Friday Freebies – BIG FKN GUN, DJ Znobia, Alidu, Murlo, DJ Zhao

Friday Freebies – BIG FKN GUN, DJ Znobia, Alidu, Murlo, DJ Zhao

 

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Been drooling over this one for a few days now, finally up on soundcloud. BIG FKN GUN is the bomb as explained more thoroughly here. Okmalumkoolkat from Dirty Paraffin has a flow that has been driving me nuts ever since I heard their Greatest Hits mixtape. And Spoek, does he still need to be introduced?

dj znobia

DJ Znobia is one of my all time musical heroes. The guy has done more to shape kuduro or tarraxinha into what we now know them to be, than any other angolan or Portugues artist I can think of. On this track he goes bananas over a very, very famous sound. Bloooohoooooooood!

Screen-Shot-2013-04-19-at-3.33.24-AM

 In case you didn’t know… we will be releasing a so far so siiiiiiiick remix EP of new unreleased tracks by Mohamed Alidu, whom you can read about here. The first remix was just released as a teaser via the XLR8R website, and features the work of…. Murlo! A current favorite of mine, check these crazy tunes.

heartoflight_800

What better way to leave you than with, quite simply, the best music in the world. Orchestrated by a knowledgeable and sensitive selector, DJ Zhao. Check out the always appropriate 2 hour Chop Chop supermix he did for Akwaaba’s 2 years, as well as his recently uploaded collection of extra worthy mixes.

Screen-Shot-2013-04-19-at-3.54.13-AM

In other news, big up to The Republic for their feature in the Guardian! And a special shout out to SanSe my DJ partner in crime in Accra, who turns the big 4-0! And is about to celebrate in style, with Ackah Blay’s full highlife band… chale more vim, enjoy the weekend!

 

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Music Video: Solid K – Walk Like A Champion

Music Video: Solid K – Walk Like A Champion

Walk like a champion was shot by Daniel Kwabena Marmo of The 3 Suns. The video captures high spirits from the start, as the kids run together through the neighborhood. Shows a champion mindset and how it's accompanied by hard work (Muscle guy in the gym). it captures...

Official Video: Petite amie/Elle veut by Ozaki

Official Video: Petite amie/Elle veut by Ozaki

  Ozaki is part of a new generation of Ivorian artists inspired by global trap legends, Ozaki’s words are firmly rooted in Bassam and Abidjan’s bustling culture, and his La Bassamoise EP is yet another milestone pushing the envelope of the local Ivorian rap...

Music Video : Flowking Stone – Let them Know

Music Video : Flowking Stone – Let them Know

  Kumasi (Oseikrom) based Ghanaian rapper Flowking Stone releases a band new video titled "Let them Know". Let them know is one of the songs of his recent album Gifted II . The song  which is a fusion of 60's Ghanaian highlife and hiphop trap beats was produced by...

Friday Freebies – BIG FKN GUN, DJ Znobia, Alidu, Murlo, DJ Zhao

 

artworks-000045809819-uk914v-t500x500

Been drooling over this one for a few days now, finally up on soundcloud. BIG FKN GUN is the bomb as explained more thoroughly here. Okmalumkoolkat from Dirty Paraffin has a flow that has been driving me nuts ever since I heard their Greatest Hits mixtape. And Spoek, does he still need to be introduced?

dj znobia

DJ Znobia is one of my all time musical heroes. The guy has done more to shape kuduro or tarraxinha into what we now know them to be, than any other angolan or Portugues artist I can think of. On this track he goes bananas over a very, very famous sound. Bloooohoooooooood!

