I remember being in tenth grade when Joe Budden’s first single “Pump it Up” came out. To be 100% honest, I didn’t care for it at all. After that track, it almost seemed like Joe fell flat off the face of the earth. From what I’ve gathered, Joe has released some mixtapes in the interim but nothing really serious… until Padded Room. It took me a while to even give this CD a complete listen because I had no idea what it was going to be like. Once I did start listening I just couldn’t get a grasp right away of how to feel. Joe has a line in the first track on the album “Now I Lay” that sums up the aforementioned statement perfectly, “It’d take you a long time to evaluate me”. It literally took me about 20 listens to get a good feel for this album, but my general consensus is that this album is damn good. Continue reading
Archive for the Reviews Category
Album Review: Joe Budden, Padded Room
Posted in Music Reviews with tags Joe Budden, Padded Room, Pump It Up on Monday, July 20, 2009 by Tim AlthausWild Style Wednesday Review: Clipse, Lord Willin’
Posted in Music Reviews, Wildstyle Wednesdays with tags Clipse, Copus, Hell Hath No Fury, Lord Willin', Malice, Pusha T, The Neptunes on Wednesday, July 15, 2009 by Tim Althaus
This album was my first introduction (as well as most other people) to the Brothers Thornton. I remember being in 10th grade riding around in my buddy Copus’s car listening to this album damn near every day. Since the album Lord Willin’, Clipse has been a duo known for their wicked, witty verses and sick ass Neptunes beats. To me it was really funny when they dropped Hell Hath No Fury because it seemed to me that nobody mentioned Lord Willin’. It was almost as if Lord Willin’ never even existed. In my opinion you couldn’t have put out a better label debut than Lord Willin’, this album is stacked with addictive top-notch beats and over the top lyricism filled with more metaphors and allusions about cocaine than you can imagine. Malice & Pusha are so good that they make cocaine sound interesting. Continue reading
Album Review: Toki Wright, A Different Mirror
Posted in Music Reviews with tags A Different Mirror, Benzilla, Brother Ali, minneapolis, Rhymesayers Entertainment, Scarub, Soundset, toki wright on Monday, July 13, 2009 by Tim Althaus
I say this all the time but, I feel so great being from Minnesota because Minneapolis is a mad music machine that keeps churning out great homeland talent. Toki Wright is a perfectly prime example of what I previously stated. I’ve seen Toki at just about every Hip-Hop event I’ve ever been to in Minneapolis, so for that reason alone he will always be a pivotal stamp in Twin Cities Hip-Hop. I got the chance to see Toki at this year’s Soundset, and I was very impressed when I saw him perform his solo material. His new album, A Different Mirror, is a great example of a hungry emcee deliberately devouring the microphone on every track. The beats on this album accent Toki’s violent and vicious flow perfectly, and Toki’s witty wordplay is highly infectious. Continue reading
Album Review: Alchemist, Chemical Warfare
Posted in Music Reviews with tags Alchemist, Blu, Chemical Warfare, Evidence, Jadakiss, Kid Cudi, Kool G Rap, KRS One, Pusha T, Snoop Dogg, Talib Kweli on Thursday, July 9, 2009 by Tim Althaus
For the last decade (and then some), Alchemist has been making some of the best beats in Hip-Hop. Much like his last album 1st Infantry he enlists a near all-star cast of some of the best cats in the game to help him bring you some real Hip-Hop. Another thing that you may notice is that ALC’s beats are just as deviously deadly as ever before. He sounds like he has been more at home with the MPC than ever, and Al’s chemistry seems like it should be in a text book it’s so good. Continue reading
Concert Photo Recap: Cocaine @ the 400 Bar
Posted in Concert Reviews with tags blues, classic rock, cocaine, concert, guitar, hard rock, live, local, minneapolis, minnesota, photographs, pictures on Tuesday, June 30, 2009 by Ryan Buege
On Saturday, Minneapolis’s hardest rocking, hardest partying, and (perhaps) hardest working band Cocaine continued their streak of high energy local live performances (while they spend their off-time working on the band’s new album) with a tight show that quickly won over a crowd who never ceased to cheer them on throughout the night. Photos from the band’s set continue after the jump… Continue reading
Concert Recap: Shellac, Bear Claw @ Varsity Theater
Posted in Concert Reviews with tags bear claw, live, minneapolis, minnesota, noise rock, prog-rock, shellac, varsity theater on Monday, June 29, 2009 by Ryan Buege
Shellac, the famed noise rock outlet comprised by Steve Albini, Bob Weston, and Todd Trainer, made it to the Varsity Theater for a rare concert appearance at the Varsity Theater in Minneapolis last week on the day of Michael Jackson’s passing. Despite some ill-advised humor mocking the death of MJ that got under the skin of more than a few concertgoers, the music at the center of the band’s free-flowing set of prog and noise rock was well-received by nearly everyone in attendance. Intricate, snarky, abrasive, and thick, the band has a sound that keeps you on your toes at attention, waiting to see where the rollercoast will veer to next.
