sábado, 5 de janeiro de 2013

Little Women - Throat

Little Women - Throat


























RECORDED

December 11, 2009
Brooklyn Recording, Brooklyn, NY

RELEASED

April 13, 2010
AUM Fidelity

PERSONNEL

Andrew Smiley - Guitar
Darius Jones - Alto Saxophone
Jason Nazary - Drums
Travis Laplante - Tenor Saxophone

Andrew Smiley - Producer
Andy Taub - Mixing, Recording
Darius Jones - Producer
Jason Nazary - Artwork [Hand Lettering, Label Art], Producer
Michael Marciano - Premastering
Mick Barr - Artwork [Cover]
Scott Hull - Lacquer Cut
Steven Joerg - Producer
Travis Laplante - Producer

TRACK LISTING

01 Throat I
02 Throat II
03 Throat III
04 Throat IV
05 Throat V
06 Throat VI
07 Throat VII

P.S.: All tracks were fully improvised.

REVIEW

Brooklyn-based quartet, Little Women, blasts out of the starting gate with its full length debut on the Aum Fidelity imprint, following up its 2008 EP. The best known of the group's constituent parts to jazz fans is alto saxophonist Darius Jones, whose Man'ish Boy (A Raw and Beautiful Thing), also on Aum Fidelity, was one of 2009's most widely acclaimed releases. But Little Women is such a team focused group that Jones' back catalogue is not a good signpost for what to expect.

The group's singular sound comes from a strong conception whereby ideas arising from group improvisation, and band members' compositions alike, are subject to joint reappraisal: all of which are sculpted into a continuous uncredited 41-minute suite. Consequently stark juxtaposition, embracing a range of genres, including free jazz, metal, folk, noise and prog, is one of Little Women's defining characteristics. Even when particular styles are utilized, the parameters are carefully controlled to fit with the overall intent. Individual expression is almost totally subsumed within the collective ethos, although guitarist Andrew Smiley is sometimes more prominent due to the ability of his axe to cut through the dense ensembles.

In a program which emphasises contrast, the uncompromising power chords and bombast of "Throat I" segue directly into a hall of mirrors of slow drifting saxophone harmonics on "Throat II." Sometimes the contrasts even come within the same piece, as with "Throat IV" where the two horns begin in folksy Americana hinting at bagpipes sonorities, sketching a soulful hymn like melody which wouldn't have sounded out of place on Jones' album, before tracing a trajectory from consonance to the dissonance of off-key twanging guitar accents and rumbling drums. Similarly on "Throat V" a nervy, episodic opening portends a process of evolution ending with a pretty musical box tune picked out on a single guitar string. Vocal grunts and sighs meld into repetitive patterns before switching up to more rapid cycling of wordless exclamations on "Throat VII": an eccentric conclusion which sidesteps the conventional idea of a climax and, like the rest of this intriguing disc, succeeds in keeping things off balance to the end.

John Sharpe
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=36223#.UOhggeTBGSo

DOWNLOAD

http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?e0j26c2iw7q8iqk

Little Women - Teeth

Little Women - Teeth


























RECORDED

December 10, 2006
Excello Recording, Brooklyn, NY

RELEASED

March 4, 2008
Gilgongo Records [Vinyl Release] & Socket Records [CD Release]

P.S.: Apparently the album was first released in 2007.

PERSONNEL

Ben Greenberg - Guitar
Darius Jones - Alto Saxophone
Jason Nazary - Drums
Travis Laplante - Tenor Saxophone

Alex Sniderman - Assistant Engineer
Hugh Pool - Engineer
Mick Barr - Artwork
Raul Zahir De Leon - Layout, Typographer
Scott Hull - Mastering

TRACK LISTING

01 [Untitled]
02 [Untitled]
03 [Untitled]
04 [Untitled]

P.S.: Here's an excerpt of an interview of the band to Alibi.com, in which they explain their writing process and the reason for the name of the songs:

Tell me about your writing process.

