12/17/15

The Best Albums of 2015

By Nathan G. O'Brien

Hey there friends, how's it going? No, seriously, how's it going? Leave me a comment or send me an email (thee.n.o.b at gmail) or a Tweet or whatever and let me know how you're doing. I hope you've had an incredible holiday season, and that the new year will be off to an even incredible-er start. (PS-I basically just copy 'n' pasted this from last year [and the year before that] but I am genuinely interested in what you've been up to and wish you nothing but the best.)

I've run year-end best-of lists addressing punk/HC, reissues, comps, mixes, etc., and rap/hip-hop so far. In the coming days you can also expect an all-cassette one (which will be narrowed down from this master list.) In the meantime, here's 25 of my favorite records from the past year. Thanks for checking it out.



1. G.L.O.S.S. – Demo (Not Normal Tapes)
You will not have heard a more urgent and powerful recording this year, no matter what genre or format, than the debut cassette by Olympia’s hardcore punk outfit G.L.O.S.S. It stands for Girls Living Outside Society’s Shit. Lest you be confused, here’s a quote from their “New Blood” feature in Maximum RocknRoll Magazine… 

“I think we were all tired of the totally substance-free white boy ‘slimy creep’ thing — all these dudes whose identities are reflected everywhere but who see themselves as outcasts.  We’re tired of punk catering to white men, and excluding all others. We want to make jocks feel uncomfortable and targeted. We’re not trying to be weird, we are just actual outcasts of society — queers, trans women, women of color, gender queer femmes, feminists, etc., and we love hardcore and are sick of being sidelined and misrepresented, so we are representing ourselves.”


2. Apollo Brown – Grandeur (Mello Music Group)
All the signature dusty soul loops you’ve come to expect from this beast behind the boards, and with a bevy of lyricists in tow; among them are Evidence, Vinnie Paz, Your Old Droog, and the recently deceased Sean Price. Building upon the foundation laid by Pete Rock, Preemo, and Large Pro, Brown is without a doubt in the upper echelon of current beat-makers.


3. Dawn of Humans – Slurping at the Cosmos Spine (Toxic State Records)
Queasy, rhythmic sounds from NYC that challenges the notion of "punk." I get a little sick to my stomach every time I listen to it. In a good way though. Super trendy right now but not for lack of reason.


4. Guilty Simpson – Detroit's Son (Stones Throw Records)


5. King Khan & BBQ Show – Bad News Boys (In The Red)
Their most punk outing to date. Still plenty of that good old fashioned primitive rock 'n' roll in there, but a bit more spit and snarl than previous releases. And of course, a healthy dose of humor too.


6. Barcelona – Extremo Nihilismo En Barcelona (La Vida Es Un Mus Discos Punk)
Malicious hardcore from Spain. So goddamn great you'll want to puke. Read my review here.


7. Starvin B – The Foreigner (Sickside)
'90s East Coast boom-bap worship up and down. Starvin B spits all rugged and raw like over some hard-ass bap and dope cuts. Heavy-bumping beats, record scratching, and skilled lyricism like this will always trump other variants of hip-hop.


8. Institute – Catharsis (Sacred Bones)
Anarcho post-punk, Krautrock, psychedelic proto-punk, and other far-out sounds. This is the first official full-length for these Austin regulars. Certainly you've heard of them by now. And if not, well get on it while they're still cool. They're only a few melodic numbers away from being massively well-liked by the H-word set.


9. Malik B & Mr. Green – Unpredictable (Enemy Soil)
Classic sounding boom-bap from the East Coast. All raps by Malik B, who was in the Roots all those years ago. He’s still bringing that live-from-the-streets vibe too. Beats and cuts by Mr. Green, whose got nimble fingers on the cross fade and a knack for hard drums.


10. La Misma – Kanizadi (Toxic State Records)
Intoxicating punk via a quartet of New York women. Allure furthered by all-Portuguese lyrics. If you had told me this was recorded in 1983 I’d have no choice not to believe you. You’ll cry when you listen to it because you know you’ll never hear something this good again.



11. Ghostface Killah & Adrian Younge – Twelve Reasons To Die II (Linear Labs)
The sequel to their 2013 project, this round is noticeably more focused on the storytelling front. It features narration from RZA as well as numerous appearances via Raekwon. Younge turns in another striking soundtrack, furthering an impressive string that includes the first Twelve Reasons and the 2014 Souls of Mischief album The Future is Now.


