Home Blog Page 2891

Stream Talib Kweli And 9th Wonder’s Indie 500

0

Two of Hip Hop’s most cherished icons, Talib Kweli and 9th Wonder have come together to create what undoubtedly will go down as an instantly classic album. INDIE 500 features an All Star supporting cast, including Problem, Slug (of Atmosphere), Rapsody, Pharaoh Monch, Brother Ali, Hi-Tek, NIKO IS and more.

After exploding on to the scene as one half of the legendary Black Star alongside Mos Def in 1998, Talib Kweli quickly followed up in 2000 with the album Train of Thought, his collaborative effort with producer Hi-Tek. As fans,critics and his peers unanimously agreed, Kweli was cemented as one of hip hop’s top lyricists and continued to release one acclaimed album after another – garnering direct praise from Jay-Z on his song “Moment of Clarity” from Jay-Z’s classic The Black Album. Meanwhile as the early 2000’s progressed, a new trio was bursting on the scene from North Carolina known as Little Brother. Behind the boards of this trio was producer 9th Wonder, who very quickly established himself as one of hip hop’s best producers.

As their 2003 album The Listening reached a fever pitch, 9th Wonder’s buzz became so hot he claimed a highly coveted production spot as well on Jay-Z’s The Black Album. Through the years both Talib Kweli and 9th Wonder have gone on to work with a staggering list of hip hop royalty. However both of their respective works outside of the recording booth have become prominent pieces of their stories as well. 9th Wonder has established himself as Hip Hop’s top educator, working as a professor at Harvard, Duke and North Carolina Central University, while Talib Kweli has become one of Hip Hop’s most vocal and respected voices, who appears regularly on news outlets such as CNN and programs like HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher.

A collaboration between Kweli and 9th almost seemed to make perfect sense, but INDIE 500 represents even more to the artists. “I’ve always been a fan of collectives, like Native Tongues and the Dungeon Family,” explains Kweli. “INDIE 500 is a tribute to the spirit of unity exemplified by some of great hip hop artists that influenced us.” Collectives are nothing new to the two, who have both successfully run their own labels in Blacksmith, Javotti (Kweli) and Jamla (9th Wonder), helping to break a number of popular artists over the years.

1950s Ads And Jingles From Green Giant, Chevy, Keebler And More

0

These commercials are for both well-known brands, such as Green Giant, Chevy and Keebler, to companies more local like Nekoosa Paper and Burny Brothers, who, according to one online reader, “were proudly featured at Wrigley Field well into the 1970s.” You never know who’s now working in advertising that might just be the next music star. When Mark Foster formed Foster the People in 2009, he wrote and recorded “Pumped Up Kicks” in five hours while working as a commercial jingle writer at Mophonics in Los Angeles. 

1.) Green Giant Music Bed (MP3)

2.) Deep Rock Gasoline (MP3)

3.) SpaghettiOs (MP3)

4.) Keebler (MP3)

5.) Chevy Trucks (MP3)

6.) Allstate (MP3)

7.) Music Bed (MP3)

8.) Burny Bros. bakery products (MP3)

9.) Bright New Ideas (MP3)

10.) Music Bed (MP3)

11.) Music Bed (MP3)

12.) Swanson (MP3)

13.) Standard Oil Yellow Tag Tire Deal (MP3)

14.) Green Giant (MP3)

15.) Music Bed (MP3)

16.) Sugar (MP3)

17.) Nekoosa Paper (MP3)

18.) SpaghettiOs (MP3)

19.) Solo Suzuki (MP3)

Via

Amy Ray of Indigo Girls on how to be an effective artist/activist

0

It’s interesting how much thought goes into being effective activists. Because there is definitely a right and wrong way to do it.
We love writing and playing music, but it wouldn’t be as poignant to us if we didn’t have this other stuff going on. It’s energizing to work on some kind of fundraising campaign for a school for refugee kids at the same time that we’re working on a new record. It gives us more of a purpose. It’s like, “If this record does really well, we can do a bigger ‘Honor the Earth’ tour.” That’s how both of our minds work, so we’re lucky in that way. It makes it fun to connect our strategy for our music with our strategy for our activism.