When we started playing together, our first few shows were 100 percent improvised. We formed with no concept of a band sound, we just got together in a room and played together. The first few times we played it was really incredible because the improvisations were abnormally focused and incredible. We knew we had something special going from the beginning.

We started trying to write pieces that were structures of our improvisations. What we're doing now, our first recording that's coming out on March 4, is the first record in a series of records that we're going to be releasing annually.

You're just using numbers as titles for your songs. Why's that?

On MySpace they won't let you put one giant track. That was just a way for us to split up the piece into sub-pieces. On vinyl it's just one side and one continuous track. We have those reference track marks on the CD, but there are no pauses. We kept it like that because we recorded it all in one take from beginning to end with no edits or overdubs

http://alibi.com/music/22055/Little-Women.html

REVIEW

The four-song debut EP by Brooklyn-based noise jazz ensemble Little Women stakes out territory somewhere between Last Exit and Orthrelm, with strong echoes of the Flying Luttenbachers. Two saxophonists -- Darius Jones on alto and Travis LaPlante on tenor -- are joined by guitarist Ben Greenberg and drummer Jason Nazary, all working together to create music of great intensity, but with a surprising beauty at its core. The disc begins with a jagged and assaultive track with guitar and drums flailing in post-metal abandon, but for the first half of "Teeth II," Jones and LaPlante conduct an unaccompanied duo that's very much in the mode of late-'60s free jazz. Then the other two come rampaging back in, and the whole thing explodes again. This track leads seamlessly into the next, which is based on a repeated ensemble riff -- the members of Little Women are clearly aware of how well-focused, full-bore repetition has worked for both Albert Ayler and Slayer. The EP's concluding track, "Teeth IV," breaks down at its midpoint, and ends with three minutes of weird glossolalia-like chanting and shouting. This is highly disciplined, clearly thought-out music that carries an aura of frenzied abandon -- an unexpected and uncommon combination.

Phil Freeman
http://www.allmusic.com/album/teeth-mw0001218901

DOWNLOAD

http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?szppc7ncjs77wdy

sexta-feira, 4 de janeiro de 2013

Death Grips - No Love Deep Web

Death Grips - No Love Deep Web


























RECORDED

May-August, 2012
Oakland, CA & Sacramento, CA

RELEASED

October 1, 2012
Third Worlds [Self-Release]

PERSONNEL

Andy "Flatlander" Morin
Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett
Zach Hill

TRACK LISTING

01 Come Up And Get Me (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
02 Lil Boy (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
03 No Love (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
04 Black Dice (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
05 World Of Dogs (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
06 Lock Your Doors (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
07 Whammy (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
08 Hunger Games (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
09 Deep Web (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
10 Stockton (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
11 Pop (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
12 Bass Rattle Stars Out The Sky (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
13 Artificial Death In The West (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)

REVIEW

For a moment, forget about the cock on the cover: The most arresting and totemic image of this week's Death Grips debacle and/or coup actually arrived about five hours before the brazen California trio released its second major-label LP, NO LOVE DEEP WEB, online, for free and under an anything-goes Creative Commons license. Shirtless so as to expose the web of tattoos on his body, Death Grips frontman MC Ride stands with his back to the camera, his middle fingers foisted high and a cigarette tucked into his left hand. But he's balancing on a balcony, high up in what appears to be a rather well-furbished neighborhood, his toes hanging just over the ledge. He's tempting fate and taking the chance to make the strongest statement possible, even if he (and the photographer overhead) had to risk a fall to the death to get it. In fact, the only incident that might have given the riot-act release of NO LOVE DEEP WEB more currency in the media would have been an accidental death. At the very least, it would have kept at bay the conspiracy theorists calling Death Grips' Monday move a publicity stunt performed in conjunction with Epic Records. "Too soon," you'd say.

