Dec 302012
 

06d3afee

På wikipedia läser jag att DN:s recensent öste beröm över Bo Widerbergs Kvarteret Korpet när den hade premiär, och några år senare hyllade han den som ett “lyckligt mästerverk”.

Tillåt mig att skratta rakt ut i luften. Jag har precis sett klart filmen och de orden liknar exakt en standardiserad, högborgerlig tandutdragning förklädd till uppskattande kritik.

Inget ovanligt där.

Kvarteret Korpet är däremot inte vanlig. Det är absolut ingen lycklig film. Den är manodepressiv, gråtmild, ilsken, vacker – som livet brukar te sig när man är som mest närvarande i det. Fantastiska skådespelare, fantastiskt kameraarbete, och ett manus som vägrar lösa upp en enda av sina smärtfyllda knutar. Allt är fucking tight och draget till en spets – av sådan sort som ger skärsår som aldrig läker. Kvarteret Korpen, alldeles i närheten av köpcentret Triangeln i Malmö, revs på 60-talet, men Kvarteret Korpen är fortfarande aktuell.

Ingen är lycklig här. Alla sliter, sjunker, skriker.

Dec 032012
 

Trappadon saktar och hackar en av de bästa låtarna från Greenova på ett tag, och gör det lika klint som vanligt (möjligen kunde den varit lite, lite långsammare?)…

DaVinci f. Main Attrakionz & Shady Blaze – Year Of The Dragon – C&S by Trappadon by brytburken

Aug 092012
 

Han dödade Ortens favoriter-remixen. Därför fick hans 2:32 ett extra varv i hörlurarna… mycket talangfullt, intressanta beats (från Antracks), men begränsat omlyssningsvärde… för mycket blödigt brudsnack, kanske.

Nu skvallrar dethäringa “twitter” om att Jaqe är uppe i 08 och spelar in med Mack Beats, Skizz och Matte Caliste. Med en sådan laguppställning borde resultatet bli jävligt långt från bull.

Smutsiga södern behöver detta .

Mar 092012
 

Har väntat intensivtdenna remix – så oerhört väl valda gäster.

Dirty Crowd-medlemmen Black Ghost tog sitt namn från the “generous bandit”, “angel of the poor”, or the “narco-saint” Jesús Malverde, släppte förra årets råaste svenska tape och inleder nu denna remix i Göteborg (hans vers här är dock inget jämfört med Blod på mikrofonen). Om jag ser rätt så är det platser runt Wieselgrensplatsen som visas – min hållplats när jag bodde i GBG senast.

Dajanko gör det bättre än på orginalet. “Vilken känsla, att få lyckas när man har kämpat, och jobbat i motvind och undrat när det ska vända“.

Stor får det att se så enkelt ut – att ännu en gång visa att han är Sveriges bästa rappare. Tror mycket ligger i rösten.

Samma med Aleks. Så snyggt han lägger det.

En fin överraskning här är att även Allyawan AKA Sveriges störigaste rappare efter Timbuktu och Looptroop gör bra ifrån sig.

Engelske rapparen Pase är med och representerar Västerås väl.

Man får nog hålla med Salazar-bröderna om att Dani M går en strålande framtid till mötes.

Alladin borde lagt en vers. Han är knappast dålig.

Aki, ja vad tror du – Sveriges bästa rappare. Hoppas vi kan klippa ihop intervjun med honom nästa vecka.

Har inte hört några bra Jaqe-låtar – men här lägger han det mycket bra. “Jag minns när ortens favoriter var Ken, Blues och Latin Kings / Chapee N Chess, nu är det Stor och Labyrint“.

Jacco borde få Polarpriset så snyggt som han avslutar med att lägga refrängen lite annorlunda än orginalet. Så mycket känsla.

Bara Sebbe fattas, men han hade kanske annat för sig.

Jag fäller en tår och tänker på hur långt svensk rap har kommit. Snart tjugo år sedan man lyssnade på Latin Kings i sovrummet och bara liksom vad är detta för något vad är det som får mig att känna så här och man förändrades för all framtid.

Dec 162011
 

With their fifth album G-Side declared their hometown of Huntsville, Alabama an Island.

To learn more about this nationally isolated, internationally renowned location and the music it has birthed, we’re going back to february this year, to the city of Malmö and G-Side’s only stop in Sweden on the European mini-tour that followed the release of their exquisitely executed Cohesive album.

