All Posts By

stepupworld

GIRLS & BOYS MEETS BFM @ WEBSTER HALL W/CASPA, HELLFIRE MACHINA, AND MORE

By | In The News

CASPA [http://www.myspace.com/caspadubstep ]

Caspa grew up in West London, and was brought up on a diet of jungle & hiphop. At the time he wasn’t old enough to go to the jungle raves so had to be content with his tape packs of Brockie and Det. When garage emerged he naturally progressed into the sound and started attending garage raves.
After an injury which sadly ended his once promising basketball career, he bought his first pair of decks and started DJ’ing. And after receiving a free demo copy of Fruity Loops he started to experiment with the idea of building tracks in a computer program and got his first real taste of music production. Under the name Quiet Storm he made a tune called ‘Bass Bins’, which was picked up by BBC 1xtra’s J Da Flex who showcased on his Underground Knowledge Show in 2003. The next day he received a call from DJ Lombardo (the first resident of FWD) who had just started his label Fragile Beats and spoke with him about a possible release of the track he had heard the night before on radio.
Due to unforseen circumstances, the label never blossomed and the track never saw the light of day, but determined not to give up he pursued his ambitions by starting his own label Storming Productions in 2004 and started a weekly radio show on the prolific Rinse FM. With a successful year of working and releasing with artists such as Search & Destroy, Dubchild, Toasty Boy, DJ Narrows and Oris Jay the label was well established as one of the dominating labels of the time.
After receiving a demo from Swedish producers L-Wiz, he decided to start a sister label to Storming called Dub Police, this label’s focus was to give platform to up and coming artists and push the newly developing dubstep sound – it was also at this time he had his debut release under the alias of Caspa, after which he had a release on well known dubstep label Tempa (Rubber Chicken), which had been one of the largest tracks of the year and is still regarded by many as an anthem.
With a string of succesful releases from artists such as L-Wiz, N-Type, Rusko, The Others and of course his own productions under the Caspa alias, the label began to grow in to one the dominating labels within the newly formed dubstep genre.
After a number of highly successful releases and remixes, in October 2007, Caspa along with label artist Rusko, were appraoched by Fabric and asked to mix the 37th installment of the legendary FabricLive series, following on from estalished artists like John Peel, Fabio & Grooverider and DJ Craze. This was the first commercially available dubstep compilation and majorly helped bring the genre into the limelight, and for many listeners, it was the first time they were exposed to the music.
In 2008, Caspa joined highly respected artist agency ‘Coda’, this lead to a string of high profile gigs & festival performances such as Glastonbury, Global Gathering, Big Chill and Glade aswell as taking Caspa as far and wide as Israel, New Zealand, America, Canada and all across Europe and the UK.
Caspa’s recently started sister label to Dub Police; ‘Sub Soldiers’, was now thriving with two installments of the popular ‘Ave It’ series, amongst other huge tracks to come out of the label. It was also at this time that Caspa & Rusko were approached by Lennie De Ice to remix the foundation setting Jungle anthem ‘We I.E.’ which had been one of Caspa’s all time favourite dance tracks. Straight after, Caspa’s highly successful remix of TC’s drum and bass anthem ‘Where’s My Money’ had become one of the biggest dance tracks globally and had grown into one of the biggest crossover tracks of 2008, propelling dubstep to the masses.
Fast forward a year from the release of the FabricLive CD, Caspa and the Dub Police have found their home at Fabric, holding down a bi-monthly night alongside DJ Hype & Pascal’s True Playaz residency at this prestigious nightclub. With an album on the horizon, aswell as other major projects including a mix compilation and a remix for EMI, Caspa shows no signs slowing down, and 2009 is set be the year of the ghost.

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=180640848647281

Hope to see you there !!!

WHOMP WHOMP !

WEBSTER HALL DOLLAR DAZE!
SIGN UP
FOR $5 ADMISSION BEFORE MIDNIGHT
*The Dollar Daze promotion is only valid for 21+

BFM w/Tinie Tempah, Hellfire Machina, and more @ Webster Hall

By | In The News

GBH & BFM Present THE WONDERMAN – ‘TINIE TEMPAH’ on March 18 @ Webster Hall in NYC

BRIT Awards 2011:
– Best Breakthrough
– Best Single (Pass Out)

MOBO Awards 2010:
– Best Breakthrough

Digital Music Awards 2010:
– Best Breakthrough

Urban Music Awards 2010:
– Best Newcomer
– Best Collaboration
– Best Hip Hop Act

WHO:
TINIE TEMPAH
www.facebook.com/tinietempahofficial

HELLFIRE MACHINA
http://www.facebook.com/HellfireMachina

+ GUESTS

WHEN:
Friday March 18th, 2011

WHERE:
Webster Hall:
125 E11th St between 3rd & 4th Ave.s

ENTRY:

$5 BEFORE MIDNIGHT WITH RSVP: http://newyork.going.com/tinietempah

http://www.websterhall.com/nightclub/c_friday_03182011.php
http://www.gbh.tv/

Doors 10pm. 19+ w/I.D.

