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Mndsgn – Frugal Earth Vol. Two [Promo Mix]

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Mndsgn

First and foremost, shoutout to the fam over at Fresh Selects who just officially launched their record label, after 5 years of steady bloggin’. To kick off their series of cassette re-issues of the label’s favorite free projects (alongside new and original projects) will be a re-releae of Breatharian, a concept-heavy instrumental project from L.A. producer, Mndsgn. Mndsgn has previously worked with OKP favorites like Jonwayne, Blu, Sonnymoon, Zeroh, and Knxwledge. The Breatharian re-release will be out on November 12th, after being mixed and mastered for the first time (with added bonus tracks, guest remixes, music videos, and more). To celebrate the re-release, Mndsgn hits us with this promo mix, Frugal Earth Vol. Two. I’ve had this shit on constant repeat, and I’m sure you will too after first listen. You can stream it below (just Side A), and get a free download of it with purchase of the Breatharian tape. Mndsgn’s Breatharian tape will be out November 12th via Fresh Selects Records.

The post Mndsgn – Frugal Earth Vol. Two [Promo Mix] appeared first on Okayplayer.


Danny Brown x Mndsgn –“Sweeney Song”

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danny-brown-mndsgn-sweeney-lead

Danny Brown and Mndsgn serve up a decidedly sharp dart with “Sweeney Song.” This joint drops ahead of the forthcoming Classic Drug References 7″ box set from Sweeney Kovar, founder of the now-defunct Classic Drug References hip-hop blog. Danny Brown does some heavy lifting on the track, proving he continues to be a huge problem on the mic – a point Kovar touches on in his retelling of the track’s inception:

“Danny was my longshot for this project. By the time I got moving on this he’d already signed with Fool’s Gold and was about to drop XXX, which would establish him as one of the fiercest MC’s out. I emailed and DM’d to no avail. One day I decided to try something really crazy and picked up the phone and called him. The stars were aligned and a rapper actually answered his phone. In all of two minutes he agreed to cut a track. I emailed him a .zip of beats I’d culled from the homies and about a week later I got a sendspace link entitled “SWEENY SONG.” He had taken a Mndsgn beat and absolutely ripped it to shreds. It’s been so long since he cut it that it now sounds like vintage Danny to me, which of course I love. I fixed the typo in the title and ran with it.”

The Classic Drug References project is available for pre-order via Bandcamp. Sweeney Kovar’s limited vinyl box sets ship on November 25th with a trio of records and a CDR magazine. The digital download will be available on December 3rd. Check the track below to get a taste of “Sweeney Song.” Stay tuned for more.

The post Danny Brown x Mndsgn – “Sweeney Song” appeared first on Okayplayer.

Mndsgn – Breatharian [Instrumental LP]

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Mndsgn

The good people at Fresh Selects Records have just made their official debut with the release of Mndsgn‘s new LP, Breatharian (check track #3 to fully understand the title). The experimental L.A. producer comes through with a concept heavy, 19-track instrumental project. The re-issue also comes with those promo mixes (that you heard here) as bonus tracks. You may have heard the album before, but not like this, as it has been mixed and mastered for the first time and tracks 12, 13, 14,and 16 are all new ish. You can cop the Cassette + digital versions (or just digi for a dollar less) via FS’s Bandcamp.  A very dope listen, I’d highly suggest making that purchase.

The post Mndsgn – Breatharian [Instrumental LP] appeared first on Okayplayer.

24-Year-Old Asal Hazel Shows Us What A Broken Heart Sounds Like On “UTMT” [Premiere]

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24-Year-Old Asal Hazel Shows Us What A Broken Heart Sounds Like On “UTMT” [Premiere]

Source: Asal Hazel

Produced by MNDSGN, Asal Hazel’s music will take you deep into the world of soulfully ethereal R&B.

If there is something called R&B noir then Asal Hazel would be the queenpin of that sound. This 24-year-old supremely gifted Los Angeles native has taken her vocal prowess, which she describes as “alternative R&B,” and wrapped it around the production skills of MNDSGN for this wonderfully gifted, heartbreakingly-emotive song, “UTMT”.

Wrapping up the finishing touches on her debut project, Like Water, Asal Hazel has harnessed her lovelorn poetry and atmospheric vocal tone into a master class of love, lust and enlightenment. On “UTMT,” Asal shared with us just went into creating a vulnerable cut, saying, “I was so heartbroken while writing ‘UTMT’ that the song basically wrote itself.” Wow. Whoever was responsible for that much damage shouldn’t be allowed to get with anyone else. As we inch closer to Valentine’s Day, we ask you to press play on this sincere premiere, “UTMT,” and keep an eye out for more from this Persian-American powerhouse.

The post 24-Year-Old Asal Hazel Shows Us What A Broken Heart Sounds Like On “UTMT” [Premiere] appeared first on Okayplayer.

Mndsgn Sets The Table for New ‘Snaxx’ Tape with a Hazy Gem

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Mndsgn Sets The Table for New 'Snaxx' Tape with a Hazy Gem

Source: Eric Coleman for Stones Throw

The Stones Throw producer’s back with a feast in the bag.

Never one to step away for too long, Mndsgn has announced a new project, Snaxx, will arrive this summer. The follow-up to his self-released remix tape, Snax (one x,) takes structural cues from Stones Throw legacy, J Dilla, compiling a feast of instrumental morsels into a potent placeholder for his next studio album, due in 2020.

LISTEN: Mndsgn Flips Washed Out’s “Floating By” into a Cosmic Slow-Burner

The lead single, “Deviled Eggs,” arrives alongside the announcement, offering a warm and warped glimpse at the menu. Snaxx also follows the 2018 collaborative album, Wanna Be Your Man, with cult boogie icon, Prophet, (the title track was flipped by Tyler, The Creator on “PEACH FUZZ.”) On his new album, the producer explains, “I think of all the posthumous Dilla leaks, and how I’ve always been just as, if not more inspired by the stuff that was never supposed to come out. Albums should be proper meals, but every now and then a snack can really hold you over.”

LISTEN: Mndsgn’s New Single is a Spacey Disco Treat

Hear Mndsgn’s “Deviled Eggs” in the latest episode of The Round-Up below. Hit the link to subscribe to Okayplayer’s Spotify channel and never miss a beat.

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The post Mndsgn Sets The Table for New ‘Snaxx’ Tape with a Hazy Gem appeared first on Okayplayer.

Steve Arrington Announces First Album in 11 Years, ft. Knxwledge, Mndsgn, and…

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The heavily-sampled Ohio funk legend’s new album is set to arrive in September.

Steve Arrington is readying the release of his first solo project in over a decade.

Arriving on September 18th via Stones Throw, Down to The Lowest Terms: The Soul Sessions wrangles the venerable LA indie label’s roster of producers and peripheral talents to welcome the Ohio funk vet to his new home. The official tracklist (see below) shows contributions from Knxwledge, Mndsgn, Devin Morrison, J. Rocc, Jerry Paper, and more. The album announcement arrives with the buoyantly aspirational and rhodes-soaked lead single “Keep Dreamin’,” produced by Shibo.

All of it arrives on the heels of a gradual return to the world. Earlier this year, Arrington lent his distinctly elastic vox to Thundercat’s “Black Squalls,” sharing the mic with Steve Lacy and, on the extended album edit, Childish Gambino. Previously, Arrington released a collaborative project with Dam-Funk in 2013, following it with outtakes pried from his own vault on the 2014 compilation Way Out (80-84.) His last solo project landed back in 2009 with the self-released, Pure Thang. 

Hear Steve Arrington’s new single “Keep Dreamin'” below. Scroll on for the album’s full tracklist and head over to Stones Throw to pre-order your copy of the album on vinyl today. Hold tight for Arrington’s next transmission in the weeks ahead.