At the risk of appearing moribund, that phenomenon of big stunts and instant exits largely defines NO LOVE DEEP WEB, not just in release style but also in musical makeup. These 13 tracks thrive on paranoia and aggression, feelings threaded together by the sense that everything could be ending right now. With his voice squeezed above a heavy thud and electro chirp, MC Ride rolls the dice again, as he did on the balcony's ledge: "My life on a limb about to break." Across these 46 minutes, Ride creates a series of memento mori scenarios (and even goes so far as to invoke that phrase) and dares them to destroy him. As he puts it, "Fuck this world/ Fuck this body."

The record's most obvious example is "World of Dogs", which opens with the repetitive hook "It's all suicide" over Zach Hill's death-jazz drums. Crushed by its own quest for redemption, the grueling pace and noose-necked premise-- "Die with me/ Blow out the lights, take your life/ Ride the falling sky with me"-- make the song more grim than most black metal in 2012. The hook of "Lil Boy" is an invitation to burn brighter and faster, while the mortality-obsessed and especially corrosive "Lock Your Doors" includes a falling-from-life scream convincing enough to be sampled from a horror film. A minute later, Ride pictures the flame of a candle like the sand slipping through the hourglass: "Light the candle, burn the wax/ Before me dies, in scorch uprise/ Can't deny it, no way back." It's as if NO LOVE DEEP WEB was written and recorded knowing that its ultimate fate would either kill or catapult Death Grips. Essentially, the risk becomes the biggest reward.

After all, Death Grips' rage for some unnamed and very big system is written all across these tracks, and not just in the horror-house din of "Lock Your Doors" or the militaristic march of "No Love". MC Ride weaves networks of anxious and sometimes fatalistic visions; his phone's been tapped, and phantom footsteps sound just outside the door. At one point, he's stuck in a closed-circuit surveillance system, and he's the only one who can't watch. "Tongue cut out the mouth of reason, and chucked off the river's edge," he manages in one particularly manic span, again acknowledging the end waiting just at the other side of the precipice.

He lashes out, becoming the bully with a vivid imagination and an aggressive lexicon. "Lil Boy" taunts the effete, while "No Love" (likely and hilariously Epic's would-have-been "single") teases the bloated form of stereotypical industry executives: "Fuck do you do? Fuck a man with hips for hulu." Ride buys up guns, threatens homicide, evades the law, pursues his prey, and, by his own admission, teeters toward the edge of crazy. He's most fierce on "Deep Web", an industrial-strength boomer that finds him ready to fight and flee. "I'm the coat hanger in your man's vagina," he stammers, unleashing a line vague enough to offend most everyone. It's the sort of thing you could imagine him shouting from the top of the balcony Sunday evening, spreading the bad news like heavy mortar fire.

With his schizoid panoply of voices and hyperlinked lyrics, MC Ride remains Death Grips' fountainhead and most polarizing figure. But the production of Zach Hill and Flatlander lives on the same line of danger as their leader. They afford Ride perfect platforms for his effrontery. Closer "Artificial Death in the West", for instance, is the longest track here, pushing toward the six-minute mark. Ride raps like he's stuck between failure and the future, so the music matches those "hopeless premonitions" with synthesizers suggesting krautrock tripping toward its own oblivion. "Hunger Games" explores a similar fascination with the end while the beat ruptures into ill-shaped bits. It's the sound of a troubled mind trying not to fall apart.

Loud and punishing, the sonics of NO LOVE DEEP WEB suit MC Ride's mix of hysteria, rage and exhaustion. Perhaps Epic has concerns about Death Grips' ability to make a marketable record; as Death Grips are arguably the most challenging act on a major label right now (or last week, at least), that much is founded. But their ability to integrate every part into cohesive tracks-- in other words, to marry their sound to their fury-- is rare. After a string of shows in the spring, Death Grips canceled all subsequent dates to finish NO LOVE DEEP WEB. That's a questionable career move, but the effort and attention show here at every turn.

