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Subject: "Shabazz Palaces - They Come In Gold (new album 7/29)" Previous topic | Next topic
BrooklynWHAT
Member since Jun 15th 2007
85068 posts
Mon May-05-14 11:24 PM

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"Shabazz Palaces - They Come In Gold (new album 7/29)"


  

          

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=tCXeRoenjz4

album is called Lese Majesty

<--- Big Baller World Order

  

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
RE: Shabazz Palaces - They Come In Gold (new album 7/29)
May 06th 2014
1
was just listening to Black Up this weekend wondering when
May 06th 2014
2
well said.
May 06th 2014
4
nice!
May 06th 2014
3
Super fuckin' nice.
May 06th 2014
5
album is v diff to black up but im into it
Jun 09th 2014
6
You heard the whole thing?
Jun 09th 2014
7
      i dont think its as out there
Jun 09th 2014
8
      Cool
Jun 09th 2014
9
      nope
Jun 09th 2014
10
           Seen
Jun 09th 2014
11
      it is now. n/m
Jul 04th 2014
12
      it sounds like rap from outer space.
Jul 05th 2014
13
           too ambient for me
Jul 05th 2014
14
DOPE!
Jul 05th 2014
15
so it's "out there"?
Jul 06th 2014
16
At 128,
Jul 07th 2014
17
Solid.
Jul 07th 2014
18
RE: Solid.
Jul 10th 2014
20
      yeah, theyre all meant to be a suite
Jul 10th 2014
21
      Interesting. Sonically or lyrically?
Aug 01st 2014
30
#CAKE single (link)
Jul 10th 2014
19
Stream is up, listening now
Jul 22nd 2014
22
npr interview
Jul 22nd 2014
26
Also check out the related - Chimurenga Renaissance
Jul 22nd 2014
23
I'd love your thoughts on @Peace
Aug 25th 2014
47
RE: Also check out the related - Chimurenga Renaissance
Aug 27th 2014
48
um okay....
Jul 22nd 2014
24
exactly how I feel. This album has grown on me during this past week.
Jul 30th 2014
28
      both of yall check post #23
Jul 30th 2014
29
      that guy's voice is annoying. I can't listen to it.
Aug 03rd 2014
34
      you aint never lie
Aug 01st 2014
32
Sounds incredible to me.
Jul 22nd 2014
25
I'm on Colluding Oligarchs... this shit is incredible
Jul 23rd 2014
27
Huge fan, but not feeling this album AT ALL.
Aug 01st 2014
31
It's worth a few more chances
Aug 04th 2014
38
      you were right, sir.
Aug 08th 2014
39
Shabazz Palaces
Aug 02nd 2014
33
the wax, artwork, and packaging
Aug 03rd 2014
35
RE: the wax, artwork, and packaging
Aug 04th 2014
37
      i dont have the limited edition
Aug 08th 2014
40
           RE: i dont have the limited edition
Aug 08th 2014
41
i disliked this album for a while
Aug 04th 2014
36
too weird for me..i like hip hop. not whatever this is
Aug 08th 2014
42
LOFL. never change Guru. never
Aug 08th 2014
43
      it does frequently sound like environmental music
Aug 09th 2014
44
           I'm not even mad at that discription
Aug 09th 2014
45
dope nm
Aug 09th 2014
46
The Quietus Interview (link)
Sep 03rd 2014
49
This is so incredibly dope
Sep 18th 2014
50
this shit is so good
Sep 27th 2014
51
Co-sign on Motion Sickness
Sep 27th 2014
52
Am I the only one who thinks Ish and Too $hort would sound dope together...
Jan 08th 2015
53
not a huge Too Short fan but yeah, this album is my shit
Jan 08th 2015
54
sort of feel like this album got overlooked
Jan 09th 2015
55

Vhien
Member since Aug 22nd 2009
149 posts
Tue May-06-14 12:05 AM

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1. "RE: Shabazz Palaces - They Come In Gold (new album 7/29)"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

I am saving up for that new record now, as they are flawless in my eyes. Very nice song.

  

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astralblak
Member since Apr 05th 2007
20029 posts
Tue May-06-14 01:47 AM

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2. "was just listening to Black Up this weekend wondering when"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

They were gunna drop the new LP

Song is good. I prefer the first half tho

Ish/Palaceer's voice will never age

Their sound is so damn unique and self assured. It doesn't reflect the times but is precisely of it.