Down to The Lowest Terms: The Soul Sessions Tracklist:

1. The Joys Of Love (prod. Mndsgn, Devin Morrison)
2. Make A Difference (prod. DJ Harrison)
3. Soulful I Need That In My Life (prod. Jamma D)
4. Keep Dreamin’ (prod. Shibo)
5. Love Knows (prod. Brian Ellis)
6. My Favorite Swing (prod. Apifera)
7. Good Mood (prod. Jerry Paper)
8. Love Is Gone (prod. Knxwledge)
9. Work On It (prod. Shibo)
10. You’re Not Ready (prod. Gifted & Blessed)
11. Make Ya Say Yie (prod. Knxwledge)
12. All I Wanna Do (prod. J.Rocc)
13. It’s Alright (prod. Benedek)

The post Steve Arrington Announces First Album in 11 Years, ft. Knxwledge, Mndsgn, and… appeared first on Okayplayer.

Stream Steve Arrington’s First Album in 10 Years, ft. Knxwledge, Mndsgn, and…

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The funk icon’s first album in over a decade pairs him with a stalwart roster of Stones Throw producers.

Steve Arrington is back with his first solo outing in more than a decade.

On Friday, the former frontman of Ohio funk legends, Slave, released Down To The Lowest Term: The Soul Sessions, his second studio album with venerable west coast indie, Stones Throw Records. On his new project, Arrington sheds the analog electronics, pairing himself with the label’s roster of funk faithfuls to create a whole new sound and chapter in an already innovative career. The new album features Arrington’s cartoonishly cool and elastic vocals over productions from Knxwledge, Mndsgn, J. Rocc, Jerry Paper, DJ Harrison, and other Stones Throw adjacent producers wrangled by the label’s chief, Peanut Butter Wolf.

Down To The Lowest Terms follows an appearance on Thundercat‘s latest album, It Is What It Is (alongside Steve Lacy and Childish Gambino on “Black Qualls,”) 2014’s Way Out (80-84,) a collection of essential outtakes from his gilded solo era and Higher, the 2013 collaborative project with Dam-Funk, which marked his Stones Throw debut.

Stream Steve Arrington’s new album, Down To The Lowest Terms: The Soul Sessions, below and grab your copy on vinyl via Stones Throw today. Scroll on for the album’s full tracklist and production credits. Hold tight for his next transmission.

Down to The Lowest Terms: The Soul Sessions Tracklist:

1. The Joys Of Love (prod. Mndsgn, Devin Morrison)
2. Make A Difference (prod. DJ Harrison)
3. Soulful I Need That In My Life (prod. Jamma D)
4. Keep Dreamin’ (prod. Shibo)
5. Love Knows (prod. Brian Ellis)
6. My Favorite Swing (prod. Apifera)
7. Good Mood (prod. Jerry Paper)
8. Love Is Gone (prod. Knxwledge)
9. Work On It (prod. Shibo)
10. You’re Not Ready (prod. Gifted & Blessed)
11. Make Ya Say Yie (prod. Knxwledge)
12. All I Wanna Do (prod. J.Rocc)
13. It’s Alright (prod. Benedek)

 

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Best Songs of The Week: ft. Mndsgn, Denzel Curry, and More [Playlist]

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The Round-Up playlist is Okayplayer’s weekly haul of the best songs in the worlds of hip-hop and R&B. This week’s set features new music from Mndsgn, duendita, Denzel Curry, The Internet’s Patrick Paige II, YUNGMORPHEUS, and more.

Scroll through selections from this week’s sequence below and subscribe to Okayplayer’s Spotify channel today.

Nappy Nina featuring Stas Thee Boss – “Real Tea”

Nappy Nina reunites with Stas Thee Boss on a swirling JWords production.

Denzel Curry and Kenny Beats – “Lay_Up.m4a” (Jay Versace Version)

Jay Versace smooths-out “Lay Up” with a lux midtempo r&b loop in his contribution to Denzel Curry and Kenny BeatsUnlocked 1.5, a remix treatment of the duo’s 2020 collaborative album from Robert Glasper, Sango, Alchemist, Georgia Anne Muldrow and more.

YUNGMORPHEUS – “The Rat Race”

YUNGMORPHEUS laces a grail soul-jazz gem on a standout from the LA rapper’s new project, Thumbing Thru Foliage.

TEK featuring Rome Streetz – “Glory”

Rome Streetz and TEK trade hustle schemes on a selection from the Smif-N-Wessun rapper’s new album, Pricele$$, featuring appearances from Conway The Machine, Roc Marciano, and a posthumous verse from the late Sean Price.

Patrick Paige II featuring Steve Lacy, Durand Bernar, and Allen Love – “Whisper (Want My Luv)”

The Internet‘s Patrick Paige II announces his sophomore solo album, If I Fail Are We Still Cool? with a hazy funk-fueled romp, featuring Allen Love, Durand Bernarr, Steve Lacy. and Syd (in a preview of an unreleased song at the end of the video.)

Figmore – “Black Velvet”

10.4 ROG and JUICEB☮X offer one last glimpse at Jumbo Street, their upcoming collaborative debut as Figmore for Fresh Selects.

Mndsgn – “Hope You’re Doin’ Better”

Mndsgn checks in with a shot of blissful quar&b, announcing his new album, Rare Pleasure (out June 4th via Stones Throw.)

duendita – “Open Eyes”

duendita resurfaces with a stirring ballad for Mexican Summer’s Looking Glass series.

The post Best Songs of The Week: ft. Mndsgn, Denzel Curry, and More [Playlist] appeared first on Okayplayer.


Best Songs of The Week: ft. Mndsgn, Conway The Machine, and More

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The Round-Up is Okayplayer’s weekly playlist of the best songs in the worlds of hip-hop and R&B. This week’s set features new music from Mndsgn, Conway The Machine, Andra Day, Kenny Mason, MIKE, and more.

Scroll through selections from this week’s sequence below and subscribe to Okayplayer’s Spotify channel today.

Andra Day – “Phone Dies”

Just weeks out from what could be a massive Oscars night, Andra Day offers a look at her next musical phase, delivering an upbeat single produced by Anderson .Paak.

Peter CottonTale featuring Jamila Woods – “Breathe My Name”

Peter CottonTale and Jamila Woods display Chicago’s ever-broadening palette on a soothing new collaboration.

Mndsgn – “Slowdance”

Mndsgn shares another shimmering single from his newly-announced album, Rare Pleasures.

L’Orange and Namir Blade featuring Quelle Chris – “Point to Point”

L’Orange and Namir Blade welcome Quelle Chris to the fold in a potent preview of their incoming collaborative album, Imaginary Everything.

Kenny Mason featuring Freddie Gibbs – “Much Money”

Freddie Gibbs comes through with a crucial assist on a slow-burning standout from Kenny Mason‘s new album, Angelic Hoodrat: Supercut. 

Hus Kingpin – “Date Night”

Hus Kingpin delivers romance raps over a butter-smooth beat on this selection from his new tape, Threesome 2: The Art of Sex.

MIKE – “Evil Eye”

MIKE delivers an ascendant performance on the first single from his forthcoming album, Disco!.

Conway The Machine featuring 2 Chainz – “200 Pies”

Conway The Machine and 2 Chainz light up an Alchemist-produced gem from the Griselda rapper’s new album, La Maquina, which is out today featuring appearances from Ludacris, JID, Westside Gunn, Benny The Butcher, Elcamino, and more.

The post Best Songs of The Week: ft. Mndsgn, Conway The Machine, and More appeared first on Okayplayer.

Best Songs of The Week: ft. MF DOOM, Isaiah Rashad, and More [Playlist]

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The Round-Up is Okayplayer’s weekly playlist of the best songs in the worlds of hip-hop and R&B. This week’s set features new music from MF DOOM, Isaiah Rashad, lojii, Little Simz, and more.

Scroll through selections from this week’s sequence below and subscribe to Okayplayer’s Spotify channel today.

Czarface and MF DOOM – “Break in The Action”

As promised, Esoteric, Inspectah Deck, and 7L’s collaborative banner, Czarface, has released a joint project with the late MF DOOM. On this standout from Super What?, the iconic rapper trades bars with the group over a smooth and sedated rhodes groove. Super What? is out today on Silver Age with vinyl copies available to pre-order in two variant covers via Gasdrawls.

 

 

 

Little Simz featuring Cleo Sol – “Woman”

Little Simz appears to be in new album mode. Her latest transmission is a simmering mid-tempo ode to black women with a Neptunes knock.

