Bones & Beeker - Inside A Different Mind Remix EP

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In November 2015, the Minneapolis duo Bones & Beeker—consisting
of singer-songwriter Anthony Newes and producer/multi-instrumentalist
BK-One—quietly released a self-titled gem of a debut. Hip-hop producer
BK-One (aka Brendan Kelly) had previously spent years on the road as
the touring DJ for Rhymesayers MC Brother Ali. So after releasing his
own album, BK-One reached out to Ali and other friends to help craft a
hip-hop EP out of source material from the Bones & Beeker record.
First onboard was DJ extraordinaire Cut Chemist (Jurassic 5), who is
about to drop his own album, 
Die Cut
, and is currently supporting it on a
North American tour. On the “World Behind” remix, Cut Chemist channels
turntable elders Double Dee & Steinski and offers a funky retake with
massive, moving drums.
Minneapolis neighbor and Rhymesayers affiliated rapper P.O.S. steps up
to drop a verse on the funky favorite “Each Time I Die.” P.O.S., a Doomtree
Collective member, has just dropped his own album, 
Chill, Dummy
, out
now on Doomtree.
Minneapolis Afro-futurist collective ZULUZULUU—one of BK-One’s
favorite bands—could be considered kindred spirits with Bones & 
Beeker, as both groups ditch convention and move to the beat of their
own drums. ZULUZULUU takes on “Wind-Up Dolls” and starts from
scratch, recording their own blissed-out take.
Acclaimed Rhymesayers rapper Brother Ali sprinkles the sauce on the
fan-favorite track “Heartbroken in Love”—the original song was recently
licensed for the Netflix series Easy.
Coming off his critically acclaimed album, 2017’s Brick Body Kids Still
Daydream (Mello Music), Open Mike Eagle blesses the BK-One re-edit
of “A Song for Al’s Dead Mother.” A Chicago native and friend of the
Doomtree Collective, Open Mike Eagle now resides in Los Angeles as a
member of Project Blowed.
Superblack has got the beats. Famed De La Soul producer Prince Paul, 
rapper/drummer J-Zone, and ego trip cofounder (and man-of-many-
talents) Sacha Jenkins joined forces to mess around with music. They
remix the B&B single “Lupine,” focusing on the raw drums that ground
and move forward the art and culture that is hip-hop.

1. World Behind (Cut Chemist Remix)
2. Each Time I Die (feat. P.O.S.)
3. Wind-Up Dolls (Reimagined by ZULUZULUU)
4. Heartbroken in Love (feat. Brother Ali)
5. A Song for Al’s Dead Mother (Re-Edit feat. Open Mike Eagle)
6. Lupine (Superblack Remix) Available from 30.03.2018

available digitally & vinyl March 30th Wax Poetics via Fat Beats

https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/inside-a-different-mind-ep/1353498484

VINCE STAPLES with GREG GREASE at First Avenue

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Vince Staples with special guest Greg Grease at First Avenue in Minneapolis Monday March 5th.

Vince Staples

Rapper Vince Staples has come a long way from his trying upbringing in Long Beach, California’s Ramona Park neighborhood. Releasing his critically acclaimed debut Summertime ’06 album in 2015, the then twenty-year-old saw his life turned right side up, going from being nearly trapped to having what appeared to be complete freedom.

Greg Grease

Percolating out from the southern part of Minneapolis comes the genius MC, producer, drummer and visual artist, Greg Grease. Utilizing his poetic vision of what he sees and perceives, Greg truly brings to light a sharp and refreshing new style and flow.

https://first-avenue.com/event/2018/03/vincestaples

 

AFROPUNK PREMIERE: HYPNOTIC SINGLE ‘DUES’ MARKS NEW FOCUS FOR ELECTRO-SOUL COLLECTIVE ASTRALBLAK

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Electrosoul collective ZULUZULUU has never pulled punches, and their re-emergence as astralblak finds the band pushing their sonic limits, while holding themselves accountable. The song matches a retro synth beat to one of the band’s tightest hooks. Melting synths fill out open spaces beneath a massive beat. As for the name change, it came as the result of soul searching about cultural appropriation and being true to their message as a band:

The main reason for the name change was a matter of authenticity and accountability. Being that none of us is directly related to the actual Zulu tribe of South Africa, we collectively decided that changing the name would be the most respectful course of action. astralblak is universal as in connecting with the universe, it is all encompassing in its narrative of blackness and highlights the diversity in all of our individual experiences as artists and members of the unified diaspora.- astralblak (formerly ZULUZULUU)

ZuluZuluu is now Astralblak

You went to bed a ZuluZuluu fan, but you woke up an Astralblak fan.

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The six-member Twin Cities hip-hop/R&B collective, winner of City Pages' 2016 Picked to Click poll, announced this morning that it has decided to change its name.

"The main reason for the name change was a matter of authenticity and accountability,” the group said in a statement. “Being that none of us is directly related to the actual Zulu tribe of South Africa, we collectively decided that changing the name would be the most respectful course of action. Astralblak is universal as in connecting with the universe, it is all encompassing in its narrative of blackness and highlights the diversity in all of our individual experiences as artists and members of the unified diaspora.”

You can catch the group's very last show as ZuluZuluu at Super Bowl Live on Nicollet Mall this afternoon at 4:00.

And just when I was finally starting to remember how many “u”s to spell ZuluZuluu with.