Death Grips exist within a cloud of hyperbole, from the maximized minimalism of their savage beats and the extreme unrest of their barked lyrics to the escalating gauntlet of their album covers and their blooming disregard of industry standards. To summarize, NO LOVE DEEP WEB-- a record ostensibly paid for by a label owned by one of the biggest companies in the world but released for free on the Internet-- features an erect penis inked with the title in sloppy Sharpie script on its cover. One of its most undeniable hooks reads, "She shoot pussy through your chest, you die." Everything about this trio seems extreme.

Especially when perceived as posturing for publicity, those appearances make it difficult to realize and articulate the issues that Death Grips make so urgent. But this is a trio of itinerant transgressors, making impossible demands on the boundaries of rap and punk and rock'n'roll and questioning to the core not only what constitutes a proper release but also the standard models for turning music into money. For now, at least, NO LOVE DEEP WEB is an extraordinary outlier in most every sense, an album with no definitive home or home turf aside from the millions who will likely download it.

So, are Death Grips publicity-crazed assholes who never saw a situation that couldn't be turned into a stunt, or are they real-life renegades who infiltrated the industry only to know they'd soon rip through its bowels? Frankly, at a time when what's for dinner can become a cause for publicizing yourself, and when one industry might shut down another to restore historically accepted order, they're nothing if not a lot of both. For the second time in one year, both on a large label and on their own, they've released a record ruthless and rewarding enough to animate that image.

Grayson Currin
http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/17216-no-love-deep-web/

DOWNLOAD

http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?ah1chbf82jj8gee

Death Grips - The Money Store

Death Grips - The Money Store


























RELEASED

April 21, 2012
Epic Records

P.S.: This date states for the Epic Records vinyl release. The album was first released in cassette, in April 20, 2012.

PERSONNEL

Andy "Flatlander" Morin
Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett
Zach Hill

Andy "Flatlander" Morin - Producer
Angelica Cob-Baehler - Artists & Repertoire
Sua Yoo - Artwork
Zach Hill - Producer

TRACK LISTING

01 Get Got (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
02 The Fever (Aye Aye) (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
03 Lost Boys (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
04 Blackjack (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
05 Hustle Bones (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
06 I've Seen Footage (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
07 Double Helix (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
08 System Blower (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
09 The Cage (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
10 Punk Weight (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
11 Fuck That (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
12 Bitch Please (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
13 Hacker (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)

REVIEW

Death Grips are angry. It's unclear why. But their thirst for vengeance, their monomaniacal desire to visit fiery destruction on the powers-that-be, is crystal-clear on The Money Store, even if nothing else-- where the hell this album came from; who plays which instrument; what the lead singer is yelling about; and what on earth this band of insurgents is doing signing an Epic Records contract with L.A. Reid-- makes much sense at all. When playing this album, the only thing I'm sure of is my overwhelming desire to split my forehead open on a cinder block.

The Sacramento group seems to have landed from an alternate planet, or at least an alternate decade when defiantly mutant outfits like this were occasionally given major-label backing. They've been persistently tagged as "rap rock" for context, but it's not a very useful description of their music. For starters, not much of The Money Store scans as rock: It's confrontational, abrasive, and chaotic, but only one of its 13 tracks includes a remotely guitar-like noise ("I've Seen Footage") and even that turns out to be a bent, sickly synthesizer. Most of the album is an alien swarm of buzzing and sputtering noises. Death Grips' Zach Hill, a drummer for the fiendishly technical noise-rock band Hella, has also chewed his way through numerous projects, including work with Marnie Stern and Boredoms, and bits of all this float through The Money Store's wildly unpredictable 41 minutes.

