Showing posts with label writes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writes. Show all posts

Friday, January 1, 2010

Happy New Year!



Peace world. This is the year for independent labels and artist to shine!

Keeping in tune with my mission of saving the music I would like to start the year off right by giving my thanks to the Freestyle Professors for being true and living examples of how important it is to save the music and this culture we know as hip hop.

Freestyle Records independently pressed up this lost treasure by Showbiz & AG - "Broken Chains". This LP is a must have on vinyl. Even if you don't spin, add this record to your collection and thank the Freestyle Professors later. I am in the process of getting my copy ordered as well.

If anyone out there follows independent labels and catalogs take time to check out Freestyle Records.

Save the music and support those keeping hip hop alive.


official Freestyle Professors website

snippets from Broken Chains - zshare link


catalog for sale - direct link









Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Mixtape:2HungryBros:MyCrew'sAllThinner!




Peace world. My name is Omega:NYC and I am a DJ. These are my written words that I dedicate to this web log of mine. I am in the process of figuring out why I decided to keep posting on the blog.

This mix has nothing to do with it but I am happy I found it out there, somewhere, to share. (I ain't rhyming!)

Back to the mix you see posted. This dude named 8thW1 is the main feature in my opinion. The other emcees are there to distract you from the fact that 8thW1 is featured on 6 out of the 23 tracks, which I clearly see as a push from the DJ team - 2HB.

Some might see this as a compilation and others may consider it a mixtape. Whatever you classify this as, take time to listen to the emcees. I miss raw hip hop and there is no better way to revisit that time and space than with a mix of who school rappers over a "rare groove" mixtape.

And what do I mean by that? Rappers spitting over breaks that are not broke!!! That's right... I said it... brakes that aren't broke! Classic tracks that have been sampled, but in this instance are played the entire way through, while we listen to the next hottest mc do his thing.

But I like it... I can't deny it, cause I tried it... but with records, not actual emcees. Anyway I dish it out, this is something you should have in your collection. If for no other reason than the song selection featured. 2HungryBros. stay true to the mixtape game and lace us with dope tracks and exclusive rhymes.

download/listen to this mix

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

The Super Adventures of Public Enemy



Written with Chuck D, illustrator Adam Wallenta presents an impressive graphic novel featuring the legendary rap crew Public Enemy. With an original storyline and original illustrations on each of its 152 pages.

The Life of MF Grimm



I have yet to read the PE graphic novel but this one by MF Grimm is a must have. To all my graff heads in the world this is like the equivalent to Subway Art. I highly recommend the read!


In SENTENCES, Carey chronicles his life in the sometimes glamorous, and often violent, hip-hop industry; from the first time he picked up a microphone at a block party as a youngster, to the day he lost the use of his legs to gang violence, to his incarceration, and eventually, to his self-reinvention and rise back to the top of his game, becoming a Hip-Hop Grand Master and being placed among the pantheon of the culture. No questions are left unanswered and no apologies are made, resulting in what's sure to be a groundbreaking graphic novel.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Hello Again - OmegaNyc




Peace world... Shout out to the # 1 record store, only in my book, only in LA..... Record Surplus! I haven't posted in a minute and this store is the reason why. I have been on the search for some new music to listen to and I have discovered it. Red Clay... First Light... these cuts off this album (pictured above) take me back to the time and place when discovery in hip hop was treasured and further more, respected. What was diggin' before DITC created the phrase? Just heads lookin' for that sound to fill their ears. With music so readily available and at the click of a button I find the past time of record collecting and diggin' refreshing!





So refreshing, to the point that I have discovered breaks for the new music I enjoy. Creation is limitless! We as listeners and music collectors have an obligation to save the music. And this is where it begins.



This is the prelude! Let's keep open minds and save the music!
Waxpoetics.... is down with us
PipoMixes..... is down with us
Saving fresh music is a must!!!........

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Up from the 36th Chamber



To any record collector out there or dj that digs this is a must have. I can't thank the Daptone and Truth&Soul labels enough for putting out vintage soul that's new to our ears. Now we can add Fat Beats to the list with this new release by El Michels Affair set to hit the stores April 21st.

