Showing posts with label Nick James. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nick James. Show all posts

BEST OF CAMP LO

DOWNLOAD :: THE BEST OF CAMP LO

I always wanted to put together an ode to one of my favorite groups, Camp Lo. People ask me why I'm so fascinated with Camp Lo and I think the reason is apparent but for those who do not see what I see, I'll break it down for you. 

1. Cultural Constructivism. Camp Lo utilizes a sort of Black referential realism to form their own epistemology. They weave historical figures and Black popular culture to form a hyperreal Black identity; collapsing numerous Black eras into one. They reference Lena Horne, Nat Turner, dashikis, What's Happening the tv show, and West African names (often in the same verse). This allows Camp Lo to piece together figures, historical events, and popular culture in hodge-podge fashion and make it seem like a set of interconnected ideas. Their lyrics are a Black cultural politics class on acid. In the selection below Sonny Cheeba "Billy Holidays" the "Foxy Browns," i.e. provides class for young dames. Holiday, an actual figure, and Foxy Brown, a movie character, become interconnected representations of Black female identity. By replacing concepts and situations (that would normally take the average rapper a few bars to explain) with pop cultural and historical references, Camp Lo packs verses with jotted imagery in hyperbolic detail. Entire identities and eras are funneled into one adjective or used as elaborate concepts.      

Case Study: Coolie High
Got the bubbly pourin through me at Cleopatra's casino
Sweetbackin' Coolie High Jackin, Jitterbugs and little (?)
Dolemite's outta site Anti-hatahs cats in the city
On the money takin the tri-state under sore savant
Billy Holidayin' the Foxy Browns with my Harlequinns
Penny he repellin reflected crystals is Hollywood

2. Cultural Malleability. The Lo primarily reference Black culture but also incorporate outside influences into their flow. The French Connection becomes "The Black Connection." They embody Blaxploitation Post Modernism. Furthermore, their cultural trajectory isn't monolithic. Whereas Ice Cube once rebelled against the Native Tongue movement for being too Black middle class all while Ice Cube himself was doing a disservice to the Black community for relying on poverty as a marker of Black identity, Camp Lo simply doesn't care. They are from the Bronx and give praise to the barrio and the boutique; something far more representative in 21st century identity politics than the socio-cultural allegiances of rappers Camp Lo came in the game with. Ahead of their time anyone?   

3. Presentation. In a recent interview, rapper/singer Cee-Lo explained that contemporary music is boring because showmanship is long gone. He believes its the performers responsibility to take the listening experience of music one step further through costume and movement. Camp Lo embodies those sentiments. In the midst of gangster rap (1996), Camp Lo set themselves a part from the pack by wearing red leather Reebok high-tops, cowboy hats, fur coats, and round sunglasses. Their presentation personified their slang. Though their live shows do need improvement, Sonny Cheeba raps with a tooth pick in his mouth and obscenely large belt buckle.      



4. Reverence for the Meretricious* From Cadillac Allante's, Martini & Rossi Asti Spumante Champagne, "slime ball jheri curls," and getting ice rock gritty with a woman named Krystal Karrington, The Lo makes the mundane and tacky seem priceless. They reference items easier to relate too (unless you own a G5) as well as praise the passé; valuing yesterday's forgotten trends, transporting the listener back to the Ali/Frazier fight where fur coats reigned.   



*Meretricious: a. attracting attention in a vulgar manner, b. superficially or garishly attractive

5. Dedication to an Idea. For 15 years Camp Lo has remained loyal to a motiff, an idea. When artists commit to an idea their personal identities aren't necessary. I have never thought of Geechi Suede or Sonny Cheeba's personal lives because their characters come off more appealing and grandiose. Kanye West probably can't decipher when Kanye the artist ends and Kanye the person begins, thus we get temper tantrums. On the contrary, when people hear Luchini, it evokes a feeling not a self serving accomplishment on behalf of the artist. Great minds discuss ideas. Average minds discuss events. Small minds discuss people. I think Camp Lo's music encapsulates a a wealth of ideas presented in beautifully gaudy packaging.   

With your newly acquired analysis, enjoy the music. Diamond Delegates signing off.


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DOWNTIME 4

Posted: Sunday, July 24, 2011 | | Labels: , , , 0 comments


DOWNLOAD :: DOWNTIME 4

If Downtime 2 had an acoustic theme and 3 was more electric, I'd have to say Downtime 4 is obscure. With music from Nigeria to Brazil, genere's spanning from afro-beat, hip-hop, jazz, house, and more, Downtime 4 is an amalgamation of sounds one wouldn't normally hear paired together. Peace.  


