Photographer/multimedia doyen Tone posted this edition of “The Social Club” a couple weeks ago on his website. It was shot presumably back in September following Macklemore and Ryan Lewis’ exuberant opening set for Blue Scholars at Bowery Ballroom in NYC.
Tag: blue scholars
VIDEO: “Coffee & Snow 2” – Blue Scholars
Cabin fever strikes Blue Scholars again. The recent inclement weather in The Deuce Dot had Geo and Zia feeling restless and creative. The recent unseasonably warm weather in The Empire City had Sabzi dancing on rooftops and playing with a pineapple (?). The result: a Pro Brown freeverse over a loping Sabzi track that sounds like a OOF! throwaway. (Also, the DJ raps — well, sorta — for the first time.)
Peep the clip below and download the track, here.
VIDEO: “The Social Club” (Tone f/Blue Scholars)
Following Blue Scholars’ triumphant New York City performance last month, multimedia impresario Tone sat down with SEA’s chosen hip-hop sons, Geo and Sabzi, to discuss matters of creativity, what it means to stay true to your art, and what we can expect from the duo’s forthcoming Spring 2011 release, Cinematropolis. Click the image below for the video link at www.photobytone.com.
DOWNLOAD: “Big Bank Hank” (Blue Scholars)
“Big Bank Hank” is the latest free drop from Blue Scholars. It’s catchy. It’s freewheeling. And, unlike ninety-nine percent of all other Blue Scholars tracks, it’s mostly underwhelming. For such an uber-intelligent rap crew like the aforementioned duo, the purpose of a track like “Big Bank Hank” falls somewhere between, “Let’s keep momentum going until our next full-length drops (Cinematropolis, coming in 2011)” and, “This is the rap equivalent of a tune-up at Jiffy Lube.” As an appetizer to a forthcoming main course, the Scholars faithful could do much worse than “Big Bank Hank.”
At the very least, the write-up on the group’s website offers amusing insight into their creative process. Read about it and download the fruits of their brainstorm session, here.
DOWNLOAD: “Lumiere (Viper Creek Club Remix)” (Blue Scholars)
Mat Wisner, of local electro-pop crew Viper Creek Club, has something tricky up his sleeve. Make that a few tricky somethings. If you’ve been following VCC’s blog (get hip, here), you’ll already be familiar with the series of hip-hop remixes Mat has been putting down for local 206 crews. What started with a gritty re-imagining of Fresh Espresso’s “The Lazerbeams” has morphed into a miniature monster: a half dozen or so exclusive remixes in which Town rap gets VCC’s special electro-pop treatment.
SHOW REVIEW: Blue Scholars @ The Bowery Ballroom NYC on 9.17.10
The two best Blue Scholars shows I’d seen before Friday’s epic Seattle throw-down at New York City’s The Bowery Ballroom (check out Photo By Tone’s amazing pictures, here) were The Long March EP release party at Chop Suey in 2005, and the New Year’s Eve party at Neumos in the same year. Those concerts stood out because of the massive amount of energy their respective crowds brought, an element that’s absolutely vital to a successful live hip-hop show.
Blue Scholars was still in the natal stage when the ’05 show at Chop went down, with a small but devout following who went bananas that night for a group that would ultimately herald the beginning of a movement local music writers are now calling, “the new grunge.” It was my first time seeing them and I got caught up in the excitement. The New Year’s Eve show was nearly as animated, but probably much of it due to the jubilant atmosphere associated with the holiday.
The Bowery concert was different, however, for a couple of substantial reasons: First, Geo and Sabzi’s live presentation is incredibly refined these days. The setlist, the cuts between songs, how Geo moves across the stage, Sabzi’s well-executed stage dive near the end of the performance — everything is tighter, tuned-up, and built exclusively for keeping the audience engaged. I’ve seen much more well-known hip-hop acts execute shows that couldn’t touch what Blue Scholars are doing now; they’re becoming true entertainers.
Secondly, the venue couldn’t possibly get any bigger for this rap group. And by “bigger” I mean more relevant. New York City is the Mecca of hip-hop, we all know this. And for a group from Seattle, Washington to come into The Bowery Ballroom, a fairly prominent Manhattan venue, on a Friday night and sell out the joint…Well, has that ever been done before? Granted, I would estimate the crowd was at least fifty percent Townfolk, but it’s still an achievement considering notable groups from Brooklyn headline shows in New York venues half the size of Bowery and can’t rock them the way Blue Scholars did the well-known Lower East Side establishment.
I had a group of nine people with me, five of whom had never heard Blue Scholars’ music before, let alone seen them live, and they all came away impressed. While there was an enormous amount of 2-0-6 love flowing through the building, there was also an addictive energy — attributable wholly to Geo and Sabzi’s vibe — that swept up those who had no association with the area code. Blue Scholars did what so many other regionally-specific hip-hop groups strive to do: they represented their town to the fullest.
Check out the videos below (courtesy Youtube member, toneriggz):
DOWNLOAD: “Lumiere” (Blue Scholars)
The name of Blue Scholars’ upcoming LP is Cinematropolis (set for release in Spring 2011). If the title is indicative of the album’s conceptual bent, then we may be in for a sort of film/music amalgamation, which wouldn’t be surprising given Geo’s love (and talent for) movie criticism and Sabzi’s own interest in visual media (check out the DJ/producer’s recently launched multimedia project, Townfolk.)
On the group’s recent drop, “Lumiere,” Sabzi samples The xx track to great cinematic effect. Geo’s vocals are understated and would probably win an emo rap battle, if there were such a thing. Click the image below for the D/L link.
DOWNLOAD: “Reset” (DLRN f/Prometheus Brown & Illecism)
The Sacramento hip-hop duo DLRN (formerly known as “Delorean” — name change presumably due to the existence of the indie rock outfit of the same moniker) has released a new EP called The Bridge which can be had for free here. Similar in style and substance to the group’s debut release, No More Heroes, this new eight-track collection is heavier on soul and collaborative endeavors, including the song “Reset” featuring Seattle rap hero, Prometheus Brown (aka. Geo of Blue Scholars).
DOWNLOAD: “Summertime in the SEA” (Blue Scholars)
A 2010 Seattle summer anthem from The Town’s favored sons, Blue Scholars. Windows down, volume up!
VIDEO: “Paul Valery” (Blue Scholars)
For a song about such a bleak future, Sabzi sure made a damn happy beat.