For Enter The 37th Chamber, a name that pays homage to the title of the Wu-Tang Clan's historic debut album, Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), El Michels Affair, took the time to interpret fifteen of some of the most legendary and well-known Wu-Tang Clan songs, including "Can It All Be So Simple," "Protect Ya Neck," "Cherchez La Ghost," and "Incarcerated Scarfaces." Also included on the album are the El Michel's interpolations of Wu-Tang Clan anthems "C.R.E.A.M." and "Bring Da Ruckus," two songs fans will undoubtedly remember from their previous release as 7" singles through the Truth & Soul label. Similar to the sounds found on those two records, on Enter The 37th Chamber El Michels Affair are able to bring their own astute musicianship, artistic touch, and soul vibe to each instrumental, breathing new life into already classic songs. It was that musicianship and versatile sound that led to El Michels Affair joining the Fat Beats family, and now, two years later, the album is finally ready for the masses.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Herbie Jr.



Legendary mastering and lacquer-cutting engineer who worked for years at Frankford Wayne Mastering Labs’ NYC facility and was responsible for cutting a respectable share of classic Prelude and West End titles, as well as tons of other disco, house, funk, and hip-hop classics over the years.

Herb still cuts vinyl, but most of his business is now in the digital domain, and he now runs his own mastering facility called Powers’ House of Sound in New York City. He almost always includes shout-outs and dedications in the lead-out area of his vinyl work, noted with a signature and a smiley face. He also scratches messages into that area at a label’s request.

I wanted to shine light on this man because he is a true master in the music industry. I first heard about Powers' House from the last verse of Just Hangin' Out by Main Source. Herb is responsible for making some of the dopest hip hop tracks sound dope on wax. As a record collector and digger I buy vinyl because it definitely has a warmer and rich sound, so thank you to all the engineers and record cutters who have mastered their craft. With that said......

Check out this tribute to Herb Powers its worth the read.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Straight Into Compton



By the 1990s, the mere mention of the name Compton had become so toxic that the nearby southern California suburbs had the city of 100,000 erased from their maps. Its schools were crumbling. Drugs were rampant, and street-gang tensions had escalated into what historian Josh Sides describes as "a brutal guerilla war." The city became the U.S. murder capital, per capita, surpassing Washington with one homicide for every 1,000 residents—and the details were numbing. In 1989, a 2-year-old was gunned down in a drive-by as he wandered his front yard; a 16-year-old was shot with a semiautomatic weapon as he rode his bike. The image of Compton as a defiantly violent ghetto was crystallized by the rap group N.W.A., whose 1988 album, "Straight Outta Compton," went multiplatinum, even though it was banned by many radio stations; the record even attracted the attention of the FBI, which felt the group was inciting violence with its song, "F--- tha Police."

Check out this photo gallery of Compton's history.

In the 1950s and early 1960s, the community was a magnet for migrants seeking suburban tranquility and blue-collar jobs. Trouble brewing in nearby Watts helped spur the settlement of middle-class blacks in Compton—which became known as "Hub City" because of its central location (today it sits amid five freeways and two ports). George and Barbara Bush lived here for a brief time—in 1949, while the senior future President Bush was working as an oil-field-supply salesman.

In 1952, Compton received the National Civic League's "All American Cities" honor, and by 1960, the city's median income was almost twice that of Watts, with an unemployment rate of less than a third, according to Sides, a professor at Cal State Northridge, whose research on Compton was published in the 2004 book, "LA City Limits." In 1963, the city elected its first black politician, Douglas Dollarhide, who would later become the state's first black mayor.

But the Watts riots of 1965 shattered that calm; white business owners fled so fast. In their wake were deserted storefronts and boarded-up homes. The black middle-class population also bolted. Unemployment shot up, along with the crime rate. The Crips were founded in South Central in 1969; the Bloods followed, on Piru Street in Compton, adopting the red color of their local high school, Centennial.

Conditions spiraled downward; a 1982 Rand study declared the city "a disaster area." And that was before crack came to town. Between 1984 and 1991, gang violence in L.A. County increased by 200 percent, with half of all black males between 21 and 24 said to be affiliated, according to a 1992 report by the district attorney's office. By 1991, Compton had its highest number of homicides on record, with 87—or three times the per capita murder rate of the city of Los Angeles.

The tension culminated with the Rodney King riots of 1992, in which more than 50 people were killed. But then the fever broke. Amid the bloodshed, the Bloods and Crips agreed to a truce, and the violence began to subside, slowly but surely. Crime in Los Angeles began declining in 1995 in most major areas; in 1997, the Los Angeles Times reported that, in Watts, gang-on-gang slayings over turf or gang clothing had "virtually disappeared." By 1998, despite having one of the densest gang populations in the country—there are an estimated 65 gangs and 10,000 gang members packed into Compton's 10 square miles—the city's murder rate was its lowest in more than a decade, with 48.