  

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KennyFresh
Member since Mar 16th 2005
8362 posts
Tue May-06-14 03:06 AM

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4. "well said."
In response to Reply # 2


  

          

>Ish/Palaceer's voice will never age
>
>Their sound is so damn unique and self assured. It doesn't
>reflect the times but is precisely of it.



http://freshselects.com
Low Leaf - AKASHAALAY http://bit.ly/_FSX-003
Mndsgn - Inedia remix EP http://bit.ly/FSX-002_
Mndsgn - Breatharian album http://bit.ly/FSX001_

  

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A Love Supreme
Member since Nov 25th 2003
3052 posts
Tue May-06-14 01:58 AM

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3. "nice!"
In response to Reply # 0


          

  

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Clarence Clarke
Member since Dec 14th 2013
1295 posts
Tue May-06-14 07:29 AM

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5. "Super fuckin' nice."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Feeling both halves... that 2nd half is mad groovy, make a nig wanna bust out
the cumbia and shit.

+
+
+
+
+
Everything's turning out perfectly

  

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GumDrops
Charter member
26088 posts
Mon Jun-09-14 12:44 PM

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6. "album is v diff to black up but im into it"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

quite a diff experience really, i kinda miss the sound of black up, but this one is good in its own way too. cant think of another rap group whose albums im as excited for tbh...

  

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ProgressiveSound
Member since Mar 11th 2003
2053 posts
Mon Jun-09-14 02:08 PM

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7. "You heard the whole thing?"
In response to Reply # 6


          

Even more out there than Black Up?
Yo...

  

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GumDrops
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Mon Jun-09-14 02:15 PM

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8. "i dont think its as out there"
In response to Reply # 7


  

          

black up was pretty dark and sonically it was pretty hard

this is kinda the opposite, beats wise, apart from a few songs here and there

its meant to be some kind of longform suite, though it takes a while to get your head around it

the rapping is seriously superb though, regardless of the beats



  

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ProgressiveSound
Member since Mar 11th 2003
2053 posts
Mon Jun-09-14 03:11 PM

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9. "Cool"
In response to Reply # 8


          

Did you see them perform in London a few years back.
I saw them twice.

  

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GumDrops
Charter member
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Mon Jun-09-14 03:20 PM

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10. "nope"
In response to Reply # 9


  

          

but im gonna check them at koko later this month, fingers crossed!

  

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ProgressiveSound
Member since Mar 11th 2003
2053 posts
Mon Jun-09-14 04:55 PM

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11. "Seen"
In response to Reply # 10


          

I didn't even know

  

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Steve O Tron v2
Member since Sep 13th 2002
12906 posts
Fri Jul-04-14 07:36 PM

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12. "it is now. n/m"
In response to Reply # 8


          

  

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BrooklynWHAT
Member since Jun 15th 2007
85068 posts
Sat Jul-05-14 02:52 AM

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13. "it sounds like rap from outer space."
In response to Reply # 7


  

          

<--- Big Baller World Order

  

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GumDrops
Charter member
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Sat Jul-05-14 07:25 AM

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14. "too ambient for me"
In response to Reply # 13


  

          

but im into it still

  

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Abstract_TheEclectic_Nubian
Member since Sep 07th 2002
5966 posts
Sat Jul-05-14 04:26 PM

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15. "DOPE!"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

╭∩╮(︶︿︶)╭∩╮





www.last.fm/user/Tha_Abstract

  

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astralblak
Member since Apr 05th 2007
20029 posts
Sun Jul-06-14 11:17 PM

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16. "so it's "out there"?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

?

  

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BigReg
Charter member
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Mon Jul-07-14 08:19 AM

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17. "At 128,"
In response to Reply # 16


  

          

Considering how trippy it is with the sound you might want to wait until a better rip pops up.

  

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BigReg
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Mon Jul-07-14 08:24 AM

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18. "Solid. "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

However it feels like a collage of ideas rather than full songs at times...figure half the tracks are 2 minutes long or less, and they had interesting things going on; I wish they would have fleshed some of those tracks out.

  

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Steve O Tron v2
Member since Sep 13th 2002
12906 posts
Thu Jul-10-14 12:32 PM

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20. "RE: Solid. "
In response to Reply # 18


          

>However it feels like a collage of ideas rather than full
>songs at times...figure half the tracks are 2 minutes long or
>less, and they had interesting things going on; I wish they
>would have fleshed some of those tracks out.
>

Agreed. It continues to grow on me, but a lot of the songs don't feel as realized as the ones on Black Up.

  

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GumDrops
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26088 posts
Thu Jul-10-14 12:49 PM

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21. "yeah, theyre all meant to be a suite"
In response to Reply # 20
Thu Jul-10-14 12:49 PM by GumDrops

  

          

but i think thats just an excuse for them all being a bit watery and indistinct

its all a bit 'environmental mood music'

  

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spirit
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21432 posts
Fri Aug-01-14 03:02 AM

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30. "Interesting. Sonically or lyrically?"
In response to Reply # 20


  

          

Because lyrically, several of the songs on Black Up sounded freestyled to me (not that there's anything wrong with that, I loved it).

