Category Archives: Music Review

|Review| ShowYouSuck: “Dude, Bro”

ShowYouSuck has been one of the more interesting artists in the Chicago landscape for a minute now. Since establishing himself as a witty lyricist and connoisseur of all things “rad” on his One Man Pizza Party trilogy, released throughout 2011-13, Show has carved out a niche unto himself with a character and personality to match. Continue reading |Review| ShowYouSuck: “Dude, Bro”

|Review| Vic Mensa: “Innanetape”

The thing that has always attracted me to Vic Mensa and his music has been his penchant for being different, his eagerness to push forward and his unwavering ability to make a stand for what he believes in. Those qualities and more manifested themselves fully on his latest project, INNANETAPE, released September 30. Continue reading |Review| Vic Mensa: “Innanetape”

The White Panda / House of Blues (Chicago, IL) / 10.07.12 [Review]

By: Jake Krzeczowski
Originally Appeared for TheUntz.com Date: Oct 24, 2012 (Wednesday)

The White Panda arrived in Chicago feeling as though they had something to prove. After the duo of Tom Evans and Dan Griffith rocked the stage at Lollapalooza to an overflow crowd, expectations were high heading into their October 7 show at the House of Blues.

“We saw this as a chance to involve some of our younger fans,” said Evans, aka Procrast, who has lived in Chicago since attending Northwestern University in Evanston. “We have some surprises to keep the crowd going.”

Surprises, indeed. Decked out in their signature white on white suits, the pair added a slight curve ball. Implanted LED lights allowed the eyes and ears of the masks to follow with the music.

“We were very excited for the masks,” said Griffith, aka DJ Griffi. “We have been trying to get them to work for awhile and I think all the bugs are worked out so we can control them while onstage.”

The set-list drew heavily from the latest offering from the mash-up duo, Pandamonium, including a Kanye West-fueled version of M83’s Midnight City, which got the packed hometown crowd moving early.

Throughout the show, The White Panda showed why they are the last of a dying breed, expertly mixing dance and EDM hits with songs more often found on the top-25 pop music hits.

“We want to make sure we give the fans what they want to hear,” said Griffith. “Since the beginning we have tended more towards Eminem and Deadmau5 type mixes which really helped us get a foothold early on.”

From the get-go, Evans and Griffth had the party going as one manned the controls, allowing the other to get the crowd moving.

After a short exit from the stage The White Panda returned to raucous cheers to do their best Psy impression while their mash-up of the YouTube hit “Gangnam Style” played along The Offspring’s “Pretty Fly (For A White Guy).”

From beginning to end, The White Panda at The House of Blues was almost exactly what one could expect from one of their performances: a good time of reminiscing over mash-ups.

DuBuddha: The Golden Age EP Review

Date: Sep 26, 2012 (Wednesday) 
(Originally Appeared at TheUntz)

By: Jake Krzeczowski

Jack Crawford, better known as DuBuddha, may well be the best example of the growing generation of electronic artists who have come to represent the musical stamp the internet generation has put on the world.

Gone are the days when artists had to be from London, Detroit or one of the coasts to be noticed, replacing hip locales with WIFI routers and hot clubs with Soundcloud.

While Crawford of the EDM-hotbed Missoula, Montana may owe his success to the web, as his stuffed Soundcloud profile can attest, it is also a tricky ocean with a nasty undertow for aspiring artists.

Luckily DuBuddha has come well equipped, as he demonstrates with his latest offering, The Golden Age, a six song EP that is effectively a personal showcase of what the artist describes as “divine grime” on his Facebook page.

The whole release has an eerie, transcendent sound that makes it perfect for the Halloween season quickly approaching.

The opening track, “The Secret,” features a smattering of bass thumps that grow more hectic throughout. Starry, flittering synths come in and out to show off the immensity of the power under the hood of the track. Throughout the synth line feels like someone lightly tap-dancing across the listener’s ears. DuBuddha has a secret, and it’s working well here.

“Purple Whale Fairy” starts off as an airy homage to a late night walk through the forest that methodically transforms to a dream-like trance of heavy bass rolls accented by wavering synths and distorted samples. The whole thing comes together to construct a cut perfect for the Friday nights of fall.

The offering is solid to say the least with professional production to boot. It also plays as a full project rather than a loose collection of tracks tossed together ambiguously. On the release, DuBuddha has managed to steer clear of the traps of his success and in turn produced a creepy good time.

With no tour dates currently posted, it looks as though we can look forward to Crawford plugging away at his craft and supplying us with some new tunes soon.

SKisM: Division Mix Pt 2 of 4 (NSD VOL. 27)

Date: Sep 05, 2012 (Wednesday)
Originally appeared for The Untz

By Jake Krzeczowski
UK legend SKisM has set off on a journey in electronic music that he has dubbed the Division Mix.

Part Two picks up right where the first installment left off, allowing for the two pieces to be played one after the other to create a pair of puzzle pieces that eventually will lead up to an 80-minute odyssey through EDM.