GROUPS:
Bass Fueled Mischief – http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=190571266131
Girls & Boys – http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=70502875038

▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼
http://www.bassfueledmischief.com/
▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲

TINIE TEMPAH

For decades, US music charts have seen what they call a “British Invasion” take place. From The Beatles and Rolling Stones to Wham!, Culture Club and Tears For Fears, this phenomenon does not seem to skip any generation. In the latest decade, we have seen Coldplay, Amy Winehouse., and more recently, artists like Taio Cruz and Jay Sean hit the top of the charts. It is with this in mind that the undisputed British breakout star of 2010, Tinie Tempah, has set his sights on America.

Tinie Tempah has had an incredible year – few debut artists boast three hit singles, a Glastonbury performance on the Pyramid stage and millions of YouTube views. He is officially certified as the best selling British debut act of 2010. Yet this 22 year-old artist has captivated music fans, celebrities and critics alike in just a matter of months.

Tinie began the year as a newly signed artist in the melee of other musicians hoping to make an impact on the UK music scene. His major label debut single Pass Out hit No.1, and has since had in excess of 11 million views. Its follow-up, Frisky, shot straight to No.2 and has been viewed over 8 million times. Combined, both singles have sold upwards of 750,000 copies. His third single, Written In The Stars, reached #1 and thus far, he has sold over one million singles in the UK alone. His debut album, Disc-Overy, debuted at #1 in the UK, and went gold in its first week, further proving his star power. Tinie plans to duplicate this success streak in the US by introducing himself with his number one UK banger Pass Out followed by the melodic, and also number one UK single, Written In The Stars.

Written In The Stars, produced by Swedish powerhouse Ishi, details the 21 year-old’s past, present and future ambitions. “I’m trying to live the dream and other people can do the same if they put their mind to it. That’s what the song is about. You can do everything I’ve done, if you’re determined and driven enough.” Featuring the incredible vocals of Boston newcomer Eric Turner, the epic, synth-led single features crisp drums, razor-sharp guitars and a considered message delivered in Tinie’s uniquely credible style. “I used to be the kid that no-one cared about, that’s why you have to keep screaming till they hear you out,” raps Tinie.

While the first singles sound like bonafide radio smashes, they are just a taste of what’s to come on Tinie’s debut album, Disc-Overy, set for release in May 2011. As well as highlighting the finer things in life that success can offer, Tinie details the lows of fame and fortune, as well as offering a candid insight into his childhood growing up in south London. “On every single song you’ll get a line that reveals what life was, and is, like for me. I recorded a lot of it after Pass Out went to No.1, so that gave me a chance to reflect on life before and after achieving success. When I’m in the studio, it’s just me in my tracksuit, a bottle of water and my thoughts. Going to No.1 gave me a chance to consider how far I’ve come, but also how far I intend to go.”

An incredibly confident debut, Disc-Overy certifies Tinie’s absolute ability to achieve worldwide success. With Tinie already on the US radar thanks to remixes with Diddy and Snoop, Disc-Overy reasserts his global appeal by offering inventive production and a range of rhymes that are in turn frank and funny. The diverse and imaginative album features collaborations with Ellie Goulding and Kelly Rowland and production from Labrinth (Pass Out, Frisky), newcomer Ishi, Al Shux (Jay-Z’s Empire State Of Mind) and Naughty Boy (Chipmunk, Wiley), as well as renowned dance producers Swedish House Mafia.

The song Simply Unstoppable underscores Tinie’s roots while Swedish House Mafia have created an undeniable dancefloor anthem in the form of Miami 2 Ibiza, and Naughty Boy delivers a deliciously brooding pop number Let Go, featuring Emile Sande. One of Tinie’s personal favourites, the laidback Snap talks about chronicling life photographically, including “My mom and dad’s wedding picture, which is my favourite photo in the world”, while Wonderman features Ellie Goulding and is produced by Labrinth. “I wanted this album to be really raw, not only in terms of the production but the guests. I was only interested in working with people I really respect and who I’m a fan of. I met Ellie very early on, we swapped numbers and after that we started living very parallel worlds; the same festivals, interviews and so on. It made total sense to have her on the album.”