Is there a key to doing it without sounding preachy?
I don’t know, sometimes we do sound preachy, and it’s just because we’re enthusiastic and we get carried away. Something else I’ve learned along the way is that things are not black and white. For instance, if you’re working on the environmental impacts of coal mining, you need to be thinking about the jobs that are in that community from coal mining, and what it means to those people to have a job. You try to talk about things in a way that is in the interest of the people in the community and not just in the interest of your self-righteous principles. It’s really important to let people in that community talk. So if we were working on an issue around buffalo and cattle farmers out in Yellowstone, we’d work with some ranchers who were pro-buffalo to talk about the issues to other ranchers, because it’s ridiculous for us to go in there as southeastern white people who know nothing about ranching. It’s not effective, either. It’s like the hippies invading a conservative town. You have to have empathy for the other side of the equation. There are a lot of gray areas, and you really need to respect the other side no matter how self-righteous you feel.

Via

Toni Morrison on the Rewards of Adulthood is the greatest thing you’ll read all month.

0

Toni Morrison’s commencement speech to Wellesley College might just be one of the greatest talks of all time. So many wonderful pieces of advice and wisdom, but this is my favourite. You can listen to her words below, or get the book with this, and many other speeches in Take This Advice: The Best Graduation Speeches Ever Given.

I’m sure you have been told that this is the best time of your life. It may be. But if it’s true that this is the best time of your life, if you have already lived or are now living at this age the best years, or if the next few turn out to be the best, then you have my condolences. Because you’ll want to remain here, stuck in these so-called best years, never maturing, wanting only to look, to feel and be the adolescent that whole industries are devoted to forcing you to remain.

One more flawless article of clothing, one more elaborate toy, the truly perfect diet, the harmless but necessary drug, the almost final elective surgery, the ultimate cosmetic-all designed to maintain hunger for stasis. While children are being eroticized into adults, adults are being exoticized into eternal juvenilia. I know that happiness has been the real, if covert, target of your labors here, your choices of companions, of the profession that you will enter. You deserve it and I want you to gain it, everybody should. But if that’s all you have on your mind, then you do have my sympathy, and if these are indeed the best years of your life, you do have my condolences because there is nothing, believe me, more satisfying, more gratifying than true adulthood. The adulthood that is the span of life before you. The process of becoming one is not inevitable. Its achievement is a difficult beauty, an intensely hard won glory, which commercial forces and cultural vapidity should not be permitted to deprive you of.

Dad “Signs” Heartland’s ‘I Loved Her First’ At Her Wedding

0

In honour of his daughter’s wedding, Nicole Cortez‘s dad decided to learn sign language to pay tribute to her, and her occupation as a sign language interpreter. After practicing for a year, he ‘signed’ Heartland’s I Loved Her First and now it’s very dusty in here.

Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame Moving to Calgary’s National Music Centre’s Studio Bell

0

The Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame (CSHF) and the National Music Centre (NMC) announce a partnership that will see the CSHF find a permanent home in Calgary within Studio Bell.

Canadian songwriters, such as Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, Robert Charlebois and Gordon Lightfoot, have penned some of the most iconic songs in popular music history, celebrated internationally for their inspiring words and music.

The Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame will join the Canadian Music Hall of Fame and the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame Collection, on level five of Studio Bell, a floor entirely dedicated to celebrating and recognizing Canadian music creators and artists who have left their mark on this country and beyond.

“Canadian songwriters have made an incredible contribution to music at home and around the world,” said CSHF Manager Lisa Gaglia. “We are thrilled that our inductees will continue to be honoured and have their legacy preserved through exhibitions at the National Music Centre.”