Screen-Shot-2013-04-19-at-3.33.24-AM

 In case you didn’t know… we will be releasing a so far so siiiiiiiick remix EP of new unreleased tracks by Mohamed Alidu, whom you can read about here. The first remix was just released as a teaser via the XLR8R website, and features the work of…. Murlo! A current favorite of mine, check these crazy tunes.

heartoflight_800

What better way to leave you than with, quite simply, the best music in the world. Orchestrated by a knowledgeable and sensitive selector, DJ Zhao. Check out the always appropriate 2 hour Chop Chop supermix he did for Akwaaba’s 2 years, as well as his recently uploaded collection of extra worthy mixes.

Screen-Shot-2013-04-19-at-3.54.13-AM

In other news, big up to The Republic for their feature in the Guardian! And a special shout out to SanSe my DJ partner in crime in Accra, who turns the big 4-0! And is about to celebrate in style, with Ackah Blay’s full highlife band… chale more vim, enjoy the weekend!

 

RELATED

Music Video: Solid K – Walk Like A Champion

Music Video: Solid K – Walk Like A Champion

Walk like a champion was shot by Daniel Kwabena Marmo of The 3 Suns. The video captures high spirits from the start, as the kids run together through the neighborhood. Shows a champion mindset and how it's accompanied by hard work (Muscle guy in the gym). it captures...

Official Video: Petite amie/Elle veut by Ozaki

Official Video: Petite amie/Elle veut by Ozaki

  Ozaki is part of a new generation of Ivorian artists inspired by global trap legends, Ozaki’s words are firmly rooted in Bassam and Abidjan’s bustling culture, and his La Bassamoise EP is yet another milestone pushing the envelope of the local Ivorian rap...

Music Video : Flowking Stone – Let them Know

Music Video : Flowking Stone – Let them Know

  Kumasi (Oseikrom) based Ghanaian rapper Flowking Stone releases a band new video titled "Let them Know". Let them know is one of the songs of his recent album Gifted II . The song  which is a fusion of 60's Ghanaian highlife and hiphop trap beats was produced by...

DJ’s Do Guetto – Free Comp – A Slice of Luso History

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I don’t hate Elvis Presley. But if I were to explore the early days of rock’n’roll, he is not an artist I would spend much time on. Conversely, this post takes a minute away from Lisbon’s kuduro usual suspects, to focus on the underground artists that kept the crowds bumping, at a time when kuduro spread its wings in Portugal. Let’s go back to 2006, when the world discovered the term kuduro via Frédéric Galliano and Buraka Som Sistema‘s work.

I had some very interesting conversations about a year ago with DJ Marfox and the crew at Príncipe Discos, an outlet for dance music of the highest caliber based in Lisbon. The convo gave birth to a piece I wrote for This Is Africa, which essentially looked into how the various Lusophone sounds melted together in Lisbon, or more precisely, in its periphery.

While Buraka may be responsible for introducing the term kuduro to a wide global audience, it is heads like DJs Marfox, NervosoN.K., Fofuxo, Pausas and Jesse who spread their electronic, often kuduro-based sound at home. First throughout Lisbon’s periphery, and more recently, with their successful Noite Príncipe parties, to the center of Lisbon, and along with it, to the media and Portugal as a whole.

This comp comes days after Marfox’ impressive free Tarraxinha compilation, and is yet another important chapter in the history of electronic music in Portugal and the Lusophone world as a whole. Much respect to the Príncipe crew for giving us a chance to get schooled.

Here’s the full story in their own words:

Released on the first day of school, 18th September 2006, ‘Dj’s do Guetto Vol. 1′ is a crucial landmark in the history of Portuguese dance music. Not only was it one of the first few albums released in this country that spread itself in a very quick and vast manner through digital media, but it also united six prominent producers, inheritors of traditions that have been working in mutating geometries which are exclusive to Portugal.

Seven years ago, Marfox, Nervoso, N.k, Fofuxo, Pausas and Jesse were people processing the information coming in from kuduro, tarraxinha, house and techno, that they definitely turned into their own idiom. During this moment of time they formed a collective uniting several areas of Greater Lisbon and its surroundings, between where they were living and the high schools they attended – Portela, Chelas, Quinta do Mocho, Quinta da Fonte, Sacavém, Massamá, Damaia, Barcarena, Reboleira, Cacém, Queluz, Fonte da Prata, Barreiro and Paço de Arcos. After a short while it was commonplace to hear these sounds coming out of MP3 players and cars with ambitious soundsystems, not only in the capital but also throughout the afro-portuguese world.