He may be distinctive in his delivery and creative in his approach to the business of music, yet the charismatic rapper’s own background is much like an average kid anywhere in the world. “I’ve never tried to be anything than what I am. I was well bought up, I liked school, I liked learning, I’m well educated, I’m well spoken,” Tinie reflects. His mom and dad were keen to keep their kids away from trouble, moving the family from Peckham to Plumstead when Tinie was 11. It’s thanks to his capital city upbringing that Tinie has been able to achieve all he has. “London is one of the only places in the world where you can live in a council block and see a beautiful semi-detached house across the street. Growing up around that was inspirational, it kept me motivated.” Yet, despite success on the underground, few would have predicted just how hugely successful he would become.

Since signing, he has accomplished more than anyone might have imagined – yet for this driven young man, it’s clearly just the beginning of an already incredible career. With a long-term goal in mind, Tinie is far from a one-hit wonder. This pragmatic, prudent MC is mindful of the decisions he makes, and has big plans for himself.

BFM @ WEBSTER HALL NYC W/NERO,HELLFIRE MACHINA,ROO MATE AND MORE

By | In The News

NERO + HELLFIRE MACHINA + ROOM MATE
Downstairs with MAKE THE GIRL DANCE
Friday February 18 at Webster Hall

A night of dubstep awaits you at Webster Hall this Friday… The UK’s NERO are back with more bass than you can wag a stick at.

Hellfire Machina and Room Mate will also be spinning

$5 BEFORE MIDNIGHT WITH RSVP: CLICK HERE

Webster Hall: 125 E11th St between 3rd & 4th Ave.s
Doors 10pm. 19+ w/I.D.

DJ QUESTLOVE HITS THE ROAD THIS WEEK !

By | In The News

This week, while the Roots have a week OFF from Late Night w/Jimmy Fallon, some of the members are spending time with their families, others vacationing.. Not the mighty Quest O ! He’ll spend every day DJn from Miami to Oakland. 5 cities in 6 days. Does this guy ever stop working ?! His band mate Black Thought also has a new project out with J.Period and will be hitting the road as well to a few select lucky markets.

QUESTO DJ DATES

Sat Jan 22-Park City Utah (Sundance)

Sun Jan 23-Miami

Tue Jan 25-El Paso

Wed Jan 26-DC

Thu Jan 27-Brooklyn

Fri Jan 28-Chicago

Sat Jan 29-Oakland

?uestlove (pronounced “Questlove”) is the stage name of Ahmir Khalib Thompson, a musician, DJ, Journalist, and record producer, best known as the drummer for the hip-hop band The Roots. ?questlove’s peerless drumming, production and engineering work is regarded bar none by music critics as some of the most innovative work seen in Urban Music. He has also produced for artists such as Common and D’Angelo and member of the production teams Grand Negaz and The Grand Wizzards.

Venue:

Location:

Show Date:

Doors Time:

Show Time:

On Sale Date:

Ticket Price:
The Den at the Fox Theater

Oakland, CA

Saturday, January 29


9:00PM

Friday, January 14

$25.00 Adv | $30.00 Door – General Admission
$50.00 – VIP (Balcony access and private bar)*plus applicable service fees

Tickets are also available service charge free at The Fox Theater’s Box Office (located on the 19th street side of the theater) on show dates and on Fridays from noon – 7:00pm.

Please note that this show is 21+

Daft Punk: Tron: Legacy OST

By | Music & Reviews

This is not the new Daft Punk album. It’s a score for a Disney franchise film that cost an estimated $200 million to make. As such, there are lots of classical-inspired strings and horns played by an 85-strong orchestra. Most of the soundtrack’s 22 pieces don’t last more than three minutes; only a few could be considered actual songs. And while we knew this was going to be a score since it was first reported nearly two years ago, it’s tough to shake the gloom of blown expectations while listening to the same ominous theme as it repeats in slightly mutated forms across the hour-long soundtrack. The French duo’s current move is almost undeniably disappointing, but it’s also not a surprise.

Daft Punk aren’t the same two guys who made Homework and Discovery. Over the course of the last decade, Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo and Thomas Bangalter have increasingly relied on images to complement– and sometimes justify– their music. Since their last proper LP, 2005’s Human After All, the pair staged the greatest dance music tour of all time– one that blasted its audience with enough visual stimuli to leave them blinking stars for hours. The pyramid, the gleaming helmets, and the lite-bright leather jackets brought Daft Punk’s greatest hits to a holy, undiscovered realm. Their 2006 art-house indulgence Electroma went even further as it was directed by the twosome yet featured no new music. Daft Punk haven’t even attempted a can’t-miss song in at least five years, and the Tron: Legacy soundtrack keeps that unfortunate streak alive.

