DOWNLOAD: “Dyme Def x GOODS x Seattle” – Dyme Def (prod. by BeanOne)

Click image for D/L link.

A natural sonic connection exists between hip-hop in SoCal and the Pac NW. We do share a coast, after all. Producer BeanOne finds the familial link in 808 kicks and classic vocal samples for this GOODS exclusive by Dyme Def. The joint’s free and dedicated to this equally fresh drop from the venerable SEA establishment.

Downloads

VIDEO: “Seattle” – El Dia

Local poet and emcee El Dia (also known as Angela Martinez Dy) contributes this dope blog to the world wide web. I hear an album is also in the works so watch 206UP.COM for more on that. In the meantime, check this video collage of Town landmarks set to her track, “Seattle.”

Video

Learn Your History (I Am)

My earliest memories of hip-hop in the 206 begin with Sir-Mix-A-Lot and Kid Sensation. It’s sad, I know, but I’m an 80’s Baby who grew up in the San Juan Islands, a place that, when you’re young, seems light years away from the foreign metropolis that is Seattle, Washington.

Back then, my Seattle points-of-reference were limited to Mariners games, Red Robin and movie theaters, three things I was severely deprived of in my formative years. Hip-hop music and culture was available to me, but only in its mass-market form. I wasn’t close enough to the city to touch the underground. If I had been, I’d probably be a more learned student of the earliest Town movements.

Thankfully we have the internet, where the history of anything is available to those willing to spend time looking. Here are two pieces of Seattle-area hip-hop lore, some brick and mortar carved right from the foundation.

Cocaine Blunts Interview with Jake One and Mike Clark

Click on the photo above for an interview with Jake One and Mike Clark (former host of Rap Attack on KCMU) courtesy of Cocaine Blunts. (Thanks to Andrew Matson, aka The Bulletproof Critic, for Tweeting this yesterday!)

UPDATE (9.24.09): And here’s part two of the interview.

1250 KFOX Facebook Page1250 KFOX was one of the earliest outlets for hip-hop music in Seattle. Click the logo above to open up the time capsule (you gotta have a Facebook account to view). Make sure to check out the very first link, “Emerald Street Boys Nasty Nes Intro” and peep the comments — hip-hop is a family affair for some artists.

Respect the foundation!

Interviews Views From the Peanut Gallery

REVIEW: From Slaveships to Spaceships (Khingz)

CD400Concept albums are always a tricky business. Rarely do they succeed in achieving a true sense of coherence, a completeness in actualizing the very “concept” they’re attempting to convey. Either they fall short because of straight-up weirdness, or inconsistencies that exist somewhere in the actual music (be it in production, lyrics, style, or what-have-you).

Because concept albums so often fall on their ambitious faces, to simply call Khingz’s second solo entry, From Slaveships to Spaceships, a “concept album” would be doing the record a disservice. It’s actually much more than that. If a music artist’s work is always inspired by something they either find valuable or have experienced in perpetuity throughout their lives, then a coherent expression of that in a single album is much less a “concept” and more a concrete expression of the artist’s reality.

From Slaveships to Spaceships certainly qualifies as an expression of Khingz’s life and experiences as a self-admitted social outcast. It’s only because science-fiction themes are so pervasive throughout that a critic like myself is excused when using the term “concept album” to help describe the record.

The album’s title and sci-fi terminologies aside, FStoS exists more on the terra firma that is Seattle’s South End than it does in the outer-reaches of our galaxy. It’s an honest expression of life as a person of color in The Town’s suddenly en vogue southern neighborhoods. Bitterness, confusion, and self-realization are all explored in dramatic fashion. Khingz (much like his brother Gabriel Teodros) is a sensitive dude. And, also like GT, restraint in his lyrics is not a problem he suffers from. There’s a valuable and uncommon connection between art and self-awareness here that makes for some heavy-handed sh*t, like the emotional tour de force of the title track. By the end of the song Khingz sounds like he’s lived enough trying times for a thousand lives.

Sonically, this album runs the gamut. From hyper-active beats emulating space battles (“Hydroplanin'” made me feel like I was stuck in the middle of a shootout between Stormtroopers and the Rebel Alliance) to the smoothed-out hip-hop valentine “Blaq Han Solo.” There’s an undeniable energy running through these beats; it’s equal parts thoughtful production and Khingz’s own crazy-versatile flow that act as the electrical current bringing each track to life.

Throughout this record, Khingz makes clear that he’s seeking his liberation from something. Could be the past. Could be liberation from the typical musical stylings that so often contribute to the stagnation of his beloved art form. Whatever. As a listener I was just happy that, by album’s end, he seems to have found what he’s looking for. As fans of hip-hop, we should be thankful that Khingz expresses his liberation through his music. It makes for “important” hip-hop in the most well-defined sense of the word.

Album Reviews

Reader Roll Call!

MicrophoneI’m a little concerned about my readership, or the lack thereof, specifically.

The last thing the 206 hip-hop world needs is another Joe-Schmo inserting his so-very-refined opinions into the blogosphere (for the record I hate that term, probably as much as Sabzi hates “conscious”).

So, just to make sure you’re out there, and to confirm that I should continue indulging myself in this here blog, I’m conducting a brief survey. An opportunity for you to let me know you care (and that you are not just a Googlebot parading around the interwebs as a real live human). You may not have enough of an opinion to comment on one of my previous posts, but surely you want to shout out your hometown, right? Right??

(Especially if your hometown never gets enough love. Like Sequim, for example. When was the last time Sequim got some love in the hip-hop world? Now’s your chance to teach us how to pronounce it correctly!)

1. Name? (Doesn’t have to be your real name, of course. Your wordpress.com username is fine, if you have one. Yahoo chat, maybe. CB radio handle, If you’re into that sort of thing which, if you’re from Sequim, maybe you are…)

2. Area code/Hometown?

3. Website?

4. Huskies or Cougars?

5. Favorite local hip-hop group?

6. Favorite venue?

7. Starbucks or Tully’s? (Just kidding, everyone knows REAL Seattle coffee drinkers go local. So what’s your favored shop?)

8. Favorite record store?

9. Last great book you read? (You do read, right? “If you got time to take a sh*t…”)

10. Does throwing dead fish constitute an egregious violation of the animal’s rights? (Just wanted to throw that one in there to shake things up a little.)

(Check the Comments section for my responses.)

Surveys Views From the Peanut Gallery