For my part, I was there to see the legendary Albini (producer of most of my favorite albums from bands ranging from Neurosis, High On Fire, Mogwai, Nirvana, and many, many more) execute his music genius right in front of me. I was situated right in front of his amp on stage right, and I don’t think I could have picked a better spot. With the warm tones and complicated melodies from Steve’s guitar dominating my hearing, I watched from the perfect angle as Trainer banged away at his drums like Animal. The show left me completely impressed (I was skeptical about seeing how these studio-based legends would translate in the live seting), and I’m sure everyone would have been on board for their sarcastic humor on most other days of the year.
Bear Claw opened the show. Videos and photos from my steady shot Sony DSCW80 follow below!
VIDEO: Shellac, Live at the Varsity Theater, 6/25/09
(Shellac)
More photos of Shellac and friends are available for you after the jump. Solider on… Continue reading
Album Review: Pepe Deluxe Spare Time Machine!
Posted in Music Reviews with tags animal collective, genetics, ice cream, Pepe Deluxe, Spare Time Machine, super furry animals, the mars volta, Torni Paajanen, Vellu Maurola, vintage on Thursday, June 25, 2009 by Nicholas Blexrud
“Talk about a Jumble” are the opening lyrics of Pepe Deluxe’s 2007 release of Spare Time Machine. Pepe Deluxe hails from the capital of Finland, and consists of two main members; Vellu Maurola aka DJ Slow and Torni Paajanen aka JA-Jazz. Enough with the background, Spare Time Machine consists of many layers; vintage synths, rockin’ beachy guitar, funky horns, and hippy-bongo drums, possibly something out of a classic surf flick. But the most memorizing flavor of Deluxe’s ice cream sundae is definitely their understanding of space and vocals. The way these two intertwine, almost genetically, XY chromosomes or the meeting of sperm and egg, is beautiful. I am one who likes
tripped-out, psychedelic phrases with lavish lyrics (The Mars Volta, Super Furry Animals, Animal Collective) that Pepe Deluxe is simply an emotion to put memories to, and I thank them for that.
You can check out a couple of there sick ass vintage 60’s sound, with clashes of psychedelic-funk with epic builds and robust, tripped out lyrics on MYSPACE.
Would love to see em live, but they haven’t updated their website for a year…
Cheers Anyway to Pepe Deluxe!
I went out and bought the complete series box set of The Wire on a whim because I had heard many good things about it. A lot of what I had heard in the past was blurbs from celebrities, and not to mention one of my best friends telling me I would love the show. The thing that really strikes me after finishing this show, is that it didn’t win any awards and relatively flew under the radar with commercial success. I am going to go on record and say that this is easily one of the top three shows I’ve ever seen. The way that this show is shot is unparalleled by any other show that’s been on television. You get an inside look into the lives of drug dealers, drug users, city law officials, blue collar workers and more. I feel like I was sleeping under a rock for not watching this show.
In lieu of my friend and comrade Erik Burg leaving us at Mind Inversion, I wanted to do a review that would hit close to home with him. When you think of dynamic duos, you tend to think of pairings such as Premier & Guru, Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth and not to mention Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince. This is where Rjd2 and Blueprint come into the equation. From the first time that I heard these guys collaborate on Rjd2’s album Dead Ringer I knew they were going to be preposterous pairing in every aspect.
(The Crinn)
(Zebulon Pike)
(The Body Beneath)
(Ambassador Gun)