Peace,

Spirit (Alan)
http://wutangbook.com

  

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Track_10
Member since Apr 08th 2005
343 posts
Thu Jul-10-14 12:29 PM

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19. "#CAKE single (link)"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Here is a link to the single #CAKE which track 12 on the album.

http://youtu.be/8tk9e7FG2ww

_______________________________________
Current Playlist:
2 Chainz - Daniel Son: Necklace Don
Logic - Bobby Tarantino
Folded Like Fabric - Luxeries EP
dvsn - Sept 5th
Drake - Views
Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool
Netsky - 3

  

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imcvspl
Member since Mar 07th 2005
42239 posts
Tue Jul-22-14 09:04 AM

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22. "Stream is up, listening now"
In response to Reply # 0
Tue Jul-22-14 09:08 AM by imcvspl

  

          

http://www.npr.org/2014/07/20/331345354/first-listen-shabazz-palaces-lese-majesty

█▆▇▅▇█▇▆▄▁▃
Big PEMFin H & z's
"I ain't no entertainer, and ain't trying to be one. I am 1 thing, a musician." © Miles

"When the music stops he falls back in the abyss."

  

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BrooklynWHAT
Member since Jun 15th 2007
85068 posts
Tue Jul-22-14 09:34 PM

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26. "npr interview"
In response to Reply # 22


  

          

http://www.npr.org/2014/07/20/332073982/unlocking-the-eclectic-a-conversation-with-shabazz-palaces-ishmael-butler

<--- Big Baller World Order

  

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imcvspl
Member since Mar 07th 2005
42239 posts
Tue Jul-22-14 09:05 AM

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23. "Also check out the related - Chimurenga Renaissance"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

http://chimurengarenaissance.cloudnice.com/main

Album is kinda heat.

█▆▇▅▇█▇▆▄▁▃
Big PEMFin H & z's
"I ain't no entertainer, and ain't trying to be one. I am 1 thing, a musician." © Miles

"When the music stops he falls back in the abyss."

  

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blinded by the lights
Member since Aug 31st 2008
625 posts
Mon Aug-25-14 04:30 AM

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47. "I'd love your thoughts on @Peace"
In response to Reply # 23


          

Have a listen to this album when you get a chance:

http://at-peace.bandcamp.com/album/peace-and-the-plutonian-noise-symphony

Whatever genre Shabazz Palaces is making, I think @Peace is probably in that lane too, and they're killing it.

"Yes I see all the nummmberrs... I still root for the dreeeamerrs... I thank God for the dreeeamerrs..." - Mos

  

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blinded by the lights
Member since Aug 31st 2008
625 posts
Wed Aug-27-14 02:17 AM

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48. "RE: Also check out the related - Chimurenga Renaissance"
In response to Reply # 23


          

This album is fire btw. Been listening to it non-stop the last few days.

"Yes I see all the nummmberrs... I still root for the dreeeamerrs... I thank God for the dreeeamerrs..." - Mos

  

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Mongo Slade
Member since Jun 28th 2002
2745 posts
Tue Jul-22-14 11:06 AM

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24. "um okay...."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          


So I've listened to the whole thing twice now..

keep in mind I'm already a fan

First listen part of me was on some....wtf is this shyt?

but...

I can't be mad in that there's nothing out here right now sounding or coming close to sounding like this.....I kind of wish there was a bit more "traditional" song structure to it..but then again I'm glad it's not too.

Honestly I think this is the closest thing to music or dare I say hip-hop evolution out there...or something at least that will inspire it.

*****************************************
http://mephonics.com/
*****************************************

  

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Fructose Soda
Member since Feb 19th 2012
2150 posts
Wed Jul-30-14 09:26 AM

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28. "exactly how I feel. This album has grown on me during this past week."
In response to Reply # 24
Wed Jul-30-14 09:30 AM by Fructose Soda

  

          

First listen was like "I'm not sure if I can really get into this".
But then again, I listen to weird, subversive, esoteric shit all the time.
And this album is sooooo esoteric (even more than "Black Up").
Now............ I think I'm falling in love with this album.
Yes, "Black Up" was definitely a ground-breaking classic. It was shocking.
This album doesn't shock. Its more sneaky. It creeps into your subconcious,......
Then next thing you know, you can't stop thinking about it.
Especially the instrumental change-up that happens midway on the 3rd track.
I can't explain it, but it takes my mind somewhere else.
Certainly not for everyone, but oh what a treat for those of us who DO *feel* it.