Whatever L.A. Reid was thinking when he signed these guys, he surely didn't meddle in their creative process. Sometimes this hands-off approach backfires, but Death Grips have actual designs to be left to, and The Money Store is a million-mph blur of ideas. One can only imagine how many hours it took to make Hill's drums sound like they're traveling inward from every corner of the mix toward its center, but the music seems to be constantly lunging out at you from all sides. A Bollywood vocal sample on "Punk Weight" is obliterated by a mortar-round hailstorm of viciously treated percussion. On "Hustle Bones", a tar-thick drone of indeterminate origin (guitar? computer?) pops into a glitter of synthesized voices. And "Hacker", the final track, hits a peak that the entire album seems to gather towards: With its simple chorus chant ("I'M IN YOUR AREA") and uncharacteristic amount of empty space, it's the only song Death Grips have recorded so far that tugs at your hips as much as it bludgeons your skull.

As for "rap": To call what lead vocalist Stefan Burnett (aka MC Ride) does "rapping" stretches the definition of the word beyond what even an avowed Lil B and Waka Flocka Flame fan like me can endorse. Burnett's deranged shouting brings a lot of things to mind-- Mark E. Smith with his mouth full, Jim Jones during an air raid, Sloth from The Goonies-- but rapping isn't one of them. Follow his lines closely and you'll slam up against the realization that you're largely transcribing word salad: "The fuck you staring at/ You know I'd be so quick to flash/ Terrified of the way a basilisk come out and skin so fast," Burnett barks on "The Cage". But his hoarse, panicked voice functions as primal fight-or-fight communication: Things Are Not All Right.
The clearest link through all the pop-culture static to the music Death Grips make is back to the ultra-aggressive, defiantly ignorant, and proudly dumb American hardcore punk-metal moment of the 1980s-- right along the Suicidal Tendencies/Fear/Cro-Mags axis. I don't watch a lot of skate videos these days, but I know a great highlight-reel song when I hear it, and every moment of The Money Store qualifies. Like those bands, Death Grips appeals to the knuckle-dragging troglodyte and the smirking smart kid in us: thick-headed goonery and bookish, viscera-free nerdiness, making beautifully misanthropic music together. Granted, The Money Store is about as intellectual an experience as a scraped knee. But it's just as good at reminding you that you're alive.

Jayson Green
http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/16512-death-grips-the-money-store/

DOWNLOAD

http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?3bhc4ea09ijrcrc

Death Grips - Black Google

Death Grips - Black Google


























RELEASED

September 9, 2011
Third Worlds [Self-Release]

PERSONNEL

Andy "Flatlander" Morin
Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett
Zach Hill

TRACK LISTING

Beware
01 Beware [Instrumental]
02 Beware [Guitar]
03 Beware [FX]
04 Beware [Drums]
05 Beware [Vocal]

Guillotine
06 Guillotine [Instrumental]
07 Guillotine [Bass]
08 Guillotine [Drums]
09 Guillotine [FX]
10 Guillotine [Vocal]

Spread Eagle Cross The Block
11 Spread Eagle Cross The Block [Instrumental]
12 Spread Eagle Cross The Block [Vocal]

Lord Of The Game [Feat. Mexican Girl]
13 Lord Of The Game [Feat. Mexican Girl] [Instrumental]
14 Lord Of The Game [Feat. Mexican Girl] [Drums]
15 Lord Of The Game [Feat. Mexican Girl] [FX]
16 Lord Of The Game [Feat. Mexican Girl] [Vocal]

Takyon (Death You)
17 Takyon (Death You) [Instrumental]
18 Takyon (Death You) [Vocal]

Klink
19 Klink [Instrumental]
20 Klink [Drums]
21 Klink [FX]
22 Klink [Vocal]

Culture Shock
23 Culture Shock [Instrumental]
24 Culture Shock [E Drums]
25 Culture Shock [Drums]
26 Culture Shock [Synth]
27 Culture Shock [FX]
28 Culture Shock [Vocal]

Thru The Walls
29 Thru The Walls [Instrumental]
30 Thru The Walls [Vocal]

Known For It
31 Known For It [Instrumental]
32 Known For It [Drums]
33 Known For It [Keys]
34 Known For It [Vocal]

