Saturday, July 23, 2011

Cooked up for a second helping . . .

. . . . . and a third, and a fourth.

Backstory:
Upon hearing Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" in 1963, Cooke was greatly moved that such a poignant song about racism in America could come from someone who was not black . . . .


Harted by way of 90210:


All Man:



I heard she leela'd her james:


Legged:




A classic changed and still coming, and we love it.

Boppin' Bopper, beebbbbzzzzBOP!

Friday, July 22, 2011

Friday, July 8, 2011

Californication - A-Plus ft. Del tha Funkee Homosapien



Free download from A-Plus found here: 


Track-listing (Rec Californication track #4 And Can't Stop and more~):


1.
Intro 00:24


2.
Can't Stop 03:09


3.


4.


5.
Hey Oh 03:40


6.
By The Way 03:21


7.
My Friends 03:50


8.


about
Via the man himself A-Plus:
About PEPPER SPRAY Hip Hop fans who also enjoy the sounds of alternative rock group The Red Hot Chili Peppers will rejoice when they hear Pepper Spray, an EP release from A-Plus of Souls of Mischief/Hieroglyphics and production team Compound 7. The 7-song EP is a reimagining of some of the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ most epic tracks as a backdrop for MCs A-Plus, Del and Knobody. The brainchild of Compound 7 member AAGEE (who suggested an EP release with production based entirely off the Chili Peppers), PEPPER SPRAY is a specialty project, according to A-Plus. “The whole purpose is a Hip Hop tribute to the Red Hot Chili Peppers, inspired by their music and dedicated to their work. The cover is going to be a spin-off of one of their most popular covers – it’s a theme all throughout,” he explains. “The songs are all topic-oriented, sonically as well as lyrically. It’s a conceptual EP, certainly. I don’t want people to look at this like it’s MY new album, it’s something I worked on but it’s obviously in a different lane,” emphasizes A-Plus. “I’m stepping outside of my paradigm to do something new, different and artistic.”   Standout cuts on Pepper Spray include Californication, which features Del. A-Plus explains the significance of Californication – “The way the song is set up, you have to hear it, its two verses then the beat changes, then the verses again, like a refrain. I instantly thought of Del after we finalized the beat. The subculture of California is snaky but its home, that’s what the Chili Peppers’ song is about so I just rapped about what California is for me in the same way - the positive and negative.”   Memories and experiences of tours & being on the road are a recurring theme of the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ music as well as on Pepper Spray. “Road Trippin’ is a song about leaving to go on the road, and what it entails. Just being out from an artist’s perspective and how it’s a very hard but amazing job,” A-Plus reasons. “By the Way is another song about being on the road, but more of a specific story, of our tour bus getting pulled over, smelling like weed, me getting arrested, it’s a story – they’re both tour-story oriented.”   Pepper Spray, in drawing from one of the greatest alt-rock bands of this century and turning their sound into a Hip Hop format will undoubtedly draw new fans toward both genres of music and beyond. One thing is sure; Compound 7’s Pepper Spray is like nothing you’ve heard before.
credits
released 05 July 201

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Toot and Boot

. . . . . and not the pull-my-finger kind. Or the French one either.


Can't, get, it, out, of, my, head. Thanks KiiS.


Gotta.


Guerrilla Girls, holla!

Bop Bop!

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Receiving Death Penalty Is As Random As Being 'Struck By Lightning': Report