  

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imcvspl
Member since Mar 07th 2005
42239 posts
Wed Jul-30-14 09:35 AM

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29. "both of yall check post #23 "
In response to Reply # 28


  

          

it's the balance.

█▆▇▅▇█▇▆▄▁▃
Big PEMFin H & z's
"I ain't no entertainer, and ain't trying to be one. I am 1 thing, a musician." © Miles

"When the music stops he falls back in the abyss."

  

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Fructose Soda
Member since Feb 19th 2012
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Sun Aug-03-14 08:07 AM

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34. "that guy's voice is annoying. I can't listen to it."
In response to Reply # 29


  

          

The instrumentation is kinda similar to Shabazz Palaces, but I'm not sure if it balances out the sound.
I'm not feelin it.
But, thanks (at least) for letting me know about them.
Its just not as nuanced and "spacey" as Shabazz Palaces, and the dude's voice is not easy to listen to. It feels like a chore.

  

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howardlloyd
Member since Jan 18th 2007
2729 posts
Fri Aug-01-14 10:33 AM

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32. "you aint never lie"
In response to Reply # 28


  

          


>Especially the instrumental change-up that happens midway on
>the 3rd track.
>I can't explain it, but it takes my mind somewhere else.
>Certainly not for everyone, but oh what a treat for those of
>us who DO *feel* it.
>
>

http://howardlloyd.bandcamp.com

  

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stylez dainty
Member since Nov 22nd 2004
6738 posts
Tue Jul-22-14 12:13 PM

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25. "Sounds incredible to me."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Honestly doesn't really sound like a huge departure from Black Up, at least certain moments of Black Up. But I understand that album was probably the absolute fringe frontier of how far out rap can go for some.

----
I check for: Serengeti, Zeroh, Open Mike Eagle, Jeremiah Jae, Moka Only.

  

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astralblak
Member since Apr 05th 2007
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Wed Jul-23-14 02:25 PM

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27. "I'm on Colluding Oligarchs... this shit is incredible"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

i feel I'm having an experience

to just call this rap music would be a disservice.

  

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meeatt
Member since Oct 25th 2004
528 posts
Fri Aug-01-14 09:34 AM

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31. "Huge fan, but not feeling this album AT ALL."
In response to Reply # 0


          

no songs, no "beats." gonna give the whole thing another good listen, but yeah. no.


**************************************************

http://soundcloud.com/manic-choints/

www.twitter.com/itsmeManic

  

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stylez dainty
Member since Nov 22nd 2004
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Mon Aug-04-14 01:45 PM

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38. "It's worth a few more chances"
In response to Reply # 31


  

          

There's so much going on and it moves quickly, but once you get used to it, it's still mostly about beats and rhymes.

----
I check for: Serengeti, Zeroh, Open Mike Eagle, Jeremiah Jae, Moka Only.

  

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meeatt
Member since Oct 25th 2004
528 posts
Fri Aug-08-14 10:37 AM

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39. "you were right, sir."
In response to Reply # 38


          

glad i gave it a few more spins. it's def a slow burn. i do still wish there were a couple more "accessible" joints like Motion Sickness on here, and I can't stand #Cake and They Come In Gold, but overall the album def has this weird gravitational pull on me the more i listen.....


**************************************************

http://soundcloud.com/manic-choints/

www.twitter.com/itsmeManic

http://vimeo.com/mattferran

  

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Track_10
Member since Apr 08th 2005
343 posts
Sat Aug-02-14 11:17 AM

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33. "Shabazz Palaces "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

When I first listened to this album I enjoyed the first half but then was disappointed that there weren't as many hooks to latch onto. The second half wasn't as cohesive to me but then again I was at work and listened to sections of the album during my breaks.

I'm so glad I kept listening to this album. It's been on repeat. I think the track listing is actually working against this album. Black up had longer tracks but they has two of three mini songs within songs. This album has tons of 1 minutes songs that when i saw the track list i perceived them as being less substantial. In retrospect, the sequence "They Come In Gold" the reflective comedown of "Solemn Swears," "Harem Aria," and "Noetic Noiromantics" is my favorite part of the album.

I'm enjoying this album. Not as good at Black up to me because that album was more aggressive (which i liked), but still a good album.