Isaiah Rashad featuring Duke Duece – “Lay Wit Ya”

After weeks of deciphering who would be the subject of TDE’s May 7th drop, the West Coast camp officially revealed the video for Isaiah Rashad‘s long-awaited comeback single last night at a premiere party in Los Angeles. And it’s already a “Song of The Summer” contender.

Sango and Waldo – “Neutral (Interlude)”

Sango and Waldo tease their next collaborative outing with a brief but blistering interlude.

Mara TK – “Te Kete Aronui”

A hauntingly soulful slow-burner off of Mara TK‘s debut solo album, Bad Meditations, out today via Extra Soul Perception.

Namir Blade and L’Orange – “I Can Change

Namir Blade is full float on a tender ballad from his new collaborative album with L’Orange, Imaginary Everything, out today via Mello Music Group.

Mndsgn – “Medium Rare”

Mndsgn offers another glimpse at his upcoming album for Stones Throw with a gorgeously sophisticated spell of cosmic r&b and heavy reverb.

The post Best Songs of The Week: ft. MF DOOM, Isaiah Rashad, and More [Playlist] appeared first on Okayplayer.

16 New Hip-Hop & R&B Albums You Should Listen to Right Now (Week of June 4)

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This week’s crop of new albums features a movie soundtrack and new releases from veteran MCs.

Keeping up with new albums in the modern age of streaming can be a tough task for the average listener. With every week, dozens of new artists appear, older albums are added to streaming, and artists tack on bonus tracks to their albums via deluxe editions. It can be a lot to process.

That’s why every week here at Okayplayer, we round up the most notable projects from artists new and old, in hip-hop, R&B, and more. This time around, we have a joint album from Lil Baby and Lil Durk, the Gully movie soundtrack featuring 21 Savage and Schoolboy Q, and a bevy of releases from all over the globe.

Lloyd Banks returns to the rap game after five years away with The Course of the Inevitable. Smoke DZA and Sleepy Hallow also dropped new projects, making it a multigenerational New York affair. Stream and download your favorites below.

Lil Baby & Lil Durk – The Voice of the Heroes

Source: Quality Control Music/Alamo Records/Motown Records

Fousheé – Time Machine 

Source: Trackmasters Entertainment

Lloyd Banks – The Course of the Inevitable

Source: Money By Any Means, Inc.

Sleepy Hallow – Still Sleep?

Source: Winners Circle Ent./RCA Records

Smoke DZA – The Hustler’s Catalog 2

Source: RFC/Cinematic Music Group

Peter Rosenberg – Real Late 

Source: Real Late Records

Apollo Brown & Raheem DeVaughn – Lovesick

Source: Mello Music Group

BROCKHAMPTON – Roadrunner: New Light, New Machine (Deluxe)

Source: Question Everything, Inc.

ANKHLEJOHN & Rome Streetz – Genesis 1:27

Source: Rare Scrilla Records

The Avalanches – Since I Left You (20th Anniversary Deluxe Edition)

Source: Modular Recordings

Cherrie – Naag Nool

Source: Asylum Records

Mndsgn – Rare Pleasure 

Source: Stones Throw Records

Various Artists – Gully Soundtrack

Source: Epic Records

Fly Anakin – Pixote

Source: Fly Anakin

Joy Oladokun – in defense of my own happiness

Source: Amigo Records, LLC

Seinabo Sey – Sweet Life

Source: Saraba AB

The post 16 New Hip-Hop & R&B Albums You Should Listen to Right Now (Week of June 4) appeared first on Okayplayer.

Best Songs of The Week: ft. Mndsgn, Fousheé, and More [Playlist]

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The Round-Up is Okayplayer’s weekly playlist of the best songs in the worlds of hip-hop and R&B. This week’s set features new music from Mndsgn, Fousheé, Lloyd Banks, Ivy Sole, Prince, and more.

Scroll through selections from this week’s sequence below and subscribe to Okayplayer’s Spotify channel today.

Prince – “Born 2 Die”

Prince proves he can, in fact, write a very Curtis Mayfield type of funk ballad on this newly-unearthed gem from the upcoming posthumous album, Welcome 2 America.

U.G.L.Y Boy Modeling – “Havea brasiliensis”

U.G.L.Y Boy Modeling pulls no punchlines on this bossa-infused selection from his new album, SUPREME ou pas, out today via 597942 Records DK.

TOBi – “Don’t Touch”

TOBi slips into a dance-floor-friendly mode with a little help from KAYTRANADA and BADBADNOTGOOD on this infectious loosie.

Mndsgn – “3Hands/ Divine Hands I”

Mndsgn flips from a Neptunes groove to a blazing Pharaohe Sanders-ish jazz fusion free-for-all on this breezy two-parter from his gorgeous new album for Stones Throw, Rare Pleasure.

Ivy Sole – “Dangerous”

Ivy Sole adds another stellar audiovisual bomb to the catalog with a slightly-swung and spell-binding loosie.

Lloyd Banks featuring Roc Marciano – “Early Exit”

Roc Marciano joins Lloyd Banks on a murky standout from the former G-Unit rapper’s first album in more than a decade, The Course of The Inevitable. 

Fousheé featuring Lil Yachty – “clap for him”

Fousheé hosts Lil Yachty on a full-float selection from her newly released debut album, time machine, out today via Trackmasters and RCA.

alayna – “Spinning Top”

Sango provides a shifty, yet minimalistic, backdrop for emerging New Zealand singer, alayna.

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Mndsgn Assembled His Dreamteam to Make a Symphonic and Sophisticated R&B Suite

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In an exclusive interview, Mndsgn takes us behind the creation of Rare Pleasure, a gorgeously intimate album that rallies a community of artists who thrive in the margins between R&B, jazz, and beat-making.

Mndsgn is tucked into his Los Angeles apartment hoping fans will arrive at his new album, Rare Pleasure, with a short memory. “This is my debut,” the producer, born Ringgo Ancheta, declares with wholesome confidence over a grainy line, marking a new starting point in a career that’s already breached its second decade. But a hard restart isn’t exactly new territory for a producer who released dozens of beat tapes before uttering a melody over his own instrumentals.

Ancheta’s formative years were spent in a South Jersey town culturally and geographically indistinguishable from neighboring Philadelphia, where he cut his teeth as a b-boy and beta bedroom beatmaker before founding the wildly influential Klipmode collective with Knxwledge, Suzi Analogue, and Devonwho. As solo artists and an ensemble, the group ushered in a new moon for a growing community of independent musicians, flooding Bandcamp and Soundcloud with glitched-out tapes and mixes that would eventually find a physical and spiritual home in LA’s budding Beat Scene. Though he’s now, at the very least, an honorary Angelino, the urge to build a family rooted in creative kinship is still more than present. In fact, it’s arguably the defining quality of his new album

A month or so prior to the COVID-19 lockdown, Ancheta had just completed the sessions for a gorgeously intimate and subtly psychedelic suite with a community of artists who thrive in the margins between R&B, jazz, and beat-making. Released on June 4th, after stewing in bedrooms and proper studios for almost two years, Rare Pleasure isn’t Ancheta’s reaction to the pandemic, so much as his preparation for it. Once the tapes were cut, mixing and mastering an album as symphonically prone and richly collaborative as Rare Pleasure carried Ancheta well into the most emotionally and politically charged period in recent history. Between the pandemic and the protests, the producer, fresh off his own bout with the potentially fatal virus, was charged with holding all of those threads and making sense of them all at once. But with a crew of trusted players at his side, both physically and, at times, virtually, Anchetta managed to forge his most sophisticated and refined body of work to date.

In an exclusive interview, Mndsgn breaks down the creation of Rare Pleasure, how he became his own source material, why he’s not in a hurry to hire Herbie Hancock (even though he probably could,) and what it means to be “on the other side of healing.”

Stream Mndsgn’s new album, Rare Pleasure, below. Pick up a copy of the album on vinyl via Stones Throw and scroll on to read our chat with the producer.

Congratulations on the album, man. It’s beautiful. When did Rare Pleasure to start to form and how? Were you already working on Rare Pleasure when the Snaxx tape dropped?

