that becomes a sensory overload. Rocky is cocky; acting as a monument that focuses on being singular and making the bass bounce off his voice to make this Earth-shattering boom and crunch. “I can feel the bass, from the ceiling to the basement. I don’t feel a thing, get the fuck up out my face, bitch. I don’t feel a thing, yeah I’m faded, yeah I’m shaded. I don’t feel a thing, I can feel the bass, I can feel the bass,” Rocky explains as “Distorted Records” floods into a remix of “A$AP Forever”.

asap-rocky-getty-nbc-tonight-showAdding a Kid Cudi and T.I. feature, “A$AP Forever REMIX” changes the formula of “A$AP Forever” and rearranges some of the elements, working in some choruses behind the hooks and some more vocal samples that lead into Cudi’s verse. It changes the original and slows the mosh-pit function of “Distorted Records” into something a little more approachable and friendly on the ears. Rather than inducing strobe lights, “A$AP Forever REMIX” makes a church seem more suitable for TESTING as Rocky explains, “I put A$AP on my tat, I put New York on the map. I put the gang on the flames, they gon’ remember the name.”

There is then a call to action where A$AP Rocky decides to induce that same sort of vibrancy behind “Distorted Records” where the aggressive, truly transformative “Tony Tone” jumps right into the front seat. Rocky is more forward than ever as he screams, “I could give a fuck about a list, ya heard? I could give a fuck about a diss, ya heard? I could give a fuck about a clique, ya heard? Shut the fuck up before I rock your bitch, ya heard.” It takes that golden-grill smile where Rocky holds no bars and any sort of brace, it speeds through the red light and does so with no hands on the wheel. “Tony Tone” is a wild card among a record full of wild choices, “Truthfully, I just say what I really think. Like, I’m too fresh man to be an under-class man. Would say ‘suck my dick’ but that’s sexual harassment. Fuck around and really come through in the Merc’ (Mercedes) on ya, who else ya know design your stage and do your merch over.” In a vulgar display, Rocky is more watchable than ever as he truly shows disrespect but with merit behind him.

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Each track on TESTING feels so incredibly different and able to stand entirely on its own. There is no need for any more energetic displays, no need for emotional tear-fuel, TESTING in the first three tracks is better than most entire discographies coming from signed artists. With a total of 15 tracks, there is not a single missed step and Rocky comes back harder than ever. He stands as a capitalization on the artist format, challenging the form of what it takes to create a perfect “rap” album, the perfect “musical” album, and the perfect display of art.

Listen To TESTING Here!!! – SoundCloud/Spotify/Amazon/iTunes

Classic Day – Somebody’s Sins

600x600bfIn amidst the 1970’s there was an influx of new musical talent, style, and unrelenting force that overtook the wave of the very strict formation of the 1950’s, to the carefree 60’s. With bands like The Velvet Underground, artists like David Bowie, and rampant experimentation in a field of the now sturdy rock n’ roll foundation; Patti Smith rose to the spotlight.

With her debut record stemming from a personal recommendation from friend Lou Reed, Smith released Horses in 1975and captures the freedom behind spoken word over loose instrumentation. Horses has a powerful stance that still even in a modern setting is a description and living painting of the liberation behind musical settings. “Jesus died for somebody’s sins, but not mine. Melting in a pot of thieves, wild card up my sleeve. Thick heart of stone, my sins my own, they belong to me.” Smith explains in “Gloria (In Excelsis Deo)”, the reworked Van Morrison/Them track that would become an iconic opening and setting theme for Horses. The disregard for the legislation on Smith as a free-thinking artist that challenges the common law of the land become a figure for controversy for her thoughts, poetic style, and musical works for years to come.

Even before “Rock n’ Roll Nigger” would even grace the paper, Patti Smith would break the barriers on social commentary through her sound as one of the first punk rock icons in the world. Her incredibly minimal cover art with its black and white film grain became famous for being a testament in juxtaposition to the extremely colorful and vivid musical progression behind the album.