As the economic climate worsens we should all be mindful of how this hip-hop culture plays a part in making life better or worst. Hopeful cities like Compton will not relapse into turmoil. Lets save this music and our communities as well. Peace to all the folks out there working in the communities to help the youth of today.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Old School vrs Original School




Peace world. Today I pose a question to all the Lab viewers – what is old school? Yesterday I put up a post about the new Nat King Cole album Re-Generations. Today I went to the record store to pick it up on vinyl. While I was there in the jazz section an older gentleman informed me that the album I was about to purchase was a “rip-off” and an insult to the original works by NKC. It was apparent to me that this guy was a product of the original school. He had me thinking I was wrong for liking this new adaptation of music by NKC. But before yesterday I didn’t even care about Nat King Cole and his music.

My old school is a lot different from that of the older generation of music lovers, who I label the original school. That school of music has heavily contributed to the music we enjoy called hip-hop. Especially old school hip-hop which has always been mostly sample based.

So is it old school or original school? Which school wears the crown when it comes to style? As a member of this hip-hop culture I have to give it to the old school. Big Daddy Kane said it best on young, gifted, & black – “you’d be another memory to us”. Original school music will always be classic but hip-hop made a lot of those old tunes sound better! Hip-hop has been saving the music for the last 30 years. When Kanye samples an original school tune all of a sudden the original artist is popular again.

Hip-hop simply keeps music current. Re-Generations will introduce a new generation of listeners to Nat King Cole that would have otherwise not considered the legend. To all to original school die hards, give those new renditions a listen. Let’s save the music before we end up worst off!

Saturday, March 14, 2009

What has it all meant?

Am I a Disc Jockey? Am I a DJ? What does it all mean and what has it all meant. I collect records and search for new music to listen to because I have never liked the radio. STRAIGHT UP AND DOWN! Its that simple. If radio was as goods as mixtapes I would never have bought a mixtape or decided to be a deejay. Since "Live At Union Square" by Jazzy Jeff I have always known that DJ's make the record sound better. Believe it or not, the record you like doesn't become a hit until you hear it in the mix. The mix is a level of creation that any one can reach once. Pipomixes, J.Rocc, Dirty Harry, Revolution, MyManHenri, Melody, Neil Armstrong, Spinbad on to Steinski and Double Dee. All of these DJ's have taken music to the next level by throwing songs we like in the mix. To all the people who download mixes - we can agree when you find songs played in the order you like its a great feeling. When Steinski and Double Dee made the lessons I could have cared less! I was too busy listen to New York radio. What I heard has shaped the style of music I like and contributed to my overall opinion of hip-hop. But when you take that blast to the past Ski and Dee hit you hard. They shape the way I feel about the breaks. Its a journey thru the present and the past. I think all DJ's should take that journey thru the present via the past. Let's appreciate the music we had and make it last. A lot of blog viewers were recently feelin the SuperRix mix Ultimate, Ultimate, which revisited the breaks. That mix is the perfect example of how old tracks never get old. Hip-hop don't stop and won't stop. DJ's of the world unite! Keep breakin it up!

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Hot Buttered Soul



This is the perfect record label to do a tribute album to Ike.

One of the greats has passed and Truth & Soul has compiled a digital EP of Isaac Hayes covers to pay tribute to one of the most talented and innovative songwriters of the twentieth century. One of the creative forces behind Stax Records, Isaac Hayes has left behind a body of work that includes legendary film score, Shaft, classic albums such as Black Moses and Hot Buttered Soul, to name a few. The EP features versions from El Michels Affair.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Save the Music


Please post your responce in regards to the following questions.

What type of mixtapes do you like?

Who's your favorite dj?

Need a custom mix?
post your request

Your feedback is appreciated

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Life, Art, and the AP



What has this world come to. Shep Fairey is getting sued over the use of this associated press photo for his now classic Obama campaign poster. Shep is like the American version of Bansky. He is famous for his stencil work in and around Los Angeles. He is even featured in the hip hop documentary Scratch: All The Way Live. Check the Shep Fairey link in the writers block section of this blog to learn more about Mr. Obey. Here is the story by HILLEL ITALIE


NEW YORK – On buttons, posters and Web sites, the image was everywhere during last year's presidential campaign: A pensive Barack Obama looking upward, as if to the future, splashed in a Warholesque red, white and blue and underlined with the caption HOPE.