By Laura Bassett:
Thirty-five years after the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment and approved new sentencing criteria to make it less random, a new report has found that receiving the death penalty is still as arbitrary and unfair as being "struck by lightning."
A number of factors unrelated to the crime, including race, geography and money, influence the sentencing of capital punishment as much as, if not more than, the severity of the actual crime,according to the study released Wednesday by the Death Penalty Information Center.
Defendants who kill white victims are far more likely to be sentenced to death than those who kill black victims, the study found. Further, a vast majority of U.S. executions occur in only a handful of states; the quality of defense a defendant is able to afford affects his chances of receiving the death penalty; and county budgets are often a deciding factor in whether a district attorney will seek the death penalty or not. A number of these cases are overturned on appeal and assessed very differently the second time around, suggesting the decisions are often unjustified.
"The lingering problem with death penalty is that it is applied unevenly and unfairly," Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center, told HuffPost. "It's not always a matter of the worst crimes getting the worst sentences. Those that have fewer resources or don't get great lawyers or don't have someone reinvestigating are going to end up getting the death penalty, while the worst crimes sometimes get good representation and don't."
As an example, the DPIC report pointed to the case of Gary Ridgway, a serial killer in Washington State who pled guilty to murdering 48 people in 2003 and was given a life sentence in exchange for detailed confessions about the victims. By contrast, Teresa Lewis, a mentally disabled woman in Virginia who stood by as two men shot her husband and son, was handed the death penalty while the two murderers received life sentences.
A national poll conducted in 2010 by Lake Research Partners showed that the unfairness of death sentencing is a top concern among voters who oppose capital punishment. Two-thirds of voters said they would prefer alternative punishments for murder, such as life without parole, over the death penalty, and 69 percent of respondents said they disagreed with the death penalty because of how unevenly it is applied.
Having the death penalty costs states a significant amount of taxpayer dollars, even when the states barely use it. The DPIC report estimates that only one person is executed for every 326 murders, which suggests that the death penalty is handed down too sparsely to be effective as a deterrent or as retribution.
"The constitution requires fairness, not just in lofty words, but also in daily practice," the report concludes. "On that score, the death penalty has missed the mark."
Images produced by Andy Warhol

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Be Kind, Be Loyal


Video released today June 22nd 2011
Excerpt from the March 25th 2011 New York Times:

WASHINGTON — The percentage of the nation’s black population living in the South has hit its highest point in half a century, according to census data released Thursday, as younger and more educated black residents move out of declining cities in the Northeast and Midwest in search of better opportunities.
The share of black population growth that has occurred in the South over the past decade — the highest since 1910, before the Great Migration of blacks to the North — has upended some long-held assumptions.
Both Michigan and Illinois, whose cities have rich black cultural traditions, showed an overall loss of blacks for the first time, said William Frey, the chief demographer at theBrookings Institution.
And Atlanta, for the first time, has replaced Chicago as the metro area with the largest number of African-Americans after New York. About 17 percent of blacks who moved to the South in the past decade left New York State, far more than from any other state, the census data show.
At the same time, blacks have begun leaving cities for more affluent suburbs in large numbers, much like generations of whites before them.
“The notion of the North and its cities as the promised land has been a powerful part of African-American life, culture and history, and now it all seems to be passing by,” said Clement Price, a professor of history at Rutgers-Newark. “The black urban experience has essentially lost its appeal with blacks in America.”
During the turbulent 1960s, black population growth ground to a halt in the South, and Southern states claimed less than 10 percent of the national increase then. The South has increasingly claimed a greater share of black population growth since — about half the country’s total in the 1970s, two-thirds in the 1990s and three-quarters in the decade that just ended.
The percentage of black Americans living in the South is still far lower than before the Great Migration in the earlier part of the last century, when 90 percent did. Today it is 57 percent, the highest since 1960.
“This is the decade of black flight,” said Mr. Frey. “It’s a new age for African-Americans. It’s long overdue, but it seems to be happening.”
The five counties with the largest black populations in 2000 — Cook in Illinois, Los Angeles, Wayne in Michigan, Kings in New York and Philadelphia — all lost black population in the last decade. Among the 25 counties with the biggest increase in black population, three-quarters are in the South.
The Rev. Ronald Peters, who moved last year from Pittsburgh to Atlanta, said it was refreshing to be part of a hopeful black middle class that was not weighed down by the stigmas and stereotypes of the past, as he felt it was in the urban Northeast.
“Too often, people turn on TV and all they see are black men in chains,” said Mr. Peters, president of the Interdenominational Theological Center, a seminary in Atlanta. “Atlanta is a clear example of a different type of ethos. The black community is not people who have lost their way.”
Increasingly blacks are moving to places with small black populations. Just 2 percent of the black population growth in the last decade occurred in counties that have traditionally been black population centers, while 20 percent has occurred in counties where only a tiny fraction of the population had been black.
Segregation declined during the decade. Among the nation’s 100 largest metro areas, 92 showed segregation declines with most of the largest occurring in growing areas in the South and West, Mr. Frey said.
The South was the fastest growing region over all, up 14 percent from 2000. Its white population increased as well, though whites grew substantially in the West as well, something that was not the case for blacks. Growth of Asian and Hispanic populations — which grew the fastest over all — was widely distributed throughout the nation.
“The center of population has moved south in the most extreme way we’ve ever seen in history,” said Robert Groves, director of the Census Bureau.
Northern blacks were a big part of Southern gains. There are now more than one million black residents of the South who were born in the Northeast, a tenfold increase since 1970