TRACKLIST
1. Massive Attack (Vibeangel Mix 1) - Flying Lotus | 2. Air ft. MF Doom (Geteye Remix) - Dabrye | 3. Blackfire - Madlib | 4. Orere Elejigbo - Lijadu Sisters | 5. No Particular One - Theophilus London | 6. Democ£stico - Marcos Valle | 7. Mother's Day - Aleke Kanonu | 8. The Gigolo and I - Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band | 9. Original Radio Spot Claudean - Claudean Movie Trailer | 10. No Hook (Ambassadors Theme) Ft. Pete Rock | 11. On Point Remix - Trademark Skydiver x Young Roddy x Curren$y | 12. Stay True - Ghostface Killah | 13. Original Radio Spot Young Blood - Young Blood Movie Trailer | 14. Troptikal (SS) - Mndsgn | 15. Classic ft. Talib Kweliw - MED | 16. Sustas - Mndsgn | 17. Full Moon - Noñameko | 18. Return From The Ashes - John Dankworth | 19. By Your Side (CottonBelly Mix) - Sade | 20. Everybody Loves the Sunshine - Seu Jorge & Almaz | 21. Soundgirl Personal - Fat Jon The Ample Soul Physician | 22. Light To Dark - Jesse Boykins III | 23. Return To The Journey -Thundercat | 24. Red Light - Fatima feat. Floating Points

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BEYONCE / ANDRE 3000

Posted: Tuesday, June 7, 2011 | | Labels: , , , , , 0 comments


He's back. For now. Produced by Kanye! And Consequence?

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SHABAZZ PALACES IS THE FUTURE

Posted: Saturday, May 28, 2011 | | Labels: , , , 0 comments







Shabazz Palaces is the future of music in my regard. They are like if Camp Lo, J Dilla, Radiohead, A Morrish Temple, and Eugene McDaniels (please research) ever made it to outer space together. Oh yeah, and Leon Thomas. Their ability to create scattered dystopian and ambient soundscapes coupled with jotted yet poignant lyrics is one aspect of their appeal (think Samuel L Jackson's character in Do The Right Thing rapping over Flying Lotus meets london garage beats). The other component, is their pastiche of afro/arab imagery. It creates a postmodern multimedia experience where the listener/viewer is given a canvas where they wrestle with their interpretation of what they are experiencing. Its kind of a subdued Public Enemy. Preachy but not to preachy. Weird but not Odd Future weird.


  Shabazz Palaces - Lost Foundling by subpop




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ERIC ROBERSON - HOW COULD SHE DO IT





Old but been on repeat.

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DOWNTIME 3: ELECTRIC



1st, I want to thank folks for the response I have been getting from the Downtime mixes. I've always accumulated a ton of music but only shared them minimally with folks. Expect more concept mixtapes in the future where I pair sound with design.

As for Downtime 3, I wanted to go in the opposite direction of Downtime 2. Whereas 1 was a mix of electric, low-fi, soul, and sample based Hip-Hop, and Downtime 2 being a mix of acoustic and stripped music, I wanted 3 to be more electric and harder than 2 yet not diverge from the subtleness that Downtime is known for. That's it. Peace.

Tracklist
1. Running - Gil Scott-Heron And Jamie XX // 2. Wildfire feat. Little Dragon - SBTRKT // 3. Free Press and Curl - Shabazz Palaces // 4. And We Gonna (Samiyam Chopsticks Remix) - Shigeto // 5. Embody - SebastiAn // 6. Ascension (Remix) - Maxwell // 7. Peace - Carlitta Durand // 8. Løb Stop Stå (feat. Coco O.) - Boom Clap Bachelors // 9. Don't Look Back - Telepopmusik feat Angela McCluskey // 10. Hoping Will Only Take You So Far - B.Lewis // 11. No Idea's Original (14KT Remix) - Nas // 12. Zambony (Remix) - K-OS // 13. Hear You Say (featuring Khari Mateen) - Money Making Jam Boys // 14. Magikbullet - Mndsgn/ 15. The Verge - Kenton Dunson / 16. I Mind - James Blake / 17. What You Need - The Weekend // 18. LucidAgain - B.Lewis // 19. Purple Pills (Sleeping Pills Remix) - Peter Hadar // 20. Manifestations - Mono/Poly // 21. Tiger Eyes (Laid Back) - Peaking Lights