_______________________________________
Current Playlist:
2 Chainz - Daniel Son: Necklace Don
Logic - Bobby Tarantino
Folded Like Fabric - Luxeries EP
dvsn - Sept 5th
Drake - Views
Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool
Netsky - 3

  

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howardlloyd
Member since Jan 18th 2007
2729 posts
Sun Aug-03-14 03:05 PM

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35. "the wax, artwork, and packaging "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

is friggin dope

sub pop does as nice a job as brain feeder.

shits plush

http://howardlloyd.bandcamp.com

  

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Nick Has a Problem...Seriously
Member since Dec 25th 2010
16580 posts
Mon Aug-04-14 01:37 PM

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37. "RE: the wax, artwork, and packaging "
In response to Reply # 35


  

          

all versions or just the limited edition joints because those are sold out

******************************************
Falcons, Braves, Bulldogs and Hawks

Geto Boys, Poison Clan, UGK, Eightball & MJG, OutKast, Goodie Mob

  

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howardlloyd
Member since Jan 18th 2007
2729 posts
Fri Aug-08-14 02:01 PM

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40. "i dont have the limited edition"
In response to Reply # 37


  

          

but the cover is made not of cardboard

the jackets are nice

and they only used three sides...

so the 4th side is an ill etching

http://howardlloyd.bandcamp.com

  

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Nick Has a Problem...Seriously
Member since Dec 25th 2010
16580 posts
Fri Aug-08-14 02:07 PM

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41. "RE: i dont have the limited edition"
In response to Reply # 40


  

          

>but the cover is made not of cardboard
>
>the jackets are nice
>
>and they only used three sides...
>
>so the 4th side is an ill etching

That sounds dope! I saw that etching and now it makes sense since they're just using three sides. Think i'm copping the vinyl. Thanks!

******************************************
Falcons, Braves, Bulldogs and Hawks

Geto Boys, Poison Clan, UGK, Eightball & MJG, OutKast, Goodie Mob

  

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GumDrops
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Mon Aug-04-14 01:22 PM

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36. "i disliked this album for a while"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

mainly as it didnt sound enough like black up for me lol
but ive since gotten rid of my ideas of what i thought this album should be like
def one of the most original albums in hip hop for a while
its a real 'experience' kinda album
blackup was pretty tough sonically and pushed you away but this one kinda invites you in
its a meditative album, its transcendental rap to me
some of it i think is perhaps a bit too close to ambient/new age music, its a bit soporific
but ive come around to it (or ive just been influenced by all the reviews, which dont seem to have noticed that this is very diff to black up)
i think palaceer must have been listening to a lot of electronic music, some ambient techno maybe

  

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guru0509
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42. "too weird for me..i like hip hop. not whatever this is"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

-------------------
I wanna go to where the martyrs went
the brown figures on the walls of my apart-a-ment...

  

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astralblak
Member since Apr 05th 2007
20029 posts
Fri Aug-08-14 04:57 PM

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43. "LOFL. never change Guru. never"
In response to Reply # 42


  

          

.

  

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GumDrops
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44. "it does frequently sound like environmental music"
In response to Reply # 43


  

          

with raps on top of it

  

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astralblak
Member since Apr 05th 2007
20029 posts
Sat Aug-09-14 01:12 PM

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45. "I'm not even mad at that discription"
In response to Reply # 44


  

          

.

  

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AZ
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46. "dope nm"
In response to Reply # 0


          

  

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Nick Has a Problem...Seriously
Member since Dec 25th 2010
16580 posts
Wed Sep-03-14 04:42 PM

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49. "The Quietus Interview (link)"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

A Quietus Interview

Telepathic Relations: An Interview With Shabazz Palaces

Laura Snoad , September 2nd, 2014 06:05

The astral hip hop of Seattle's Shabazz Palaces conjures up a disorienting and thrilling patchwork of shifting moods and sensations. Laura Snoad speaks to vocalist Ishmael Butler about new album Lese Majesty, the science fiction of Octavia Butler, and the importance of ambiguity

Ishmael Butler, the multi-monikered vocalist of Seattle-based hip hop outfit Shabazz Palaces is not known for his desire to elucidate on the duo's musical output. In fact, in the early days of Shabazz, the identity of fellow band member Tendai Maraire as well as those of collaborators were kept anonymous, interactions with journalists were few and far between and press shots were practically non-existent. Far from a cynical marketing ploy, it came from a will to let the music alone do the talking, and a reaction against the trend for narrative-driven self-aggrandising which placed context above the music that artists were actually producing.

Although Butler's stance has somewhat softened after self-released EPs Eagles Soar, Oil Flows and The Seven New and albums Black Up and July's Lese Majesty (put out through Seattle's forward-thinking but predominantly indie and rock-led label Sub Pop), it's clear he's still uncomfortable making statements about the duo's back story or how listeners should interpret their latest offering. "A picture's worth a thousand Swerves," he raps in Lese Majesty's 'They Came In Gold', clearly a dig at the industry culture that places the worth of the artist's image above the work – in this case Black Up's 'Swerve'. You only have to tot up the number of similes Butler spouts in our interview to notice that he's a man who prefers not to talk specifics.