Mndsgn: Damn, I got to really think about the chronology. I think a good amount of those Snaxx tracks were already done. Yeah, they already existed by the time I started writing the new record. And I guess by putting out Snaxx I kind of just didn’t want to leave anything behind that I didn’t think should be left behind. I think it was like late 2018 that I officially, like mindfully, was starting to make stuff that would potentially be on the new album. So it’s been like a good year and some change in the making.

So was it something you completed during the pandemic?

I worked on all the material myself for a solid year. And then right before the pandemic hit, I booked some studio time to get a bunch of musicians to come and play over and even replay some of the tracks. It was great. That session was so thorough.

Knocked it out in one session?

No, it was like a week. Or probably not even a full week. Maybe five days of just getting certain heads in to replay over a bunch of stuff. But yeah that was in January. And then a whole bunch of stuff happened with me personally that I had to go through. But yeah, after I’d got over that hump, came back and started mixing it with Swarvy. Like during everything, man — during the protests. Yeah, last year was insane. 

Did you find yourself revisiting the material and reshaping it through the lens of this year? 

We mixed it all throughout the spring. I think we turned the record in just before summer or something like that. So it was crazy, like, going through those last stages during last year. You know obviously because so much was going on but at the same time I think it was an advantage because, even though it was just the mixing process, I was still pulling from how challenging the time was. Somehow it kind of worked, both energetically and spiritually, in our benefit. 

Do you feel like the material was kinda meant to go through all of this before it got to its final stages? 

For sure. And I think even earlier in the process of writing the record, obviously, I asked myself a lot, “What kind of record or what kind of world am I trying to go into?” I kind of had this feeling that I wanted to make something that was meant for the other side of healing, if that makes sense?

What does that side look like for you? 

If your personal journey had involved going through a stage of darkness and then coming into the light, then I would’ve wanted the record that would be something that was for the other side of whatever hurdle, you know? I had that feeling before, like while I was starting to write the record. So I think it was crazy, once the pandemic hit I was like “Whoa, I guess that’s what that is. That’s what that feeling was.” Because I knew at that point, while we were still mixing it, I’m like “This shit is not going to come out until like… like I don’t even know when.” You know? Now, the fact that it’s going to be released this year and we’re getting over some kind of hump, I think it’s a really profound time for this music to be coming out. But I don’t know, I think a lot of the process really involved me just following an intuitive instinct, as opposed to really trying to be the one steering the wheel. 

Could you talk about some of the players on the album? 

Oh my god. It’s an all-star ensemble. We got Swarvy mainly playing bass, but he played a few other things too, like percussion, I think. Kiefer on the keys. Will Logan on the drums. Keith Askey and Chris James on guitar. We got Fousheé on the background vocals. Devin Morrison on the background vocals. Anna Wise on some of the backgrounds. Low Leaf on the harp. Carlos Niño on percussion. Miguel Atwood Ferguson on strings. Dang, did I leave anyone out? John Keek on sax. [David] Otis on sax too. It’s stacked man. Fuck. Oh my god, Aisha Mars on flute. She blessed it. Emile Martinez did some flugelhorn. It was crazy. Also, another artist I’m really inspired by right now is Jon Bap. It was really special to have him and Anna and their baby, Supernova, singing background vocals on one of the “Rare Pleasure” movements.  

Damn, what a crew. But that’s a lot of people, man. A lot of threads to hold at once. Have you ever worked with this many people on an album before? 

No, no. This is definitely the first time. It’s a blessing, man. Because everyone’s got different schedules, everyone’s doing their own thing. For everyone to come together in such a short amount of time, in the way that we did, and make what we made. It’s a pleasure for me most of all, to have been involved in that process and to have been the one to write the music for these people to play. But yeah, they’re all homies too, you know? 

It’s a real family record.

Exactly. I didn’t feel like I had to really go too far outside the camp, you know? 

Sure, especially when the camp is filled with such capable people.

Yeah. And like Stones Throw’s always throughout the years only been like, “You know if there’s anyone you want to work with, let us know. We can like pull the strings.” And I’m like, “Damn but there’s so much heat just already around me.”

Have you taken advantage of that resource yet and just put out a wild call? Like, “Let me get Herbie to run this TONTO real quick.”

You know what, no. I guess I’m kind of weird like that. The thought of it is cool. But then, I don’t know man, I feel like you should just tap in with what is already around. And I think that at the end of the day, like we’d have to be able to pay Herbie for his time. Obviously everybody got paid for their time. But it just seems more transactional when it’s someone that you got to pull strings for. Whereas you know, I feel like the relationships that I’ve already built in my life are the most, not only fundamental, but also very valuable. You know? And I wanted this record to be more of a showcase of community. 

On a project like this, was it difficult for you to balance the beatmaking half of your brain with the songwriting half of it? Which part of your music mind landed on Rare Pleasure? 

I think it’s really more so my personal taste being at the forefront. When I was making beats, it was really just like, “What do I have a taste for?” And I guess now it’s more so “What do I want to hear?”And, you know, I’ve been listening to beats for so long, I guess there’s a natural tendency to want to switch it up. It just made sense to make something that was aligned with shit that I would sample. 

I’ve always found myself trying to emulate the real stuff anyway. And I guess it just dawned on me that that’s such a subjective term, “The real stuff.” You know what I mean? Trying to make those drum kits on your computer sound like actual drums or trying to make a beat that sounds like a band. And then I was like, “Wait, I could actually do that now.” Given the community and the resources and everything. And, you know, just years of crafting beats. I was just utilizing all of it to make something that is a more evolved representation of my taste. 

I definitely see this album as the most refined body of work you’ve put out so far. It’s sprawling and big also beautifully quiet at times. 

Thank you, man. I definitely still feel the same. When I finished it, I was like, “Dang, like if I could say this was my first record ever, I would.” 

Musician and producer MNDSGN in burnt orange and khaki against a yellow door and cold blue wall.

“I wanted to write songs I’ll enjoy performing until my time is up.” MNDSGN said about his new album. “Having that intention early on kind of fortified my trajectory throughout the whole process of making the album.” Photo by Shane Sakanoi for Artist

You want people to just start here? 

Yeah, this is my debut. Sometimes I do look at it that way and I look at all of my past work as being the process to get to this album. And it just so happened that I was willing to share that process. But personally, like in my heart, I feel as though this is my first very firm statement of me. You know? Definitely the most sophisticated, I would say.

Were you ever worried whether this album, which you began writing two or three years ago, would still resonate when it finally landed? 

It’s something that I wanted to be mindful of early in the process. I noticed with my previous work and all my older songs, I kind of get burnt out on them. I don’t know why, but because of that, I wanted to be more conscious of that as I was making new songs. I wanted to write songs I’ll enjoy performing until my time is up. Having that intention early on kind of fortified my trajectory throughout the whole process of making the album. Just trying to make songs that would stand the test of time for me, personally. And it’s crazy. I listen to them now and they’re still hitting. 

Did the loss of a physical venue, or at least the prospect of playing at a physical venue, impacted any of the choices you made on this album?

I guess I always kind of had a vision of it being an ensemble or an orchestra situation. So that was definitely a part of the vision. I don’t know, it’s weird because like playing out, you kind of have this voice that’s like, “You got to play the jams or people are going to want to dance and stuff.” And this album is really not that. It’s a listening experience.

It’s also really personal, though. Earlier, you were describing how you had gone through some hardships in making this, or just prior to putting it down. Do you want to get into that at all?

Oh man. It was really just like a string of unfortunate physical injuries and sicknesses. I got sick which, I don’t know, maybe it was an early strain of COVID. But I got really sick right after my girlfriend had gone through it. We both got messed up simultaneously. So it was crazy how it worked out because we knocked out so much shit in those sessions, right before, and then all of that happened. So I’d just accomplished a lot, just in the nick of time before life hit. 

In hindsight, it was such a growing period that ultimately got put into the record. Maybe not in the literal sense, but just energetically. It’s pretty dense. And in my imagination, the album exists not just as sound but as a an outer dimensional space. And I have been going there throughout the whole process as if I’m building a castle or something. That’s kind of how I visualized it the whole time I was making it. Like I was going to this place and people are going to be there. People are going to ultimately visit this place via listening to the record. So going to that place has definitely been a source of healing. Just in my personal journey. And yeah, it’s a trip that slowly people are also visiting that place.

