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Culture Music

Hip-Hop Legends Bun B and Mr Biggs Journey Through American History With “The Future Is Mine”

We try to douse the fire, it continues to burn/Like the Boogie Down Bronx, it continues to burn/Like that cross in the yard, it continues to burn/Can’t you see the fire, it continues to burn

The subject of American racism and violence is a heavy one to tackle, but two hip-hop legends take history to task with a harrowing recounting of injustice in a new music video/short film, The Future Is Mine. Clocking in just over eight minutes, the video is an oral history through time, documenting the arrival of Columbus all the way to the police murder of George Floyd. The art piece discusses everything from slavery, civil rights, Jim Crow, to the aftermath of the election of Donald Trump.

The Future Is Mine is is a triumphant collaboration. Mr Biggs, who performed with Afrika Bambaataa and the Soulsonic Force and one of the architects of hip-hop, enlisted the help of producer and longtime collaborator John Robie, who produced the track as well as directed the short film. Robie had worked on several records with Biggs in the past, including the legendary Planet Rock. Bun B lent his talent and performed the track with Biggs. The powerful vocals hammer the message with urgency, compassion and lamentation, all with the intent to get out the vote and make things right once and for all.

The video’s montage of archival photos by photographers Fred Baldwin and Wendy Watriss are peppered with animations by Celia Bullwinkel, illustrations by Mirella Moncheva, contemporary photographs by Alice Teeple, and choreographed sequences arranged by J Lyn Thomas). The project moved ZE Records founder Michael Zilkha to revive the label to help release the song and video.

The video has garnered much praise already from heavy hitters in activism, as well as the academic and entertainment worlds. Darryl Pinckney, author of Blackballed: The Black Votes and US Democracy, describes The Future Is Mine as “urgent and necessary, brave and consoling. The American history in the tough, inspiring lyrics, the dancing, the wit and poetry, the power in the images – especially in the black and white photos that capture the long road of struggle – the music video reaches out to us, and finds us, ready and in need of its healing beat.” Harry Belafonte describes the video as “a moving contribution to the struggle.”

The photographers of the archival stock footage used throughout the film have an entire page explaining the context of the images, which include photos of sharecroppers, Martin Luther King, and historical events. The photographers detail how the photos were captured, some in extremely dangerous circumstances involving the KKK.

“We have reached a pivotal point in history where artists not only have an incredible opportunity but a responsibility to use their talents to raise awareness and provoke change,” Robie told Rolling Stone, who premiered the video. “An aggressively old-school jam whose production was purposely meant to fit into a self-penned musical set in the Eighties became transformed by a covenant that Biggs and I have had for many years, to bring meaning and message back into music. To create something turbulent, timeless and timely. And when Bun B graciously joined forces with us to help spread the word, just like the movement to end racial inequality itself, there was no stopping us.”

Zilkha added: “The song itself offers a dark history lesson, but the film John directed transforms it into a work of anger, hope and even joy.”

This video is an intense experience, but a necessary history lesson set to a sick backbeat. The song is available for download through the site. The team behind The Future Is Mine is not only encouraging everyone to get out the vote, but also offering merch; net proceeds from sales will be donated to Fair Fight to support the cause.

May we continue to grow, learn, and do better.

VOTE.

 

Learn more about the project and the collaborators on the official The Future Is Mine release page with ZE Records.
Categories
Featured News NYC Opinion

A Poignant Protest In Astoria Park

“Greater love hath no man than this: that a man lay down his life for his friends.”

Last night, hundreds of people from all walks of life, all backgrounds, all cultures and all income brackets gathered along the waterfront in Astoria Park to reflect upon the immense losses of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Eric Garner, and the countless others who had their precious lives cruelly stolen.

The choice of the gathering was extraordinary. On one side, the RFK Bridge, swathed in the light of the setting sun, its namesake struck down by an assassin’s bullet. On the other side, the Hell Gate Bridge spanning the East River Styx. And, shining in the light of hundreds of candles, remembrances of the slain, perfumed by incense, a shrine to the fallen of WW1. The inscription: “Greater love hath no man than this: that a man lay down his life for his friends.”

The crowd parted in front of this shrine, forming a circle for poets, activists, students (some as young as 15), parents, Covid survivors, teachers, and musicians to step in and speak from their hearts. After several days of nonstop social media feeds stuffed with violence and rage, these brave ambassadors of peace still rose up for their loved ones. They acknowledged they were risking their lives, but still faced down their greatest fears to do the right thing: to speak their mind by baring their souls to hundreds of strangers who held space for them.