Designed by Shepard Fairey, a Los-Angeles based street artist, the image has led to sales of hundreds of thousands of posters and stickers, has become so much in demand that copies signed by Fairey have been purchased for thousands of dollars on eBay.

The image, Fairey has acknowledged, is based on an Associated Press photograph, taken in April 2006 by Manny Garcia on assignment for the AP at the National Press Club in Washington.
The AP says it owns the copyright, and wants credit and compensation.

Fairey disagrees. "The Associated Press has determined that the photograph used in the poster is an AP photo and that its use required permission," the AP's director of media relations, Paul Colford, said in a statement. "AP safeguards its assets and looks at these events on a case-by-case basis. We have reached out to Mr. Fairey's attorney and are in discussions. We hope for an amicable solution."

"We believe fair use protects Shepard's right to do what he did here," says Fairey's attorney, Anthony Falzone, executive director of the Fair Use Project at Stanford University and a lecturer at the Stanford Law School. "It wouldn't be appropriate to comment beyond that at this time because we are in discussions about this with the AP."

Fair use is a legal concept that allows exceptions to copyright law, based on, among other factors, how much of the original is used, what the new work is used for and how the original is affected by the new work.

A longtime rebel with a history of breaking rules, Fairey has said he found the photograph using Google Images. He released the image on his Web site shortly after he created it, in early 2008, and made thousands of posters for the street.

As it caught on, supporters began downloading the image and distributing it at campaign events, while blogs and other Internet sites picked it up. Fairey has said that he did not receive any of the money raised.

A former Obama campaign official said they were well aware of the image based on the picture taken by Garcia, a temporary hire no longer with the AP, but never licensed it or used it officially. The Obama official asked not to be identified because no one was authorized anymore to speak on behalf of the campaign.

The image's fame did not end with the election. It will be included this month at a Fairey exhibit at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston and a mixed-media stenciled collage version has been added to the permanent collection of the National Portrait Gallery in Washington.
"The continued use of the poster, regardless of whether it is for galleries or other distribution, is part of the discussion AP is having with Mr. Fairey's representative," Colford said.

A New York Times book on the election, just published by Penguin Group (USA), includes the image. A Vermont-based publisher, Chelsea Green, also used it — credited solely to Fairey_ as the cover for Robert Kuttner's "Obama's Challenge," an economic manifesto released in September. Chelsea Green president Margo Baldwin said that Fairey did not ask for money, only that the publisher make a donation to the National Endowment for the Arts. "It's a wonderful piece of art, but I wish he had been more careful about the licensing of it," said Baldwin, who added that Chelsea Green gave $2,500 to the NEA.

Fairey also used the AP photograph for an image designed specially for the Obama inaugural committee, which charged anywhere from $100 for a poster to $500 for a poster signed by the artist.

Fairey has said that he first designed the image a year ago after he was encouraged by the Obama campaign to come up with some kind of artwork. Last spring, he showed a letter to The Washington Post that came from the candidate.

"Dear Shepard," the letter reads. "I would like to thank you for using your talent in support of my campaign. The political messages involved in your work have encouraged Americans to believe they can help change the status quo. Your images have a profound effect on people, whether seen in a gallery or on a stop sign."

At first, Obama's team just encouraged him to make an image, Fairey has said. But soon after he created it, a worker involved in the campaign asked if Fairey could make an image from a photo to which the campaign had rights.

"I donated an image to them, which they used. It was the one that said "Change" underneath it. And then later on I did another one that said "Vote" underneath it, that had Obama smiling," he said in a December 2008 interview with an underground photography Web site.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Who are they now?





After the debut of Illmatic (Nasir Jones), the bar was raised for the quality of hip hop music. High expectations for the art form became even more of a reality after the loss of hip hop’s genius producer James Yancey (Jay Dee aka J Dilla). With the release of Hip Hop is Dead (Nasir Jones) in 2006, the same year of J Dilla’s passing, Nas was the first to proclaim the culture had been lost. Some agreed with the artist and many denounced the thought of his statement, but regardless of opinions it did spark a question in my mind. Who is hip hop’s elite? This is a question I give serious consideration because many rappers and producers lack the passion of the legends of yesteryears. Today I see artists more concerned with the business aspect of the music over the art. Is the chart topping rapper of the day a businessman or dope mc? Possibly both? I am not sure but I feel the culture is somewhat passion deficient.