12. Gay Kiss – Preservation Measures (Sorry State)
A violent ripper, front to back from this Phoenix quartet. Closes out with, of all things, a Nine Inch Nails cover. And a damn fine one at that. Read my review here.


13. Grand Invincible – Menace Mode (Megakut Records)
This very well could be the best work from both of these dudes to date. Luke Sick’s lyricism and delivery is wholly realized. He comes straight gully, spitting mean-mugged, blunted rhymes; ripe with clever wordplay and cultural references that will have you hitting the rewind button like, hold up, what’d he say? And DJ Eons One has fully arrived; a master craftsman when it comes to production. His vinyl-culled beats are so vintage in sound you can practically hear him blowing the dust of the records. Smudgy, horn-filled loops and hard drums, accented by ill audio ephemera samples and inspired scratching results in a boom-bap odyssey-like soundscape. And on cassette too.



14. Red Death – Permanant Exile (Grave Mistake Records)
The debut album from a four-pack of DC dudes. Pop quiz: Did you like Sick Of It All when they weren't a caricature of themselves? Did you like Corrosion of Conformity before they went all Southern-fried metal on your ass? Do you have a worn out copy of AC/DC's '74 Jailbreak somewhere on the floor of your car under all the empty bags of Chili Cheese Fritos and Slim Jim wrappers? Do you sometimes wear long underwear under a pair of shorts? If you answered yes to any of these questions you'll love this.



15. Czarface (Inspectah Deck and 7L & Esoteric) – Every Hero Needs a Villain (Brick Records)
Placing hip-hop’s longstanding love affair with comic books and pro-wrestling at the forefront, Esoteric and Decks’ battle raps and clever banter works in perfect synchronicity with 7L’s boom-bap production, record cuts, and pop-culture samples. Quality guest spots from Large Professor, MF Doom, and R.A. the Rugged man to boot.


16. Diat – Positive Energy (Iron Lung Records)
The first time I listened to this I did so as I often do: laying on the floor in front of the stereo, with headphones on, and my eyes closed. My wife said it looked like I was having an orgasm. There's so many bands doing post-punk now that when you come across the really good stuff it's hard not ruin your undies. Surprising too that they're from Germany, which is something I'd normally hold against a group of white dudes.


17. DJ EFN – Another Time (Crazy Hood Productions)
Miami mixtape maestro DJ EFN's latest features hand-picked production from nine different producers and over 60 rappers. It' on some cypher outside the corner store, beats blasting from a Jeep nearby, rockin' baggy sweats and cigarillos-type shit.


18. Broken Prayer – Misanthropocentric AKA Droid's Blood (Sorry State)
Another can't miss boundary-bending album from these Chicago strange-oid punks. Difficult to describe but I did my best to do so here.


19. Gangrene (Alchemist & Oh-No) – You Disgust Me (Mass Appeal)
As usual these two producers-come-rappers are on the blunted, LSD-soaked, heady tip. Not the most dexterous emcees but they do enough to get by, and bring in heavyweights like Sean Price, Havoc, and Action Bronson to fill in the gaps. Their production is the real star here; mucky psychedelic beats enhanced by dusty movies samples and other scary as fuck audio clips.


20. Decades/Failures – Goodbye (Dead Tank Records)
Outstanding gothic, dark, synth-punk made by one, or maybe two guys (I should probably check on that) that live in sunny Florida. I was playing this for my 60-something year-old dad who had this to say: "Why would anyone celebrate such deliberate sadness?"



21. Paul Nice & Phil Most Chill – Fabreeze Brothers (AE Productions)
This is on that throwback tip, undeniably. Apart from one another these two have been in the game for a minute, so it’s no surprise that this new joint—their long-awaited collaboration—has that crate-digging, break-beat, verbal deftness sense that recalls the early-to-mid-‘80s days in hip-hop development. It’s not archaic, rather archetypal. And holy shit is ever refreshing.


22. L.O.T.I.O.N. – Digital Control and Man's Obsolescence (Toxic State Records)
Imagine a punk heckling the band from the audience. "Where's the drummer?” He'd yell. The singer screams back from the stage, "We don't need a drummer. THIS IS THE FUTURE!" Well this is indeed the future and it sounds incredible. Goodbye Humans.


23. Ratking – 700 Fill (XL Recordings)
On the heels of a brutally cold winter this New York trio dropped a free EP named after the famed North Face winter jacket model. Nine tracks recorded in as many days, which lend it a unique and improvisational ambiance. Sporting Life’s beats—post-trap, maybe, or rather, probably—compliment emcee’s Hak’s aloofness and Wiki’s nasally, battle-ready exorcisms.  