But unpacking Lese Majesty is a tricky business. Sonically, it's a chaotic patchwork of dark soundscapes and sci-fi synths, doped beats that slip into more traditional sultry grooves, and tribal percussion that unexpectedly arrives at energetic Miami bass. Recorded in a dilapidated old brewery that the duo transformed into a studio, Lese Majesty eschews standard verse-chorus structure, instead shifting from sonic space to sonic space with exciting and sometimes disorienting results.

Linguistically too, it's far from straightforward. Butler's complex tangles of lyric, repetition and imagery offer glimpses of meaning and familiarity that fade and disappear just as quickly as they reveal themselves. Constant allusions to masks, identity and ego mingle among quotes from Moby Dick and samples from poet Lightning Rod, and there's a host of neat linguistic plays. In 'Dawn In Luxor' for example, Butler riffs on 'Kush', nodding both to cannabis and the African kingdom that neighboured Ancient Egypt – itself a huge Afrofuturist reference point. For Butler, words are often used as a palette to create mood, to set a framework for listeners to delve into their own thought patterns or preoccupations. But this haze of meaning also makes moments of clarity all the more poignant. It's tough to think of a more straightforward and understated way of describing the buzz of initial romantic affection than the line, "We should touch and agree" (repeated frequently in 'Neotic Noiromantics'). As Butler himself espouses, it's "more complex how my patterns map".

Just after the release of Lese Majesty, the Quietus caught up with Butler to talk about latest single (with its accompanying psychedelic horror video) '#CAKE', Seattle and telepathy.


Laura Snoad: Do you feel that Lese Majesty is a departure from or evolution of Black Up?

Ishmael Butler: I guess I understand why people want to compare the last thing you did to the newest thing you did, but never really understand why. It's not like you wake up in the morning and you put some clothes on, you go to a party, and people are like, 'Why are you wearing that when you wore this the other day?' Yeah, it doesn't have anything to do with Black Up really.

LS: But I guess although you might not wear exactly the same T-shirt, there might be correlation between your style one day to the next or where you like to shop…

IB: Yeah, I guess some artists have to stick with a certain sound or formula because their fans are people who are more prone to look at music and culture like they look at buying dishwasher liquid. They want that fit or familiar feel otherwise they don't feel like it's the product that's been advertised to them. We don't really have that kind of stigma attached to us. I'm sure some people will hear it and be like, "Ah, it's not Black Up" but if they were looking for that, I don't know what to tell them. (He laughs) I'm sorry!

LS: It's a really interesting record structurally. What made you decide to separate it into seven suites?

IB: The structure was something that developed, it's not something that we blueprinted out and then filled with content like pouring cement. The titles and suites came about because certain sonic patterns pronounced themselves, and we started to see that certain tracks went with each other. Sometimes names have got something to do with creativity or you might just be high one day and something sounds good. There's not a plan, it's just a filling out of certain things, letting instinct prevail. Whatever conversation you're having with the spirits and the universe where ideas and shit come from, you just grab on to them put them down and then move on.

LS: So there's not a significance to the number seven?

IB: Oh, there is a significance to the number seven for sure. We all know what that is, or have our own thoughts and perceptions about what that number means to us to us specifically. It's important to us but I don't think it's important to the story of this music.

LS: I thought it was interesting looking at the artwork for the record - the suites are actually mapped out architecturally like rooms in a building. Is that relevant to how you saw the record come together, or were you developing patterns in other ways?

IB: Unbeknown to myself maybe, but I don't have that kind of intelligence to see those things ahead of time. I will say this, the brother than did that, Nep Sidhu, he is an architect. He listened to the album before it was done and we had conversations together about it as friends. He always comes up with things that when I see them I relate to them and recognise but I would never have come up with them myself. We're brothers and we're kind of telepathically linked, in the sense that where my skill set and his skill set meet, they have characteristics that are very similar.

LS: Lyrically, Lese Majesty is quite illusive in places. How important is ambiguity in your work and using words to create mood rather than meaning?

IB: That's interesting. The way I see it is this: a mood is much more specific, and has more weight, than a word or something that is telling you what to feel rather than providing the space for you to feel what you're going to feel inside of it. So ambiguity in a way is more specific than the way that you have been trained to understand lyric or melody. For me, exciting music, reading or artwork is something that doesn't instruct me but provides for me a place where I can find out something more about myself or the way that I feel, rather than telling me this is what you're meant to feel by experiencing this thing. We try to facilitate that. It's not even about being really ambiguous, I'm not even smart enough to do that. I'm being as specific as I can, but it's just the style that I've honed over the years lends itself to this kind of output. This is the way the land lies for us.