The tracks that make out the more than two hours of explosive music presented here are essentially grounded in its instrumentals. Ruthless kuduro beats going at least at 130 BPMs and over, with the occasional tarraxo, funaná and kizomba in the mix. Still today they clearly sound like visionary and precocious works, if we think that these musicians were all under 21 years old at the time. As always, Lisbon remains a harbour, and it was here that Angolan electronic music, the disco culture outside of the heart of the city, an enormous fondness for bass, and both the party and the melancholy of the projects and the suburbs met.

The precision and care with the impact of the sound is impressive, millimetrically controlled in order to maximize the brutality of rhythm in any set of speakers. Rhythm is the essence of these compositions and the element that is all-transforming (alarm sirens, horror movie keyboards, kalimbas, cut-up voices, which are mutilated and cut-up again). Ranging in vibe and territory through universalist epics, works of pure percussive and amelodical austerity, grinded attacks towards dizzy spells and cardiac problems, there is a clear feeling here of wanting to imagine a music for your friends but also for a planet that is as yet untravelled. It is also there that this music’s strength resides, and, let’s start to get used to it, where its beauty comes from.

Needless to say that ‘Dj’s do Guetto Vol. 1′ hit hard on a lot of people. It is forever in the foundation of what constitutes afro-portuguese dance music, and it will continue to inform its future, as its present is so alive, and nearly everyone that is part of it heard this record with close attention. But there is a large piece of world yet to hear these 37 tracks, and there’s even more world that should now have a better way of understanding a history as important and recent of what makes out the music produced here and now. This history is still pretty much new, but we already have crucial music behind us which genesis is necessary to know, where it came from, for what reasons, why it is how it is, and what it caused. And music one must return to or get to know, as all which is contained in these sounds is still as fresh today as it was in the day the kids got back to school in September 2006.

This free digital reissue contains the files that survived PCs which have tragically passed away, the WAV files and Fruity Loops (amongst other software) projects from where this music was born out of and apparently lost forever. Being as it is, we tried to find the files with the best audio quality for each MP3 we now make available to you.

The title present in the original artwork of this compilation is written as being by the “Dj’s do Guetto”, though it was popularized through its creolized name, which is present in the titles of each shared file – “Dj’s di Guetto”. We chose to preserve the two versions in accordance with the original form of this music.

Free Tarraxinha Comp by DJ Marfox

Free Tarraxinha Comp by DJ Marfox

00 - Keep-Calm-And-Listen-To-Tarraxinha

I’m so excited… OBRIGADO DJ Marfox, for putting together a much needed compilation of some of the best tarraxinhas to come out of Luanda and Lisbon. I’m about to drop the full story for Fader, so for now, since this is my turf, I will just talk crap: forget about zouk bass and thank Marfox thoroughly for showing us the light. Tarraxinha does not require moombah type basslines, it’s not music to move your body erratically to, it’s not music to increase your number of followers on soundcloud. NO. It’s music to loosen up your partner before hitting the sack. Zouk bass? Was invented under a different name – tarraxinha – over a decade ago by proper geniuses such as DJ Znobia.

