Saturday 30 April 2011

The Edge of Day...

Secret Archives of the Vatican Podcast 48 - The Edge of Day is now available from:

Libsyn


iTunes

MixCloud

The Edge of Day...


Tracks

  1. Evolve or Die feat. Destiny Lab
    Amos the Ancient Prophet
    http://www.soundclick.com/bands/default.cfm?bandID=726340
  2. Friendly Artificial Intelligence
    Secret Archives of the Vatican
    http://www.brokendrumrecords.com
  3. Fist of Fury
    Liquid Stranger
    http://globalnoize.wordpress.com/2011/04/07/dimmsummer-presents-subcontinentalbass/
  4. Zawiyya
    Celt Islam
    http://urbansedatedrecords.bandcamp.com/
  5. Mehman (The Guest)
    Azam Ali
    http://www.azamalimusic.com/main.php
  6. Arabian Trials
    Tribal Spectrum
    http://tribalspectrum.bandcamp.com/track/arabian-trials
  7. My Way
    Retrotation
    http://soundcloud.com/retrotation/myway
  8. Arabian Loop
    Dafu
    http://dafu.bandcamp.com/track/arabian-loop
  9. Bilady
    Deeb
    http://deeb.bandcamp.com/album/cairofornia-ep
  10. In my Heart
    Nucleya
    http://globalnoize.wordpress.com/2011/04/07/dimmsummer-presents-subcontinentalbass/

In the jungle of dub...

Podcasting legend Mr Pete Cogle has released episode 98 of The Dub Zone podcast.

In the jungle of dub...

You can find full details of TDZ#98 HERE.

Direct download HERE.

Tracks

  1. Rightfull Ruler - Rolling Lion Studio (Manwel T Mix)
  2. Signos Vitales - DubRifles
  3. Dub On Struggle - Dadub
  4. 30 Head - Fed
  5. Burn Out The Rich (Feat. Kulcha Ites) - Dubmatix
  6. Disco Dub - Pama International
  7. The Follower (Feat. Live Full Power) - R-DUG
  8. From The Sea - Dubsalon

Friday 22 April 2011

Boom!

Hip Hop Zone

There's a new episode available of Pete Cogle's Hip Hop Zone podcast.

You can find full details of H2Z HERE

Direct download is HERE


Tracks
  1. Mr Universe - Mos Dub
  2. You Disconnect - DJ Code
  3. Echo Boomers - Texture
  4. Beaumont is Alive - Dr Kananga
  5. Was Fuer Eine Welt (What A World) - Slomo (Zengineers remix feat. Backwater Planet)
  6. Lazy Summer - Hypoetical
  7. Spalony Lennon - Szubrawy Kot
  8. Back At It - Anitek

Poetry is the backbone of the Arab language

Recently we blogged a few times about Iraqi-Canadian hiphop artist The Narcicyst and various projects he's been involved with; we've also written about the North African revolutions and hiphop's connections with changes occurring in the region. One of The Narcicyst's collaborators is Syrian-American rapper Omar Offendum. He was the catalyst for the song #Jan25, a collaboration by international rappers inspired by the protests in Egypt. You can see the video for it HERE.

Here is a link to an interview he gave to The European:

Poetry is the Backbone of the Arab Language

Omar Offendum

Tuesday 19 April 2011

Secret Archives of the Vatican Video Podcast 4 -Record shops. mp3s and art

Secret Archives of the Vatican Video Podcast 4 - record shops, mp3s and art

Members of Secret Archives of the Vatican talking about record shops. mp3s and art...


Saturday 16 April 2011

Al Jisr Hip Hop Mixtape 'Bridging Cultures' Part II

Here in the Secret Archives, we like Arabic hip hop. Heard about Lebanese artist DJ Lethal Skillz through Iraq-Canadian rapper The Narcicyst.

Lethal Skillz has just released the second volume of an open-ended series of transnational mixtapes.