Was it logistically difficult to record and mix an album with this many people during a pandemic?

I would say a majority of it was conceived in my bedroom studio. Just me recording these demos and having greater ideas, greater goals for them in my mind. Some of the demos I wouldn’t completely flesh out at home. I would just leave them open because I knew it would sound crazier when Logan was playing drums or if Kiefer was playing the keys instead of me. But I think it was so effortless because not only did I already know exactly what I needed and what I wanted, but the way we had it scheduled out, it was just real precise. Everybody came in during those sessions and did what they needed to do and they just banged it out so professionally, so concise. And everyone was just on time. It was insane. Honestly, that’s probably around the time that I came up with the title of the album. I was just tripping out at how rare it is to get everybody on the same page like that.

Yeah, I mean even before the pandemic. 

Exactly. Because I feel like people were so busy. Or it seemed like it when you look back, we were all just moving, doing our thing. And yeah, I’m just so grateful for everybody that blessed the record. Because like I said, it’s just a trip to get everyone aligned in that way.

Outside of the record, what else are you excited about this year?

I guess, potentially playing shows. It seems like venues are opening up and seems like that might be a thing in the somewhat close future. It would be cool to see people come out and just vibe with the record. So I guess just seeing the world. I miss traveling, honestly. Hopefully, that is in the books. 

The post Mndsgn Assembled His Dreamteam to Make a Symphonic and Sophisticated R&B Suite appeared first on Okayplayer.

Best Songs of The Week: ft. SZA, River Tiber, and More

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The Round-Up is Okayplayer’s weekly playlist of the best songs in the worlds of hip-hop and R&B. This week’s set features new music from SZA, River Tiber, Valee, Mndsgn, and more.

Scroll through selections from this week’s sequence below and subscribe to Okayplayer’s Spotify channel today. 

Leland Whitty – “Windows”

BADBADNOTGOOD‘s Leland Whitty slips into a sublimely symphonic mode on this sprawled-out stunner from his debut solo album, Anyhow, which is out today via Innovative Leisure.

River Tiber – “Hypnotized”

After six years off the map, River Tiber reemerges with a touch of parabolic paranoia on this slick and deeply funky frequency from his new album, Dreaming Eyes, which he self-released today.

Eddie Chacon – “Holy Hell (Mndsgn Remix)”

Mndsgn turns in a synth-specked and two-step-friendly recalibration of Eddie Chacon‘s crucial mid-summer suite, which is slated to appear on his upcoming debut album for Stones Throw in 2023.

Valee – “Alpina Beema”

Valee bullies a sweet soul loop with lux wordplay on this rumbling standout from his new album, Vacabularee, which is out now via Shell Company Records, featuring appearances from Na-Kel Smith, KiltKarter, and Zelooperz.

SZA – “Smoking on My Ex Pack”

SZA returns with a fistful of bars on this agitated, all-smoke morsel from her long-awaited Ctrl follow-up, SOS, which is out today via RCA and Top Dawg Entertainment, featuring contributions from Travis Scott, Don Tolliver, JAY VERSACE, and the late Ol Dirty Bastard.

Turich Benjy featuring Pink Siifu – “Don’t Break”

Pink Siifu loads up on affirmations with Turich Benjy on this standout from the Cincinatti rapper’s new album, ULTRASOUND, which is out today via TURICH WORLDWIDE.

The post Best Songs of The Week: ft. SZA, River Tiber, and More first appeared on Okayplayer.

The post Best Songs of The Week: ft. SZA, River Tiber, and More appeared first on Okayplayer.

Ranking the Best ‘Fast and Furious’ Movies in Order From Worst to Best

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The Fast and Furious franchise didn’t exactly get off to a fast start. After the first film in the series was released 23 years ago, The Fast and the Furious star Vin Diesel cited a weak script as the reason he wouldn’t return for the sequel, 2 Fast 2 Furious. After the sequel was panned, the next one, Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift, was almost sent straight to video release. And what appeared to be a burgeoning box office titan appeared destined for dormancy. But, there was a promising silver-lining: Diesel’s character, the iconic Dom Toretto, made a surprise cameo at the end of the film, signifying his return to the Fast and Furious universe. He hasn’t left since.

Known for its high-speed chases, over-the-top action sequences and spurts of melodrama, the Fast and Furious series has become one of the biggest action-flick franchises this side of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). Like the MCU, it’s a ceaseless machine that thrives on big explosions and big personalities, and it’s spawned it’s earned billions of dollars at the box office, and it hasn’t shown many signs of slowing up, even in a post-pandemic reality that’s resulted in declining box office ticket sales. The latest is Fast X, the 10th movie in the series — Hobbs & Shaw not included.

The new flick is one that sees Dom and the gang take on a fearsome, yet hilarious new villain by the name of Dante Reyes (Jason Momoa), and it’s going to take all the crew’s expertise to subdue their newest threat. Are they up to the task? Based on action flick bylaws — and the need for more Fast and Furious sequels — most definitely.

Fast and Furious might have a lot of big races, guns and corny jokes, but at is best, it blends drama with humor and the action that made it so thrilling. Some flicks have been better than others. We took a look back to rank the Fast and Furious movies in order from worst to best.

12. 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) Directed by John Singleton


Admittedly, 2 Fast 2 Furious had some things working against it before it even began — namely, the fact that the star of its predecessor decided not to pull up. No Vin Diesel meant there were things that had to be reworked, but such a drastic change is hard to account for, and you realize the difficulty of doing so when watching this sequel, which is hindered by a lack of continuity and a shitty, colorless villain. Without a charismatic performance from Vin Diesel, 2 Fast 2 Furious feels like an extravagantly lame excuse to race flashy cars.

11. Fast & Furious (2009) Directed by Justin Lin


Fast & Furious is an example of when motion is confused for genuine movement. The collisions and high-octane races are here, but they lack refinement of the best Fast and Furious films, and the plot itself feels more convoluted than it needs to be. Additionally, Fast & Furious lacks the dynamic character roster that makes the best flicks in the franchise so enjoyable. This isn’t the worst Fast & Furious flick, but it’s definitely one of the most boring.

10. The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) Directed by Justin Lin


Once upon a time, the Fast and Furious franchise tried its hand at a coming of age tale — and it was actually pretty solid. This one places an American teen in the heart of Tokyo’s street racing underworld and the crosshairs of the local Yakuza. The fish-out-of-water story of a beleaguered kid (Bow Wow) trying to make the best of a tough situation while transforming himself was already a bit tired when Tokyo Drift hit the screens, but the kinetic driving sequences and the controlled cool of Han Lue (Sung Kang) embed the film with stylish wonder. This one gets extra credit for getting Vin Diesel to get back in the driver’s seat.

9. Los Bandoleros Directed by Vin Diesel (2009) 


A prequel to Fast & Furious, this short film helped re-introduce Dom Toretto into the fold after he hadn’t appeared in any meaningful way since 2009. Vin Diesel directs the movie, which is a brief surge of adrenaline that adequately contextualizes his new life in South America. You can understand the next movie without it, but if you’re in Fast and Furious marathon mode, might as well throw this on your list.

8. The Fate of the Furious (2017) Directed by F. Gary Gray


By the time The Fate of the Furious hit theaters in 2017, it was clear that the series had gone into full-on franchise mode, a veritable machine that made too much money to justify entertaining an ending. A side effect of this is monotony. Given all the elaborate chase scenes and explosions, that shouldn’t be possible for a flick like this one, but when you’ve got characters letting loose jokes in the face of inexplicable betrayal and life or death situations, things have definitely gotten a bit stale. Still, Charlize Theron makes for a magnetic villain, the action is electric and the stakes are high enough for it all to stick. This isn’t one of the more acclaimed Fast and Furious entries, but it’s definitely got its charms.

7. F9 (2019) Directed by Justin Lin


By the time F9 was released, the franchise had gone so far over the top that it actually outpaced the jokes about it. Seriously, two of Dom’s crew members literally end up floating through space, in a space whip, no less. The fight choreography here is A-1, the setpieces are as creative as it gets and the self-referencing jokes usually land, even if the quips and the crew’s ability to walk away from the destruction stakes feel as low as they have in years.

