Beat Connection just dropped a new cut for us today off of their upcoming Palice Garden LP. The “Palace Garden, 4am” is the first official single for the LP. This is a killer track with otherworldly synths, upbeat bass, catchy vocals, and some interesting high frequency bird chirps…Give it a whirl and if you’re one of the lucky ones who can go to Sasquatch this weekend, get excited for some new material during their show! The album is set to come out on June 19th and for now, you can stream the single below.

What to say about this one… it’s a mashup of an edit of an edit; in other words, Ryan Hemsworth has done it again. This time, he took Nicolas Jaar‘s remix of Shlohmo‘s staple track “Rained The Whole Time,” and threw in a little (just kidding, it’s a lot) of R. Kelly’sNumber One.” Not all that surprisingly, coming from musical masterminds like these, the combination is quite effective.

Stream and download the track below.

So Sasquatch is only three days away. Seems like only days ago that we began to cover the festival. In anticipation of the festival, we have joined forces with Portland’s own Rustu to bring you the one and only Sasquatch 2012 Mix. It’s that time of year folks and whether you’re into Apparat or Active Child, this mix is the perfect primer for your weekend. Even if you’re not planning on attending the most perfect of perfect music festivals, passing on this mix would be a (major) mistake. Give Rustu some props over at his Soundcloud and get hyped for the weekend. Stream/download below and find the full tracklist after the jump.

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Photo by Nighstar

This has been a long time coming. For months, we’ve worked to get a mix series of our going and it’s finally here. Mixes From The Astal Plane will be an every-so-often feature highlighting our favorite DJ’s and the music they love to rinse. Our first mix comes from our friend and San Francisco native Yesh. He brings the perfect mixture of bass, hip hop and club cuts to keep everyone satisfied. Jam City, French Fries and 123Mrk are all prominently featured. As this is our first stab at this sort of thing, we would love and appreciate any and all feedback. If you’re an aspiring DJ who wants to get involved, hit us via email. We’re (usually) friendly people. Last but not least, give our boy Yesh some love in the comments. Find the tracklist below.

Tracklist

I Told Ya – Daniel Klauser
German Clap – Modeselektor
The Don (Hot City Hype Mix) – Nas
Ecstacy (Jam City Refix) – Endgames
If U Want Me – Deadboy
Little Things Like That – Untold
Into You (French Fries Remix) – Greenmoney
Blood of a Slave (Cedaa remix) – Myrryrs
Magic Drops – Jam City
Warp 1.9 – Steve Aoki+The Bloody Beetroots
Yo Vogue (House Edit) – French Fries
Cooler Couleur (AC Slater Remix) – Crookers+Yelle
Got U (Canblaster & Berou Bonus Remix) – Nguzunguzu
Delight In Delaware – Karma Kid
The Lick – Dark Sky
Basement Party – The Cool Kids
Original Don – Major Lazer
Thrill – 123Mrk
Hugz – French Fries+Bambounou

If you missed the announcement, Rock The Bells announced its lineup yesterday. Like always, Guerilla Union made waves, bringing in Nas, Ice Cube, Kendrick Lamar, Dipset, A$AP Rocky and many, many more (check the full lineup here). Deltron 3030, the supergroup of Del, Dan The Automator and Kid Koala were also brought in. What brought the tidal wave though was the 20 year anniversary of Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, performing E. 1999 Eternal in its entirety. In hip hop’s history, no set of artists have perfected a sound quite like Bone Thugs. Their gospel infused, sing-rap harmonies were unmatched in their time and have yet to be truly replicated in 2012. One collaboration comes close though. When Oakland’s Main Attrakionz (who we tried to interview once) and fellow Bay Area residents Friendzone get together, the result is pure, blissful hip hop. Remember “Perfect Skies” off of 808’s and Dark Grapes II? Friendzone. Shady Blaze’s “Follow Me”? Friendzone. The newest cut from the two brings the comparison to another level. “Green Ova To The Top”, featuring Shady Blaze, is vintage Bone Thugs. The light-hearted guitar, sing-song chorus and bitter-sweet verses are all there. Main Attrakionz are not Bone Thugs. Not even close. But when they get together with Friendzone, the two make some uncanny throwback joints. Stream and download below.

Bristol house maven Julio Bashmore has been of the UK’s most respected producers for around three years now. He has his own Radio One show, released tunes on DirtyBird, Night Slugs and Fabric, and toured the globe endlessly. As he notes below though, he did not have a label to call his own… until today.