It's called:
RE-VOLT & PhonoSapien Productionz Present:AL Jisr Hip Hop Mixtape 'Bridging Cultures' Part II

Al-Jisr Mixtape (Bridging Cultures) Part II


You can find full details HERE and there's a link to download the mix.

Friday 15 April 2011

Sunset Dub...

There's a reason why we always post a blog entry when The Dub Zone podcast releases another episode....they're excellent! Here's more rootsical itality in TDZ#97...

TDZ#97

Full details HERE.

Direct download HERE.

Tracks
  1. Sunset Riddim - Steenkoud
  2. Inna Eden Dub - Dubmatix
  3. Give Dub - Ras Cricket meets The Black Seeds
  4. Planets in Heaven - Weight and Treble
  5. Who Knew (Lofi Dirty) - Trickstar
  6. Some One (Dub Mix) - Mackadub (feat. Unojah II)
  7. Nubian Dub Kings - The Dub OracleMassive Dub
  8. Job (Rubber Mix) - Dub One!

Tuesday 12 April 2011

Diatribes of a Dying Tribe - review

If you read this blog regularly, and if you listen to our podcast (you do, don't you?), you'll know we are fans of Arab-Canadian rapper, Yassin Alsalman, aka The Narcicyst.

I posted a short video here last month of an interview with The Narcicyst, where he talks about a book he has just published, The Diatribes of a Dying Tribe.




The Narcicyst's website, iraqisthebomb.com, says this:

The Diatribes of a Dying Tribe is about the jumbled reality of North American life. The destructive components of juxtaposing cultures, the birth of immigrant internationality and the resilient art that comes out of struggle and oppression.

It is the story of four young Arab men who joined forces to create their own representative governing meeting. Excentrik, Ragtop, Omar Offendum & The Narcicyst spent two weeks in California and endless hours on a computer crafting the Fear of an Arab Planet; an examination of the heightened anxiety towards Islam, the Oriental gaze towards the Arab face and the ever-growing paranoia of the ‘other’, all over some bangin’ beats to rock to. As a post-analytical view of the making of an album, this book serves as a document on the burgeoning Arab poetry scene, and how the two mother cultures of a migrant society coalesced through a modern hyper-culture called Hip-Hop. From TSA agents to ABC rappers, The Arab Summit were on a mission to be heard… and that is exactly what happened.


The book is short, less than 130 pages long, and includes essays by Omar Offendum, Ragtop and Excentrik as well as Yassin Alsalman himself. There are also brief interviews with Cilvaringz, Malikah, Eslaam Jawaad, as well as members of AK, DAM and Soul Purpose.

The main writers' styles are different, from the conceptual, dense verbiage of The Narcicyst, to the more accessible styles of Nizar 'Ragtop' Wattad, Omar 'Omar Offendum' Chakaki and the analytical flow of Tarik 'Excentrik' Kazaleh. They talk about the contradictions of being of varied Arab origins, living and being creative in pre- and post-9/11 North America. They describe the processes of developing and adapting self-identity in a changing and often hostile culture. They speak of how hiphop gave them a voice, a way to express anger, pride, faith, self-awareness and resistance. We read about how they met each other and how they started a recording project, The Arab Summit, that released an album in 2007, Fear of an Arab Planet.

The book finishes with excerpts from round-table email discussions with a wide range of hip hop artists, including: Eslam Jawad (Arap/London-Lebanon), Rush (Arabian Knights/Egypt), Mazzi (Soul Purpose/Iran), Lethal Skills (961 Underground/Lebanon) and more. Their experiences of being rappers and producers vary a lot - it's a very interesting and inspiring read.

Diatribes of a Dying Tribe is fully referenced, literary sources as well as the music mentioned in the text (had me running to dig out old school hip hop albums from NWA and Wu Tang to hear what these guys heard when they answered hip hop's call).

You should buy it.

Buy the book, download Fear of an Arab Planet (free!), read the blog, watch videos HERE.