6. FAST X (2023) Directed by Louis Leterrier 


Powered by a Joker-esque villain (Jason Momoa), team chemistry and all the over-the-top kineticism of the best Fast and Furious flicks, Fast X is more than good enough to justify a sequel. Here, familial ties are revealed in shocking fashion, and the car chase scenes reach inventive heights that prevent things from getting stale. Sure, at least some of these surprises feel unearned, and it's a little too silly to make it stand as much of a genuine drama like Fast 5 or Fast 7, but it stands as one of the most entertaining flicks in the franchise.

5. Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw (2019) Directed by David Leitch


In their time as action movie stars, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson and Jason Statham have served as poster children for winking absurdity. So then, their Fast & Furious Present: Hobbs & Shaw feels a lot like a Dream Team. This one plays out like a buddy cop film infused with the excessive action that fuels the most exciting Fast and Furious adventures. The Rock and Statham’s back-and-forth banter feels as natural as any connection in the franchise, with their movie persona types being pushed to the reasonable limits of self-caricature. This makes the flick the funniest in the series, and Idris Elba’s turn as a witty, super-charged bad guy helps tie this one together in a way that propels it past many of the flicks in the franchise.

4. The Fast and the Furious (2001) Directed by Rob Cohen


The Fast and the Furious has all the hallmarks of shitty action thrillers, but Vin Diesel’s turn as a stoic racer and the tale of a forbidden friendship ensure it’s a worthwhile ride. This isn’t a classic, but it also wasn’t designed to be. There are fast cars. There are explosions. There are pretty people and the stakes get pretty high. And with an impending betrayal at the center of the plot, it’s easy to care about the characters, even if they aren’t particularly deep. As stylish as it is corny, the first entry in the Fast and Furious franchise is shameless, exhilarating fun.

3. Fast & Furious 6 (2013) Directed by Justin Lin


While it’s a step back from Fast Five, Fast & Furious 6 has no shortage of self-contained thrill rides, and the chemistry between the team members is as strong as ever. This is the moment the franchise went from heists to heroism, as Dom Toretto and the rest of his squad face off against a team with military weaponry and the collateral damage reaches devastating new heights. And yet, like there is plenty of pathos, as characters are forced to deal with loss and new beginnings amid the chaos, a balancing act that proved once again that the series had evolved in the best way possible.

2. Fast Five (2011) Directed by Justin Lin


Halfway through the franchise, the folks behind Fast and Furious got it right. Pulling together situational squad members from the previous films, Fast Five balances personalities with dynamic action. Those quippy exchanges between Tej Parker (Ludacris) and Roman Pearce (Tyrese) flourish while Gisele Yashar (Gal Gadot) and Han Lue bring mystique and effortless cool. Meanwhile, The Rock also came through, with his brand of over-the-top masculinity reaching comedic levels. Collectively, the mix of personas gives the film a propulsive force that was missing from most of the previous flicks while infusing it with all the organized chaos of the best heist movies. Between the exhilarating car chase scenes, high-stakes thefts and genuinely clever schemes, this one had enough to be an above average Fast and Furious flick. But Fast Five reached a new level by embracing teamwork and character pathos, embracing family in a way that’s come to define the franchise.

1. Furious 7 (2015) Directed by James Wan


After the tragic death of Paul Walker, the writers for Furious 7 faced the nearly impossible task of explaining Brian O'Conner’s departure in an organic way that still paid tribute to his legacy. They had to do all of that while moving the story forward. It’s hard, but they make it work, as evidenced by the film being the highest-rated Fast and Furious movie in the Rotten Tomatoes database. Here, the gang is all back together, and their interactions feel as genuine as ever. But, knowing the fate of Walker, there’s a lot more weight. However, that doesn’t stop the fight scenes and car stunts reach Marvel Cinematic Universe levels. It’s as fun as it is touching, and it’s got one of the great movie soundtrack songs of all time. With affecting performances from its ensemble cast, a little editing ingenuity, and a script that extracts meaningful drama at nearly every turn, the Fast and Furious team turned an insurmountable obstacle into their greatest triumph.

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Peter is a writer and editor who covers music, movies, and all things dope.


Westside Gunn Responds to Critics of His Possible ‘Hitler Wears Hermes’ Album Cover

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Westside Gunn is standing on the potential album cover for the new LP Hitler Wears Hermes 11. On Saturday (May 27), the 40-year-old Griselda member uploaded an image of presumed cocaine packages with Nazi symbols and the word “Hitler” stamped on a parcel. Fans responded negatively to the artwork, with one fan assuming that Gunn, legal name Alvin Worthy, would soon collaborate with Kanye West.




Many of Gunn’s supporters and critics went on to argue over the image, which the rapper ultimately responded to on Sunday (May 28). He doubled down on the artwork choice, while also calling responders “bums.”



He also went on to troll some followers, posting proof of him donating to a GoFundMe for multiple Buffalo residents.



HWH 11 potentially marks the end of Gunn’s retirement, as he previously shared in February that the tenth installment of the series would be his last.

“A lot of people in this game, they come and go. For me to be able to say I did it 10 times is legendary in itself. That’s just [to] let you know that I’ve been putting in work for a decade, and a lot [of] people can’t say that,” he told High Times.

“Even after a decade, I’m just now starting to get certain looks after 10 years of working. That just lets you know you just gotta work hard, stay consistent and don’t give up ‘cause there’s always another level,” he added. “I carved my own lane, so I’m already happy. I don’t care if I don’t get no bigger than what I am now, for what I’ve done in these 10 years, I done carved my own lane, I did it my own way and I’m super happy.”

Tyler, the Creator Makes An Appearance In New Kendrick Lamar & Baby Keem Video “The Hillbillies”

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Kendrick Lamar and Baby Keem are back in action. Fresh off Lamar’s appearance on Beyoncé’s “America Has A Problem” remix, he joins cousin and fellow pgLang artist Baby Keem for “The Hillbillies.” Produced by Evilgiane of Surf Gang, the instrumental samples a 2020 Bon Iver song, "PDLIF."

A companion music video for the single was also released, with a special appearance from Tyler, the Creator. Partially shot in London, the VHS-styled visual shows Lamar and Keem in a private jet, a mall and outside Los Angeles’ Dodger Stadium.

The collaboration marks Lamar and Keem’s latest collaboration, as the latter artist last featured on “Savior (Interlude)” and “Savior” from Lamar’s Grammy-winning album Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers.

Next, Lamar and pgLang co-founder Dave Free will produce an upcoming live-action comedy directed by South Park co-creator Trey Parker. With a script written by Vernon Chatman, the film synopsis reportedly “finds the past and present coming to a head when a young Black man who is interning as a slave reenactor at a living history museum discovers that his white girlfriend’s ancestors once owned his."

Keem, who supported Lamar along with Tanna Leone on The Big Steppers tour in 2022, released his debut album The Melodic Blue in September 2021. The album included singles “Durag Activity” with Travis Scott and the Lamar-assisted “Family Ties,” which won the Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance in 2022. In the same year, the 22-year-old was also nominated for Best New Artist and Album of the Year (as featured artist on Donda) and Best Rap Song.

Baby Keem, Kendrick Lamar - family ties (Official Video) www.youtube.com

BABY KEEM Wins Best Rap Performance For ‘FAMILY TIES’ | 2022 GRAMMYs Acceptance Speech www.youtube.com

Watch “The Hillbillies” below.

Baby Keem & Kendrick Lamar - The Hillbillies www.youtube.com

LL Cool J Recorded ‘30 to 40 Songs’ With Dr. Dre Before Asking Q-Tip to Executive Produce Upcoming Album

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The universe got involved with the final decision for executive producer on LL Cool J’s new album. The Queens-born rap veteran recently visited iHeart radio show Way Up With Angela Yee where he explained that Dr. Dre was originally tapped to oversee the LP before making the switch to Q-Tip.

“So, the real story is that I did about 30 to 40 songs with Dr. Dre, and in doing those songs I felt like — the music was amazing what Dre was bringing to the table was super dope — but I felt like the writing, what I was bringing to these songs didn’t feel strong enough to me,” LL explained.