G-Side named their first release Sumthin 2 Hate, but seeing them in the flesh, shining, proudly surfing a wave entirely of their own creation, there’s nothing to hate on. Even when the warm-up DJ insist on treating the crowd with the same ol’ tired ass boombap raps for a long ass time, and a fair share of squares trail off during the Alabama duo’s set to the more commercially oriented dance floor in the same building, there’s no denying that their majestic Prog Rap works surprisingly well in the club. ST 2 Lettaz and Yung Clova rap their asses off (stage routines might need some work, though), lining up one underground hit after the other. The bass is booming through the system, and fans arriving from far (shouts to Sonny AKA alabama187, Hugo, Sanna, Petter) all have a ball.

Backstage the crew is relaxing, ready to start, as ST 2 Lettas put it, “hanging out with the people”, and we get the oppurtunity to talk with him, rhyme partner Yung Clova, manager Codie G, and producer CP, who starts breaking down the structure of Slow Motion Sounds for us:

“In Huntsville – I don’t know if it’s been done anywhere else – we have a 6,000 square foot facility, and inside that we got eight studios. All the producers are under the Block Beattaz brand. We got R. Dot, ATX, Boss Man, P.T., Cees, 118, Fadel, myself, Mali Boi of course. They come to the studio, and just go studio to studio. There’s always something going on. We have young producers that we’re trying to bring up, but we’re really keen on quality. We’re just trying to give them time to mature and develop… we’re gonna get them in there and make them official.

Talking about other producers, Clams Casino helped you with Pictures.

Clams sent us the rough tracks and we went in there and stripped the beat down and built it back up, with his permission. I love Clams, Codie actually put me up to him. He’s super dope. He got crazy melodies, the illest samples. That’s what it’s all about.

You have a similar sound.

Oh yeah. I think sampling is the corner stone of hiphop. It’s what hiphop is to me. I grew up a big East coast fan: Nas is my favorite rapper; Boot Camp Click. I like the new stuff and all, but I’m a purist. That’s where my heart lies.

If we’re talking classic Southern albums, which would be your favorites?

When Outkast did Aquemeni, I wanted to quit. I loved the Witchdoctor CD, that’s one of my favorites. Young Bleed, I forgot what the name of that album was. Favorite groups… of course G-Side; I’m a little biased. I love Goodie Mob, Three 6 Mafia, of course UGK, all those guys. I’m a huge Project Pat fan… Skinny Pimp, Gangsta Black.

Any Screwed Up shit?

It really didn’t catch on with me, because I’m really not a syrup sipper. I did it one time and was stuck in one place for five hours, and said I’ll never do that again. I like Z-Ro, I like his style. Trae The Truth, he actually just grew on me…

Maybe Block Beattaz should produce for Z-RO?

We got some tracks with Trae. We got some tracks with Slim Thug. We got a couple with Pimp C before he passed.

You produced for Pimp C?

Yes. I think they got recorded but never released. We sent them off. 6 Tre G, he had that song Fresh, he was working with Trae a lot out there.

You got a lot of electronic sounds in your music, but I was listening to you the other day, and I thought, “this feels like a Barry White, Isaac Hayes thing”, the way you organize these sounds. Do you have an influence from this older generation?

Yeah, of course. But what we’re trying to do is get away from those typical samples, that people probably have used, and dig deeper. I’m really into the eurotrance music. I just bought the Katy B CD, that’s dubstep and trance.

So you’re into more electronic stuff, like dubstep?

Yeah, it’s growing on me. DJ Giraffo sent me a lot of stuff to listen to. It’s growing on me. I see how it moves people in the club, so…

Do you think America would accept someone rapping over dubstep?

Right now? No. But if we continue to get stale in the states, I think, yeah, they’d be more open to it.

The way you program your drums, do you have an influence for your complex drum patterns… or do you just take the 808 and freak it?

Pretty much, man. That’s our culture in Huntsville and Alabama and the South. The first thing you do when you get a new car, before you get an insurance and before you put gas in it, is to put speakers in it. You put the 12 or 15 inch speakers in there and let the trunk bang. The 808 is the cornerstone of the whole track. The influences from that are definitely Magic Mike, Three 6 Mafia… just aggressive drums, extreme low end. The East Coast influence comes with the sampling and the nice melodies on top of that, making everything beautiful.