I Want It I Need It (Death Heated)
35 I Want It I Need It (Death Heated) [Instrumental]
36 I Want It I Need It (Death Heated) [Drums]
37 I Want It I Need It (Death Heated) [Guitar]
38 I Want It I Need It (Death Heated) [Vocal]

Blood Creepin
39 Blood Creepin [Instrumental]
40 Blood Creepin [Drums]
41 Blood Creepin [Bass]
42 Blood Creepin [Vocal]
43 Blood Creepin [Keys]

REVIEW

P.S.: There are no reviews on the internet about this album. However, the band left this message on their website when it was released: "BLACK GOOGLE... Portal to the deconstruction of... DEATH GRIPS - EX MILITARY... the artist escapes from his work". It was already removed though.

DOWNLOAD

http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?rhzqa7c8kb7jipi

Death Grips - Exmilitary

Death Grips - Exmilitary


























RELEASED

April 27, 2011
Third Worlds [Self-Release]

PERSONNEL

Andy "Flatlander" Morin - Producer, Synthetics
Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett - Lyrics, Vocals
Zach Hill - Drum Machines, Drums

TRACK LISTING

01 Beware (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
02 Guillotine (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
03 Spread Eagle Cross The Block (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
04 Lord Of The Game [Feat. Mexican Girl] (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
05 Takyon (Death Yon) (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
06 Cut Throat (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
07 Klink (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
08 Culture Shock (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
09 5D (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
10 Thru The Walls (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
11 Know For It (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
12 I Want It I Need It (Death Heated) (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
13 Blood Creepin (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)

"Beware" contains a sample of "Up The Beach" by Jane's Addiction.
"Spread Eagle Cross The Block" contains samples of "Rumble" by Link Wray and "(You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party!)" by Beastie Boys.
"Lord Of The Game [Feat. Mexican Girl]" contains samples of "Fire" by The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown and "Brass Monkey" by Beastie Boys.
"Takyon (Death Yon)" contains samples of "Supertouch/Shitfit" by Bad Brains and "A Who Seh Me Dun" by Cutty Ranks.
"Klink" contains samples of "Rise Above" by Black Flag and "Liar, Liar" by The Castaways.
"Culture Shock" contains a sample of "The Supermen (Alternative)" by David Bowie.
"5D" contains a sample of "West End Girls" by Pet Shop Boys.
"Thru The Walls" contains a sample of "Gettin' High in the Morning" by Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti.
"Known For It" contains a sample of "De Futura" by Magma.
"I Want It I Need It (Death Heated)" contains samples of "Interstellar Overdrive" and "Astronomy Domine" by Pink Floyd.

REVIEW

Energy without insight is monotonous. Insight without humor is preachy. Humor without frustration is toothless. Frustration without humanity is destructive. And humanity without energy is defeatist. If an album operates with the purpose of being a big noisy fuck-shit-up machine, missing just one of those elements can leave you with an overbearing mess, where every speaker-rattling burst of noise or cathartically screamed hook turns you back instead of getting you all riled up. Sacramento punk-rap outfit Death Grips are known for starting frothing mosh pits with a style that seems in keeping with the hardcore-meets-hip-hop confluence that first ran through skate culture a few decades back. Exmilitary, their free mixtape, is a bludgeoning slab of hostility that plays like both sides of a circa-1987 Cro-Mags b/w Just-Ice home tape bleeding through each other.

Exmilitary avoids any of the flaws outlined above, but it's still a potentially alienating album: unnerving when you're not on its aggro wavelength, inviting when you are, and transfixing either way, thanks to the aggregate work of Death Grips' core. The raspy, deliberate MC Ride doesn't so much flow as bellow. Producer/videographer Flatlander and co-producer Info Warrior hit both sides of the audio-visual equation with overloaded noise (check the "Guillotine" video for starters). Additional vocalist Mexican Girl skulks in the background and spits venom for occasional effective emphasis. And Zach Hill, the Hella drummer-- recently heard on Marnie Stern's self-titled album-- provides some of the live percussion elements. But isolating each member's specific contributions seems like a good way to make an overwhelming sound seem flimsier than it really is.