The score keeps another trend going, too. Bangalter and de Homem-Christo have flexed their robot obsession for years, but its nature has changed. On Discovery tracks like “Digital Love”, “Something About Us”, and “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger”, they employed robotic voice effects to bring out the childlike naïveté of artificial intelligence. And Discovery‘s accompanying animated movie, Interstella 5555, was a bright and fun technicolor cartoon. But their mechanized fantasies have gotten continually darker since then– consider the much more sinister robo effects on Human After All‘s “The Brainwasher” and “Television Rules the Nation”. Electroma‘s two metal-machine leads commit harrowing self-destruct suicides. Most of the robot doomsaying can’t compare with their ebullient side; their apocalyptic visions are hardly Philip K. Dick-worthy, and they’re oftentimes a huge bummer to boot.

Tron: Legacy is rated PG and aimed at igniting the imaginations of 10-year-old boys. When I watched it in IMAX 3D it was easy to revert back to my younger self and just gawk at the exquisite whiz-bang of it all. That said, it’s pretty fucking dark. Most of the movie takes place in a virtual world that doesn’t know sunlight– it’s like a futuristic version of Tolkien’s Mordor. Almost all of the post-Han Solo humor that buoyed the original Tron is replaced by a thunderous seriousness (and blue-black color scheme) more akin to The Dark Knight. And the music follows suit with endless crescendos of pounding timpani drums and monolithic strings. Naturally, the music synchs a hell of a lot better when you’re watching the stunning images it was made to accompany. Daft Punk’s score plays a vital role in making this poorly scripted mega movie seem bigger and more important than it actually is.

Even so, it hems frustratingly close to the sweeping classical film music style pioneered by John Williams (Star Wars) and picked up by Howard Shore (The Lord of the Rings) and Hans Zimmer (The Dark Knight). The Tron: Legacy score’s supposed innovation is combining an orchestra style with electronics, but the meshing of the two styles is rare and rudimentary. More often than not, each piece is either mostly synth-based (including filter-house also-rans “Derezzed” and “Tron Legacy (End Titles)”) or symphonic (“Nocturne”, “Outlands”). When they pull off the combo– as on the blistering “The Game Has Changed”– it’s thrilling even without an IMAX screen hijacking your senses. And while the classical arrangements mark a new style for Daft Punk, it’s hardly revelatory in the sphere of movie scores at large.

Watching the movie, I couldn’t help but think that this was Daft Punk’s attempt at topping their legendary pyramid tour. Theoretically, by teaming up with Disney and the most high-tech cameras and surround-sound systems and recording facilities known to man, the two could could dive bomb into the minds of millions of people in one immense opening weekend and stay consistent with their man vs. machine ideology– all without leaving the comfort of their own homes. But the tour was phenomenal because they were the central characters– not just a side act– and because it was delusionally fun. Tron: Legacy has flashes of that sort of brilliance, but it’s downright puny compared to the sheer joy that is “One More Time” or “Around the World”. Daft Punk used to be a couple of guys hellbent on making genius dance music who happened to wear goofy robot helmets. Along the way, though, their priorities seem to have changed.

Ryan Dombal, December 10, 2010

Kanye West: My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy (Def Jam / Roc-A-Fella; 2010)

By | Music & Reviews

Kanye West’s 35-minute super-video, Runaway, peaks with a parade. Fireworks flash while red hoods march through a field. At the center of the spectacle is a huge, pale, cartoonish rendering of Michael Jackson’s head. My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy‘s gargantuan “All of the Lights” soundtracks the procession, with Kanye pleading, “Something wrong, I hold my head/ MJ gone, our nigga dead.” The tribute marks another chapter in West’s ongoing obsession with the King of Pop.

West’s discography contains innumerable references and allusions to Jackson. His first hit as a producer, Jay-Z’s “Izzo (H.O.V.A.)”, sampled the Jackson 5’s “I Want You Back”. For many, his first memorable lines as a rapper came during 2003’s “Slow Jamz”: “She got a light-skinned friend look like Michael Jackson/ Got a dark-skinned friend look like Michael Jackson.” And when West’s recent interview with Matt Lauer on the “Today” show went awry, he took to Twitter, writing, “I wish Michael Jackson had twitter!!!!!! Maybe Mike could have explained how the media tried to set him up!!! It’s all a fucking set up!!!!” Like most everything else, Kanye may exaggerate the kinship, but it’s real. And it’s never more apparent than on Twisted Fantasy, a blast of surreal pop excess that few artists are capable of creating, or even willing to attempt.

