Sound Verite Records present Greg Grease / Muja Messiah / Lady Midnight at Icehouse Feb.1st

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Sound Verite Records present @greazygreg / @mujamessiah / @iamladymidnight with @DJJustNine & @DJKeezy612 at @icehousempls Thurs. Feb.1st

City Pages ' The week's 7 best concerts: Jan. 29 - Feb. 1

Thursday 2.1

Greg Grease, Muja Messiah, Lady Midnight @ Icehouse
Last year, the multitalented MC/producer/drummer Greg Grease of ZuluZuluu dropped his excellent solo album Down So Long, local rap veteran Muja Messiah added two excellent EP collaborations with Roc Marciano to his catalog, and stylish R&B visionary Lady Midnight worked with Afro-Keys to release the great Parables of Neptune EP. In other words, if you want to know where Minnesota hip-hop and soul are headed in 2018, your attendance here is required. With DJ Just Nine and DJ Keezy. 10 p.m. $10/$12. 2528 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis. More info here.—Keith Harris

http://www.citypages.com/music/the-weeks-7-best-concerts-jan-29-feb-1/471560814

 

https://www.icehousempls.com/events/2018/2/1/greg-grease-muja-messiah-lady-midnight

MUJA MESSIAH "SARAN RAP" ALBUM PROD BY ROC MARCIANO PRE-ORDER

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Muja Messiah's Saran Rap EP produced by Rco Marciano via Man Bites  Dog Records.

ABOUT SARAN RAP

Muja Messiah sounds cold, calculative, and collected on Saran Rap, the newest collaborative EP between him and Producer/Rapper Roc Marciano.  Over a breezy 18 minutes, soulful and jazzy loops are stirred into an addictive tour-de-force of letha lyricism and random musings.  "Stand Up" featuring Stones Throw affiliate Oh No shows both artists trading lyrics over a whirring and whimsical sax loop, whereas "The Climate" is over a Blaxploitation-esque backing that is sparse and bubbling, along with Guilty Simpson's gritty and chilling delivery.

ABOUT MUJA MESSIAH

Minneapolis rapper/songwriter Muja Messiah has been on the radar internationally releasing his legendary album God Kissed It, The Devil Missed ItThe Angel Blood Soup MixtapeLemuria (2015 with Villa Rosa) and the collaborative project 9th House with I Self Devine (Rhymesayers Entertainment) in which Pitchfork proclaimed it as “...the record the Cities have created for themselves.” Muja headlined The Red Eye Tour the summer of 2016 and touched down bringing his visceral stream of consciousness raps to the masses in locations such as the Ukraine, Czech Republic, Israel, Italy, and Cuba. 

https://www.manbitesdogrecords.com/blogs/news/muja-messiah-saran-rap-album-prod-by-roc-marciano-pre-order

Zuluzuluu's Greg Grease on his new solo album, his love for the Mississippi River — and what it means to be a WZRD

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Greg Grease is a wizard.

As one-sixth of the Minneapolis nouveau-funk collective Zuluzuluu, the 31-year-old MC and drummer helps concoct heady cauldrons of afro-futurist flavors, drawing from Prince, West Coast synths, and a modern hip-hop sensibility. 

Grease and the Zuluus are all wizards, though he and his compatriots in esoterica spell it “WZRD.” And the meaning isn’t always easy to pin down, even for him. “Man, it can mean a lot of different things, y’know?” Grease said.

“I’m trying to think of a way to explain it without just getting more into that like ‘it’s all about alchemy and science…’” Grease laughs. “But it is, though!” 

A “WZRD,” he says, is someone who can adapt to any surrounding, who can make something out of nothing.

“WZRD” isn’t their only shared vernacular among Zuluzuluu. The word “matrix” gets thrown around a lot, too. It’s also a versatile term. It can be the city of Minneapolis itself or the hyper-connected world.

And when Grease gets too worked into the matrix, the signals can be too much for him to process. So he escapes to the nearest farthest place he can: the Mississippi River. 

“Ever since I was young I’ve always kind of been a loner,” Grease said. “So I would like always hop on my bike and just bike down to the river and walk around there by myself. And then as I got older I found more people that liked to do the same thing. So that’s how I spend most of my time in the summer when I’m not doing music or working.”

Down by the riverside, everything comes to pass – even the headaches caused by the mixed signals and crossed wires of the matrix. On his recent track, “Migraine,” Grease hits out at the people and distractions that would drag him beneath the surface. Over a dense, slogging beat that feels a bit like being underwater, Grease drawls out the last word of each line: “They trying to drag you through the mud/ drown you in a flood/ trying to kick you like rug/ trying to take your plug/ only pretending like you buds/ so they can come up/ claiming to give you a hand up/ only to leave you slumped.”

The time Grease spends by the river might seem like he’s on furlough, but he contends it’s about work. “If I was on vacation all the time I’d have vacation music, or party music,” he said. “I don’t party, though…”

While Grease can make songs that get crowds moving, the majority of the music he makes is designed for slow cars or solo bike rides. It’s introspective headphone music that helps him — and his listeners — to reflect.

full story at MinnPost

https://www.minnpost.com/arts-culture/2017/10/zuluzuluus-greg-grease-his-new-solo-album-his-love-mississippi-river-and-what-i