There were dozens of impassioned speeches, eyes shining with tears, the mantra “I’m tired” escaping into the universe, as citizen after citizen called for commitment to mercy and justice. Every speaker implored the crowd that non-Blacks continue to fight for equality, speak up for them, and to actively counter tyranny and discrimination at all levels. A white woman read her text thread between her family aloud, and asked others to follow suit and have those difficult conversations. When it comes down to it, will you retreat into the safety of your homes, or lay down your life for your friends? Will you advocate, will you amplify, will you cry, will you march, will you love?

Photo: Alice Teeple

The motto of the New York Police Department, Fidelis ad mortem, is Latin for “faithful to death.” A sinister translation, to be sure, after witnessing the atrocious brutality exercised on demonstrators this week. There was no need for the dozens of NYPD clutching riot gear on the perimeters. This was a protest of the interests of the oppressors who are given priority over common decency, of equality, and of humanity. When corporations talk a good game for advertising, but refuse to pay their employees a fair wage or provide health insurance, expect resistance. Courtesy, Professionalism, Respect. Where have those qualities been, other than emblazoned on the car doors ramming into innocent bystanders? Or brutally mocking, harming and neglecting vulnerable homeless people in our city? It’s shameful, and it’s wrong.

These were American citizens, exercising their right to peacefully assemble and speak freely about the government, to look out for our fellow humans of all colors of the rainbow, all genders, all orientations, and all cultural backgrounds. The Astoria Park rally radiated nothing but tough love and solidarity. As one speaker eloquently put it, “we all bleed the same color.”

The United States is a beautiful melting pot of humanity and melanin, and when given the chance, has the potential for so much beauty and grace and evolution. Don’t forget what we are fighting for. Inevitably there will be commercials with melancholy piano music and meaningless platitudes about “coming together,” but that’s the same old nonsense. Business as usual. Coming together means standing up for what’s right and helping your fellow humans, not just when it’s trending as a TikTok challenge or a black square on Instagram. Every day. Every hour of every day. Support minority-run independent businesses. Support champions of justice and support education. Support those who wish to travel to learn more about life around the globe. Support minorities in the arts and humanities.

When the glass is swept and the next news cycle lashes out the next Two Minutes Hate, hold on to the light. Tightly, fiercely. Never, ever lose the light.

HOW CAN YOU HELP?

Put your money to work and donate.

Black Lives Matter:

https://secure.actblue.com/donate/ms_blm_homepage_2019

Brooklyn Bail Fund to assist protesters in Brooklyn:

https://brooklynbailfund.org/donate

Donate to Black Visions Collective:

https://www.blackvisionsmn.org/

Donate to the Movement for Black Lives:

https://m4bl.org/join-our-movement/

Donate to The Bail Project:

https://bailproject.org

Donate to George Floyd Memorial Fund:

https://www.gofundme.com/f/georgefloyd

Donate to Reclaim the Block:

https://secure.everyaction.com/zae4prEeKESHBy0MKXTIcQ2

Donate to bail funds across the US:

https://secure.actblue.com/donate/bail_funds_george_floyd

Donate to the Southern Poverty Law Centre:

https://www.splcenter.org/

Donate to the #SayHerName campaign:

https://aapf.org/support

Donate to the Emergency Release Fund:

https://emergencyreleasefund.com/about/

Donate to Unicorn Riot to help provide accurate, on-the-ground coverage:

https://unicornriot.ninja/donate/

 

SEE MORE:

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Biig Piig Makes An Impressive “Switch”

KVASIR Unleashes A “STATE” of New York During The Era Of Covid-19

NYC’s Lesley Barth Hits The Sweet Spot With “Big Time Baby”

Album of the Year: Civilian by Frank Tovey

 

Categories
Culture Featured Music NYC

Dancing Between The Lines With Brooklyn Singer Lorelei Rose Taylor

Between my costumes and your heirlooms
All I’ve exhumed and your short fuse
It takes two to
Dance between the lines

“Venus with a vengeance” Lorelei Rose Taylor releases a magnificent EP, Versailles. The gorgeous, lush vocals of the Brooklyn songstress effervescently float between baroque rock, 90s alternative, and ethereal dream pop. Drawing inspiration from fellow chanteuses Jewel, Sinéad O’ Connor, and Florence and the Machine, Versailles is raw emotion buttered up with pure storytelling and rich vox.
The title track, Versailles, unfurls dark drama in a familiar landmark. ‘Versailles’ embodies a sort of cosmic dance between two people very much in love, but very toxic for each other – and everyone around them. The Palace of Versailles was a landmark in a near decade-long relationship for me, one which became a symbolic memory – a beautiful place to visit, but we couldn’t live there,” shares Taylor.
Versailles became the third demo Lorelei Rose Taylor ever recorded. After an initial spark of inspiration in the NYC subway, the single came together when Taylor joined forces with punk musician Robbie Grabowski (I Can See Mountains, Super American) on piano. The two took their time sculpting the song before presenting it to producer Stephen Kellner.

