KmSm Featuring Kidd Money
Gangster Walkin
(Avenue, 1992)
vinyl rip @ 320 kbps
Hope to soon present a Gangster Walk mix starting with Underground Mafia's version and moving through Memphis Get Buck bangers to NOLA Buck Jump jams (as well as their color gang roots). In the meantime, this isolated offering by a moniker-jumbled early incarnation of producer SMK (of golden era Indo G & Lil Blunt production fame).
Like FM's Porkchop, Gangster Walking is the strong point of an otherwise unfocused full-length, Black Enimie.
9.29.2008
Follow the Gangsta Train
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
9:30 AM
2
comments
Labels: Down South, Gangsta Walk, Memphis
9.28.2008
10% Talent, 90 % Business
FM (Freakmaster)
Gimme What You Got!
(Avenue, 1992)
vinyl rip @ 320 kbps
That the rest of Freakmaster's Mac of the round Table is weak by comparison suggests he buckled under the timeless industry pressure to make less good music some time between the release of this 12" and his full-length. Or, maybe it's Freak's style to cop styles - elsewhere he lays out the Making Easy Money Pimpin Hoez In Style acronym over Bill Withers' Use Me Up (a la UGK) and there's a track that sounds something like a weaker version of an early Ball & G joint.
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
3:38 PM
3
comments
Labels: Bounce, Down South, Memphis
9.20.2008
U Already Nodo
I've been hearing D-Lo's "No Hoe" a lot on KMEL recently. I posted that track in the Blapp Blapp mix from back in June. Its nuts already but the clean edit comes out truly fucked up. His myspace begs viewers to call and request that shit. Consider it, 800.955.KMEL.
I've heard a few other D-Lo solo joints and a couple of HBR (Hyfee Block Records) click jams (note: D-lo is no longer HBR affiliated) and now I'm fiending equally to hear new shit and to score hard wax copies of those tracks already heard. A forthcoming remix with Keak and others suggests a vinyl release of "No Hoe" soon. Great bayed out, relaxed Ying-Yang style and you can find an additional mini-interview here. I think he's been locked up and is about to bust out - there's a myspace flyer for a Welcome Home D-Lo Function (10/20). I hope that means blunt nights at the studio and some tangible releases in the near future.
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
10:10 PM
3
comments
Labels: Bay Area, Up Elsewhere
9.18.2008
Music
Debbie Deb When I Hear Music
(Jampacked, 1983) @ 320 kbps
Freestyle classic sampled in many Magic Mike songs, other Bass & Rollerskate cuts and more recently Pitbull's "Fuego". The best song you're likely to hear coming out the radio while getting your teeth cleaned (2nd place: Jacksons' Shake Your Body).
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
10:25 AM
1 comments
Labels: Breaks, Down South, Miami
9.17.2008
Up Elsewhere
DJ Godfather feat. Players Only
Player Haters in dis House - Remixes
(Databass, 1998)
If I remember correctly, this is the first Detroit based post on these pages and thanks to Coon Daddy's raps its a good record for those rap fanatics still scared off by the house rhythms and repetitions of Ghettotech, Ghetto House and Club musics of Detroit, Chicago & Baltimore.
The remix turned me off at first but over years its really grown on me and what I said about the Silky Acapella probably stands even more true for this slab.
Check out the classic floppy logo, too. Still, its outdone by their future digital tit and ass geodesics.
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
2:09 PM
0
comments
Labels: Detroit, Ghettotech, Up Elsewhere
Emergence
Parlez Make It, Shake It, Do It Good!
(Superdome, 1983) @ 320 kbps
I first discovered this record on a mislabeled ebay auction that offered a audio snippet actually taken from an early 90s Kalifornia Noise 12 inch. It was a pretty lo-fi 4track effort that didn't immediately signal some anachronism (though, admittedly, an anatopistic 415 reference) and for the earliest rap out of New Orleans sounded mindblowingly ahead of its time. It was based around the same Ike's Mood piano sample that was superglued to Mannie Fresh's scratching fingers during Cash Money's coming up period and it suggested the kind of hidden & impossibly linear regional development that made my paypal nerve centers itch with temptation.
Needless to say, this is not that record - but it is the oldest rap record out of N.O. to land on this blog, and as far as I can tell, the searchable internet. 16 minutes of the kind of extended party boogie I would have expected given the known context of this LP - if not led elsewhere by a divshare misclick. And I like the fucking piano that pours through in the final minutes.
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
1:07 PM
5
comments
Labels: Down South, NOLA
The Sister Sister
Silky Slim Sister Sister 12"
(Profile, 1992) @ 320 kbps
From its inception T&G has suffered the financial setbacks of relocation, unemployment and other bullshit, but now we're climbing out this hole on a rope ladder made of hospital OT and lined with spare change from the back-on-the-wagon piggy bank. New M44-7 in pocket, hi-fi vinyl rips should be spilling on the T&G dinner table like Bass Tapes were back in March before I discovered how (almost disturbingly) prolific Drop Da Bass had become. I imagine that blog as some pac-man like digital monster that survives on files with "bass" in the title.