The second part of the series gets ominously darker with slow, methodic basslines accented by haunting synth lines before including a uniform snare that sends the whole track careening off the rails toward a moombahton-like dance line.

The twenty-minute track is everywhere at once, hopping from drum n’ bass to hard dub and back again faster than the listener can really pay attention. As artists try to conquer all aspects of the burgeoning electronic scene, SKisM has proved he can find a way to mesh it all into one.

The Division Mix series is essentially a Costco for EDM music, a Now! album sampler that doesn’t delve too deeply into anyone one discipline, rather allowing for the listener to get a taste of each.

That isn’t to say that the sound is watered down. It is no easy task to take several very different sounds and bring them together into a single track, much less an 80-minute monster that is the goal here.

That the mix is being released under Never Say Die Records makes sense, as the London-based label has long pushed for expanded creativity in the EDM scene and SKisM perpetuates that perfectly.

Focusing on working in the studio, SKisM’s tour dates have slowed a bit, paying shows in Belgium and France over the next two months.

Known for his dubstep remixes that have brought him attention from the EDM world, SKisM has set out on an interesting exploration of which we find him only halfway done and eager for the rest.

The Malah – “Light Forms” Review

By: Jake Krzeczowski (Originally Appeared At TheUntz.com)

As the culture of electronic music has pushed its way into mainstream miasma, artists from far and wide have found new and interesting ways to incorporate the intricacies of largely computer-generated tunes with live instruments to create a wholly new sound. One of the most refreshing instances to hit the scene during this time is the Denver, Colo., trio, The Malah, who blend the aesthetics of a jam band seamlessly with throbbing bass and synth lines into a trance-like euphoria on their latest album, Light Forms.

The Malah open up their newest offering since 2010’s Live From Earth by allowing the listener to ease into the funky, grooving texture on the first track, “Lights” which employs a rolling rhythm section accompanied by light electronic aesthetics. The aptly-named song offers a light glimpse into what the album has to offer from there on out.

With criticism beginning to run rampant in the DJ game these days for a perceived lack of live-performance ability (see Swedish House Mafia), a premium has been placed on the ability to create the electronic sound on cue with live instrumentation. The Malah find themselves poised to strike on the rising popularity that acts similar to them have only begun to find.

As seems to be par for the course on Light Forms, each track gets increasingly different from the one before. “As Above So Below” features a series of rocking piano solos that feel like an amped-up Billy Joel sample which is paired with light synth work and the ever-present guitar rhythm that is the obvious trademark for the group.

“Rectangle” also switches things up a bit by providing anything but straight lines as grooving bass lines drive an interesting blend of jam-rock and moaning synth with a rasta-inspired wah-wah guitar to boot. The resulting sound is reminiscent of an upbeat Radiohead tune, minus the wailing of Thom Yorke.

The Malah produce a refreshing aesthetic sound that is both experimental and poignant to today’s burgeoning music culture. At a time when festivals like Bonnaroo, Lollapalooza and Camp Bisco are offering a smattering of both jam bands and electronic artists, this trio appears poised to raise the bar to another level through their incorporation of both into a live-performance dynamic.

Cold Blank: The Agenda Review

Date: Aug 06, 2012 (Monday)

By Jake Krzeczowski

In the past decade or so, electronic dance music has exploded as the advent of low-cost software and marketing have allowed for a sea of artists to emerge from local bedrooms and studios alike.

While the explosion has brought about both good and bad, the latest to rise from the waters and make a mark on the scene, Los Angeles electro duo Cold Blank, has sought to do things the right way.

The Agenda is the debut offering from the team, released via their own independent label Burn The Fire.

At a time when a distinct sound is hard to find, the album features a smattering of EDM variety from drum n’ bass to house, with a healthy dose of dubstep thrown in for good measure.

Seemingly trying to find themselves on their first full-length foray into the public consciousness, Cold Blank spreads it around, opting to try many different sounds rather than focus on a specific lane.

On the house-rocker “Los Angeles” a popping synth line is accompanied by robotic vocals declaring “we are from Los Angeles, this is where the party is,” in case anyone forgot. In a nod to early successes, Tiësto featured the track on his Club Life podcast.

A sure gem from The Agenda is the first single, “Onslaught” featuring original Duran Duran member Andy Taylor lending a smooth distorted guitar brilliantly paired with a bumping bass line and synth structure that builds to crescendos throughout.

Leaning away from the house feel, Cold Blank opts for a trance-like vibe that carries you into the sky before pummeling you into a full-fledged drop complete with grinding dubstep basslines and punching synth hits on “Louder Than Bombs.” The track debuted on MTV Hive and reached #2 on the Beatport Top 100 Dubstep Chart.

The album also features some help from notable acts such as Veela and Blake Miller of Moving Units.

Currently nominated in the Top 100 DJs in America by DJ Times, Cold Blank will be touring across Australia and New Zealand before settling back into the states with a show in Oklahoma City on September 19.