Fast cars, money, but no record label to truly call my own? This ends today…
Hi, I’m Julio Bashmore.
Somehow I have found time between jet-setting around the globe, becoming a voice for the people via my Radio One show and generally living the high life to bring you a brand new label, Broadwalk Records.
Today heralds a new era in the Julio Bashmore chronicles, with a sound that shall echo through the ages…

No more details have surfaced regarding the label, but “Au Seve” a funky, bass-indebted riddim is its first release, set to drop on July 2. From Bashmore’s work with Jessie Ware to his countless original productions and remixes, the Englishman has seen a meteoric rise to prominence over the past few years. Broadwalk Records is the natural next step in Bashmore’s progression and hopefully his curatorial ear is as good as his production acumen. Stream “Au Seve” below.

Wassup readers, my name’s Will.  I’m from rural-ass Wisconsin, currently residing in Los Angeles.  I’m about to begin lacing The Astral Plane with occasional mixes, track postings, and overly pretentious musings on music and the artists that make it.  I played a lot of violin and cello in my childhood and I’ve always loved making music.  Inexplicably, I love hip hop, and I have for a long time.  Lately I’ve developed a full-blown obsession with listening to, studying, and crafting electronic music.  I won’t bother talking about my tastes now because you’ll figure them out sooner or later.   Anyways, to start, I’ve had the pleasure of listening through Jeremiah Jae’s forthcoming LP Raw Money Raps quite a few times, and I figured I would share my thoughts on the album.

Two days ago, Jeremiah Jae graced us with his latest effort, a three-track single released by Brainfeeder.  “Money” is his most recent release on the LA powerhouse since the Rappayamatantra EP last spring and a precursor to his debut full length on Brainfeeder, Raw Money Raps, set to drop July 23rd.   If my first few listens of the LP are any indication, Jae has crafted a debut full length as thoughtful and intriguing as those of his fellow west coast come-ups (read Black Hippy) and is about to make some serious waves.

Chicago native Jae has a serious pedigree; his father was a musician who worked with Miles Davis.  He also has a serious endorsement from another musician with close connections to jazz royalty, a certain Flying Lotus.  Raw Money Raps seems to be born of a smorgasbord of influences, but Jae manages to blend a host of seemingly disparate elements into a cohesive whole.  He builds his sounds so that every sonic element fits into a context that is at once eyebrow raising and comfortable.  The cohesion moves beyond individual tracks; Jae pulls the listener on a crazy tour of hip-hop subgenres.  When I first listened to “Money and Food”, the b-side of the “Money” single, I felt like the track was trapped between club banger and wonky curiosity and didn’t really work as either.  However, on the LP, it comes as a catchy, satirical take on the “Love In This Club” style of hip-hop club banger.  This belies the sense of structure that underwrites every track on the album, as well as the album again.

I love music that sucks me in, forces me to get so deeply lost in the soundscape that the details are inescapable.  If there was one thing that struck my about “Raw Money Raps”, it was this mercurial quality of interest.  There is a fascinating duality to the music; it has the control and polish of modern digital production, but there is a consistent, charismatic humanity that hearkens more to a track coming out of RZA’s MPC.  This album is full of W8WTF moments. “Guns Go Off”, the album’s second track and its first fully structured tune shakes the listener with a short, disorienting loop that carries through the whole song.  15 seconds in I was like fuck this I’m over it.  But a little patience let me hear Jae carefully manipulate this loop as he introduced his own musings.  His voice goes through a gauntlet of effects, each carefully introduced and morphed.  It wasn’t easy to notice the song developing, but undeniably, it was.  Having to search for Jae’s musical ideas made them all the more satisfying.

Parts of this album are really fucking weird.  There is absolutely no percussion on “Infinite Mask”.  Jae raps over a drone, some plucking sounds, a jazzy bass line, unpredictable organic sounds, and a peanut gallery of spoken vocal samples.  There is nothing new about this, as this style is highly reminiscent of his debut Brainfeeder EP.  On this particular album, weirdness works wonders. The whisper of vocal samples that pervades the album is generally unintelligible, but that’s okay because the words themselves don’t really matter; it’s the sound of those human voices that matter.  Jae replaces hi-hats with consonants.  Words rush and skitter around the beat like water in a rhythmic stream.  It’s beautiful.