Starting off: Silky Slim's (not to be confused with the male rapper of the same name) "Where They At?" response record - context provided by TT Tucker. I'm not sure how many of you are DJs or track-makers, but I can imagine this Acapella put to good use by the right hands.
If anyone can remind me where the circus toy sounding slide melody comes from...
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
12:15 PM
3
comments
Labels: Bounce, Down South, Females in Charge, NOLA
9.09.2008
Addendum
The real deal for all yall geek smokers:
I like the exaggerated triplet drum fills - it makes up for the weird feel of any rap song that swings and the video's colorized format is an apt translation of what much good rap feels like - limited colorful patches pasted into hard-edged landscapes.
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
7:02 PM
16
comments
Labels: Bounce, Down South, NOLA
Marrero
A classic NO youtube post (because its easy) - pile of ripped vinyl coming soon (including the oldest NOLA rap 12" to grace this blog as of yet). Stay tuned and let's cross our respective fingers in hopes that youtube poster 1825TulaneAve will keep up the bounce audio vids - the sound quality is pretty good for streaming video and they might just post something I haven't heard before.
Feat. Above:
MC Thick "What the Fellas They Be Yellin"
DJ Duck & MC Shorty "Where My Old Lady At"
PNC & Jubilee "NO Block Party"
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
3:51 PM
0
comments
Labels: Bounce, Down South, NOLA
9.02.2008
Sissy Roots (cont.)
Here are the relevant audio links from the previous homo posting. We're just 4 months shy of having a black president, so I'd like to think we aren't too far off from you bloggees being able to accept a rapping fag. Fairly extensive / researched Sissy article here as well - I was glad to learn that Gotty Boi Chris came up as one of Big Freedia's back-up singers and she has a great quote too: "My mama's heard me say 'dickeater' so much she doesn't even care". Surprised to see a rap artist with a song called "Poo Shooter" nervous about gay-rap's affect on his children, though.
Don't have a copy of Y2Katey or the Battle of the Sissys disc - an upload or active eBay auction link from any holder or seller would be greatly appreciated.
Katey Red "Local New Orleans"
Katey Red Melpomene Block Party EP
Chev "Fuck Katey" (skit)
Chev "Fuck Katey"
Vockah Redu f/ Chev "Avealations"
Big Freedia "A'han, Oh Yeah"
UPDATE: via poster NOLA
Katey Red Y2Katey: The Millennium Sissy
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
6:26 PM
20
comments
Labels: Bounce, Down South, NOLA, Sissy Rap
8.29.2008
Sissy Roots
Alright, yall. From the margins of the margins, Andy Hopkin's full interview with the original Bounce Sissy, Katey Red, from Roctober zine, #32: Hip Hop [?] Issue. Relevant audio to follow in near-future post. Select articles (not this one, though) from the same issue are here for any nerd interested in a deeper plunge and an unlikely NYT article exists as well. Katey on sex change vacillation, her Whos/Whoas/& Hoes, and punk jealousy. Check it:
Leave it to New Orleans, the birthplace of everything jazzy & funky, the murder capital of the US, where booty-shake Hip Hop is called Bounce, and where there has always been room for cross-dressers.
I was down in New Orleans this past spring and visited Odyssey Records, right on Canal Street. It was right before closing time and I asked the clerk to quickly show me all the best Bounce music they had. As he fanned out about 6 CDs one in particular caught my eye..the one with the green black lady on it posing as the Statue of Liberty in front of New York City. As I read the song titles, the clerk leaned in closer to me, looked me right in the eye, and in a serious whisper said, "you know that's a homosexual don't you?".
Katey Red is the first openly gay or cross-dressing rapper to ever release an album. Hip Hop is a homophobic world, where homosexuals are not only uninvited, but openly and often violently disparaged. So much so that for years rumors have circulated about who the "gay rapper" is, with fans and radio DJs alluding to the scandalous offstage behavior of certain rap superstars.
Enter Katey red, 22, standing 6'1", with short shorts and nicely curled and set hair, Katey didn't plan on being a rap superstar. She used to just do hair and rhyme with her girlfriends around the Melpomene housing projects, until one night her friends convinced a drunken Katey to grab the microphone at a block party. The rest is sissy rap history. Her spontaneous performance that night was enough to convince Take Fo' Records, New Orleans' #1 Bounce label, to sign her on as their newest act. The Melpomene Block Party EP was released and soon afterthat last year's Y2Katey: The Millenium Sissy CD.
The music is everything a block-rocking party mix should be: infectious, intense, catchy, funky, hilarious and sometimes a little scary. For a relative newcomer, Katey's sense of rhythm and phrasing is impeccable. The beats, like in most Bounce music, sample grooves that have been used in so many other songs, that its almost laughable. But while your face is laughing, I can guarantee that your ass will be shaking. The Take Fo' producers can take an old sample like say the Jackson 5ive's "ABC", and flip it, chop it, add percussion to it, syncopate it and next thing you know it's a brand new funky sound, always bubbling up and kicking it down when you least expect it. It's a perfect foil for Katey's excited call-and-response style rapping, where if you didn't catch what she said the first, you might catch it when here dancers, known as Dem Hoes, shout it back to her.