LL Cool J Talks New Album, Being Married, Shooting His First Concert + More youtu.be

“I didn’t feel like I was expressing, I was getting out of me, what I was feeling. In my mind, I didn’t feel like it was written properly.”

LL, legal name James Todd Smith, went on to recall a dream where he was visited by the late Phife Dawg, which gave him the idea to reach out to Phife’s fellow A Tribe Called Quest member Q-Tip.

“So, I took a pause. Me and Dre just kinda paused for a minute. And I ended up having a dream, and in this dream Phife Dawg from A Tribe Called Quest came to me,” he added. “When he came in my dream he was like ‘Yo, that album you gonna do with Dre is gonna be dope.’ And I’m looking at him and he’s smirking a little bit.

He continued, “He [Phife] had a funny look on his face. And then when I woke up, I just felt like Q-Tip was on my spirit. So I just called him. He picked up and I told him that I wanted to do an album. We went and did the record and the rest is history.”

Although Smith prefers not to call the album a “comeback,” the currently-untitled project marks his first LP in a decade, also set to coincide with the 50th anniversary of hip-hop. This summer, Smith will also headline hip-hop tour The F.O.R.C.E. (Frequencies of Real Creative Energy) Live, his first arena tour in 30 years.

Gorillaz Tap Kaytranada & Lil Yachty for 4-Night Tour

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Gorillaz is bringing Cracker Island to a city near you. The animated group, with lead vocals from Blur member Damon Albarn, announced The Getaway Shows, where they’ll hit Los Angeles, Austin, Chicago, and Boston in September. Supporting acts for the concerts include Kaytranada, Lil Yachty, and Remi Wolf.


Gorillaz presents The Getaway Shows - Live Across the USA September 2023 youtu.be

Two weeks ago, Kaytranada dropped the Aminé-assisted album Kaytraminé, led by singles "4eva" and “Rebuke." In January, Yachty dropped his fifth studio album, Let's Start Here, with features from Teezo Touchdown, Justine Skye, Fousheé, Ant Clemons, Nick Hakim, Daniel Caesar, and more.

In February, Gorillaz released their eighth studio album Cracker Island, with appearances from Thundercat (“Cracker Island”), Tame Impala and Bootie Brown (“New Gold”), Bad Bunny (“Tormenta”), and a posthumous verse from Trugoy the Dove from De La Soul (“Crocadillaz"). In April, Auburn performed a star-studded Gorillaz set alongside special guests Bad Bunny, De La Soul, Yasiin Bey, Little Simz, Thundercat, and more.

Following Cracker Island, earlier this month, Albarn announced the first Blur album in eight years. Titled The Ballad of Darren, Albarn called it “an aftershock record, reflection and comment on where we find ourselves now.”

In other Gorillaz news, Netflix pulled the plug on the group’s planned film due to downsizing their animation division.

Check out the dates for The Getaway Shows below.

Sep 10 - Los Angeles, CA - BMO Stadium
Sep 13 - Austin, TX - Q2 Stadium
Sep 16 - Chicago, IL - Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre
Sep 19 - Boston, MA - Fenway Park

14 Great Psychedelic Hip-Hop Videos

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When the earliest humans searched for answers about the less-than physical world evidenced by their dreams, they turned to hallucinogens and music. Psychedelics are so closely linked to dreaming that the simplest scientific terms for explaining the experience is likening it to dreaming while awake. Though the ritual of the contemporary psychedelic practice may look more like three friends figuring out an empty YouTube search bar than a drum circle, the intention is still to explore a dreamlike world enhanced by a tailor-made experience with music.

So, we curated a playlist of some of the best psychedelic video experiences in hip-hop. If you scroll down you’ll find a mix of animation and special effects — dreamlike visuals for trancelike rhythms found in MCs’ even flows, and otherworldly instrumentation inspired by the entanglement of the civil rights and counter-culture movements of the late ‘60s.

Extended Playlist: A Trip With Psychedelic Hip-Hop Videos youtube.com

Psychedelia has always been about looking inward to seek hidden truths about the external world, and Black psychedelia brought new meaning to that purpose.

The culture took on a more political edge, asking listeners to wake up from the dream and become more conscious of the exploitation that surrounded them. While Pink Floyd’s staple psychedelic masterpiece Dark Side of the Moon was asking the question, "Why did we let the world get like this?," Sly Stone’s jaded, dissociative tango with fame, There’s a Riot Going On, was answering, ‘the world is like this by design.’

Decades later, hip-hop took that message, and that sound, to heart. Psychedelia found its way into records like Snoop Dogg’s “Who Am I (What’s My Name)?” on the decks of crate-digging DJs and producers looking to get crowds moving by sampling from Sly Stone contemporary, Parliament-Funkadelic. The same blues-laced, distorted guitars of Jimi Hendrix that inspired Funkadelic frontman George Clinton, found another route into hip-hop through jazz.

Ran through the mind and fingers of Miles Davis, Hendrix’s spacey riffs became Bitches Brew, spawning the turbulent offshoot jazz fusion. The most well-known contemporary proponents of the style, Flying Lotus and Thundercat, are decidedly psychedelic, but it was the jazz-sampling Native Tongues from New York who hoisted the flag on true psychedelic hip-hop. In the early ‘90s, A Tribe Called Quest and De La Soul were bringing socially conscious lyrics, hallucinogen references, and hypnotic flows to a new visual experience.

Early psychedelic hip-hop videos didn’t have huge budgets or access to advanced animation or CGI. But what they were lacking in resources they made up for with creativity and an unbeatable knack for crafting vibes. The Native Tongues were combining practical effects with clever camera work and Afro-futuristic settings, while on the West Coast The Pharcyde were learning to lip sync and choreograph backward.

As hip-hop grew in popularity, so did access to resources, and even rap artists whose music wasn’t necessarily psychedelic found success by integrating dream-like worlds and trippy visuals into their videos. The world was introduced to Missy Elliott’s solo career through a fish-eye lens, and her visuals maintained vibrant surrealism from there forward. Such early hip-hop videos that took inspiration from hallucinogenic experiences set the standard for contemporary artists who became synonymous with psychedelic visual and musical experiences.

A$AP Rocky’s “L$D” and A$AP Mob’s “Yamborghini High,” are perhaps the most well known modern day psychedelic videos in hip-hop. The ideal experience calls back to the dreamlike nature of hallucinogens with vibrant visual effects, mind-bending turns of reality, and trance-inducing waveforms. But many of the best examples are less well-known or obvious.

Whether intended to be traditionally psychedelic or just flexing creative new ways to approach music videos, hip-hop is full of visual and musical trips that lean into the dreamlike world of psychedelics. Whether you want sick flows and funny videos or wavy beats and deep insights, this list features some of the best psychedelic accompaniments in the genre.

theMIND, Mick Jenkins, Noname & Jesse Boykins III — “Animated Ambition” (2016)


“Animated Ambition” is representative of many of the themes and techniques that elevate the psychedelic video binge experience. An animated Mick Jenkins on a vibrant backdrop lives out his dream as he raps, “When I was young, thought I’d grow up to be a cartoon.” While Jenkins’ verse parallels himself to classic Saturday morning cartoons, Noname rhymes cryptically about American consumption of Black culture. The politically charged side of psychedelic hip-hop is meant to be as perspective-altering as imaging a more animated life, both accessible behind a shared mental block.

The Pharcyde — “Drop” (1995)


Before Spike Jonze directed the critically acclaimed film Being John Malkovich, he heard a backspin record scratch on a Pharcyde joint and got an idea for what would become one of the most innovative hip-hop videos of all time. He came to the South Central LA hip-hop group with the following proposal — to film “Drop” entirely in reverse.

While the video starts small with the gimmick, showing the group dancing in an alleyway and somehow bouncing on and off screen, the uncanniness slowly makes sense as they’re shown stripping down in reverse and sliding up a stair rail before gallons of gravity-defying water is flung from the ground back into the air. Not only was the video choreographed and shot to the song playing in reverse, but the MCs even employed a professional linguist to learn how to lip-synch their verses backward.