I remember the day I went to the record store to get Illmatic. Cutting school was rare so I made the exception for this album’s release date. Rock n’ Soul off 34th St. and 7th Ave in Manhattan was my regular record store back then. As I made my way to the record section of the store I saw Primo, DJ Premier, picking up a copy of Illmatic. This seemed real odd to me because he produced tracks on the album and could have easily gone down to Columbia Records and gotten promos. After giving my props I asked the question, “Why are you buying the record when you can get it for free?” Primo’s answer was simple, “I just wanna support”. That moment changed my perspective for life. Premier is a true hip hop supporter and one of the greatest producers to ever do it. Supporting the artist meant preserving the quality of the music. When Donuts (J Dilla) came out I was again changed for life. No mc’s just raw production and quality, I had to support.

So who makes up hip hop’s elite today? Would Primo go to the record store to pick up that new Wheezy 12 inch? How about the Lupe Fiasco album? Maybe the newest Nas release? Only Primo knows! As for my crates, I saved space for Lupe Fiasco. Post Illmatic and the J Dilla era I have focused more on the beat makers and producers in hip hop. True school mc’s keep hip hop fresh and new, but more than ever people are listening for the beats. The music in the background has always been relevant. It is the voice of hip hop that has been muted for the moment. Beats and production are now in the forefront while mc’s/rappers embark on reinventing the vocal aspect of the music. Nas made it hard for a lot of rappers to follow but not impossible. J-Live, John Robinson, Elzhi, Gift of Gab, Talib Kweli and Lupe Fiasco are a few artist redefining the art to make it viable again. Dilla made it hard for producers to shine but it didn’t stop MF Doom, Madlib, Ta’raach, Black Milk, Kev Brown or 9th Wonder. Good beats and rhymes are out there and these are just a few artist included in my group of hip hop’s elite.

Find hunger and passion and you too will find hip hop’s elite. Nas is from New York and Dilla is from Detroit. Both cities have artist who are pushing the culture forward but other locations are holding down hip hop as well, namely California, Maryland and North Carolina. If you love good music you might want to check the underground. Yes I miss the 95 essence of hip hop. I also miss the 88 era of hip hop. The point I’d like to drive home is embrace the future. Elite mc’s, rappers, beat makers and producers are alive! Wake up and let hip hop shine its light.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

:Omega:Nyc: vrs Jango

What up world. For all the lab blog visitors who seek out good music look no further. Check out the newest link on the blog - omeganyc vrs jango - Jango is an online radio station that plays music based on artist selection. Its not perfect but, it will expose you to new music. The artist featured in the links open up each set and what follows is progam technology and virtual dj magic! Jango is cool but real BlendingNations djays are usually better... don't you think so too?

By the way, you can listen to other staions users have built around the artist featured on the lab's links. Enjoy!

Thursday, January 15, 2009

The History of The Rootdown

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

10 years of ROOT DOWN By Music Man Miles

Its been a long time... 10 years to be exact, since the seminal funk/breaks/hip hop jam THE BREAKS was started by Music Man Miles, DJ Organic of The Movie "Freestyle" fame & MC HYMNL of DARK LEAF & CUT CHEMIST collaborator. Carlos nino actually was the first to bring turntables into the coffee house on La Brea ^& invite guests to come hang & spin records sitting on a couch which quickly evolved out of control in a good way. Of course there were folks like Mear doing live art, the b boys & b girls flexing in a cypher the size of a coffee table, the various mcs like Thes One just hangin out or freestylin on the mic with the OG Breakestra band at that time considering calling itself the Breaks band till better judgement prevailed. The band included Rootdown co founder Loslito of Rebirth , Double G of Dakah, Damon Aaron, Dave Chegwidden of the rhythm roots all stars, plus Todd Simon & Dan Ubick of The Lions. This is where Miles & Dusk met for the first time & would soon after join forces backing MC T Love live.