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Which Type of Friend Are You?

A great time killing read from the folks over at Cracked.com. Now which type of friend are you?


Here is an excerpt:
Just like a superhero team or jewel thief gang needs each member to specialize in a different skill set, a good circle of friends also needs a wide range of useful skills. While a superhero team might need a guy who is superstrong and a guy who has a lot of gadgets, your friend team might consist of a guy who can get you discounts at the Best Buy and a guy who's totally cool with feeding your cats when you're out.
When I suggest assembling such a team, I'm not suggesting you go around preying on emotionally vulnerable people who can do useful things for you and pretend to be their friend. I'm just saying that if you happen to run into some cool people you enjoy hanging out with, who also own a pickup truck, don't take them for granted.
Sure, you can have friends that are just fun people, or that you are fond of for no logical reason, but that doesn't mean you don't also want to have friends such as:
#2.
The Friend Who Can Find Deals
This is the kind of friend you can miss out on discovering if you make the wrong choice in a minor moral dilemma. They often reveal themselves during an innocent group conversation when you mention a vacation you went on and they ask you how much you spent, then react by saying, "Oh no, that was way too much. You should have checked Kayak first. I saw fares for $400 less last week."
You have a choice here. You can get pissed off at someone butting in and Monday-morning quarterbacking you and making you look like a chump, or you can check this person out and see if you have a genuine Deal Finder on your hands.
Getty
To find out for sure, you just put them under a bright light and ask them to price products. Or maybe just hang out and get to know them.
This is the kind of person who thinks of comparison shopping as a recreational sport. You might think it is a tedious chore, going from store to store, and website to website, reading fine print, trying to figure out which coupons stack, and following every Twitter update on Black Friday deals. But for this person, it is literally like a game. When they get a new gadget, they are less excited about the gadget itself than about the fact that they "scored" in getting it for 60 percent off.


Read more: The 7 Types of Friend Everyone Needs | Cracked.com http://www.cracked.com/blog/the-7-types-friend-everyone-needs_p2/#ixzz1PwLAj0Ti

A Tune for Tuesday

Paul Jones Instrumental #99

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Nubs

. . . . . . . and not the cacao kind.


Want.

How can you not like this little nub of a badass. Tell me.

BOP!

P.s. Shout out! BKDP! Panda Bear! HOLLA!

Friday, June 17, 2011

Feel Good Radio Tunes Live Tonite!


WTULNewOrleans.com at 10pm until Midnight Central Standard Time, 11pm-1am Eastern Standard Time (New York). Twist, sip, and enjoy! 
A Taste:

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

The World's Shortest Living Man

What more can I say but that I am happy to see the little guy brimming with smiles. I am still conjuring
ideas for ideal job positions (I am sure some Chilean miners could have benefited from his services), but for the moment I will let Junrey shine (but of course feel free to chime in with your own needs or job recommendations for Junrey). 

Click through for the Associated Press story:

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Arrested Development


A good song with a message great; A video with a backstory, that much better.