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YOUTH SPEAKS: MY WORDS CONSUME ME



Youth Speaks just sent me an anthology of poems and given their 15th Annual Teen Poetry is happening this Friday, I had to post. Youth Speaks is a pioneering youth poetry organization based in San Francisco but has chapters nationally as well as an international base of poets and fans. Check what they have to say about the mix and if you are in the Bay, check out the slam this Friday at Davies Symphony Hall.
Youth Speaks’ 15th Annual Teen Poetry Slam takes place Friday, May 20, 2011 at the historic Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco. As a way to show our appreciation, we are offering a free download letting fans experience the first poems to come out of Youth Speaks. Download and come hear the next generation of Youth Poetry Friday at Davies Symphony Hall. This anthology features amazing pieces by Okechuku, Sailor Jay, Marc Bamuthi Joseph, Eddie Monroe, April Hale, Saul Williams, Taz Shirota, Molly Rainor, Rafi, Kinich Coda, Aya De Leon, Tim Arevalo, Biko Eisen-Martin, Beau Sia, and more.

Tickets are still available. Get them while you can. Purchase HERE. Also, with the ticket stub you get into the after party for free where Will.I.Am is DJ'ing. Personally, I am a Will.I.AM fan especially pre "Where is the Love" Will.I.AM, but even after Fergie-Gate he still made dope beats. My friend once saw him spin at his house and when someone bumped the table, he made a beat out of the skip. That has to account for something.


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ZO! & PHONTE - RETURN OF THE MACK

Posted: Sunday, April 17, 2011 | | Labels: , , , , 0 comments


Zo! & Phonte ft. Tigallo the Tay God – Return Of The Mack


I release Downtime 2: Acoustic today and later in the day this comes out. Hilarious and amazing cover. He pays homage to Lil B and the Geto Boys at the end. I want to perform this at some recreation center event for some reason.

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DOWNTIME 2: ACOUSTIC



Back by popular demand, Downtime is a series of mixtapes designed to personify moments of relaxation, meditaion, retrospection, introversion, and the like. Given the first Downtime had a more contemporary and electric vibe, I decided to piece together some acoustic sounds and rare live recordings to complement the first offering.


TRACKLIST
1. Autumn In New York - Singers Unlimited // 2. Ci'iy Life - Tranqill // 3. Sunday Morning (Live) - K-OS // 4. Good Man (Acoustic) - Raphael Saadiq // 5 Gotcha feat. Tyler Woods (Nick James Remix) - Camp Lo // 6. Encore (Acoustic) - Jay-Z // 7. All Falls Down (Acoustic) - Kanye West & John Legend // 8. what kinda cool will we think of nexT - Cody ChesnuTT // 9.  Portrait of Tracy - Jaco Pastorius // 10. Something In The Silence - Andreya Triana // 11. Black Maybe - Syreeta // 12. Step into the Realm (Live) - The Roots // 13. Billie Jean (Michael Jackson Cover Live) - Aloe Blacc & The Grand Scheme // 14. You Are My Everything - Janelle Monáe // 15. Transformer (Live at Abbey Road Studio) - Gnarls Barkely // 16. Angel (Acoustic) - Jimi Hendrix // 17. I'll Come Running Back to You - Sam Cooke // 18. Visions - Stevie Wonder // 19. To The Establishment - Lou Bond // 20. Piano Cover - H.O.P.E. Wright

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SELAM

Posted: Saturday, April 16, 2011 | | Labels: , , , , , 0 comments

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SEU JORGE + WMM



.


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XV - WICHITA (PROD. JUST BLAZE)

Posted: Friday, April 15, 2011 | | Labels: , , , , 0 comments


XV - Wichita (Produced By Just Blaze)


Perfect.

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H.O.P.E. WRIGHT

Posted: Thursday, April 14, 2011 | | Labels: , , , , 0 comments


H.O.P.E. - Piano Cover


Since I mentioned H.O.P.E. in the last post I figured I should post the two songs of his I've playing a lot lately. Also, I miss designing these headers for each post.

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KENDRICK LAMAR - HIIIPOWER


Kendrick Lamar - HiiiPower (Prod. J. Cole)

Between Kendrick and H.O.P.E., Compton has been putting out the best hip-hop music. Kendrick continues to impress and this homage to black power further showcases his ability to depict Black life and struggle without sounding preachy or antiquated like other artists. 