This party roamed for half a year till finding its home on tuesdays @ Pedros on Vermont in Los Feliz. For an incredible 6 months at Pedros, funk/breaks djs like J Rocc,Mix Master Wolf(cuttin up Zeppelin), Cut Chemist, Marvski, hip hop groups like Latyrx, Black eyed Peas, Jurassic 5, Company Flow, Dilated Peoples & Freestyle Fellowship, backed by a live breaks freestyle session with The Breakestra got down live on stage like Cali had not seen for a hot second. Anyone remember Peace Pipe? I hear ya Araceli. Of course there were the heads who made it the jam. All the b boys & b girls who now had room enough for multiple cyphers on the floor & all the good folks there just to move & groove in their own funky way. This is the spot where you would find pre Rootdown DJ DUSK(RIP) chillin, takin photos, Chuckchilla in the freestyle cypher, Sloe Poke just hangin out, Medussa, Ab Rude, the whole darn family. Judd & Scotty Haulin that sound from the OC, real Gs! George of jointz always bein real & always showin love. Many a night after at Freds 62, gettin that grub we missed while setting up the night. Alexis holdin it down at the door takin no shit! Janky muthas grabbin bottles from behind the bar gettin us grief, but mostly the livest party we could have hoped for thanks to everyone in the mix. On & on... Maintaining the weekly booking/functioning of the night took its toll on the promoters not to mention dealing with the semi gangster biz of the venue (still made much easier due to Loslito's spanish skillz) & they decided to pause the record until the time was right to drop the needle to the record.

After a few months, Loslito & Miles realised that there was a void in Los Angeles for even the most basic hip hop/funk/live music parties & decided to keep it movin by calling forth the funk in the name of Jimmy Smith via the Beastie boys. ROOTDOWN was MANIFEST! Starting out as twice a month event at the Atlas Bar in mid wilshire, they brought together the same basic elements of the breaks. The first shows with T Love, the Breakestra, DJ Sesquipedalian, Dilated Peoples & Nu Mark were a well needed outlet for LA's underground. It lasted two months till some fights killed it & rootdown bounced for a little hiatus. Then Los & Miles found Gabah on Melrose near Silverlake, at the recommendation of music promotion comrades, Sheakspeare & Auerlito of Chocolate Bar & I n' I Prods. After a few months of dialing in the family of djs & bringin DJ Dusk in to mix things came together , most notably on the night Cut Chemist came through to rock. Dj Dusk's party hosting skills became apparent that night, not to mention his progressive, world eclectic approach to hip hop djing that not many were employing in their sets at that time. After a couple of years Los introduced Wyatt Case into the mix & Miles started to bring records to play early, begining his excusrsion in to djing. Los himself already an occasional dj would get in the mix as well but the night became centered around the sounds that Dusk & whatever guest booked that night were bringin to the crowd that had now become fairly regular. Dusk introduced alot of heads not only to deep jamaican, hip hop/funk music but also latin sounds from puerto rico to columbia that were not getting played anywhere else in town for the most part. When he said "there ain't no other sound in town like the mighty, mighty Rootdown" he was not fronting. Of course that doesn't mean ya had to like the sounds but if ya liked funky organic, soulful music more than likely you would tend to see it Dusks way in all his b boy braggadocious glory!

Some nights would just be the sound system dj's rockin sounds from back in the day to right then & from all around the globe. Other nights would be broken up by live funk band or hip hop performances. For a brief time Los, Miles & Dusk started a live project they would break out for rootdown called the rootmattics, with Dusk providin beats cut up on the decks, Loslito on the keys & with mcs sometimes freestylin. For a second Egon of Stones throw records having just moved to Los Angeles joined the rootdown soundsystem dropping funk records that no one had ever played let alone even heard in Los angeles before, much to the floor rocker's pleasure. Nights at Gabah trying to find a parking spot, haggling with good ol Adnon for a drink ticket or two, lighting up in the patio without getting caught. Kofie & Mear blessing the stage with live freestyle art. Gladys the wonderful, always with a smile at the door & Sarah as well, she met her husband there I heard. Brissa with the sunshine, kool ass Chris always in the spot. Of course the most Mex-I-Can mutha in the house, Boss Bean, Arturo holdin it down inside & out. No ya can't bring in all the homies fool! Vinnie the ink master, keepin those baseball cards trading posters shading. Basically quiet Wyatt bringin all his homies into the RD family. Thanks again man, for the love. Lets not talk bout those bathrooms. Too late, you all know what i'm talkin bout, thats one of the reasons we had so much incense burning in that spot. Breakestra gettin that soul togetha live & on film. Aloe & Exile back before they had no name.