24. Vaaska – Todos Contra Todos (Beach Impediment)
This Austin-based band's versatility is really impressive. D-beat is at the core but surrounding that is a whole load of scorching axe work, agile drumming, and rock ‘n’ roll attitude. Read my review here.


25. No – Treating People Like They Don't Exist (La Vida Es Un Mus Discos Punk)
Loud fast rules crew from London. Unique in a way that's hard to put into words. I think due to the guitars. Very angry. Whenever I listen to this on my bike I get wherever I'm going like twice as fast. 

12/16/15

The Best Hip-Hop Records of 2015

By Nathan G. O'Brien

I'm not going to lie, when it comes to rap music, I'm getting old. Don't get me wrong, I'm not stuck in the past—I keep up on the new shit—but variance-wise, I'm not exactly trying to expand my horizons anymore. I prefer the type of rap that doesn't stray far from the original blueprint; birthed in the late '70s, developed throughout the '80s, and damn-near perfected in the '90s. That is: dope beats, hard rhymes, and cuts. I've said it before and I'll say it again: call me a grumpy curmudgeon if you must, but do so knowing that are very few things that I'm as passionate about as rap music. My approach to hip-hop is the same as that of a big man holding down the lane on a basketball court: Don't Bring That Weak Shit In Here. So, with that, here's my favorite rap music from the past 12 months...

Action Bronson - Mr. Wonderful (Atlantic)
This is Bronson’s—the former sous chef turned rapper—most eclectic release to date. Sure, the pimp hand and pop-culture-laden rhymes are there, but the song writing is more focused and the production is diverse; including beats from the likes of longtime collaborators Statik Selektah, Alchemist, and Party Supplies, as well as Mark Ronson and 88 Keys.

Apollo Brown - Grandeur (Mello Music Group)
All the signature dusty soul loops you’ve come to expect from this beast behind the boards, and with a bevy of lyricists in tow; among them are Evidence, Vinnie Paz, Your Old Droog, and the recently deceased Sean Price. Building upon the foundation laid by Pete Rock, Preemo, and Large Pro, Brown is without a doubt in the upper echelon of current beat-makers.

Czarface (Inspectah Deck and 7L & Esoteric) - Every Hero Needs a Villain (Brick)
Placing hip-hop’s longstanding love affair with comic books and pro-wrestling at the forefront, Esoteric and Decks’ battle raps and clever banter works in perfect synchronicity with 7L’s boom-bap production, record cuts, and pop-culture samples. Quality guest spots from Large Professor, MF Doom, and R.A. the Rugged man to boot.


DJ EFN - Another Time (Crazy Hood Productions)
Miami mixtape maestro DJ EFN's latest features hand-picked production from nine different producers and over 60 rappers. It' on some cypher outside the corner store, beats blasting from a Jeep nearby, rockin' baggy sweats and cigarillos-type shit.

Gangrene (Alechemist & Oh-No) - You Disgust Me (Mass Appeal)
As usual these two producers-come-rappers are on the blunted, LSD-soaked, heady tip. Not the most dexterous emcees but they do enough to get by, and bring in heavyweights like Sean Price, Havoc, and Action Bronson to fill in the gaps. Their production is the real star here; mucky psychedelic beats enhanced by dusty movies samples and other scary as fuck noises.

Ghostface Killah & Adrian Younge - Twelve Reasons to Die II (Linear Labs)
The sequel to their 2013 project, this round is noticeably more focused on the storytelling front. It features narration from RZA as well as numerous appearances via Raekwon. Younge turns in another striking soundtrack, furthering an impressive string that includes the first Twelve Reasons and the 2014 Souls of Mischief album The Future is Now.

Freddie Gibbs - Shadow of a Doubt (ESGN)
Gangster Gibbs could easily rest on his laurels at this point in the game; especially coming off of two excellent records last year in PiƱata and The Tonite Show, his collaborations with Madlib and The World’s Freshest respectively, but instead he continues to challenge himself creatively and emotionally. The result is sonically varied album—bumping, moody, subbed-out—that further displays his versatility - a street hustler, a gangster rapper, a crooner, a showman, an artist.

Git Beats & Bob Banner - Get Mad, Turn Green EP (Usedwax)
An under the radar yet wholly enjoyable EP via the New York duo Git Beats and the mysterious Bob Banner. If it wasn’t for the Sean Price’s appearance on a pair of tracks, it’s unlikely this would have ever made the blog rounds. Let’s be thankful it did. Banner’s got that rugged, cotton balls in his mouth vocal affection, which goes well with Git’s hard-thumping boom-bap.

