Pseudocoded

human.Author I = "Mookie";

human.EveryoneElse you; //will be defined at runtime

if (You.break(myHeadphone)){
    I.Voice.Yell.ToMouth() = "You will pay for this!";


I.Hit(you, Rock);

return;

}

Happy New Years peeps! I hope you are all well. I am renewed and ready for another year of music posts for you. I can’t wait to read your comments and emails! Our fans are the best in the world! Let’s get it on then?




Sean “Jay-Z” Carter

To start off the year I am doing a book review of sorts. The book is Jay-Z’s book Decoded which was available for sale November 16th, 2010. I received the book as a xmas present from The Little One. She knows a music book will always make me happy!


Jay-Z (also known as Sean Carter, Jigga, or Hova), for those of you that don’t know, is a successful hip-hop artist and entrepreneur. He had a net worth over $450 million in 2010, has sold 50 million albums worldwide, co-owns a chain of sports bars and lounges called The 40/40 club, and is part owner of the New Jersey Nets. He was once the CEO of Def Jam, founded the record label Roc-A-Fella Records, and is the creator of the wildly successful clothing line Rocawear.


That’s some resumé…


Like Jay-Z, his new book is also many things. It’s a lyrical anthology, a biography, and a coffee table art book all wrapped into a beautiful hardcover package. The book covers 36 of Jay-Z’s songs, which he “decodes” for the reader. Jigga provides perspective and insight on the lyrics and the stories behind them.


Hova says this about the vision for his book:

The cover of Decoded is based on
Andy Warhol’s 1984 “Rorschach” paintings.

When I first started working on this book, I told my editor that I wanted it to do three important things. The first was to make the case that hip-hop lyrics—not just my lyrics, but those of every great MC—are poetry if you look at them closely enough.

The second was I wanted the book to tell a little bit of the story of my generation, to show the context for the choices we made at a violent and chaotic crossroads in recent history. And the third piece was that I wanted the book to show how hip-hop created a way to take a very specific and powerful experience and turn it into a story that everyone in the world could feel and relate to.



I’ve talked to a few people about the book that I know are fans of Jay-Z. None of them had yet read, or even cracked open the book, but had heard that there wasn’t anything “new” in the book. Specifically, that the stories articulated in its pages were “known” by the “real” fans for some time. 


While that’s probably true, they are missing out on the clear specific breakdown of the songs. Jay-Z annotates the lines of the songs, dropping knowledge on the story being told. Sometimes the breakdown of the lyrics relates to the hip-hop culture, politics, or specifically to Jigga himself. The breakdown often highlights the architecture of the rap. In the track “My 1st Song” Jay-Z points out “that the pace is double-time and the lines are all stuffed with internal rhymes which gives the song the breathless rhythm of my earliest songs, which when I was essentially a speed rapper.” 

Click to play Jay-Z – My 1st Song

Marvin Gaye

The lyrics are broken down to explain the culture of the hustler and the music is explained to help you understand the mood and frame of the story. For example, in the song “American Dreamin'” Jay-Z points out the the song samples Marvin Gaye’s “Soon I’ll Be Loving You Again” and that “the sample transports you to a blue-lit room in the seventies; you can practically smell the smoke from a joint coming out of the speakers.” Even if that’s not what you get from hearing the track, it’s fascinating to hear an artist break down this level of minutiae to their work. It’s not something we often get to see and understand when we enjoy the final product on the album.


Click to play Jay-Z – American Dreamin’

This song was featured early in the book, the second song broken down. It was at this point that I decided to create a playlist of all the songs in the book. I wanted to hear the songs while I read about them. If you get the opportunity to read the book, I suggest you do the same. If you don’t have access to all of the 36 songs mentioned, you can maybe rectify that here.


One of the revelations in the book that strikes a chord in me was on why hip-hop is controversial and often misread. It’s something I’ve often struggled with when trying to explain rap music to people. There are people who just don’t get, or even HATE, hip-hop. I try and stress upon what they are really missing out on. That the song is not all about bitches, drugs, and violence–but that there are great stories being told with an amazing flow. These excerpts from Decoded really break it down beautifully. I want to end my post with these excerpts from the book. I hope that it hits you in the same way that it hits me. Maybe if you are not a fan of hip-hop, it can give you the perspective and context to listen again.

Hip-hop has always been controversial, and for good reason. … It leaves shit rattling around in your head that won’t make sense till the fifth or sixth time through. It challenges you. Which is the other reason hip-hop is controversial: People don’t bother trying to get it. The problem isn’t in the rap or the rapper or the culture. The problem is that so many people don’t even know how to listen to the music.

The art of rap is deceptive. It seems so straightforward and personal and real that people read it completely literally, as raw testimony or autobiography. And sometimes the words we use, nigga, bitch, motherfucker, and the violence of the images overwhelms some listeners. It’s all white noise to them till they hear a bitch or a nigga and then they run off yelling “See!” and feel vindicated in their narrow conception of what the music is about.

But that would be like listening to Maya Angelou and ignoring everything until you hear her drop a line about drinking or sleeping with someone’s husband and then dismissing her as an alcoholic adulterer. But I can’t say I’ve ever given much of a fuck about people who hear a curse word and start foaming at the mouth. The Fox News dummies. They wouldn’t know art if it fell on them. 