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Stagnation or Damnation? The State of Public Education

Posted: Monday, January 24, 2011 | | Labels: , , , , , 3 comments


With the recent news that the California UC system has to cut $500 million from its general budget, they came up with the solution to turn away qualified students. This strategy is disheartening in a country where intellectual labor is not just the norm, but also our economic reality. The United States is nearing its 40th birthday of deindustrialization, making a college education and comprehensive skills a must. With the presence of Prop 209 in California, annual increases in tuition fees over the past decade, and now cuts in admissions due to the budget deficit, a Black or Brown student with a 3.5 GPA possibly won't be able to attend schools like UC Berkeley. 

The 50 year master plan for the UC system was created to make college accessible by minimizing tuition for in-state residents and guaranteeing admission for eligible applicants, but when the UC President is instituting cutting admission and accepting out of state applicants to capitalize higher tuition rates, California's public university system is on the path towrds privatization. Funding will now be equivalent to 1998 levels when it educated 73,600 fewer students, thus 350,000 students may be turned away this following year. 

Increases in tuition alone have forced students of color who have been admitted to forgo the college of their choice but now they won’t even experience the joy of being accepted. Yet, UC's football and basketball teams will remain Black and Brown with low GPAs, rarely graduating, but generating millions of dollars a year for their schools. Educational merit is nothing when capital is everything. How UC's are content with this exploitation of the body over the mind is beyond comprehension.  With the debates regarding the financial state of education in this country, Geoffrey Canada type achievement models, public schools versus charter, and the achievement gap between ethnicities, one thing remains certain; any given society cannot promote the importance of education without the initial investment.  


Beyond the cuts, the U.S. has continually negated public education for all its citizens. Whether it be during slavery, the Industrial Revolution, Jim Crow segregation, Chinese segregation in 1885, or the myriad of tax loops and budget cuts that undermine the maintenance of adequate schools we experience today, the U.S. continues to move at a pace antithetical to the needs of its citizens. The propensity to cut education due to deficit or lack of property taxes has replaced the overt racial discrimination of the past even though it still has racial consequences. From the state to the federal level, the inability to effectively plan ahead and deter the economy from dictating the quality of education most come to an end. The reluctance to create policy cemented in the belief that all citizens can be guaranteed a substantive education and enforcing it with unwavering aplomb must be viewed as a continuation of historical oppression. Systems of oppression rarely dissolve, rather they are masked through various subterfuges reluctant to produce and promote equality and equity; blaming the injustice on "de facto" circumstances rather than the historical neglect of people's rights and needs. 

I chose the title “Stagnation or Damnation?” after the racist Senator, Harry F. Byrd, who instituted “Massive Resistance” (1956) as a reaction to Brown v. Board of Education. Massive Resistance allowed public institutions in Virginia to willingly segregate against federal law. Harry Byrd's hatred was proactive, it was overt and easy to delineate as the impediment to progress but times have changed and education's adversaries are now masked. Two realities now remain: stagnation or damnation? Is ineptitude to blame or an acquiescence towards inequality and inequity? What students experience now from those in power is Massive Damnation. Excuse the draconian overtone and its implications but access to education is country club in nature; homogenous and elitist. Educational segregation has rarely been remedied and with the current economic downturn, demanding resources seems bleak. Thus, the students caught in the margins inch closer and closer to the edge of social oblivion.  

Frantz Fanon's, "Wretched of the Earth," was initially titled, "The Damned of the Earth." Originally written in French, the publisher of English translation opted to change the adjective in the title. I always wondered why and only could only come up with one answer; one can be blamed for being wretched. One can be blamed if they are wretched or deficient but never damned. For someone to be damned, a force willingly controls their reality and mobility. It is hard to come to grips with damnation because someone has to take responsibility for it. America thrives on blaming anyone, any group, any race, any religion, or any class. There is a political party or a candidate or a union to blame education's plight on, thus providing time to stagnate. Fanon wanted the reader to know that imperialism and colonialism is a damned state. He wanted the world to know that Africa was damned by Europe. Language that speaks to the true nature of an injustice must be used in order to eradicate it, not diluted language, i.e. wretched.

With that said, what is the cause of the current state of education: stagnation or damnation? 