To be clear, Kanye West is not Michael Jackson. As he told MTV last month, “I do have a goal in this lifetime to be the greatest artist of all time, [but] that’s very difficult being that I can’t dance or sing.” He ended the thought with a laugh, but you get the impression he’s not kidding. Unlike Michael, he’s not interested in scrubbing away bits of himself– his blackness, his candidness– to appease the masses. And while Jackson’s own twisted fantasies of paranoia and betrayal eventually consumed him whole, West is still aware of his illusions, though that mindfulness becomes increasingly unmoored with each newspaper-splashing controversy. The balance is tenuous, but right now it’s working to his advantage. On Twisted Fantasy, Kanye is crazy enough to truly believe he’s the greatest out there. And, about a decade into his career, the hardworking perfectionist has gained the talent on the mic and in the control room to make a startlingly strong case for just that.

Kanye’s last album, 2008’s 808s and Heartbreak, was heavy on the Auto-Tune and stark synths, but relatively light on grandiose ideas. It was a necessary detour that expanded his emotional palette; a bloodletting after a harsh breakup and the passing of his mother that manifests itself in Twisted Fantasy‘s harshest lows. But musically, the new album largely continues where 2007’s Graduation left off in its maximalist hip-hop bent, with flashes of The College Dropout‘s comfort-food sampling and Late Registration‘s baroque instrumentation weaved in seamlessly. As a result, the record comes off like a culmination and an instant greatest hits, the ultimate realization of his strongest talents and divisive public persona. And since the nerd-superstar rap archetype he popularized has now become commonplace, he leaves it in the dust, taking his style and drama to previously uncharted locales, far away from typical civilization.

He’s got a lot on his mind, too. After exiling himself for months following last year’s infamous Taylor Swift stage bomb, the rapper made some of his first comeback appearances at the headquarters of Facebook and Twitter in late July. Videos of West standing on a table in tailored GQ duds while gesticulating through new rhymes (sans musical accompaniment) quickly made the rounds. The Silicon Valley visits seemed like a stunt, but they were prophetic. Forever an over-sharer, Kanye was looking for an outlet for his latest mirror-born musings. He found that platform with Twitter, and proceeded to dictate his own narrative in 140 character hits. Whether showing off exotic purchases, defending himself against the press, or going on stream-of-consciousness rants, Kanye finally had the middleman-free, instant-gratification platform he’d always wanted.

Juiced on the direct connection, he began releasing weekly songs for free online, the generosity of which would be moot if the songs didn’t deliver. But they did, over and over, eventually building up the same type of superstar goodwill Radiohead pulled off with their pay-what-you-want In Rainbows release plan and Lil Wayne’s free mixtape barrage leading up to 2008’s Tha Carter III. So while Kanye can’t sing or dance like Michael, he’s making meaningful connections in a fresh, oftentimes (ahem) naked way. “When I used to finish an album I would be so excited for my mom to hear the final – final!” he wrote on November 11. “The final – final is what we used to call the… completed album with all the skits!!! I made songs to please one person… MY MOM!!! I would think… would my my Mom like this song!”

I’m not sure which song he’s talking about. Because, between July and November, West seemingly decided to make My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy less mom-friendly and more of a hedonistic exploration into a rich and famous American id. At Facebook, he rapped the first verse of what would become album closer “Lost in the World”, at one point changing Michael Jackson’s “Wanna Be Startin’ Something” refrain to, “Mama-say mama-sah Mama Donda’s son,” referring to his late mother. The familial allusion was left off the album. Another Facebook tune– a brutally oedipal account called “Mama’s Boyfriend”– was also deleted, along with the vintage-Kanye-sounding “See Me Now”. Such exclusions speak to the album’s sharp focus– to move everything forward while constantly tipping on the brink of frantic instability.

This isn’t the same resourceful prodigy who made The College Dropout or even the wounded soul behind 808s and Heartbreak. Instead, Kanye’s Twisted Fantasy incarnation cherry-picks little things from his previous work and blows them up into something less than sane. The expansive, all-encompassing nature of the album is borne out in its staggering guest list which includes mentors Jay-Z, RZA, and No ID, along with new charges like Nicki Minaj, Rick Ross, Kid Cudi, and Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon. The inclusion of Minaj (who contributes the schizoid verse of her life on “Monster”), Ross (a guy known for making up his own reality as he goes), and Cudi (who’s probably even more wildly self-destructive than Kanye) especially adds to the hallucinatory tone. By the time Chris Rock shows up to provide comic relief during one of the album’s bleakest moments, it begins to feel as if Kanye is stage-managing his own award show with enough starpower, shock, and dynamism to flatten the Grammys, the VMAs, and the rest all at once.