LS: There's a lot of allusions to being your true self in the record and yet you're interested in anonymity, and almost a kind of linguistic disguise. How to those two things balance out?

IB: I don't know the answers. This endeavour, our compulsion to make music, is also just cats getting together and searching for answers ourselves. This whole notion that musicians have information and are channelling into some higher understanding, though true, it's not specific to them. These people don't have the answers, they're not deities. The music is not coming out of us, it's happening to us. We're traveling coinciding with everyone that's listening to it. We're searching as well.

LS: Is the idea of the musician as a 'deity', or perhaps just a 'celebrity' something that concerns you? In the early days of Shabazz Palaces you didn't name band members and collaborators…

IB: Some musicians are deities, but most of them that are self-proclaimed whatever, the 'greatest', they're not. But that's now more of a marketing thing than people being serious. A lot of people have self-absorbed feelings about themselves or their contribution to society or culture. At first it was like a 'me-mania' sweeping over Western quote-unquote civilised nations and now permeating throughout the world. You, your Facebook, your Twitter, your Instagram or whatever devices you're using to keep those up – it's just "me me me, I'm this, I'm that". Everyone's crazy over photos they took on their iPhone, it's wild shit. There are really superficial, unnecessary things that are being passed off as culture. I understand that, I'm not dissing it, I got my feelings about it, but I don't think that overall it's weak and corny, although there's a lot of weakness and corniness that's involved in it. Early in Shabazz, we just wanted to make the music and let the music be what it was and forget about all the other anecdotal backstory marketing stuff and see what happened. It was more about that than being purposely mysterious.

LS: Do you feel more relaxed about talking about your history and your backstory now?

IB: Not really. I don't think it really matters, but again it wasn't about being mysterious. I'm not going to bust around acting like I'm not going to talk about it just to be difficult.

LS: Do you want to tell me about some of the ideas you wanted to explore in Lese Majesty?

IB: No, not really. If they're there, they're there to be mined by people rather than for me to issue some statement about what they are.

LS: What about the production then, it's a lot weirder than Black Up. Were there new sonic avenues that you wanted to explore?

IB: Yes, but a lot of that is intimate. The record is like a marathon. You run with as much strength as you can for a very long period of time, even when you're on tour for a year pretty much, or three years as is our case. Your mind's always in a constant state of composing, but you're not getting into the studio that much. That traveling of your mind is just as integral to the final product as actually recording. When you take time off to record and you get in the studio and it's kind of like the end of the race when you're sprinting to the finish line.

LS: Yeah, I can really feel that sense of it gathering over time, especially in '#Cake'. I really love the production on that track, it hops between this psychedelic, almost woozy feel, to then to an Anquette-like Miami Bass vibe, then there's the lovely interludes from Cat Harris-White. What inspired that track and how did come together?

IB: Well, you describe it better than I could (he laughs and then pauses).

LS: Perhaps tell me about how you and Cat started working together then?

IB: THEESatisfaction were local legends on the scene and I hadn't heard or seen them yet until my bro told me, "You got to check them out". The first time I met them it wasn't at a concert but at an art opening, where Maikoiyo Alley-Barnes had this spot called Punctuation. We had been destined to be together for quite some time. We finally met and started making music together and just hung out. This was probably 2008. We loved talking about the world and having fun with each other. Sometimes we'd find ourselves in the studio, sometimes we were on tour, but there's always a vibration coming out of her. When that track was being constructed, there was a certain part on there... I always hear Cat singing in my head, and that was one of the times where everything coincided and we were able to put something on record.

LS: THEESatisfaction are also in The Black Constellation with you...

IB: Yeah. Black Constellation is artists of all disciplines that see the world similarly, get along with each other and have a desire to protect and exalt our culture, that's African, American, musicians, men, women, lovers and livers of life. We've been around since the beginning of time in different incarnations and we have been fortunate enough to find each other in this time. We challenge, support and inspire each other to pursue our passions. We've all made it better for each other.

LS: Tell me more about the Ode To Octavia films you made with Maikoiyo Alley-Barnes and THEESatisfaction. What was it about sci-fi writer Octavia Butler's work that particularly inspired you to make the series?

IB: The brilliance, the strength, the imagination, the selflessness of her work. Her writing inspired and spoke to me and kept me company and sparked my imagination. We all have personal feelings but they all fall under that description about her. We come together on that. She's been a mother and a mentor to us. We owed it to her basically.

LS: Do you see Shabazz as part of a similar lineage, part of an 'Afrofuturist' body of work?

IB: I think it's for someone else to say other than me but I know that... I'm a product of it. I wouldn't call it 'Afrofuturism' because I don't really know what that means. But Sun Ra, Miles, and countless other people that never heard of 'Afrofuturism', I've learned from their gleanings.