Most of the classics compiled by Marfox were produced in the mid 2000s, in both Lisbon and Luanda. Tarraxinha stemmed from kizomba, which is a slowed down version of semba, the quintessential Angolan genre. As it turns out, slowed down semba, aka kizomba, sounds quite similar to zouk (OK it’s more complicated than that, zouk influenced Angolan music and helped shape kizomba). Now tarraxinhas are slowed down kizomba, with much more minimal, often times less melodic production. Or you could say tarraxinha is kind of like zouk without the cheesy R&B vocals. Yet the major difference between tarraxinha and kizomba/zouk is not so much musical, but rather how they are danced. The way to dance tarraxinha is way sleazier than kizomba, which is still proper ballroom dancing. Tarraxar is more about grinding pelvises and offending older people. So when tarraxinhas came up, they got noticed, but for reasons I do not know, after a peak around 2006, tarraxinha production dwindled.

I’m repeating myself, but thanks again to DJ Marfox for shedding light on a genre that remains difficult to know about, because it has not really entered the soundcloud/internet world. Many of the songs on here are 128s, and chances are a better version of the songs never existed, so I recommend bitrate snobs chill and enjoy the lo-fi sound: these sound exactly how they are supposed to. If you don’t think so, just look for a partner and see what happens.

 

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Music Video: Solid K – Walk Like A Champion

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Walk like a champion was shot by Daniel Kwabena Marmo of The 3 Suns. The video captures high spirits from the start, as the kids run together through the neighborhood. Shows a champion mindset and how it's accompanied by hard work (Muscle guy in the gym). it captures...

Official Video: Petite amie/Elle veut by Ozaki

Official Video: Petite amie/Elle veut by Ozaki

  Ozaki is part of a new generation of Ivorian artists inspired by global trap legends, Ozaki’s words are firmly rooted in Bassam and Abidjan’s bustling culture, and his La Bassamoise EP is yet another milestone pushing the envelope of the local Ivorian rap...

Music Video : Flowking Stone – Let them Know

Music Video : Flowking Stone – Let them Know

  Kumasi (Oseikrom) based Ghanaian rapper Flowking Stone releases a band new video titled "Let them Know". Let them know is one of the songs of his recent album Gifted II . The song  which is a fusion of 60's Ghanaian highlife and hiphop trap beats was produced by...

Free Tarraxinha Comp by DJ Marfox

00 - Keep-Calm-And-Listen-To-Tarraxinha

I’m so excited… OBRIGADO DJ Marfox, for putting together a much needed compilation of some of the best tarraxinhas to come out of Luanda and Lisbon. I’m about to drop the full story for Fader, so for now, since this is my turf, I will just talk crap: forget about zouk bass and thank Marfox thoroughly for showing us the light. Tarraxinha does not require moombah type basslines, it’s not music to move your body erratically to, it’s not music to increase your number of followers on soundcloud. NO. It’s music to loosen up your partner before hitting the sack. Zouk bass? Was invented under a different name – tarraxinha – over a decade ago by proper geniuses such as DJ Znobia.

Most of the classics compiled by Marfox were produced in the mid 2000s, in both Lisbon and Luanda. Tarraxinha stemmed from kizomba, which is a slowed down version of semba, the quintessential Angolan genre. As it turns out, slowed down semba, aka kizomba, sounds quite similar to zouk (OK it’s more complicated than that, zouk influenced Angolan music and helped shape kizomba). Now tarraxinhas are slowed down kizomba, with much more minimal, often times less melodic production. Or you could say tarraxinha is kind of like zouk without the cheesy R&B vocals. Yet the major difference between tarraxinha and kizomba/zouk is not so much musical, but rather how they are danced. The way to dance tarraxinha is way sleazier than kizomba, which is still proper ballroom dancing. Tarraxar is more about grinding pelvises and offending older people. So when tarraxinhas came up, they got noticed, but for reasons I do not know, after a peak around 2006, tarraxinha production dwindled.

I’m repeating myself, but thanks again to DJ Marfox for shedding light on a genre that remains difficult to know about, because it has not really entered the soundcloud/internet world. Many of the songs on here are 128s, and chances are a better version of the songs never existed, so I recommend bitrate snobs chill and enjoy the lo-fi sound: these sound exactly how they are supposed to. If you don’t think so, just look for a partner and see what happens.