Over the past few months, Kanye has intermittently tried to flush away his rep as a boorish egoist in interviews and on Twitter, which is, fortunately, impossible. Because without his exploding self-worth– itself a cyclical reaction to the self-doubt so much of his music explores– there would be no Twisted Fantasy. “Every superhero needs his theme music,” he says on “POWER”, and though he’s far from the virtuous paragons of comic book lore, he’s no less complex. In his public life, he exhibits vulnerability and invincibility in equal measure, but he’s just as apt at villainy– especially here.

With “Runaway”, he rousingly highlights his own douchebaggery, turning it into a rallying cry for all humanity. Like many of his greatest songs, it’s funny, sad, and perversely relatable. And while the royal horns and martial drums of “All of the Lights” make it sound like the ideal outlet for the most over-the-top boasts imaginable, West instead inhabits the role of an abusive deadbeat desperate to make good on a million blown promises. “Hell of a Life” attempts to bend its central credo– “no more drugs for me, pussy and religion is all I need”– into a noble pursuit. As a woofer-mulching synth line lurks, Kanye justifies his dreams of not sleeping with but marrying a porn star, peaking with the combative taunt, “How can you say they live they life wrong/ When you never fuck with the lights on.” Inspired by his two-year relationship with salacious model Amber Rose, the song blurs the line between fantasy and reality, sex and romance, love and religion, until no lines exist at all. It’s a zonked nirvana with demons underneath; a fragile state that can’t help but break apart on the very next song.

The haunted, Aphex Twin-sampling “Blame Game” bottoms out with a verse in which Kanye’s voice is sped up, slowed down and stretched out. The effect is almost psychotic, suggesting three or four inner monologues fighting over smashed emotions. It’s one of many moments on the record where West manipulates his vocals. Whether funneling some of his best-ever rhymes through a tinny, Strokes-like filter on “Gorgeous” or making himself wail like a dying cyborg in the final minutes of “Runaway”, he uses studio wizardry to draw out his multitudes. Tellingly, though, he doesn’t get the last word on the album. That distinction goes to the sobering tones of Gil Scott-Heron’s 1970 spoken-word piece “Comment #1”, a stark take on the American fable. “All I want is a good home and a wife and children and some food to feed them every night,” says Scott-Heron, bringing the fantasy to a close.

On “POWER”, Kanye raps, “My childlike creativity, purity, and honesty is honestly being crowded by these grown thoughts/ Reality is catching up with me, taking my inner child, I’m fighting for custody.” The lines nail another commonality between the rapper and his hero. Like Michael, Kanye’s behavior– from the poorly planned outbursts to the musical brilliance– is wide-eyed in a way that most 33 year olds have long left behind. That naivety is routinely battered on Twisted Fantasy, yet it survives, better for the wear. With his music and persona both marked by a flawed honesty, Kanye’s man-myth dichotomy is at once modern and truly classic. “I can’t be everybody’s hero and villain, savior and sinner, Christian and anti Christ!” he wrote earlier this month. That may be true, but he’s more willing than anyone else to try.

Ryan Dombal, November 22, 2010

NEXT BFM PARTY @ WEBSTER HALL W/BRAND NUBIAN-12THPLANET-HELLFIRE MACHINA-AND MORE

By | In The News
Brand Nubian [www.myspace.com/98093317]
Brand Nubian is an American hip hop group from New Rochelle, New York, consisting of three MC’s: Grand Puba (born Maxwell Dixon, on March 4, 1966), Sadat X (formerly Derek X, born Derek Murphy, on December 29, 1968) and Lord Jamar (born Lorenzo Dechalus, on September 17, 1968), and two DJs: DJ Alamo and DJ Sincere. Its debut album, One for All is one of the most popular and acclaimed alternative hip hop albums of the 1990s, known for socially conscious and politically charged content inspired by the teachings of the Nation of Gods and Earths.
12th Planet [http://www.myspace.com/12thplanet]
Born in Los Angeles in 1982, John Dadzie aka Infiltrata aka 12th Planet prescribes a transatlantic flavour to Med School. Growing up in the south of the city, John’s musical apprenticeship began in his high school days by playing in bands and regularly attending raves and jungle parties. The turning point came when he formed Imperial Recordings with DJ Lith, a stepping stone for John to excel in a field of production and management.