In your music there’s a lot of things going on, while Magic Mike is pretty straight-forward. Is that something you came up with yourselves, or is there an influence?

I learned that from Mali Boi. This whole thing is the element of surprise, sometimes you might hear something for two bars that you won’t hear anytime else in the song. That’s his whole thing, he just wants to keep pulling you in. He got a strong jazz influence. He’s from Chicago, and pretty much well-rounded and well-versed in a lot of stuff.

I read in an interview about your very hectic work schedule. Are you still working a 9 to 5?

No. No no no. I’m actually working 9 to 9 in the studio now. I spend 20 hours a day in front of the computer, recording. We started something and now business is picking up. I just sit and record all day. That’s my job now.

Where do you get motivation to sit 20 hours a day in front of a computer?

Number one: Money. And number two: I filled out an application and now i gotta deal with it. It’s rough sometimes, but I get through it.

Do you and Mali Boi ever make beats together?

That’s how we started. But he records also. What happens is that I lay down the skeleton of the track, give it to him, he’ll do some things and send it back, and we’ll go back and forth. He’s pretty much the beatsmith. I do tracks, but my main focus is the recording, engineering and overall production of the song.

What have you learned touring?

That the world is bigger than my immediate surroundings. As far as music, I was watching the videos on TV in the hotel… Man, there’s some nice music over here. We actually did a track where we sampled Scatman John. Jackie Chain recorded to it, so that should be out soon.

Is that Pimp C stuff coming out?

I seriously doubt it.

How can that shit stay locked down?

Just politics and bullshit.

Can’t you get Obama on the line, maybe The Navy Seals, and just get it out?

Maybe! When we get a little bigger we might be able to pull some strings, but right now I seriously doubt it. One of my partners, I don’t know if you remember a group called Royal Flush, they were on Rap-A-Lot Records maybe 86-87… Royal Flush was the one that actually brought Pimp C and Bun B together to form UGK, they’re from Port Arthur also. And my partner, his partner was actually in that group, his name is Albert Bush, they call him Al-B, and he was really cool with Pimp, man. Pimp made a show in Birmingham, Alabama, and he took me to see him. Pimp used to write Al-B from jail, when he was locked up, so it was really crazy. They called each other by first name, he called him Chad. That’s how we had that connection.

What is your first memory of rap music?

My sister getting into trouble for having 2 Live Crew and I didn’t understand why. She would sneak down and dance to it when my parents were gone. She had 2 Live Crew, she had DJ Magic Mike. Those are my memories from way back.

What came after that?

I think Nas came out in 96, was that 94? Illmatic. I think that was the first time I could actually understand and breathe and… understand the impact of the music. It sent chills down my body just listening to it. How could this young cat know so much and speak so eloquently?

How old were you then?

I was fourteen. I’ve been doing this since I was nineteen years old.

Did you mostly have access to New York rap when you were at that age?

That was pretty much it. I went to store when the music dropped, that what it was all about. First thing you do, get the cd, get the plastic off of it, put the cd in, take the book out, sit in the car and listen to it. That’s one thing I miss: books.

I remember when I bought Doggystyle and it had the comic in it.

Yeah, that was a good record. That was when I was a fan. I didn’t start doing music until I was nineteen or twenty. I was at school playing football and everything. I played drums for a year, but I played football and wasn’t thinking about nothing else. But my brother, Chico, they were actually rapping, and it seemed like they were having fun. I went and bought Virtual DJ, you remember that program? I got that program, started doing beats, stopped going to class. And that’s pretty much how I started doing it first. My parents didn’t like it. My mom bought me a keyboard and she says she regretted it – but she doesn’t regret it anymore. She bought me a $600 Yamaha QS 300.

That was when you started, at nineteen – twenty hours a day?

Pretty much. It was all day everyday, then when I was younger. That’s all we did. Get high, bring some girls to the studio, get a bunch of Hennessey, get a bunch of 40′s, and just kick it and make music. Believe it or not, me and Codie G were the rappers.

How did the scene look in Alabama, when you were coming up?

There was nothing, people were like, “What the hell are you doing? Take your ass to school, get rid of this shit.” There were a couple of local groups. At Ease, J to the third. At Ease actually made it to Harlem to The Apollo, but they got booed of stage. There were three black dudes and a white guy in the group, Mike; actually the guy that got me started on doing production. That was big for us. For a long
time, man, we weren’t nobody really doing anything. We were doing all the industry stuff, we were taking our music to radio stations, they would tell us, “you gotta sound like this”, we would go back and do it, and waste time, and take it back to them, and they’d say it had to sound like something else. We were like, “fuck it, we’re just gonna make the music we wanna make”.