“I think it’s my favorite song,” says Taylor. “And I always stop myself before I say that, feeling guilty for loving one child more than the others. I guess I felt especially vulnerable when I wrote this; I let myself run back and forth through my emotions unhinged. I was livid and sad and proud and helpless all at the same time – but somehow, my tone is indifferent. There was a moment where I turned to the guys like, “Do I sound bored?” But I realized I was just exhausted. Exhausted and defeated – and I didn’t want to pretend I felt any other way.”

Photo: Bonnie Nichoalds
Another standout track on the album is When You’re Gone, an atmospheric, melancholy number that feels right at home in a David Lynch production. It is a highly emotional piece with gentle nods to doo-wop and uncannily evoking the mournful cries of the Cranberries’ Dolores O’Riordan.

The Texas-born songwriter grew up in upstate New York and penned her first song at just 11 years old. The precocious youngster took it upon herself to label her keyboard keys with marker and to emulate Jewel on acoustic guitar, sparking a lifelong passion for songwriting. In 2012 Taylor moved to NYC to attend college at FIT. From there, she pursued an Art History degree in Florence. By 2017 Taylor was back in Gotham, ready to write more music.

Reflecting back on the creation of the album, Taylor says: “Château de Versailles is home to one of the most electric eras of my life. For so long, everything was decadent – full of love and lust and excess. And then it wasn’t. The EP is about the party being over and the gardens being overgrown. It’s about returning to Versailles with the only set of keys and realizing the locks were changed – sure, I could break in, but would it still feel like home?”

Stream the gorgeous EP here:

SEE MORE:

Biig Piig Makes An Impressive “Switch”

KVASIR Unleashes A “STATE” of New York During The Era Of Covid-19

NYC’s Lesley Barth Hits The Sweet Spot With “Big Time Baby”

The Brilliance Shines Brightly At Rockwood Hall

Album of the Year: Civilian by Frank Tovey

Categories
Culture Entertainment Featured Music NYC

Biig Piig Makes An Impressive “Switch”

Don’t care about who you know
Man, you’re old, you don’t scare me
Run down a rabbit hole
Your downfalls, I see you clearly now

Irish singer/rapper Jessica Smyth, aka Biig Piig, recently dropped Switch, her newest single from her recent EP No Place For Patience, Vol.3 (RCA). It is a banger.

Switch is percussive, glitchy, and dreamy, graced with Smyth’s ethereal vocals and a relentless bassline. The song defies any real genre, blending elements into an exciting new hybrid. Part confession, part resignation, and part determination, the song proved itself eerily prescient for a global lockdown.

Smyth got her artistic start in London with the NiNE8 Collective, a network of creatives which Jess founded with Lava La Rue. The name “Biig Piig” revealed itself when Smyth read it drunk off a pizza menu: a fitting origin story for an artist who displays continued optimism and determination whilst facing quarter-life crisis. The 22-year-old has since earned significant attention over the last couple of years. Billie Eilish is an ardent fan, and a strong presence on the British airwaves has launched Biig Piig into the limelight.

Photo: Districtmagazine.ie

Switch is about the tension, helplessness and pressure that the world is under right now. The beat and lyrics to me represents the fast pace of how the world is falling apart, and the anxious undertone of it all,” says Smyth.

Although the lyrics feel as if they’ve been ripped from a diary, the chaotic backbeats and spirited energy drive the tune into uncharted waters. It is the calming cup of tea for a stress migraine.

The video for Switch, which recently aired on MTV UK, depicts a fast-paced, fiery car chase of Jess (and several Nine8 friends) zipping through a a darkened, dystopian city. The piece is a collaborative triumph by British illustrators Alice Bloomfield (character animation) and Jack Solomon Smith (backgrounds). The stunning piece of art works well with the hypnotic, frenetic sound of Biig Piig. Smyth sings the praises of Bloomfield’s vibrant work:

“Alice is an incredible illustrator, I’m so happy we worked with her on this one…The whole ethos of Nine8 and the theme of the song are so intertwined, and she captured that perfectly.”

Sit back and enjoy Switch!

SEE MORE:

KVASIR Unleashes A “STATE” of New York During The Era Of Covid-19

NYC’s Lesley Barth Hits The Sweet Spot With “Big Time Baby”

The Brilliance Shines Brightly At Rockwood Hall

Album of the Year: Civilian by Frank Tovey

Clan of Xymox Materializes At Le Poisson Rouge

Categories
Culture Featured Music NYC

NYC’s Lesley Barth Hits The Sweet Spot With “Big Time Baby”

Lesley Barth has often wrestled with a sense of feeling like an outsider in her own life. The questions arising around the key to happiness; a sense of identity that deems outside validation unnecessary; the corporate grind. What is it all for, in the end? Barth’s hunger for a meaningful, mindful existence has resulted in her stellar sophomore album, Big Time Baby, all with a feminine 70s-pop sheen reminiscent of Jenny Lewis. Drawing frequent comparisons to songwriting greats such as Joni Mitchell, Carole King, and Fleetwood Mac, with a commanding and singular voice reminiscent of Natalie Merchant, Barth shapes these influences into a mixture of confessional songwriting, poetry, and wry observations about human nature. Big Time Baby is an album about feeling isolated, wearing masks, failing, rebuilding yourself, questioning societal norms, and the quicksand that is our modern non-stop notifications, performance-driven, social-media-optimized life.