Pushin buttons, anyone remember?Shadow, Uncle Nu & Cut? Sugarman 3, Antibalas, People Under the Stairs featuring Baron von Thes? Freshly Los Angled PB Wolf, Zack Tripper the block rockin beat master from A to Z, Logic before the J, Haul & Mason testing out those quad mixes live, almost every single Beat Junkie blessed us & that's alot, ya know phillipinos & their cousins, oh yeah thats right sorry J.Hier with the Fiyah, Topanga homie! Bobby & his many degrees of soul, Rich Medina the marathon funker, Quantic on his first excursion out west, Malcolm Catto droppin funk heat on the decks, Blackalicious, Lyrics Born bringin that bay area sound to our town, Style Wars live on stage, Mona Lisa, Big Dada Daz always checkin & tryin to keep this thing we do out here honest, Crown City, been way too long since ya set fire, Burning star, we miss ya!" Ya never know who might drop by in the mix "YOU were there and if YOU weren't, this is that taste, better later than never. A few years into it Dusk & Miles were chillin after another Rootdown & came up with the idea to do a live beat maker exhibition/battle inspired by the jamaican sound clashes that dusk was especially aware of, having studied the art of djing inside & out from the street to the art college text book.

Dusk had just recently been teaching a "DJ as the post modern musician" class at UCLA. That night they conceived of the first Rootdown soundclash & set about to manifest it, first inviting Cut Chemist & Madlib to do their thing & later Thes one, Will I am & Exile & Ohno. Recently this year round 4 featured Stro of the Procussions & Newman of Giant Panda during this time longtime friend Chuckchilla, mc/beatmaker of Gershwin BLX crew joined rootdown to deal with the booking. After 6 years of rocking the Gabah, Rootdown decided to head a little further east to the Little Temple. After setting it off with Dj Numark they were in motion again now with two rooms to rock in which allowed room to expand the soundsytem to include long time friend & occasional guest dj Sloe Poke, Ervin of the Rocksteady crew & more recent connection, Dj Expo, who Los again invited into the mix to bring his deep crates & skills. If you get to rootdown early, you can hear him in the main room dropping jazz, rare groove & roots dub records, you will be hard pressed to hear coming out of a pa system anywhere else in town. In 2006 the rootdown family & the world tragically lost our dear brother DUSK after he was struck by drunk driver. We were very close to saying thats it, kill the record but we know in our hearts DUSK would want Rootdown to keep on rockin in his name. There will never be another Tarek "DJ DUSK" Captan at rootdown or more importantly in this world but we can keep sounds and spirit moving that we feel compelled to share with folks each and every thursday night in the groove that we call life.

THANK YOU TO ALL PAST & PRESENT ARTISTS, SUPPORTERS, FRIENDS & FAMILY WHO HAVE PARTICIPATED IN THIS LOVE & SOUND WE CALL ROOTDOWN! In the words of DJ DUSK ,"WE'RE NOT DONE,WE'RE NOT DONE"!!!

Monday, January 12, 2009

Welcome to 2009

What up to all the people of the world.
2009 should be a good year for The Lab.
Kicking off the month of January with 3 new
mixes.


Meet the Browns is my mix dedicated
to all the Brown's in the music industry. Featured
artist include James, Bobby, Foxy, Chris, Sleepy,
& Kev Brown - from the godfather of soul to the
smokey underground production of MD's native son.
Check this mix for the cool out!

Electrogoodness is as fun as it sounds! I set of the mix
with electric eel by MGMT. That's about it on this one,
its just a fun mix. Peep the mix for yourself!

8008 came before electrogoodness but its on the same
vibe, its a cross between an 80's mix and my current
attempt to blend up tempo tracks by producers like
morgan geist. My people in Australia know whats up!

meet the browns

electogoodness

8008

As always good music is the aim and good mixing the focus

Peace to Hazer Soze for putting me up on Chromeo!!!


click here for :omega:nyc: mixes posted on pipimixes.blogspot.com

Monday, December 15, 2008

The Purpose

Welcome to all new viewers.
:omega:nyc: is the name and this is The Lab.
All of what you see here is inspired by the one and only PipoMixes.
Blending Nations is the crew and good music is what we are all about.
As we go into 2009 I hope to build this blog for all of those who love good music
and look for those rare gems.