It takes a nation of 2 million to hold us back Volume 1

A couple of years back a new blog, dedicated to all the bass driven musical genres we like, was born - Generation Bass - and our friends over there have this week celebrated their 2,000,000th visitor. It's going to take a bit longer before we get those kind of numbers here.... :(

To celebrate, they're releasing three free downloadable albums – exclusives, previews and remixes by the likes of Diamond Bass, Kush Arora, Shalakazoo, Celt Islam and many many more.

Generation Bass

The first one is: It Takes a nation of 2 Million To Hold us Back Volume 1

It's available to download from here:

Tracks
  1. Krsur – Starlights
  2. Boyfriend ft Offkey Rolex – High Rise Horizons
  3. Diamond Bass & Mfana – Mumboa
  4. Andy Kisaragi – Spunn (oh yeah)
  5. Amplifier – Barbarix remix
  6. Bert on beats – Bullet Skank
  7. Anthony B & Subatomic Sound – Dem can’t stop we from Talk
  8. Paul Oakenfold – Southern Sun (FLeCK & Eski remake)
  9. Dj Delay – Gypsytronic
  10. Laura Marling – Speak because I can (EEE Remix)
  11. George Lenton – Imd
  12. Edu K – Me Bota Pra Dancar (Motorpitch edit)
  13. Mexican Dubweiser – Hacienda
  14. Tinie Tempah & Ellie Goulding – Wonder Man (Bandish Projekt mix)
  15. ArtCade – Good Bad Girl

Monday 11 April 2011

The Mother of Exile: From Night to the Edge of Day

'I discovered that lullabies are so much more than just musical and rhythmic tools to soothe a child. They are in fact a powerful medium by which a mother can send direct messages to her child about life, nature, joy, pain, love, beauty, etc.'



I own a lot of recorded music and I hear a lot of music on top of that. There's music I like and music I like a lot. Different types of music, different albums, have different purposes; some are to fill up the silence while you focus on some work or study, some are for celebration and dancing, some are for quiet chilling. Some are to make you feel in touch with the cutting edge of our culture and we pretend to like them, even if we don't really. You'll know if you have those by how many times you've consciously chosen them in the last year!

There have been a handful of albums over the years that, for me, somehow fly high above all of that. There's a quality of musicianship that puts them in a different class but also they touch something beyond the mere carnal, beyond shallow surface emotion. The Lost Souls by Niraj Chag, or Digital Prophecy by Dhafer Youssef are in this category for me. Sublime, spiritual, transcendent.

Well, another one's just come along. From Night to the Edge of Day is the latest release from Iranian American singer, Azam Ali. I've been a fan for a few years, having heard her work in various projects including on some stunning albums from the band Niyaz. This new album is essentially a collection of lullabies from across the Middle East - Iranian, Turkish, Lebanese, and Kurdish, mostly traditional but including one (Faith) written spontaneously by Palestinian oud player, Naser Musa, for Azam Ali's son after discussing the project with her.




The project grew organically, in response to the birth of her son; she sang to him spontaneously on the night he was born and the melody eventually became the song Tenderness. Other songs evolved from Farsi texts of traditional lyrics brought by friends, and classic favourite lullabies from across the region.

____________________________________________________________________________

'To do this project, I worked with Kurds, Azeris, a Palestinian Christian, Iranians from all over,' recounts Ali. 'You could write a book about each one of them, about their difficulties in life and their diaspora. It was a profound experience for me as person.' Despite oppression, war, and exile, Ali heard 'hope and the belief that good will always come out in the end' in the traditional songs and in the musical contributions of her friends.
_____________________________________________________________________________