Via Youtube:

Tony Bingham, a sincere friend, found our location for this video at the last minute - and we were of course elated. But on the shooting day in question, the skies produced rain clouds for miles.
I sat silently, thinking how I'd finally gotten to shoot a music video for this band (I had already directed their EPK and documentary), and now the heavens were not cooperating. Clearly a disaster was abound. I decided to shoot anyway. Maybe two takes in, I'd pretty much given up on the clip having any signature look...everything was drab, muddy and dark.
But within, it seemed, seconds, a wondrous thing happened. I received a call from my steadicam operator who said prior his schedule would not allow for him to be there - now he was asking for directions. My smile began. Once he arrived, the cloud cover peeled back. We had a stretch of about 3 hours of moist sunlight! Outstanding!
After a bit of fertile photography, we packed up and left the farm location, stumbling accidently on a small shack in the middle of nowhere. Funny, when I entered the rickety structure, a visible hole stood out in the middle of the place. I thought out loud, "Quick, let's place the camera down there, and spin it in a circle to catch each band member in a different part of this open house. Worked like a charm!
And when I suggested Speech sit in the window, the sun grew brighter for our two only takes. God...is all one can say.
We traveled back to downtown ATL, where I was favored with the distinct honor of working with famed artist, Radcliffe Bailey. A polished professional. He braved rush hour traffic, and seedy alleyways for us to capture what was pure about his work even then.
We ended our spirited day at the Scoville Hotel, where we finalized our efforts for the remainder of the concept.

Mr. Wendal with decent audio makes that much more of a difference(goood). Also check the 15 minute live version with a funky break down:
Click Through For Lyrics, bio, and more:

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Tinkers Didico Knackers

My blog mind, blown.



For all you Mc's out there, you need not worry, we won't judge you. Just don't paint your baby's toe nails florescent pink for their christening. Own it and paint them green with gold flecks.

South Carolina? Stop stealing my beer.

Dhalyōn munʹia!

O'Bop.
(I couldn't help myself)

Monday, June 6, 2011

Pharoahe Monch - "Clap (one day)" Extended Music Video + W.A.R.


I have never been that high on Pharoahe Monch, but I do appreciate when an artist surprises me with solid material.
"Clap" is off of Pharoahe's latest release W.A.R. of which is a solid output when I consider my previous encounterings with the MC.. I am going to start with the video that first sparked my interest in the album and then build from there sonically. Hopefully a career of hype can finally begin to pan out.



A few selected songs from We Are Renegades:



Click through for a song featuring Pharoahe from 2002's Soundbombing III

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Muliebrity . . .

. . . . . at it's best, so that hopefully you won't be totally grossed out by my last post and the teenage boy lurking around inside me. I'm still a lady who likes a good picnic in the sun, grass blade tunes, unicorns, origami, and pretty birds.


Oh, and live Japanese puppies.

Bop!

RATATAT Presents: Remixes Vol. II

As Ratatat originally released Vol. II
As a free download album
and I am not sure what happened to 
the original link,
I went ahead and found another
for your enjoyment. 


Ratatat take from Fashawn:

Get The Fucking Fat Out Of Your Ears!

There is a whole lot of motion, a whole lot of high fivin', and a 
wholelotta of smiles between Zach Galifianakis and 
Will Ferrell on Between Two Ferns: 

Funny Or Die

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Mac-Uh-Fucking-Rooooons.

Eat with me.
And shit by yourself . . .. . . regardless of what this installation implies.

Both of these are inevitable. In both bodily function(s!) and posting. I can't help but eat, I can't help but excrete, I can't help but share. I mean post.

kid ick, we miss you.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

David Stern (NBA Commissioner) Fixes the 1985 NBA Draft

After watching the following video, I have little doubt that the NBA commissioner David Stern would not hesitate to help ensure the "success" of the NBA via illegitimate means if he deemed it righteous and worthy (of course in compliance with his own twisted sense of justice). Most major sports have their shady dealings and stories, what bothers me is that the man who runs the NBA has been allowed to do so for such a long time, he helped take away NBA basketball from the city of Seattle (a whole other travesty) even though he claims to want to protect NBA franchises, thus allowing them to flourish in healthy NBA cities (Seattle had a Championship and a healthy fan base). The mind cannot help but wander into the depths with which David Stern has hinder other, smaller franchises, in the name of "growth" for the NBA. Booo to David Stern, a corrupt individual on the day that marks the beginning of the NBA Finals (which nonetheless should be exciting).