So when you realized that, did you have the same vision that you have today, soft, nice, beautiful melodies, hard ass drums?

Yeah. We’re actually gonna leak some of the old stuff to show you that it’s a derivative of what we were doing. Just don’t laugh at it, we were crazy. We were on some real gangsta shit back then. Calling out snitches by their government names. That was how we were living. But just growing up, being mature; we got kids now. We’re conscious of what they might hear. We’re smack dead in the middle of the street so we can’t avoid it. I deal with jackers, robbers, dopeboys, all types of people everyday, so I’m right there in it. I see everything. But I think we actually had an impact on the crime wave in Huntsville, because everybody is in the studio recording and rapping about it instead of crawling through your window. So, you know, I think we’ve had an impact.”

May 142011
 

Jonas Grönlund jämför i Sydsvenskan den Malmöbaserade gatukonstnären Dan Parks provokationer med Sex Pistols.

Första gången jag såg hans affischer var i Göteborg strax efter mordet på Anna Lindh; en grynig fotokopia på utrikesministern, från andra hållet en arm hållandes en kniv, och texten “Ett hugg för Sverige”. Estetiskt nytänkande och en gnutta humor från högerextremisterna, gissade jag.

Cripple Bastards grejer och Ruptures Soap Farm är estetiskt oemotståndliga. Och jag sätter Jim Goads ANSWER Me! och några andra publikationer i samma anda högt. Att det existerar en undervegetation av JVVF-artister ser jag som nödvändigt för ett samhälles mentala hälsa.

De riktar sig till likasinnade, och håller sig för sig själva.

Dan Park klistrar främst upp sina – kanske inte rasistiska men definitivt främlingsnedlåtande – affischer i de delar av centrala Malmö som är mycket invandrartäta (och mycket PK-folktäta – vilka man till hans fördel kan gissa vara hans primära målgrupp). Hade Jim Goad gått runt och delat ut det ökända våldtäktsnumret av ANSWER Me! på kvinnojourer hade jag värderat honom annorlunda.

Till skillnad från Goad verkar dock Park inte ha något intressant att säga. Provokation utan patos är i vuxen ålder bara en slags avsiktlighet (tack än en gång, V.E.), och påminner mig mer om att prata med mat i munnen eller när någon klampar in hos mig med skorna på än att likt Johnny Rotten reta hela det fortfarande andra världskriget-självgoda brittiska imperiet genom att matcha hakkors med säkerhetsnålar och bondageaccessoarer (för att ta ett väldigt enkelt exempel).

Nihilismen är en process, ett fortgående arbete där man river ner för att etablera nya värden. Ser man det inte som en resa kan man lika gärna stanna på sin kammare. Den JVVF-estetik som Park företräder frammanar bilden av en idiot som sitter och kluddar med sin egen avföring, men jag misstänker att Park egentligen har mer gemensamt med en Lars Vilks än en Jim Goad (frågan är dock om inte också Goad står närmare Vilks åsikter än mina egna nu). Konst kan vara reaktionär även då den axlar outsiderrollen.

Ett problem i sammanhanget är ändå vänsterns självhatande PK-mentalitet som inte enbart stöter bort stora delar av arbetarklassen, men också refraktära, egensinniga, och i grunden kamratligt inställda typer, som Johannes Nilsson (ett till enkelt exempel) som förklarar att han på senare har “haft betydligt större utbyte av högerradikaler, primitivister, apokalyptiker, konspiracister och andra dårar långt bort från tråget, vilka trots tillkortakommanden av allehanda slag drar vissa logiska slutsatser från verkliga förhållanden.

Har själv träffat på och snackat med Park i Malmö och imponerats av hans breda musikkunnande. Samtidigt förstod jag att allt inte var hundra i huvet på honom, inte exakt hela tiden åtminstone, ett intryck som förstärktes av att senare se honom kuta runt och skrikandes jaga duvor på Värnhemstorget – men kanske framförallt av faktumet: 42 år gammal, och håller på med “provokativ gatukonst”.

Till hans försvar måste man dock säga att några av hans affischer är roliga. Och han borde självklart inte ha blivit avstängd från sin skola, eller vad det nu var som hände.

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