Flying Lotus & Anderson .Paak — “More” (2019)


A wavy Flying Lotus record featuring a stellar verse from Anderson .Paak and a video directed by Cowboy Bebop director Shinichiro Watanabe, is exactly as good as it deserves to be. Even the twangy strings at the opening bring a Western feel to the animated video’s crashing spaceship and desert-wandering astronaut.

A muted color palette with sharp contrasts breathes Watanabe’s vision into the video, but the Bebop-noire is broken by .Paak’s robot stand-in. A bouncing backdrop absorbs the spacy intro and .Paak’s verse causes a transformation to burst from the track and its protagonist.

Busta Rhymes & Janet Jackson — “What's It Gonna Be?!” (1999)


Busta Rhymes has been innovating the hip-hop music video space since 1997’s “Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Can See,” a mix of choreography and stop-motion camera work that sparked a wave of psychedelic Afro-futurism in his videos. When Y2K anxiety hit around the same time he was dropping his third album, Busta responded with “What’s It Gonna Be?!,” one of the most expensive music videos ever made.

Costing upwards of $2 million and featuring Janet Jackson, the chromed-out duo perform in a spacy tunnel of liquid silver. Busta’s flow is as smooth as the image of tower speakers liquidated by the track’s bass, making the video an absorbing experience.

Samiyam & Earl Sweatshirt — “Mirror” (2016)


An insane sample flip of a gospel track with a surprisingly Pink Floyd-esque guitar riff makes for a track that tumbles through the mind, especially when given Earl Sweatshirt’s darker treatment. While he raps on “Mirror,” he contends with the various components of his life that have contributed to the person he sees in the mirror. On screen, an animated Earl morphs into the pieces of himself he sees beneath the surface, shifting and changing to reflect the perspectives he could view himself from, but always returning to baseline.

In the background, an eerily familiar ghost dances fleetingly through the frames. The ghost, Koko the Clown, is the first figure to ever be animated by a combination of rendering and human motion, with these particular dance moves originating from 1933’s Betty Boop in Snow White. In the film, a magic mirror claims that Betty Boop is the fairest in the land, making her reflection the driving force of her reality.

Flatbush Zombies — “MRAZ” (2013)


A fisheye lens and disorienting cuts of the Flatbush Zombies recording in their home studio make the “MRAZ” visual fit the Brooklyn MCs’ explosive, mind-expanding entrance into the hip-hop consciousness. With two of the three Zombies dropping LSD at the video’s start, and each getting their turn to spit what’s on their mind, the video has a day-in-the-life feel. An off-screen Meechy Darko at the song’s end affirms that the video sets the scene for the trio’s early identity, exclaiming, “What the hell? Ghetto Black kids doing psychedelics?”

NxWorries — "Lyk Dis" (2018)


It must be a communal experience to have watched a sunset on hallucinogens, saw the warm orange of the sun bleed a gentle purple glow into clouds floating on a cooling blue sky, and said, “Yeah, that’s it.” That color palette is all over psychedelic visuals, and if you closed your eyes and tried to imagine the color of Anderson .Paak’s voice, the same palette glows in the mind. The animator and illustrator of “Lyk Dis” knew exactly what they were doing with this one.

EARTHGANG & OG Maco — “Friday (F Bomb Remix)” (2105)


Before Johnny Venus and Doctur Dot were Olu and WowGr8, EarthGang was casting a veil of Afro-surrealism over Atlanta before Atlanta hit FX. The mist-filled, morning dew-laden “Friday (F Bomb Remix)” video features the pair wandering through the woods employing smoke-filled shamanistic imagery, and a topless model in a mascot bear head.

Produced by Hollywood JB, the mystical track is backed by a choral chant that could light candles in a dark room. Visually, reversed frames of EarthGang and OG Maco whipping smoke bombs through the air manage to land in sync with their flow. A particularly psychedelic bit of wisdom from Olu — “That ego might get you through / but it might not get through to them” — both inspires thoughts about a new way to live while driving home the track’s mantra, leaving it up to you to decide if you give a fuck or not.

Open Mike Eagle — “Microfiche” (2018)


Open Mike Eagle’s whimsical bars and clever punchlines just hit the mind right. Paired with stop-motion claymation, his unexpected reference humor approaches surrealism in the music video for “Microfiche.”

The video is painstakingly animated. Wiggling cotton balls play clouds but also stand-in for the snaking smoke of a lit blunt resting in an ashtray. The stop-motion effect feels like watching life in a lower frame rate, and as Open Mike Eagle and Colin Kaepernick fight the NFL, Dracula, and the federal government, the lagging lyrical references leave the brain feeling like it’s catching up to the eyes.

Warm Brew — “Psychedelic” (2018)


This LA Westside trio proves, yet again, that with just a green screen studio, a couch, and the homies, you can make psychedelic perfection. The music video for “Psychedelic” is a perfect representation of the feeling that a lot is going on when nothing’s really happening. The couch’s trip to space is grounded by a simple doorbell, and a painting on the wall becomes a liquid portal to another dimension. This trip is guided by three clean verses that tell the listener to ease up and see how they’re living on the Westside.

Mac Miller, Kendrick Lamar & Iman Omari — “Fight The Feeling” (2012)


Slept on by fresh Mac Miller fans and old Kendrick Lamar fans alike, “Fight the Feeling” is a story arc worthy of a spot on the ultimate highlight reel. Looking like pencil doodles in a notebook, this video scrawls its way from frame to frame. It follows a determined sketch’s life story from creation to enlightenment: the wonder of new life, the suffering of progression, and the ecstasy of the endpoint. While during life we look back on mistakes and misfortunes as setbacks, the reality is that we’re constantly chugging forward through the rain with our head down whether we feel like it or not. The end result is a video that ends with a soberingly clear message: when your life flashes before your eyes, you’ll be reminded of how differently you experienced it from how you remember it.

The Underachievers — “Chasing Faith x Rain Dance x Allusions” (2015)


The Underachievers, the Flatbush duo of AKTHESAVIOR and Issa Gold, have a discography rife with psychedelic themes that extend beyond the music and visuals to their spiritual philosophy. When their second single “Gold Theory” hit BBC Radio in 2012 before they had even signed to Flying Lotus’ Brainfeeder label, Gold told Complex: “The universe or whoever’s controlling this entire thing, put all these superficial stimuli around all of us… all you really need is inside of you.”

One of their most visually stunning videos, the mash-up of “Chasing Faith,” “Rain Dance,” and “Allusions” uses psychedelic visual effects that escalate from the subtle warping of a desert landscape, to thrusting the artists into a Fear and Loathing scenario where the lines between themselves begin to blur with the other-worldly neon bombardment of the Las Vegas strip.

Cohenbeats & Quelle Chris — "Daily Affirmations" (2017)


There’s a lot of power in affirmations, and if you follow Cohenbeats’ mantras — “I’m good enough. I’m smart enough. And God damn it people like me” — you’ll find yourself in a more positive space throughout the day. As Quelle Chris repeats the mantra on “Daily Affirmations,” he raps about the many, many distractions that fuel his anxiety and imposter syndrome.

Animated in a simple style that looks like a mash-up of many animation techniques, Quelle dodges federal bullets and deals with career disappointments, but treasures everything that reminds him of his passion. As the verse and the mantras transition to second person, Quelle also reminds the viewer to treasure the simple things by walking them through his experience.

A Tribe Called Quest — “Jazz (We've Got) Buggin' Out” (1991)


Camera work, creativity, and a smooth record are the building blocks of a good psychedelic video. Everything else is just extra. Dropping straight-forward rhythm and rhyme, the video for “Jazz (We’ve Got) Buggin’ Out” sees A Tribe Called Quest walking along the seafront in black and white. They seem to rock back and forth in odd juxtaposition with the skylines behind them until the backdrops fall out as printed paper. It’s a simple effect, but one they make great use of throughout the visual.

A surprise twist at the end shakes the viewer out of the hypnotic stupor cast by the trio’s flows. The video switches to color, and the MCs eyes bug out of their heads while they share a final bonus verse. It’s silly, surreal, and unexpected — like the sudden inconsistencies of a lingering dream.

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Brandon is a young writer from Illinois. His love of storytelling draws him to hip hop and journalism.

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