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ST. ELMO'S FIRE

Posted: Saturday, January 8, 2011 | | Labels: , , , , 0 comments


Michael Franks - St. Elmo's Fire


I'm surprised more rappers haven't sampled this given he says "we get high" in it.  Needless to say, this song provides that sappy 70s white jazz coupled with a bottle of Bordeaux and and thick mustache that comforts the soul.

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DOWNTIME

Posted: Tuesday, November 30, 2010 | | Labels: , , , , , , , 0 comments


DOWNLOAD: DOWNTIME

This mixtape is inspired by Duke Hugh, a producer from the Netherlands, who is prominently featured on the mixtape.  His recent beattape and remixes of Oliver Daysoul's new project with Oddisee are so serene yet lively that I imagined it being a backdrop for a nice day, a good conversation with a friend, or music for a road trip.  Not wanting to simply mash his two recent projects together, I paired his music with current songs, and some old ones, that I felt complemented his sound.  What ensued was Downtime.

The covers were inspired by the recent video project, Hi-Fi, by director Bante and artist Moussa Kaba.  Nothing too fancy but images that reverberate simplicity, welcomed melancholy, elegance and tranquility like the Blue Note covers of yesteryear.


TRACKLIST
01 Steve Mason - Boys Outside (Keep Shelly In Athens Remix) // 02 Duke Hugh - Sweet and Lowdown // 03 Olivier Daysoul - In The Now (Duke Hugh Bossatronic Remix) // 04 Duke Hugh - Derby-Dana // 05 Electric Wire Hustle - Chaser // 06 Robin Hannibal - Transit (Instrumental) // 07 Casa del Mirto - Brother // 08 Von Pea - New Pair // 09 Electric Wire Hustle - Perception // 10 Musiq - I Luv Her // 11 Duke Hugh - Lovesong // 12 Bilal - Levels // 13 Olivier Daysoul - Labor (Duke Hugh Futuresoul Remix) // 14 Jazzanova feat Vikter Duplaix - Wasted Time // 15 Duke Hugh - Polaroids // 16 Foreign Exchange - Everything Must Go // 17 Duke Hugh - It's All Good // 18 N.E.R.D. - Inside of Clouds // 19 Yesterdays' New Quintet - Rocket Love Pt. 1 // 20 Gretchen Parlato - Weak // 21 Kenton Dunson - Stranger // 22 RJD2 - Work // 23 Dudley Perkins - Falling (Instrumental) // 24 Duke Hugh - The Blue Marble

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TWTRCON MIXTWEET VOL.2 BAY ABRIDGED EDITION



Download the MixTweet: Volume 2

Six months ago Anne Weiskopf, VP of Business Development for Modern Media, asked MVMT and Nick James Music to curate a mixtape for TWTRCON NY 2010, a one-day conference featuring case studies, workshops and mini tutorials about real-time tools from the world's leading brands and social media practitioners. We dubbed the project "The MixTweet: Volume 1" and filled it with music inspired by the Twitter experience. The release was a success, serving as the background soundtrack to the day's events. We heard Martha Stewart was tapping her foot to Blitz the Ambassador's "Something to Believe."

Six months later, Weiskopf made a request for "The MixTweet: Volume 2," so we partnered with the local tastemakers at 38th Notes to create the score for TWTRCON SF 2010. 38th Notes is founded by Coolhand Luke (aka Lukas Brekke-Miesner) and co-conspired with his brother Sean and best friend Niema Jordan. Together they've hammered their stake in the ground as the premier blog for music and entertainment in the Bay Area. A blog highlight is their “Bay Abridged” mixtape series where they showcase new music from local artists. Thus, making “The MixTweet: Volume 2” a special Bay Abridged Edition was fitting. Nick James, an Oakland native, pairs his music production and design artistry with activism and youth education. MVMT is chiefly cultivated by Rolando Brown, who leads a collective of MVMT MKRS that make valuable contributions to a variety of artists, community developers and social entrepreneurs. Together, we've combined to create a unique platform to showcase local Bay Area music talent.

The mixtape mimics the pace of our virtual movement, with a sonic funk and electronic pulse that's reminiscent of the fast, collective flutter of our Twitter message exchanges. "MixTweet Volume 2" highlights a diversity of talented Bay Area artists, with all new, exclusive music in a uniquely designed package. 100 CD's will be given away by @hp_pc at the Envy Computer Station at the conference.