NMC is partnering with these three Canadian music organizations to highlight the contributions of their inductees, and examine the importance of these organizations in recognizing the achievements of musicians, songwriters, and other influential players in Canadian music.

“We are thankful to the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame for this exciting partnership that will allow us to recognize the amazing legacy of Canadian songwriters,” said Adam Fox, Director of Programs for NMC. “Finally, Canada will have a physical place to visit these three important national halls of fame, and through our programming we can celebrate our pioneers and icons.”

Visitors will be able to visit the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame Collection, and the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame when Studio Bell opens to the public next summer.

Win The Ultimate Starter Tool Kit Valued At $1100 From DEWALT, Stanley Tools, And The Ontario College of Trades

0

You now have a chance to “tool up” as part of the Ontario College of Trades’ Tune in, Trade Up campaign promoting the skilled trades through the lens of Ontario’s music scene. The College is partnering with DEWALT and Stanley Tools to give 10 lucky winners the ultimate starter tool kit.

Working as a tradesperson in the music industry means you’re part of the success behind massive music festivals across Ontario. Sure, you have your singers and bands playing the shows, but without the tradespeople, there wouldn’t be a stage to stand on. From the heavy equipment operators who prepare the land and the carpenters who build elaborate stages to the many cooks and chefs who feed the large crowds, tradespeople are the backbone of any great festival.

But to have an all-access pass to the music industry, tradespeople need the right tools to get the job done. This is where DEWALT and Stanley Tools and the Ontario College of Trades come in. With the Ultimate Starter Tool Kit (valued at $1,179.00 each), you have the chance to win one of 10:

  • DEWALT 5 piece Combo Kitcontaining: 20V Impact and 20V Hammer Drill / Driver, Circular Saw, Flashlight, and Reciprocating Saw
  • DEWALT DCR015 Radio Charger
  • Stanley 28 inch Structural Foam Toolboxwith all the required tools which includes:
  • High Velocity Hammer
  • Tape Measure
  • FatMax Level
  • Utility Knife
  • Carpenters Square
  • Multibit Screwdriver
  • Snips
  • Laser
  • Chalk Line

Visit earnwhileyoulearn.ca/tunein to enter.  The contest runs until Nov. 30. While you’re there, make sure to check out this behind-the-scenes video, which was filmed during this past summer’s WayHome and Boots and Hearts Music Festivals. And don’t forget to follow the Ontario College of Trades on Twitter and Instagram for contest announcements and other updates.

Tools Dresses Up As Led Zeppelin For Halloween Concert

0

Tool dressed as Led Zeppelin for Halloween, and covered “No Quarter” and it was fun AND amazing.

Amazing Video: “David Bowie On Stage” TV Concert From 1978

0

David Bowie’s Isolar II – The 1978 World Tour, more commonly known as The Low / Heroes World Tour or The Stage Tour, originally was to have Brian Eno as part of the tour band, but had to drop out due to health reasons. The band only had two weeks to rehearse for the tour. Carlos Alomar was the tour’s band leader and drove the rehearsals.

The set list for the performances consisted of material from the previous years’ albums, Low and “Heroes”, with the second half of each performance opening with a five-song sequence from the The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars album. Bowie had the band learn the entirety of the Ziggy Stardust album in rehearsals, although most of the songs were never performed live on the tour. The instrumental track “Art Decade” typically followed the Ziggy Stardust tracks, a mellow track to follow the energy of the Ziggy Stardust material.

This TV special was filmed at the Dallas Convention Center, Dallas, Texas on April 10, 1978
Show filmed and broadcast as “David Bowie On Stage” on US TV
What In The World 00:26
Blackout 05:19
Sense Of Doubt 09:08
Speed Of Life 12:15
Hang On To Yourself 15:03
Ziggy Stardust 17:47

https://youtu.be/9QXYnCaKZEY

Rick Rubin Returns to His NYU Dorm Room

0

Def Jam was started 30 years ago in Rick Rubin’s NYU dorm room. Watch him go back to the place where it all began for the very first time.