I was fortunate enough to talk to Katey on the phone for almost a hour. She has charm in her voice that even a slight stutter (when speaking, never when rapping) can't subdue. She is a mellow megalomaniac, and I believe she's soon to be the nation's favorite sissy rapper.
Roctober: Tell me about your new album.
Katey: My next CD is gonna be called One Thing About It by Katey Red featuring Big Freedia and KC Redd I have a song "One Thing About It". I have a marijuana song. I have a rest in peace song for a boy who got killed in the projects... he was close to me. I have about 18 new songs coming out.
What does "One Thing About It" represent?
"One thing about it" is just the slang we use, like "One thing about it, whatever happens gon' happen." People like the song because they already use that phrase.
Is it going to be another heavy Bounce record?
It's not just Bounce no more. You know what I call Bounce? Bounce and rap is different. With rap you think about the words you're gonna say and write verses and all that. A bounce song you can just do out your head. And bounce don't have no meaning, you know, as long as you're feeling the beat and making them feel the beat, that's all that matters, if you have a beat they can shake they behind on. So I have a little Bounce on there and I have rap. I don't know which level I'ma go to yet, but I know I got to make a change from just Bounce. I can't go on just like this and get to New York, go on TV and get an award.... (cont. as comment)
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
11:03 AM
5
comments
Labels: Bounce, Females in Charge, NOLA, Sissy Rap
8.26.2008
Memphis Pimpology
Eightball & MJG Pimpology Collection
(93-94?) @ 320 kbps
This is a meta-compilation of the best tracks from a pre-Comin Out Hard 8ball & MJG, previously compiled (with other material) on Lyrics of a Pimp and Memphis Underworld.
Most tracks are paired duplicates, giving each a sense of some identity that exists outside the single recording. Sitting together, nuances of production & inflection stick out stronger. And you get a second chance to catch any lyrics you may have missed the first time.listen to the bass / keep the snare in a flash / with a blast / to forever last / my rhymes that move past / these crooks / who just / stole an old ladies pocketbook / jook when you hear my hard rhyme / pass me a book / a Tops / and let me get high / as a raindrop / when I start kickin chicken / tell me why I gotta stop / I ain't / so witness my Memphis Pimpology / don't like chicken / but I smoke it don't follow me / hard black brother / with a curl and a real limp / you're listening to the lyrics of a pimp
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
1:07 PM
5
comments
Labels: Down South, Get Buck, Memphis
8.25.2008
Women of Bass: Missy Mist
Missy Mist Gettin' Bass
(1989, Neverstop)
A Side Only, Vinyl rip @ 320
Once Upon a Time, You Never Needed Boom...
First, an apology for the ground-in hiss of this rip, the original owner must have got their fair share of bass out this 12 inch. I'm posting this mainly for the cover which is something like the zenith of bass iconography. Enough speaker power to beat half the county down, Missy like the Vanna White of Boom and the no frills font of cassette tape ubiquity. Its an image that must have had some power to endure, it was remade and updated for the liner notes of Big Boi's Speakerboxxx, though its difficult to compete with Andre's astrological centaur pic in the Love Below - a single image worth more than the entire disc's musical content.
The song itself is something like the Ghetto D of Bass, with Missy listing part for part the recipe for Boom - 3000 Watts, 24 bass bins, 2 Technics 1200s and some records to spin / a disco mixer with faders and switchers and then a cutter and a scratcher with some straight up itches [or maybe inches?].
Ms. Mist is still active, or at least was more recently than this aged release - she was featured under the pseudonym Ms. Houston for several tracks on Bishop's "U Know U Ghetto" record. I posted that single in the early and restrained days of this blog - now seasoned and promiscuous, I think I'll post the whole disc.
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
9:05 AM
1 comments
Labels: Bass, Down South, Females in Charge, Miami
8.14.2008
Ike Moods: The Mixtape
DJ Kid Slizzard presents
Ike Moods: Da Mixtape
Side A, Side B
I mentioned in my distant but most recent post a desire to unleash some convoluted Bar-Kays rap family tree mixtape, with space allotted for the Bar Kays, Isaac Hayes, Ike Dirty, Gangsta Pat & Jazze Pha - all connected through musical & familial relations - and works related through sampling. But then Isaac Hayes' death became an inspiration to review more closely that life now lost. So in place of something with a larger scope is this mix of Hayes' most trampled breaks in both raw and sampled forms. The fact that samples of Ike's work follow the full trajectory of rap history from the East Coast (Biz Markie, Ultramagnetic) to the West coast (NWA, CMW, Spice 1) to the Southern States (BG, Skinny Pimp) gives some clue as to the weight of his boots in rap annals. I hope this bootlegg cassette shows due respect in a way that only a bootlegg cassette can. RIP.
Posted by
kid slizzard
at
5:29 PM
5
comments
Labels: Breaks, Cassettemix, Memphis, Rap Roots