The album opens with Noor (The Light in my Eyes), a drone and a beautiful Eastern-inflected melody with some subtle harmonising lines. It reminds me of European plainchant, otherwordly, ethereal. The second track, Dandini, a Turkish traditional tune, features a frame drum and some distant, elusive instruments playing behind a very filmic vocal melody. Nami Nami follows, with some beautiful microtonal violin improvisation, before being joined by a goblet drum and an ensemble of other instruments. Once again, I'm struck by the similarity in feel to pre-classical European music. I absolutely love this tune. Neni Desem follows, a rarely heard Turkish traditional lullaby and then Shirin (or Shrin, depending on which part of the cover art you're reading...), a song from the Azeris of Iran. Once again, it is reminiscent of an Elizabethan courtly dance tune and the tempo picks up slightly from previous tunes. Azam Ali has deliberately chosen songs from minorities in the region as a way to call for peace and an end to conflict. Mehman (The Guest) is based on the aforementioned Farsi texts, gorgeous strings slowly swelling over a drone, the vocal remaining delicate as it explores a beautiful melodic mode, evocatively Eastern, before fading to the drone once more for the ending. Then we're into the bouncy and Arabic-flavoured Faith. Azam Ali duets with composer Naser Musa on this superb tune. Tenderness, Ali's own tune, follows, multitracked voices building layers of atmosphere over a drone; not sure why but this actually reminds me of the good bits of Clannad from back in the day. Lai Lai comes from the Iraqi Kurdish community and features the beautifully played frame drums featured on many of the tracks on this album. It's a short tune, followed by the last and shortest song on on the album, Faith (Reprise). In this reprise, the oud is more upfront in the mix and once again we hear Naser Musa's voice interweaving with Azam Ali's as the song slowly fades to silence and the end of the album.

This album is genuinely beautiful, peace-filled and exquisitely performed. Sublime, spiritual, transcendent.


_____________________________________________________________________________

Six Degrees Records

Sunday 10 April 2011

Poulp It Up!

PCP#346... Poulp It Up! ...

European podcaster of the year 2010, Pete Cogle, has released a special edition of the PC Podcast focusing on one of our favourite French netlabels, Fresh Poulp.

You can find details of PCP#346 HERE.

Direct download HERE.

Fresh Poulp

Friday 8 April 2011

Dub Destroyer

DSZ#35... Dub Destroyer... is the latest basswobbletastic episode of podmeister Pete Cogle's Dub Step Zone podcast.

Full details HERE.

Direct download HERE.

Dub Destroyer

Tracks
  1. Instinct - Zoom
  2. MySkye (Original Mix) - GoldRush
  3. Daywalker - Narky
  4. Chicago - J Courage
  5. Backyard Prophet - Photophob
  6. I Can Feel You Now - Hand Of Buddha
  7. Sistematico - Dessben
  8. Petdestroyer - Mochipet

Tuesday 5 April 2011

Fareeq El Atrash - Lawein & Ba'ed Min Hon

We like Arabic language hiphop. Here's two tunes in one from Beirut.

They say:
Two songs in one video clip from Fareeq El Atrash's debut album Fareeq El Atrash

As a decade elapses from the 21st century and we look back to a very well documented 20th century, we take a moment to reflect on the events that have marked Lebanon, the Middle East, and the World. Fareeq El Atrash take us on a journey to remember a century of eccentric art and fashion, wars and dictators, actors and musicians...

Times have changed; the players have changed (most of them at least); however the events and the themes are recurrent.

أغنيتين في فيديو كليب واحد لفريق الاطرش

فريق الاطرش يأخذنا في رحلة لنتذكر قرن من الفن والأزياء، من الحروب والحكام المستبدين ، من الممثلين والموسيقيين والمشاهير...لقد تغير الزمن، وتغيرت الوجوه (معظمها على الأقل)، إلا أن الأحداث والمواضيع تتكرر.


Sunday 3 April 2011

Muslimgauze: Chasing the Shadow of Bryn Jones

If you’re a regular reader, you’ll know we’re fans of the late Bryn Jones, aka Muslimgauze. Here’s an interview with him that I came across today.

The Narcicyst - Brass

We like The Narcicyst....here's a new video.