This same acute sense of the human voice as an instrument can be seen in Jae’s flow.  It’s easy for a sample-heavy beatsmith to get lost in the Dilla/Madlib/Premier shadow, but even the most Donuts-esque tracks on Raw Money Raps seem refreshingly original.  A large portion of this is due to Jae’s flow.  His bars feel nonchalant, with the elegant ease of a jazz musician flipping off a solo on his favorite set of changes.  However, on Raw Money Raps, Jae is not only the lead trumpeter but also the backing combo. His lyrics are generally clearly intelligible, but the words don’t pop out of the speakers.  Instead they weave in and out of the beat, sometimes complementing, sometimes contrasting, sometimes acting as nothing more than a constituent of the beat.  The first time through, I didn’t even really have a chance to listen to what Jae was saying, as I was too busy listening to how he was saying it.  Jae is a thoughtful, skilled lyricist and his ciphers present a jaded take on the paradigms of hip-hop.  They also unfold in meaning as one becomes more familiar with them, which brings me to the biggest reason I like this album.

When I finish the album’s amen, “Cable” (which I’m pretty sure prominently features a sample from the soundtrack of Pixar’s “Up”) I want to go right back and press play on track 1.  I always feel like there is more to figure out.  In an age of twitter and more songs from more producers than you could ever possibly listen to, it’s a blessing to have a work of art that you need to grapple with, that doesn’t diverge all of its secrets right away.  Is “Raw Money Raps” perfect?  Certainly not.  It’s not right for everyone, and if you are looking for the instant gratification of an incredible drop, you won’t find it anywhere on the album.  But if you are looking for carefully crafted, engaging hip-hop, please, for the love of Flying Lotus, buy this album on July 23rd.

There’s been a lot of discussion over the past few years about the appropriation of regional sounds by members outside of those respective scenes. The truth is that this has been happening for years. In the 80’s, Chicago House and Detroit Techno were appropriated by everyone. More recently, UK Bass has infiltrated the American hip hop market on Drake’s back. The internet has obviously sped up this phenomenon, democratizing music in general and opening localized scenes to national and international attention. Jersey Club music has been the latest craze to hit the blog world and Frenchman Sam Tiba of Club Cheval has taken notice. Last Fall, Tiba debuted his Jersey Club Music and in the months since, the scene has ascended to new heights in creativity as well as national exposure. Tiba, ever impressive for his skills as a member of Club Cheval, has really outdone himself with these volumes, encapsulating the frenzied, style-heavy Jersey style. Volume 3 features over 80 tracks in half an hour. This shit goes. Our favorite Jersey son DJ Sliink shows up quite a few times as do scene stars Nadus and DJ Jaystar. Tiba edits quite a few tracks himself to keep the mix flowing properly. If you are uninitiated to the Jersey Club sound, this is great place to start. Far from a definitive take on the Club sound, but more than an adequate introduction. The mix was concocted in collaboration with the Pelican Fly label. Stream and download below.

Not only is Seattle’s own Keyboard Kid the Basedgod’s main producer (a feat in its own right), but an ever improving DJ as well. In March, we saw him join forces with DJ Darwin to craft the “808’s and Space” mix and it looks like he’s collaborated with the Mad Rad representative once again. The two are featured in this week’s Mixmag’s Mix of the Week — quite an honor. If I had to guess, Darwin handles most of the mixing while KK takes on song selection. I could be wrong though. Like “808’s and Space”, the mix features a mixture of KK originals and fuzzy, hip hop oriented bass tunes. The MΔRRI$ tune (“Different Girl”) is especially nice. Like everyone else (not a bad thing), Baauer appears in the mix. Dude is quickly making a name for himself. Stream and download below and find the tracklist after the jump.


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The fantastically whimsical UK-based Gold Panda has graced us with a brand new single called “Mountain,” backed with a great track titled “Financial District.” These two tracks include familiar elements from previous Gold Panda material, such as Middle Eastern and Asian-influenced instruments and samples, paired with noisy percussion and head-bobbing beats. At about two and a half minutes in, “Mountain” morphs almost entirely from an ethereal, low-key musing to a full-on glitchy celebration. The B-side, “Financial District,” balances upon warped horns and chopped-up vocal samples, sounding like something shiny swimming around at the bottom of the ocean. Listen below.