“I learned that you can’t perform your life and live your life at the same time,” says Barth.  “There are moments where performing is what’s required.  But if we don’t take the mask off from time to time and connect to who we really are, I can tell you from experience that one day you will wake up and not recognize who you are and the life you’ve built for yourself.  I hope this album gives people hope that, no matter how uncomfortable or out of place they feel in their life, they can change it by finding the courage to take off the mask and really get to know who they are underneath.”

 

Photo: Harish Pathak

Barth paired her artistry with Philadelphia producer Joe Michelini (American Trappist, River City Extension).  The resulting three singles, all tinged with that 70s songwriter groove, speak to various stages of the process of redefining her life.  Woman Looking Back at Me, a disco-flavored tune, seeks to understand negative self-talk and distance Barth from the critical voice in her head.  The neon-cowboy-hued Nashville tries to understand better the internal demons that keep us away from the lives we want, and the catchy and empowering You Gotta Hand it to the Man is an indictment of the ubiquity of a patriarchal society and capitalism gone awry, with accompanying video criticizing the precariousness of the American health care system: “Almost all the savings I had for quitting my job got wiped away by healthcare costs, and I had to scramble.”

Lower East Side sees Barth immediately admitting to failure and a sense of unreadiness for the journey ahead.

“Making this album has been a rejection of the concept of ‘big time’ and ‘small time;’ living for other people’s validation is what got me into the whole mess of a life that felt foreign to me, so I wanted this album to be a declaration of who I am,” says Barth. She penned the album as her life became uprooted, and recorded it as she navigated the uncertainty of the structure of the gig economy.

“It’s an album for these uncertain times where many people feel their lives have been stripped to the bone, they’ve woken up from a daydream, and they weren’t sure what tomorrow would bring because that’s where I felt I was when I wrote it,” says Barth.

Sign o’ the times. Enjoy Big Time Baby.

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The Brilliance Shines Brightly At Rockwood Hall

Album of the Year: Civilian by Frank Tovey

Clan of Xymox Materializes At Le Poisson Rouge

Categories
Culture Music NYC

KVASIR Unleashes A “STATE” of New York During The Era Of Covid-19

As NYC remains effectively locked down and we grapple with the immensity of a global pandemic, electronic solo artist K V A S I R has unleashed a dynamic new single:

S T A T E.

The droning, hypnotic track wavers back and forth between chanting “New York State” and audio clips from the news addressing the city’s overwhelming Covid-19 crisis. It is timely, unique and moving, for even as of this writing, ambulance sirens wail through Astoria.

The track (and accompanying mesmerising, self-produced video) flows with vibrant, glitchy beats and pulsing arpeggiators. S T A T E  manages to stay modern and fresh without succumbing to more pedestrian tastes of EDM. The video flashes hundreds of images of Gotham, from empty streets to its citizens in masks, in time to the music. The flow of the track is tempered with talking heads droning out their own hypotheses of the “new normal.”

It’s easy to get lost in this mantra, and his approach of image bombardment proves to be an appropriate take on the deluge of news, fake news, pundit opinions, social media feeds, and predatory advertising that pepper our daily multimedia experience.

K V A S I R cites influences from film and television, which is particularly evident on his critically acclaimed debut EP, (K V A S I R ). On this album, Oliver Stone’s Wall Street proved particularly auspicious, inspiring him to also pen the track Exchange. This in turn fed into his ideas behind ‘First Throws’, which reflects on how wealth and greed, brought about by a capitalist society, impact the quiet, introspective moments before we fall asleep.

A fascinating, prescient track for our fair, ailing city. Was the old normal working for everyone? Or is this pandemic ushering in a new state of mind and existence? Only time will tell. Until then, this is a banger.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1QPqLh2CoU

LISTEN TO MORE:

Spotify Link:

SEE MORE:

The Lion In Winter: Peter Murphy Returns To Le Poisson Rouge

Flooded With Memories: They Might Be Giants Celebrates Thirty Years of Flood

The Brilliance Shines Brightly At Rockwood Hall

Album of the Year: Civilian by Frank Tovey

Clan of Xymox Materializes At Le Poisson Rouge