The Infiltrata profile skyrocketed thanks to support from Boxed Agency UK and John hot-footed it across the Atlantic stepping into the European dance circuit. He was able to catch the attention of big players in the d&b community with releases on Cartel, Renegade Hardware, Tech Itch, Barcode, Cymbalism, and Uprising. Infiltrata has forged successful collaborations with heavy hitting d&b artists such as Spor, Limewax, Concord Dawn, Evol Intent and Mayhem. He also joined forces with Dave “Hochi” Weston, producing a telling remix of the massive Photek single “Sidewinder”. On the back this he later helped establish the TEKDBZ label, a subsidiary of Photek Productions.

Infiltrata aka 12th Planet expresses himself as an artist in multiple genres including dubstep, electro and hip-hop… a fitting backdrop for any Med School beat surgeon. Donning his white overalls, Infiltrata has his scalpels sharpened and is ready to operate.

Underneath the Grand Ballroom lives the historic Marlin Ballroom, the second biggest of Webster Hall’s legendary dance floors. Every Friday night this room is PACKED from the time doors open until the sun comes up. Webster Hall’s world-famous DJ Ray Roc holds residency, serving up the freshest mash up song selection in North America to the incredibly diverse crowd that can be found in the Marlin Room at all hours of the night. Musical style includes today’s top 40 dance hits, hip hop and house, along with classic dancefloor-packing hits from the 80’s, 90’s and 00’s.
TRASH!
The infamous TRASH! party at The Studio in Webster Hall is the “go-to” Friday night event for rambunctious erotic behaviour coupled with the best playlist in NYC. Hosted by DJ JESS and ALEX MALFUNCTION, the party has a flair for underground fashion, a frenetic passion for cutting edge music, and a sense of camp and frivolity that invokes the contraband celebrations of 1920s speakeasies, the flamboyance of Studio 54, and the ecstatic release of 1990s Limelight. Kookie club kids work the dance floor, post punk go-gos flash their undies, and the “Late Nite Cabaret” show turns every head in the room. Get there early to catch cutting edge bands; stay late for the wicked 2-4-1 drink special. Work a look for door whore BRENDON JAMES and skip the line. This is the ultimate party for girls who are boys who like boys to be girls who do boys like they’re girls who do girls like they’re boys. Always should be someone you really love…

NYE IN NYC IS GOING DOWN w/BFM !!!

By | In The News

BFM + GBH present the BASS FUELED MISCHIEF
NEW YEAR’S EVE EXTRAVAGANZA

See the new year in with some heavy bass ripping through your body in a dark warehouse in Brooklyn at our dubstep NYE party…

Your DJs
The Spit Brothers Live
Ill Esha
Hellfire Machina
Odi b2b Dara
Joe Wize
Newmann
Tsunami Bass Experience
Mike Skillz
Val Molano & Linz

Why you should come:
Large Outdoor Smoking Area
Champagne Toast at Midnight (21+ only)
Bass Fuel Punch only $6
Balloon Drop at Midnight
Decorations by Antarra
Lights by Morphous
Music from god

Information
Nearest train: Graham on the L or Nassau on the G
Advance tix: $25 / or $35 with open bar
Day of show: $35 / or $50 with open bar
Door cover will be slightly more expensive if you are under 21

More info/tickets at www.bassfueledmischief.com

171 Lombardy Street. Brooklyn, NY.
Doors 9pm-Very Late. 18+ w/I.D.

Next BFM w/Emalkay(Dub Police) Dieselboy, Hellfire Machina and Liondub

By | In The News

This month on the 17th of December we bring you for the first time in NYC the mighty EMALKAY (Dub Police), east coast legend DIESELBOY, Bass Fueled Mischiefs HELLFIRE MACHINA and local hero Liondub.
_____________________________________________________________________

EMALKAY [www.facebook.com/emalkayofficial]

With initial support in the form of grime veteran Plastician, “Birmingham’s finest” Emalkay gained the attention of South London based label Boka Records with the warped, future bass drones and epic strings of Gut Feeling. Continuing the success, Testing The Waters EP was released in October 2006 followed by Monsters in June 2007. The revolutionary sound of Mecha, released in the fall of 2007, gained Emalkay support from the likes of Radio 1 DJ Mary Anne Hobbs and breakbeat pioneer FreQ Nasty, as well as many of the leading figures of the current dubstep scene. It seemed Emalkay’s own potential as a pivotal dubstep artist was finally being realised. His final release on Boka Records was the reggae influenced My Story in April 2008. In the fall of 2008, Emalkay produced Explicit – a tune that gradually captured the interest of such prominent dubsteppers as Benga and received major support from acts such as The Scratch Perverts and drum and bass duo Chase and Status. After being approached by Caspa however, the track was finally released on the Dub Police label in February 2009 after much anticipation.