Gasp!


Via Youtube user :


"What the NBA doesn't want you to know -

In this version of the video I cut out all the crap and cut straight to the fix.

00:00 - Jack Wagner is instructed to "gingerly" place the seven envelopes into the drum. The fourth envelope he holds contains the NY Knicks logo. The material of this envelope is much flimsier than the rest.

00:06 Wagner slams it against the side of the drum, much differently than the way he places the other six envelopes into the drum, visibly bending the corner. He has likely practiced this dozens of times to ensure he can bend the corner on cue when the time comes

00:25 The drum is rotated several times to mix the envelopes. Sterns eyes are intently searching for the Knicks envelope the entire time

00:38 Stern unlocks the drum himself, taking time to look through the drum and try to find the envelope. It is no coincidence that Stern unlocks the drum himself. This gives him valuable seconds to examine the contents. Before reaching in he takes in a deep breath. He spots it. Luckily the bent corner is sticking straight up in the air when the drum stops, however he sees that two other envelopes are laid on top of it

00:45 Stern wades through the envelopes of the likes of Sacramento and Golden State, to find the bent envelope of New York and complete his magic trick in front of a dimwitted audience of writers giddy at the newborn concept of the draft lottery. In his head Stern is surely a nervous wreck, and possibly seems a little shrill by the awkward way he is forced to grab the envelope by the way it is covered. He flips the envelope upside-down, perhaps to hide the bent corner the best he can from the cameras closeup view

00:48/00:49 Pause the video here. David Stern is clearly looking at the bent corner as he flattens it with his thumb as best he can

00:50 Watch Sterns LEFT HAND very carefully. This is the part you couldnt see in the old Youtube video. Watch him stroke the corner with his index finger repeatedly, over and over, attepting to straighten it out, as he holds the envelope up high for the world to see. Clearly he is trying the smooth out the overly bent corner.



The rest of the video is history as Debusshere celebrates and holds up the #33 Ewing jersey that we would become so familiar with for the next 15 years. Though a championship never came out of it, it enabled New York back into playoff contendership after the career ending injury of Bernard King, and led to the massive streak of sold out games at Madison Square Garden throughout the 1990's and 2000."



Full Video after the break:

Thursday, May 26, 2011

The Preservation Hall Jazz Band - More Than Complicated



"Preservation Hall is located in the French Quarter, just three blocks from the Mississippi River. The Hall has served many functions over the years. Originally built as a private residence in 1750, the hall has evolved into a tavern, inn, photo studio and an art gallery. The inside of the hall contains portraits of the musicians who first filled it with the beautiful sounds of New Orleans Jazz.
Preservation Hall opened its doors in 1961. The hall was created as a sanctuary, to protect and honor New Orleans Jazz which had lost much of its popularity to modern jazz and rock n roll. Allan and Sandra Jaffe, the hall's founders, wanted a place where New Orleans musicians could play New Orleans Jazz, a style, they believed, should not disappear.
Today, over 40 years later, the hall is still going strong. On any given night, the hall is filled to capacity with people eager to hear New Orleans jazz played by veteran musicians in their 70's and 80's and younger musicians learning and embracing music that is both sweet and very beautiful." - PreservationHall.com


Props to Todd for the video feed.
Via Youtube: Originally written by Ray Davies of the Kinks, [Complicated] is performed by the Preservation Hall Jazz Band featuring Clint Maedgen on vocals. Filmed mid-2005, this music video features Clint Maedgen, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band and a guest appearance by the New Orleans Bingo! Show.



Also be sure to check out the photo gallery on the Preservation Hall webpage as there are some gems.

Here are a few selected songs by the ever changing Preservation Hall Jazz Band. The Sweet Emma is a good one, tough to track down though, so if you come across it, hold onto it as it may be awhile before you see another one. Enjoy the beauty of New Orleans Jazz!