  

THIS JUST IN: A Picture is Worth 369 Words!

Un bon croquis vaut mieux qu’un long discours

-N. Bonaparte


BEFORE YOU GO TOO FAR! THERE IS A NSFW PICTURE AT THE BOTTOM OF THIS POST. I DON’T WANT YOU TO GET IN TROUBLE OR EMBARRASSED. IT’S JUST A NIPPLE…BUT YOU NEVER KNOW.  DID YOU SCROLL TO THE BOTTOM TO SEE IT? YOU ARE NAUGHTY!


The artwork for an album is just as important to me as the music itself. It lends itself to creating an initial impression before listening to an album, and then after listening, you look back and maybe gather a new impression. Sometimes an album cover will be very simple and straightforward. Like just a picture of that band. This is usually a bad sign for what’s inside. I have been wrong, but normally, if the band didn’t get creative on the outside, the music lacks that same creativity and enthusiasm.

I could have done the “Top Ten Album Cover of All Time” kinda thing that a lot of music mags and sites like to do. You have likely seen those ad nauseum. I want to do it a little different. I want to share three album covers that I thought were interesting enough that they actually got me to buy and crack open a cd case and get me to listen to what was inside. Thankfully, the music was as interesting as the image outside!

The Birth

STARDEATH AND WHITE DWARFS – Birth
First off is the album Birth by the band Stardeath and White Dwarfs. This is just insane looking. That guy looks like he is scared and crazy and maybe also experiencing G forces in a centrifuge. It’s crazy looking isn’t it? But then when you listen to the album, it doesn’t match. Or does it?


Download Stardeath and White Dwarfs – Age Of The Freak

The album has a Dark Side of the Moon feel to it. After listening to the album, I get the album cover. It makes sense. Maybe this image is how maybe you look in your minds eye when you go crazy. When you start to unravel. Maybe I am stretching! Well, that’s what is says to me. One thing is for sure, it’s an unforgettable album cover.

Y LA BAMBA – Lupon
I’m lucky, because I have access to bands and can ask a question or two about a song or an album. I recently emailed the PR for the band Y La Bamba to ask what this album cover for Lupon was all about. It doesn’t NEED an explanation, but I just knew there was something deeper to this one. An older man with a strong manly mustache that has lightning coming from his eyes like tears. Then, if that wasn’t enough, a cute kitty on his forehead whose eyes are shooting out the name of the band.

Let’s listen to a song while we wait for the PR guy to get back to us.


Download Y La Bamba – Juniper

That voice right? Young and beautiful with a warble of an old soul. The harmonies with the others in the group make it seem dreamy. Heavenly.

Ok…I got the info about the cover. Ready? The man in the picture is the grandfather of the frontwoman, Luz Elena. She has never met the man, but his influence on her father, Guadalupe, was a heavy one. Luz says this about her father:

My father had a difficult time with forgiving my grandfather for his childhood dark memories. Carrying his frustration and anguish on his Kin…projecting guilt, resentment, and  confusion.

Her father’s friends nicknamed Luz’s father Lupon. The cat on Lupon’s forehead represents Luz. It’s her spirit-head on the third eye of a man she’s never met. Trippy huh?

I wasn’t expecting all that. That’s what I mean though. You can hear that heaviness in the album, along with some hope and rebirth. Maybe heaviness is the wrong word. It’s more like a melancholy sadness. Still, there is struggle. You can hear the struggle of woman surrounded by a family of men, the only daughter among many sons. Usually, the first man a woman ever loves is her father. Imagine a father with some daddy issues, and the affect that might have on a young woman.

ELECTRIC TICKLE MACHINE – Blew It Again

When I first got the album Blew It Again, it was in a simple CD case with a white cover that had the name of the band and the album. It was meant to just get the music to reviewers and radio stations as soon as possible. I liked the album, had planned on writing about it, and then suddenly many months had passed. I was re-listening to the album recently and finally iTunes was able to load some album art. It’s a young teen girl with a pony tail and a blue shirt that ends right past her nipple. Showing some “neathage,” or at least I think that’s what that is called. I never really thought much about the ripped corner. I guess I should have known it was a bit of censorship, but for some reason I never processed it that way. I just assumed it was some artistic touch. When I decided that I really wanted to write about this band, I checked out their website and found the album cover you see on the right.

I tried to contact the bands PR to get more info on the girl, the idea behind using that picture as the cover, I needed answers. Alas, no response as of right now.

The sound of the band is lo-fi gargage rock. Don’t let this hinder you though. I am sure that when I say lo-fi garage rock you think it’s gonna sound like crap? Not so. The band just does a lot with very little. It stays fun yet sounds beautiful. Check out a track:


Download Electric Tickle Machine – Gimmie Money

Curious about the bands name? I was too. Look what I found on the bands website:


I think it’d be best if I explained the rationale behind our name (which is not a euphemism for a vibrator). Electric Tickle Machine is meant to be a reference to the evolving relationship between humanity and technology, specifically the vessels through which we process and regurgitate our culture, art and entertainment.



If that’s not enough to sell you on picking up this album, check out the video below. It makes me want to buy two copies on vinyl, frame one and hang it on my wall!


Electric Tickle Machine (live on KEXP at Cutting Room Studios NYC) from KEXP RADIO on Vimeo.