DIESELBOY [http://www.djdieselboy.com/]

Dieselboy is the stage name of Damian Higgins, an American drum and bass DJ, producer, remixer, founder of the Human Imprint music label, and co-founder of its sublabel SubHuman launched September 2010.
On New Year’s Eve 2009 during a 3D Productions event at Club 24 in Washington, D.C., Dieselboy played a 3-hour multi-sub-genre set including drum and bass, dubstep and electro. The enthusiastic crowd response encouraged him to continue experimenting with this new format into 2010. Dieselboy is the best-selling American drum and bass musician, was the first American to be voted into the UK-based Drum & Bass Arena Top 10 DJs 2004 online poll, and has played events on six continents. He was also the first d&b artist to chart a single on Billboard’s dance chart with Invid in 2000. (Source: The Washington Post) Dieselboy is sponsored by DC Shoes and Pioneer Pro DJ.
Currently based in Brooklyn, Dieselboy has also performed at rock festivals and extreme sports exhibitions. Dieselboy tracks have been heard on MTV and ESPN, and in videogames. Higgins has also designed graphics for T-shirts, logos, fliers, buttons, CD’s and record sleeves. Dieselboy is represented by William Morris Electronic, the high profile booking agency’s electronic artist division, and Circle Management.

DJ QUESTLOVE AND ECLECTIC METHOD @ WEBSTER HALL !

By | In The News

This Friday Dec 3, get ready for another off the hook party when Questlove and Eclectic Method tear down the roof at Webster Hall in NYC !

Questlove [http://www.myspace.com/questlove]

Ahmir Khalib Thompson (born on January 20, 1971), known professionally as ?uestlove or Questlove (also known as BROther ?uestion, Questo or Brother Question), is an American drummer, DJ, music journalist and record producer. He is best known as the drummer for the Grammy Award-winning band The Roots, which is now the in-house band for Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. He has produced for artists such as Common, D’Angelo, Jill Scott, Erykah Badu, Bilal, Jay-Z, Nikka Costa and more recently, Al Green and John Legend. He is a member of the production teams the Soulquarians, the Grand Negaz, and The Grand Wizzards.
Eclectic Method [http://www.eclecticmethod.net/]

Eclectic Method is the name of an audio-visual act from London, formed in 2002 by Geoff Gamlen, Ian Edgar (aka Cutswift) and Jonny Wilson (aka B.R.K.).
Eclectic Method released their first audio-visual mixtape – the result of mixing, sampling and rhythmically re-editing video from music video, TV and film entitled Bootleg Video Mix in March 2002. After seeing this CD-ROM, MTV commissioned Eclectic Method to work on the MTV Mash video mix show on MTV Europe (2003–2004)[3]. They followed this up by releasing the We’re Not VJs DVD, possibly the world’s first a/v mashup mix DVD in 2005.
They quickly developed their audio-visual style into a live performance featuring video turntables (Pioneer DVJ-1000) – mixing the visuals and audio live[4]. As a live act, they have travelled around the world playing hundreds of gigs in Asia, North America, South America, Europe and the Middle East. After their early period, creating what were considered “bootleg” and “unofficial” video remixes, Eclectic Method were called upon by artists like Fatboy Slim[5] & U2 and by film, video, and television companies such as New Line Cinema[6] and Palm Pictures to create custom a/v remixes.

Girls & Boys presents Questlove + Eclectic Method
December 3rd
10PM
AGE 19+ enter , 21+ to drink
Dress to impress! *
Neat and trendy appearence a must.
Webster Hall reserves the right to deny admission to anyone,
and is not required to specify cause for denial.

In The Grand Ballroom: Questlove + Eclectic Method
Plus the Girls & Boys resident DJs: Alex English, Kids With
Snakes, Gavin Royce, Rekles
In The Marlin Room: hip hop, top 40 mash ups by DJ Ray Roc
In The Studio: new wave, rawknroll, britpop, indie, postpunk, elecro, glam, pop TRASH! party with DJ JESS & ALEX MALFUNCTION
4 Massive Floors of the Hottest Music in NYC
ELECTRO . HIP HOP . HOUSE . LATIN . POP . ROCK . MASH-UP
TICKETS $25 General Admission at the door
For general inquiry please call (212) 353-1600

General Admission advance tickets: $15 ($10 off the door price!).