That said, MC Ride might be the most upfront element. His tendency to go hard in the rawest way possible with doomsayer verses has slotted him in a strange no-man's land between Southern and avant-rap. His tangled, diabolical lyrics are wrapped up in lust, drug panic, metaphysical power-tripping, and political agitation, and he delivers them as if every syllable were an exclamation point. And while there's not a ton of nuance, there's a surprising versatility, as Ride's rhymes range from malevolent to anxious to smart-assed. Monolithic and harsh, his voice sounds powerful doubling up the beats to the point where it doesn't even seem like a problem when it's halfway buried in the mix.

The production does its damnedest to capture punk aggression for a hip-hop context without pushing things too far in either direction. Fuck-the-cops anthem "Klink" invokes Black Flag's "Rise Above", the opening scream from Bad Brains' "Supertouch/Shitfit" punctuates "Takyon (Death Yon)", and the beat to "Spread Eagle Cross the Block" is built sturdily around Link Wray's "Rumble". On sex-maniac anthem "I Want It I Need It (Death Heated)", a devastating hijack of Pink Floyd's "Interstellar Overdrive" perfectly conjures up this music's intersection of choppy, riff-heavy beat assault and psychedelic sprawl. Juke-inflected bangers like "Thru the Walls" and "Blood Creepin" blur Exmilitary's stylistic lines, and that's good-- it means not having to worry about scene purity or crossover potential, and focusing instead on just how much ferocity you can take.

Nate Patrin
http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/15583-exmilitary/

DOWNLOAD

http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?v6u8purx887qln8

Death Grips - Death Grips

Death Grips - Death Grips


























RELEASED

March 8, 2011
Third Worlds [Self-Release]

PERSONNEL

Andy "Flatlander" Morin
Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett
Zach Hill

TRACK LISTING

01 Death Grips (Next Grips) (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
02 Face Melter (How To Do Impossible Things) (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
03 Full Moon (Death Classic) (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
04 Known For It (Freak Grips) (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
05 Takyon (Death Yon) (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)
06 Where's It At (Death Heated) (Andy "Flatlander" Morin / Stefan "MC Ride" Burnett / Zach Hill)

REVIEW

Pitchfork: Death Grips feel extremely mission-oriented. Do you have any mantras or animating principles as a group?

ZH: Yeah: "No Representation Is Better Than Misrepresentation." Another is the idea of acceleration-- that word seems to apply to every aspect of our band. I mean acceleration in a broad, universal sense, the way you feel the pace of everything moving forward so quickly. Things are becoming archaic at a faster rate than ever before, and there's this close-mindedness that can exist even within the creative realm, like accelerating towards these old notions of what's acceptable. One of the things we do when we're able to play bigger rooms is modify the field of space with visual effects, so you get the sense of acceleration from all corners of the room-- almost like how Star Tours does it.

Pitchfork: Is your music supposed to embody that acceleration, or is it a reaction to it?

ZH: It's more of an embracing of it. We'd like our music to make you feel like you are accelerating physically and mentally. I don't mean that in an alienating sense, like we're some political band pushing our agendas on people. We're not. That's why I use more ambiguous words like "energy" and "feeling."
We're real hesitant, because we want to keep things on a day-to-day level where we can talk about being out of your mind on drugs and all those other, less-heady things that are totally real to our lives and just as relevant as the more abstract aspects. So it's weird to be like, "Our band is like the internet!" But actually it kind of is: You have all the lowest-level activity side-by-side with the highest intellect also happening within the same realm.

P.S.: I coudn't find any review of this EP on the internet, so I put an excerpt of Zach Hill's interview to Pitchfork that i think better describe the attitude of the band towards the music that features in this album.

Jayson Greene
http://pitchfork.com/features/interviews/8815-death-grips/

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