LS: There are a lot of nods to Ancient Egypt on the record, obviously an important reference point for that movement, but a lot of the tracks ('They Come in Gold' especially) simultaneously deal with wealth, dissent, ego… I wondered whether there was any correlation between the struggle that the modern nation is having with corruption, with Hosni Mubarak imprisoned for embezzlement... or am I reading far too much into it?

IB: No, I think it's a compliment what you're reading into it. The function of art is to do just that. Even if these parallels aren't noticed and recognised by the people making it, the fact that they exist corroborates the connection even more than if it was common. Telepathy has been replaced by our notion of technology. Instead of being able to think along wavelengths and connect that way we've made devices that do it for us. In actuality there's always been a 'World Wide Web', a network of telepathic feelings that if you're tuned into - and open to this conversation with the universe - patterns develop. I knew what was going on in Egypt and I followed it in a superficial, marginal way, but I didn't have to follow it because I'm in tune with it, me and my peoples are in tune with it, and we're living a version of it ourselves where we're at. That you saw it is keen on your part, because than energy you saw is very real even though I hadn't even thought of the record that way.

LS: You self-released your first two EPs before signing to Sub Pop. At the time it was quite an unorthodox signing for them in some ways because they are traditionally more of an indie label. Are you still finding it a comfortable fit?

IB: Yeah, it definitely is. Sub Pop is a singularly unique entity in the sense that their approach to the business of music is that everyone, from the people who work for the label to those that record on it, share a passion, a love and energy for music. They create an environment that's comfortable. It's serious and hard work is expected, but creativity in both business and the product is expected too. It's an environment unlike any other. I love it.

LS: How do you feel about the general health of hip hop in Seattle? You obviously see a lot of new talent helping Sub Pop with A&R…

IB: Yeah it's really diverse, there's quite a few interesting people making music. But Sub Pop is international too. We've got people from all over the world signed here. We do keep an eye on things locally of course, and have a lot of pride and love for the city, but it extends all around the world as well.

LS: Is your working relationship with Tendai Maraire something you anticipate continuing for a long time?

IB: Yeah, he's my bro. He raps as well, and he's got musical ideas that he wants to pursue himself that he's doing with his Chimurenga Renaissance, but in terms of our musical brotherhood I'm sure it will continue through the years. We relate telepathically. It's rare that you find someone that you communicate with like that. We'll always be down.

Shabazz Palaces' Lese Majesty is out now via Sub Pop

Read story here: http://thequietus.com/articles/16120-shabazz-palaces-ishmael-butler-interview

******************************************
Falcons, Braves, Bulldogs and Hawks

Geto Boys, Poison Clan, UGK, Eightball & MJG, OutKast, Goodie Mob

  

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Soulroe
Member since Dec 25th 2009
1518 posts
Thu Sep-18-14 06:08 PM

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50. "This is so incredibly dope"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

I'm glad I kept on listening.

Very satisfied. I liked Black Up. But this might be even better.

___________________________________________________________
Giants, Knicks, Yankees, Rangers

  

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thebigfunk
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Sat Sep-27-14 08:10 AM

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51. "this shit is so good"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Finally got around to listening to it last week and can't stop. Also, "Motion Sickness" is probably one of their most straightforward tracks I can think of, and it's an straight up brilliant lyric.

Can't wait to put this down in a few weeks and go back to their other stuff for comparison... I expect epiphanies.

-thebigfunk

~ i could still snort you under the table ~

  

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Anonymous
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Sat Sep-27-14 08:27 AM

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52. "Co-sign on Motion Sickness"
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Nick Has a Problem...Seriously
Member since Dec 25th 2010
16580 posts
Thu Jan-08-15 11:20 PM

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53. "Am I the only one who thinks Ish and Too $hort would sound dope together..."
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Their voices and flows would go together perfectly IMO. Still bangin this album. Shit is great!

******************************************
Falcons, Braves, Bulldogs and Hawks

Geto Boys, Poison Clan, UGK, Eightball & MJG, OutKast, Goodie Mob

  

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Anonymous
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Thu Jan-08-15 11:26 PM

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54. "not a huge Too Short fan but yeah, this album is my shit"
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I don't even know why I like it so much but I constantly go back to it.

  

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thebigfunk
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Fri Jan-09-15 07:27 AM

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55. "sort of feel like this album got overlooked"
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I know it got a lot of love on some end-of-the-year lists, but feels like it came and went. Around here, never got the close-up discussion I like to see...

Still spinning this, and every listen is revelatory. Lots to appreciate on this one --- musically, lyrically, everything.

-thebigfunk

~ i could still snort you under the table ~

  

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