With the dance and rhythm focused nearly doo-wop inspired “Redondo Beach”, Smith acts as a muse behind the sunlight and driven instrumentation. As the guitar plays a cheerful-esque background that includes keys that cling and act as accents, the percussion finds its way to clash on the hi-hats and play small cascades on the toms. Smith was the main vocalist and guitarist that would lead Jay Dee Daugherty on the percussion, Ivan Kral on bass, guitar, and backing vocals, Lenny Kaye on bass, guitar, and vocals, and finally Richard Sohl on keyboards into the journey ahead.

010psjlHorses also has the moments of immediate slow down that control the rising action and make for the breaks where Smith acts more as a stand up poet than a rock vocalist. Her style however, does not follow much of a structure as she howls, moans, and whispers her way through “Birdland” which is one of the tracks that show the more experimental side of Horses. It can be strange at moments, hard to follow at others, but Horsesis one of the albums that has a strange appeal behind it. The kind of album that works to produce these large landscapes of sound that becomes more and more unraveled through each listen. Smith constantly adapts to different environments and works to form this never broken style that rekindles at the end or beginning of each incoming track; becoming finally collected and processed.

With one of the final tracks, “Break It Up”, Smith uses one of the more beautiful uses of chord progressions and choruses that back her vocals up to form almost tear-bringing glory. The building action, the falling tone, and the endless wave of empathy that comes from Smith’s smooth voice and piano combination creates one of the more beautiful arrangements on Horses. Not only is there this awe-inspiring sense behind the vocalization, but the instrumentation truly adds to the mood and feeling behind the emotional display from Smith and her band.

Smith takesHorses into so many varying directions and makes an effort to create new boundary-destroying styles on each track. The movement and ability behind Smith always keeps this engaged focus, recreating the 1970’s freedom; where Horsesleaves a trail of smoke and slight confusion at the final silence.

Listen To Horses Here!!! – Spotify/Amazon/iTunes

Misc. Day – Hexed Sense

a3503731580_10From the first crashing waves of the feedback and distortion bearing guitar and bass, there is an aura behind Monolord. They accompany with the occult, the destructive, and the strange in a musical triangle that becomes more intriguing and more filled with wonder than fear.

On their 2015 release Vænir, thereis the audio embodiment of both pleasure and pain. In a twisted sense, Monolord is heavily reliant on creating these large swoops of sound that form the real direction of each track. While slowed, Monolord moves through as a persuasive batch that is dependent on each others movement to truly prosper. In a way, Væniris more of a jump into the unknown as Monolord begins with “Cursing The One.”

The moments of building noise that lead the listener into the sudden battlefield of sound is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. Monolord takes the listener by the hand and then suddenly subjects them to a surprise assault of sluggish chords, bass growls, and percussion that actually crashes to create these rings throughout the movement. “Cursing The One” is a solid introduction to a six-track dive through warped lyrics, experimental instrumentation, and an approach to creating despair as a sound.

Surprisingly movement orientated, Mika Häkki and Thomas Jäger create whirls of sound through the bass and guitar combination while keeping a tortious-esque shell over the band. Esben Willems handles the percussion that clasps and slams along to the vocal performance from Jäger that sounds distorted but fitting along the path. Through just three members, Monolord is able to capture and play with a sound that is surprisingly punishing even from a metal standpoint. The hydra shifts together and ultimately becomes a driving force to push Monolord into the mid-point with “Nuclear Death”.

Similar in style to what has been previously presented; “Nuclear Death” rides on the wave of heavy bass and rhythm riffs to create a backbone. The sound is engaging and fills the void with a final push to hit the midpoint. As the middle arrives, Monolord stays in a consistent grind to make a cycle of sound. It captures the listener and traps them in a gripping whirlwind of fury that never becomes unrelenting throughout Vænir.

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It is this style that ultimately moves into “Died A Million Times” where the cover of Vænir shows a sense of reflection into the sound. The figure stepping into the murky water is similar to how the listener is thrown into the darkness of the album, the real pit of power.

While ultimately feeling as one continuous track, Monolord is intelligent in the way the spacing of the album works. Not only is there a sense of ability behind the band, but the togetherness creates a bond of strength. This bond stays consistent and works in a favor to illustrate Monolord’s bone-breaking crush even into the final darkness that ends Vænir.

Listen To Vænir Here!!! – BandCamp/Spotify/iTunes