Wednesday, January 20, 2010

African by the Bay



The video and beat off for the lead single for E-40's new Sweat/Suit-style fake double album, Revenue Retrievin' (coming out March 30th), are pretty fucking great. So's Earl's rapping, but I'm not interested in talking about that in this post. Rick Rock's beat on "The Server" is a menacing slab of industrial stomp and well placed percussion, where maracas and woodblocks and deep synth bumps sit right alongside each other. It immediately reminds me of what would have happened if DJ Quik had combined the best aspects of "9x Outta 10" and "Moroccan Blues" off BlaQKout. The video makes this combination even more apparent, where dudes in prison shank each other with turkey bones while wearing war paint, and women in the same facepaint and grass skirts shake it while dudes in bongos sit near them in the middle of some Bay Area projects. It's a pretty thrilling track and video, and 40's wordplay, twisting and sliding off and on beat, is as compelling as ever (okay so maybe I did talk about his rapping a little bit).

All of this made me wonder if Rick Rock, E-40 ,or even the director of the video have heard Chief Boima's new EP, African by the Bay. Boima's a Bay Area producer that specializes in making dance music and remixes based on African electronic music from all over the map. I copped the EP about a month ago, and while occasionally it misses the mark, it's interesting to hear how well he incorporates the bounce and synths commonly found in African electronic music genre's like Kuduro and Kwaito into rap, particularly the post-hyphy sound being produced by rappers like The Jacka and J. Stalin these days. In fact, perhaps the best remix on the album is that of The Jacka track "Fabulous Lifestyle". It's amazing how natural the extra percussion sounds within the original, adding a whole bunch of small, moving parts to the fluttery beat of the original. In fact, the one original track on the EP, "Shake Them Dreads", features a lot of the same parts found in a typical track from someone like Rick Rock or Droop-E, just arranged differently and set to a different BPM. Interesting stuff.


I wonder if Timbaland ever feels like he peaked early. At this point, some of the most unique and refreshing production is coming out of the roots of the work he did in the early 00s. I don't think anyone finds that to be a shocking statement. But it would have been interesting to see where he would have gone had he not ended up teaming with Nelly Furtado and OneRepublic, or spending an unhealthy amount of time in the gym and receiving packages from BALCO. One of the few areas of the world Timbaland never seemed to consciously promote or draw influence from was sub-Saharan Africa (to my knowledge, if any readers can point me to some of his work that does I'd love to hear it). In addition to Chief Boima, who is drawing obvious connections between Timbaland synth gurgles (I see you, Tom Breihan) that Rick Rock and Droop-E are the standard bearers of now, and African electronic music, there's also Amon Tobin's Two Fingers project. Released last year, it also works in that area of fantasy that imagines "What if Timbaland ever visited Luanda?", something Noz wrote about a lot better than me a couple months back. Truth be told I can't get into this album fully, but the instrumental "Keman Rhythm" off the album is a monster, full of buzzing synths and djembes (you really need to listen to this on a system that can handle bass, but I would hope you already knew that if you listen to rap). I'd love to hear someone like 40 or Turf Talk rap over a track like this, though I guess "The Server" is a pretty good prototype of that right now.

Below are some MP3s of the tracks mentioned, as well as another highlight off the Chief Boima album, his remix of "Money to Blow" and the newly released video for my favorite E-40 associated track from last year, D-Lo's "No Hoe (Remix)":



The Jacka feat. Andre Nickatina- Fabulous Lifestyle (Original)
The Jacka feat. Andre Nickatina- Fabulous Lifestyle (Chief Boima Remix)
Chief Boima- Shake Them Dreads
Birdman feat. Drake and Lil Wayne- Money to Blow (Chief Boima Remix)
Two Fingers- Keman Rhythm

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