Tracklist:

01 The Twitter Score [0:39] by Indy Mogul | @indymogul
02 It's A Shame [3:51] by  Raphael Saadiq | @rayraysaadiq
03 Right Now [3:52] by Do D.A.T. | @dodatamen
04 Abrazame [3:42] by Los Rakas | @LOSRAKAS
05 Top Of The World [3:41] by The Cataracs | @thecataracs
06 TWEET IT [3:42] by Seedwell | @Seedwell
07 I Got Soul, I'm So Wasted [4:36] by Wallpaper. | @Wallpaper
08 Nightcap [4:36] by F.A.M.E. feat. Mike Baker | @MKBKRTHEBKMKR
09 Hands Up [3:07] by Erk Tha Jerk | @erkthajerk
10 Liquid Love [4:08] by Chris Turner | @lovechildct
11 Day Dreamer [2:47] by Moe Green | @MoeTheDreamer
12 Dreams [2:31] by Droop-E | @DroopE707
13 Foxy Girls [3:04] by The Getback | @rafaelcasal @chinakahodge @daveeddiggs
14 Smarts [2:53] by Fear & Fancy | @fearandfancy
15 Our Time [3:17] by Alexander Spit | @AlexanderSpit
16 Many Stylez [4:32] by ZION-I | @ZIONI
17 Seat Filler [2:39] by Siaira Shawn | @SiairaShawn
18 What Twitter is For (Skit) [1:10] by Some Grey Bloke | @somegreybloke
19 Nothing Compares 2 U [3:26] by Goapele | @Goapele
20 Grapevine [3:27] by DLRN | @dlrnmusic
21 Circus Lights (Nick James Remix) [7:45] by Ill-Literacy | @ill_literacy @iamnickjames



Download the MixTweet: Volume 2

ABOUT TWTRCON

TWTRCON is entirely focused on the business use of the real-time web.  We produce the TWTRCON Business in Real-Time conference, a one-day event that features case studies from leading brands, workshops led by social media practitioners and mini tutorials about real-time tools.  We also collect and publish social media business case studies, statistics and videos on our web site at TWTRCON.com. Our goal is to create a resource and a place — both online and at our events — where business people managing real-time strategies can exchange ideas and best practices.  


TWTRCON is produced by Modern Media, a team of people dedicated to driving innovation in the media industry.  We started out as an agency, and still work with many clients to produce events and marketing programs.

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ROSA PARKS REMIX

Posted: Friday, November 12, 2010 | | Labels: , , , , , , 0 comments


Andre 3000 - Rosa Parks (Nick James Remix) Download Snippet


I've been wanting to do a 3000 project for a while and am finally getting into it. It's going to be a joint collaboration with singer, Siaira Shawn, where she adds choruses and verses as well. Given that most of 3000 acapella are just one verse, I wanted to fill the tracks with new music. Not to mention, Siaira is dope.  Thus, it should knock hard. Oh, and that isn't the cover.

Stay tuned.

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SEARCH FOR THE NEW LAND

Posted: Friday, October 1, 2010 | | Labels: , , , , 1 comments

leemorgan

Click Link to Download the Album


Lee Morgan - Search for the New Land


My friend for over a decade, Danny Wheeler, once came to my apartment in Berkeley years ago with this Lee Morgan album.  He comes in and sits down and tells me to put this on immediately.  We played the 16 minute song without talking to each other.  The song finishes and he asks me what I thought about it.  I talked about the musicality of it and referenced other songs of that era and he did me a favor and appeased my lack of imagination and proceeded to provide an amazing interpretation. He talked about the song title first, "Search for a New Land," as it related to the intro and outro of the song; explaining that it sounds like the end of movie or an epic.  If you listen closely, the beginning of the song sounds like a song just ended not a new one beginning.  Hence, Morgan's intro emphasizes the end of an era, moment, or experience and the importance endings have when beginning a new journey.  To embark on something new, something old (whether liberating or confining) usually is the catalyst for change.  This is why the introduction arrangement is strategically placed throughout the entire song.  It signifies a change in the narrative.


I've always referenced this song and that conversation to different experiences I've been through. Without words this song reveals an inevitable truth that fleeting moments, unfortunate experiences, fallouts, overstayed welcomes, or life transitions can be melancholy but there is nothing we can do about change.  It will come and when we must search for the new land metaphorically (or even figuratively given the state of our planet), welcome it or you will remain in the purgatory of antiquity.


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