 

RELATED

Music Video: Solid K – Walk Like A Champion

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Walk like a champion was shot by Daniel Kwabena Marmo of The 3 Suns. The video captures high spirits from the start, as the kids run together through the neighborhood. Shows a champion mindset and how it's accompanied by hard work (Muscle guy in the gym). it captures...

Official Video: Petite amie/Elle veut by Ozaki

Official Video: Petite amie/Elle veut by Ozaki

  Ozaki is part of a new generation of Ivorian artists inspired by global trap legends, Ozaki’s words are firmly rooted in Bassam and Abidjan’s bustling culture, and his La Bassamoise EP is yet another milestone pushing the envelope of the local Ivorian rap...

Music Video : Flowking Stone – Let them Know

Music Video : Flowking Stone – Let them Know

  Kumasi (Oseikrom) based Ghanaian rapper Flowking Stone releases a band new video titled "Let them Know". Let them know is one of the songs of his recent album Gifted II . The song  which is a fusion of 60's Ghanaian highlife and hiphop trap beats was produced by...

Friday Madness: Maskarado “Tabacanawa”

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In Luanda, most of the top house music producers don’t really talk, or even know each other. I was a bit sad to realize that all of the big names mostly evolve on their own, partnerships are incredibly rare, DJ Djeff and DJ Silyvi being the most notorious.

But one guy brings it all together, because he doesn’t compete with anybody, but rather completes everybody’s music: the one and only Maskarado. A cat I had the pleasure of meeting on my trip to Luanda in 2009, when he was already spitting rhymes on top of house beats. This was before Elegom Bounsa, which not only put Maskarado on the map in a big way, it put domestic Angolan house music on the map in Luanda.

Today house music is huge in Angola, but still defined by very specific boundaries. Maskarado seems to continue his mission to bring down these barriers, he distills his kuduro style rapping on all kinds of uptempo beats, and Tabacanawa is a fine example of that sound. Bruno and Nelson Rudebeatz of house crew Homeboyz, are lucky to be around: Nelson almost passed a couple of months ago. Seems his close encounter with death only made his determination stronger: I am completely and entirely sold by this beat!

DJ Satelite – Luanda No Horizonte Vol. 3

It’s Fridaaaaaaaay! DJ Satelite prepared us another round of afrohouse goodness, feels like a bit of Luanda nightlife delivered straight to your earbuds. Cover is a photo of Elinga Teatro, a place doomed to be destroyed sometime this year… it’s an old colonial building soon to be replaced by a fancy glass skyscraper. It’s also a place Satelite has rocked several times in the past months, possibly the most forward thinking music venue in Angola. Without further adue, the almighty tracklist:

1 – Ningana – Dj Dorivaldo Mix feat Dr tchubi & Pé Quente – DJ Satelite Remix

2 – Jingasnas – Homeboyz Muzik

3 – Nje Nje ( Album Mix ) – Heavi-k Remix

4 – Bukalanga [Vocal Mix] – DJ Oats Feat. Konkrete

5 – Sodat Aza Na Kati (Instrumental Mix) [Ft. Da Costa]

6 – Tala Bango Baza – Dj Silyvi Feat. Rodjess

7 – Tokita Nango ( Nacé ) feat. Os Kao Bios.

8 – Nankoumandjan (Instrumental Mix) – Boddhi Satva

9 – He Lives In You (Afro Dj Pupo’s Ancestral Walk Remix)

10 – Molanduka – black motion ft celimpilo

11 – Ma Ndebele – Black Motion ft Canndy

12 – Dj Satelite feat Aylo – U Played Me (Original Mix)

13 – Intliziyo – Black Motion feat. Bucie & Damor

14 – Respect Me (Black Coffee Original Mix)

15 – Rock My World 192 kbps (Boddhi Satva Ancestral Soul Remix)

16 – DJ Satelite Feat Jackie Queens – Fire (Orininal Mix)