Grand Invincible - Menace Mode (Megakut)
This very well could be the best work from both of these dudes to date. Luke Sick’s lyricism and delivery is wholly realized. He comes straight gully, spitting mean-mugged, blunted rhymes; ripe with clever wordplay and cultural references that will have you hitting the rewind button like, hold up, what’d he say? And DJ Eons One has fully arrived; a master craftsman when it comes to production. His vinyl-culled beats are so vintage in sound you can practically hear him blowing the dust of the records. Smudgy, horn-filled loops and hard drums, accented by ill audio ephemera samples and inspired scratching results in a boom-bap odyssey-like soundscape. And on cassette too.

Guilty Simpson - Detroit's Son (Stones Throw)


Malik B & Mr. Green - Unpredictable (Enemy Soil)
Classic sounding boom-bap from the East Coast. All raps by Malik B, who was in the Roots all those years ago. He’s still bringing that live-from-the-streets vibe too. Beats and cuts by Mr. Green, whose got nimble fingers on the cross fade and a knack for hard drums.

Paul Nice & Phil Most Chill - Fabreeze Brothers (AE Productions)
This is on that throwback tip, undeniably. Apart from one another these two have been in the game for a minute, so it’s no surprise that this new joint—their long-awaited collaboration—has that crate-digging, break-beat, verbal deftness sense that recalls the early-to-mid-‘80s days in hip-hop development. It’s not archaic, rather archetypal. And holy shit is ever refreshing.

Pusha T Darkest Before Dawn: The Prelude (G.O.O.D. Music)


Ratking - 700 Fill EP (XL Recordings)
On the heels of a brutally cold winter this New York trio dropped a free EP named after the famed North Face winter jacket model. Nine tracks recorded in as many days, which lend it a unique and improvisational ambiance. Sporting Life’s beats—post-trap, maybe, or rather, probably—compliment emcee’s Hak’s aloofness and Wiki’s nasally, battle-ready exorcisms.


Starvin B - The Foreigner (Sickside)
Another low-flying release that caught some attention due to a Sean Price guest spot. '90s East Coast boom-bap worship up and down. Starvin B spits all rugged and raw like over some hard-ass bap and dope cuts. Heavy-bumping beats, record scratching, and skilled lyricism like this will always trump other variants of hip-hop.

Vic Spencer & Ill Legit - Plastic on Couches (Fake Shore Drive)


Westside Gunn & Conway - Griselda Ghost EP (Big Ghost Ltd.)
Gunn and Conway on the mics, Big Ghost on the beats; flexing that grimy ‘90s-style muscle. I could continue to describe this but I wouldn’t do it the justice it deserves; so here’s Big Ghost in his own words: “We’re trying restore the feeling of when you could throw a record on and let that shit play all the way through...no skips...and get lost in some fly shit. If you can remember what it was like hearing The Infamous or The Purple Tape the first time… This is from that essence... The smell of blunt ashes and broken Heineken bottles on the corner at 5:00 am. This is that Carharrt dungarees and razorblades under the tongue shit. This is that pissy project hallways shit.”

12/15/15

The Best Reissues, Comps, Mixes, Etc. of 2015

By Nathan G. O'Brien

Hey Jabronis, here's a list of my favorite reissues, compilations, mixes, and the all-encompassing etc. from the past 12 months. Basically this is the catchall of everything that isn't covered on the punk/HC, rap/hip-hop, cassettes, and best albums lists that have been posted or will be soon. I'm blurbing these out and adding links as I have time, so check back often, as content will likely change several times in the coming days.

UPDATE: Scene Point Blank is now running this as part of their year-end feature 2015: A Year in Review.

A Cat Called Fritz - Nowadays (mixtape)
Fritz reworks classic rap songs and mixes in some new stuff and some exclusive beats. Perfect to throw in the earbuds for both mowing the lawn and sipping the cold ones afterwards.
Agnostic Front - No One Rules LP (Radio Raheem)
First official vinyl release of these 30 some tracks spanning two different demo sessions; from before the United Blood 7" and before the Victim In Pain LP. Plus a ginormous book filled with flyers, photos, stories, and other ephemera; including AF playing in a cave!