If this duo set out to distance themselves from the competition they did so not as much on the strength of individual songs as much as the complete body of work which sets the stage for a wide open future by demonstrating their ability to craftily handle a wide range of sounds.

For Cold Blank, the future looks as open as the toolbox from which they constructed The Agenda.

Diplo: Express Yourself EP Review

Date: Jul 06, 2012 (Friday) Originally appeared on TheUntz.com

By: Jake Krzeczowski

In July, Wesley Pentz, better known as Diplo, will be on a long train ride through Canada with fellow EDM mainstays Pretty Lights, Grimes, and Skrillex as they headline the Full Flex Tour.

Perhaps inspired by the solo success of those three as well as his own skyrocketing reputation, Pentz is putting out Express Yourself, an EP expected to be released at the end of 2012, and his first meaningful individual work since his debut, Florida, in 2004.

On his newest offering, Diplo keeps the party rocking and the backsides bouncing with his particular blend of electro house.

With nearly a decade in the game, the Tupelo, Mississippi-born Pentz proves his hunger to continue to develop a sound he helped popularize.

Mixing his special blend of loops, heavy bass lines and quick synths, Diplo weaves together consistently-progressing lines of sound that easily open into an all out ear assault.

The title track of the EP builds slowly, evolving itself from a trance-like introduction before quickly building the beat into his signature moombahton sound.

The Philadelphia DJ achieves this through a mix of squirreling synth lines and reggae inspired sample loops that take you on a journey of sound that finally dumps you off three and a half minutes later feeling as though you’ve explored the full catalogue of your music library.

Always one for experimentation, Diplo doesn’t shy away from trying something new on his latest EP. While maintaining his signature dancehall influenced rhythm he weaves in throughout.

Each track on the record sounds blindingly similar at times, which works within the context of keeping people moving and the party hopping.

Not to be mulled over, songs like “Butters Theme” and “Move Around” employ a host of guests from Elephant Man to Billy the Gent.

The bevy of features touch on genres from dancehall to moombahton and back again, demonstrating not only the DJ’s range of musical tastes, but also his ability to move seamlessly between them.

Express Yourself comes on the heels of a book, a TV show and a production credit on Usher’s newest single, and feels like a wave from the podium as he glances back on his rise over the past ten years.

If it is anything, the most recent digression by Diplo is more review of his career this far and only a small inkling of where he has to go from here.

ALBUM REVIEW – J.COLE – COLE WORLD: THE SIDELINE STORY

J. Cole – “Cole World: The Sideline Story” – An Instant Classic

In today’s instant media-driven world quality can sometimes get lost in the shuffle of pushing the product to the masses. Over the past two years North Carolina MC and Jay-Z protege, J. Cole has certainly produced his fair share of material, providing the hip-hop scene with some of the most sought-after mixtapes over that span. Cole World: The SIdeline Story is the tale of J. Cole’s rise from college student to the next in line for hip-hop’s next generation of anointed rhymers by crafting an album that is both socially conscious and impressive in the craft of the stories he spins.

J. Cole – Sideline Story

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Perhaps the most telling part of J. Cole’s initial iTunes release is his development  of not only of lyrics and delivery, but also of that most important skill these days, production. On tracks like “In The Morning” Cole creates a breezy, airy beat complemented by his flowery lyrics detailing love at first sight, sort of. he counteracts that with the electro-pop inspired “Daddy’s Little Girl” which delves into the world of young women growing up in dire circumstances. J. Cole’s patience in releasing this latest project pays off as it becomes a testament to his continuous improvement and innate need to do just that. Both in production and on the mic, the assortment of tempos, subjects and rhyme schemes J. Cole attacks prove that he has certainly gotten off the bench and crossed the sideline into the game.

The hip-hop world was first introduced to J. Cole as a kid fresh off his college days when he scored a feature on Jigga’s The Blueprint III album, spitting a verse on the track A Star is Born. Since then he has released some of the hottest mixtapes around including,Friday Night LightsThe Come UpThe Blow Up and most recently the Any Given Sunday series, a collection of tracks passed on for the album.

What I found most interesting was the way Cole demonstrated his progression through the use of earlier tracks originally produced for the aformentioned mixtape releases. “In The Morning” popped up on both Friday Night Lights  and  The Blow Up but takes on a different tone on the latest release, easing in with the same opening line “Baby, you summertime fine” before veering off and adding small differences in the beat, while adding a hook from Drake. Likewise, “Dollar and a Dream III” is a continuation of tracks by similar names on The Warm Up. The lyrics tweaked and the beat deeper and more soulful, Cole shows his prowess as both a lyricist and a producer. The newer versions of the songs act almost as earlier drafts of a story written by an author.

The album is an instant classic much in the same vein as Jay-Z’s 1998 breakout albumReasonable Doubt. To appreciate it fully, you may want to check out his previous works to better understand the concept that pervades.