Ils nous seront utiles pour :
Certains cookies sont nécessaires à des fins techniques, ils sont donc dispensés de consentement. D'autres, non obligatoires, peuvent être utilisés pour la personnalisation des annonces et du contenu, la mesure des annonces et du contenu, la connaissance de l'audience et le développement de produits, les données de géolocalisation précises et l'identification par le balayage de l'appareil, le stockage et/ou l'accès aux informations sur un appareil. Si vous donnez votre consentement, celui-ci sera valable sur l’ensemble des sous-domaines de Syncrophone. Vous disposez de la possibilité de retirer votre consentement à tout moment en cliquant sur le widget en bas à droite de la page. Pour en savoir plus, consulter notre politique de cookie.
Les cookies nécessaires sont utiles au bon fonctionnement du site. Ils permettent de réaliser des fonctions de base comme la navigation de page et l'accès aux zones sécurisées du site web. Le site web ne peut pas fonctionner correctement sans ces cookies.
Les cookies de personnalisation permettent à un site web de retenir des informations qui modifient la manière dont le site se comporte ou s’affiche, comme votre langue préférée ou la région dans laquelle vous vous situez.
Les cookies marketing aident les propriétaires du site web, par la collecte et la communication d'informations de manière anonyme, à comprendre comment les visiteurs interagissent avec les sites web.
Les cookies statistiques permettent le suivi des visiteurs sur le site. Ils ont pour but de vous proposer un ciblage publicitaire plus pertinent et donc plus intéressant pour les éditeurs et les annonceurs.
Ce sont les cookies qui n'entrent dans aucune des catégories ci-dessus ou qui n'ont pas encore été classés.
On their third full-length release, Potatohead People widen the frame of their progressive musical vision and deliver a far-reaching yet approachable set of moods and grooves.
Mellow Fantasy continues to showcase the trademark instrumental prowess of the duo and their ease with the loose but hard-hitting drum style brought to the fore by Jay Dee's influential productions, but goes well beyond basic boom bap bread and butter, with singer-centered R&B and uptempo bumps sharing the stage.
Beginning in 2008 as a Vancouver-based hip-hop production team, Potatohead People (Nick Wisdom and AstroLogical) have collaborated with a fantasy league of MCs, including Frank Nitt of Frank'n'Dank (the 2013 breakout jam "Back To My Shit"), Illa J (producing an entire album for J. Dilla's younger brother) and the late Phife Dawg (the beloved A Tribe Called Quest co-founder's last recorded verse was over one of their beats).
Setting them apart from other Dilla-influenced beatmakers is the way they push the scope of the style, working the corners with their own unique touch. At its most basic, "the goal has always been making really dope loops," they explain. By using slices of their own rough instrumental ideas, finding "a chord progression or texture that you can hear again and again and never question it," they've taken this fundamental concept and elevated it to new levels of melodic, harmonically complex music.
A jazz-like responsiveness to the input of collaborators is a key component of how the team works. "We like to get the artist involved when the beat is an early idea, and build the beat around the vocals, getting inspired by what they do."
On Mellow Fantasy, they had some impressive inspiration. Pos from De La Soul immediately connected with "Baby Got Work," a sophisticated slap that went through several iterations before settling into its ultimate form. Appropriately, the song's diligent construction echoes the ethic of the grind in the clear-eyed, precisely dovetailed lyrics fans have come to expect from the Daisy Age don. "Baby Got Work" is the album's lead single, hitting on 9/25/20.
Befitting Potatohead People's origins as a hip-hop group, cameos from Illa J and Slum Village's T3 on the summertime teaser "What It Feels Like" and Vancouver veteran Moka Only (the sassy, vanity take-down "Ungodly") add to the unimpeachable rap bonafides.
The hometown connections continue with Lotusland local Kapok slinging verses on a couple tracks and rising stars Kendra Dias and Clear Mortifee, who stake serious claims as names to watch with standout vocal turns on the low-slung neo-soul "Break Even" and the upcoming second single "Hidden Levels," a high-flying house/future boogie hybrid. Following up their successful 2019 collabo "Single Life," Bunnie makes her return to action with the group on "Kettle Boiling." Ranging further, Reggie B, who broke on the scene with his lead on Onra's "High Hopes," shines on the optimistic bounce of "Bring The World A Little Closer."
Threaded throughout are interlude instrumentals that comfortably manage the neat trick of being musically intriguing while retaining an accessible, gut-level thump. Look no further than the statement-making, Yussef Kamaal-like funk fusion album opener "1st Light" and their nod to overlooked Vancity synth pioneer Dale Jacobs ("Ode To Mr. Jacobs") for clues to where Nick and Astro's hearts are at.
Mellow Fantasy, released 10/30/20 on Bastard Jazz and available on vinyl and all digital platforms, is Potatohead People's most evolved collection yet, rooted in earthy low end but elevated, expansive and reaching new musical heights.
Vous devez activer les cookies pour utiliser le site.
Pour savoir comment activer les cookies sur votre navigateur, rendez vous sur la page suivante:
http://www.accepterlescookies.com/