Anaszi / Survival - Communion split LP (Self-Released)
Vinyl reissue of the 2013 cassette-only split between these two primitive, gothic, cold-wave-ish punk bands.
Bahnhof -  February 82 7" (No Plan)
Sing-a-long punk from Milan, Italy. They began 1979 and ended 1984 after the singer had a motorcycle accident. All that was left behind was a famed four song cassette, which has finally seen the light of day on vinyl and, holy shit, does it ever sound incredible.


Bikini Kill - Revolution Girl Style Now LP (Bikini Kill)
Vinyl reissue of the original 1991 demo tape plus three unreleased tracks.
Brycon Games - The Adventures of Whoopin Crane, parts 1-3 CD (Megakut)
8-bit madness from Bay Area producer Brycon.


Cal & The Calories - Greatest Asses cassette (Lumpy)
It's been said that Cal & The Calories is just stuff that Martin thinks is too poppy to be considered as Lumpy & The Dumpers. And while that may be true, only the discerning ear would ever notice. I happen to own a set of those there discerning ears, and yeah, I get it. Well anyway, this is everything done under the Cal moniker complied one one side of a cassette.

DJ Food - Solid Steel Radio Show 11/12/15: DJ Food vs. The Rammellzee (mix)
"For the past weeks I've been reading, watching, listening, writing and building The Rammellzee and his mythos have become an unhealthy obsession." This is Kevin Foakes (AKA DJ Food) in an article he wrote for The Quietus back in December, titled "The Rammellzee: From Beat Bop To Cosmic Flush on The Quietus." This mix is the result of said obsession.

DJ Gravy & DJ Corey Chase - Double Barrel: Reggae Samples & Hip-Hop Classics (mixtape)
Chase & Gravy explore the longstanding association between reggae and hip-hop; joining together definitive rap tracks with the very same reggae songs that were sampled.
DJ Qbert - JellyFishLazerFace (mixtape)
Qbert describes this mixtape—a recapitulation of his Extraterrestrium: The Guided Space Tour album—as “an odyssey of future bass music." It’s a dope mix that places ultramodern hip-hop production from the likes of El-P alongside post-dubstep and other subbed-out sounds with Qbert’s trademark turntablism leading the way.

DJ Rhude - Naz: The Flyest Essence (mixtape)
Despite their numerous collaborations Nas and AZ have never collaborated on a full-length album. So DJ Rhude made one for us.
DJ Wicked - The Wicked Takeover on MHz 11/1/15: 1995 Hip-Hop Special (mix)
If you've never heard Wicked's themed "takeover" shows on KZSU's MHz you're sleeping. (Do yourself a favor and peep his "420/Weed Smokers Special" shows.) This one celebrates the year '95 in rap music; comprised primarily of deep cuts and B-sides and all off of vinyl. Twenty years later and this stuff still sounds ill.

Eli Escobar - Live At Brooklyn Museum 4/2/15: Basquiat "Unknown Notebooks" Opening (mix)
I freak out every time a DJ drops Liquid Liquid's "Cavern" in the mix, as Escobar does in his set for the latest Basquiat art show. In addition, he spins era-appropriate party atmosphere-enhancing tracks from The Clash, Madonna, Grace Jones, Blondie, the B-52's, and many more.

Iron Boots - Complete Discography LP (Grave Mistake)
This discography LP is rad if you're in the mood for a mid-'00s NYHC/skinhead/mosh worship with glam metal guitar leads revival thing.
JD Twitch - NTS Radio 10/30/15: Post-Punk Special (mix)

Minneapolis Uranium Club - Human Exploration 12" EP (Fashionable Activism)

Miss Red - Murder (mixtape)

Shout Out New York & United Crates - Ol' Dirty Bastards: ODB Sides (mixtape)

Sun Ra & His Arkestra - Those of Earth…And Other Worlds 2xLP (Strut)

Useless Eaters - Singles: 2011-2014 CD (Slovenly)

Various Artists - Bughouse, vol.1 mixtape cassette (Not Normal)

Various Artists - Coalmine Records presents: Reminded (Mixed by DJ Revolution) (Coalmine)

Various Artists - Lumpy Mix, vol.2 mixtape cassette (Lumpy)

Various Artists - Next Stop Soweto, vol.4 2xLP (Strut)

Various Artists - Trevor Jackson presents: Science Fiction Dancehall Classics 3xLP (On-U Sound)

Vexx - Live cassette (Perennial)

Wasted Talent - Ready to Riot LP (Going Underground)
Unearthed punk rock from State College, PA circa 1981-1983 compiled on vinyl for the first time.

Wiki - Lil Me (mixtape)