INSTAGRAM/STATIGRAM

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

ROLLiNGStONE - PLAYLiSt SPECiAL - MARK RONSON





When Mark Ronson was in college, a friend turned him on to Stevie Wonder's Talking Book. "She said, 'You've never heard "Maybe Your Baby"?' and I said, 'No, what's that?' " Ronson remembers. "She threw it on. I was more than dumbfounded. I thought, 'Fuck, I could have been listening to this my entire life!' " For this list, he chose the songs that move him the most. "Stevie Wonder is the only musician I know who touches every single person I've ever met, from punk kids to indie kids to hip-hop kids."
  1. "Big Brother" 1972
    I can't say enough to do justice to this song. He played every instrument on it, and he's one of the best drummers ever. There are political undertones, and an amazing chord progression — so beautiful. Then on a dime he turns it into the most awesome fucking blues melody.
  2. "All I Do" 1980
    This was a disco classic — most hip-hop DJs had that somewhere in their crate — but it became my song. I would end every DJ set with it. This could be my wedding song.
  3. "I Was Made to Love Her" 1967
    He was probably 16 when he sang this, and it's like hearing Michael Jackson sing as a child — you can't believe he could have possibly felt the pain and angst of love at that age, but the performance is so heartfelt and anguished and believable. If I'm in a certain mood and I listen to that song, all two minutes of it, it can move me to tears.
  4. "Superwoman (Where Were You When I Needed You)" 1972
    When he hits "Where are you when I needed you" on this song, it's like fucking gulp city. The swelling of the Moog and the synth, the chords, the melody – it's perfect, like "Eleanor Rigby" perfect.
  5. "As" 1976
    I played this one a lot during DJ sets too. It was like, "OK, I'm gonna throw this one on and everyone will have a soul dance-off/love-in." It's perfect; at the end he goes on a three-minute ad-lib. His ad-libs are better than most people's main melody.
  6. "I Don't Know Why" 1968
    All I can say is that this is one of my favorite vocals of all time.
  7. "Happier Than the Morning Sun" 1972
    I love the clavinet, the way it moves. Stevie was so amazing at borrowing from baroque and other classical forms of music.
  8. "That Girl" 1981
    This is very Eighties, but it's one of his classics. It starts out a bit of a sleeper, but when that chorus hits, everyone on the dance floor says, "Oh, yeah, this is the best song ever."
  9. "I Believe (When I Fall in Love It Will Be Forever)" 1972
    This is another one that makes me cry, especially when I'm with someone I love. It's so uplifting. It starts with those bossa nova- like chords he was playing so much at that point, then it lifts up into the most incredibly joyous chorus. Then there's that fucking badass coda — the meanest stomp I've heard.
  10. "Living for the City" 1973
    This one still hits me the hardest. It's the weirdest progression ever. He's layering all these keyboard tracks. Then you have the narrative that comes in about New York. It sounds like he's desperate to get his message across.

ROLLiNGStONE - tHE PLAYLiSt SPECiAL - ERYKAH BADU







Growing up in the Seventies, I was a child of the funk," says Dallas-bred Badu. "My favorite songs were happy, funky love songs: They made my heart burn, they moved me, and they made me want to boogie, too."
  1. "Don't Ask My Neighbors" The Emotions, 1977
    The singer has this voice that sounds like a primal wail, but it's very gentle and very romantic.
  2. "Natural High"Bloodstone, 1972
    This is a sweep-you-away type song. I used to hear the chorus and imagine Prince Charming. It makes me feel like spinning around and around, looking up at the sky and hoping I never get dizzy.
  3. "Aqua Boogie" Parliament, 1978
    They laid so far back on that bass. This song is some project shit, you know what I'm saying? It reminds me of pink rollers in your hair and Mama yelling, "Don't slam my screen door!"
  4. "As" Stevie Wonder, 1976
    When I hear this song, nobody else exists. The shyest person, if they got any kind of taste, will be up on the floor.
  5. "I Wanna Be Your Lover" Prince, 1979
    Radio used to play all six minutes, because it's perfect. PERIOD.
  6. "Groove With You" The Isley Brothers, 1978
    That's the barbecue jam! As a kid, it made me want to groove with somebody when I heard it — a teddy bear or something.
  7. "Mary Jane" Rick James, 1978
    Of course, I didn't know what "mary jane" referred to back when I first heard this. I thought that he was just talking about some chick! That's the beauty of allegory. Rick James has this voice that almost sounds operatic, but he uses this very simple phrasing. It's an example of a song where it doesn't take a lot to make you feel good.
  8. "Free" Deniece Williams, 1976
    Oh, my God. This is my theme song. Every summer I would go to a recreation center where we did musicals and one-act plays and such. I choreographed a dance to this song and performed it wearing a black leotard and tights. What made it great was Williams' amazing vocal range — she sang like a bird.
  9. "Our Love"Natalie Cole, 1977
    Every girl in second grade sang this at the talent show. It starts out, "You're my morning star, shining brightly beside me." It's such a sweet song, and it was so sincere, the purest song I'd heard up until that time as a child.
  10. "That's the Way of the World" Earth, Wind and Fire, 1975
    When I heard this, it was like there was something that burst out of the ground and surrounded me — like children and flowers and Africa were appearing out of nowhere. And those horns! When Maurice White's voice comes in, it sounds like the voice of God.

ROLLiNGStONE - tHE PLAYLiSt SPECiAL - DRAkE



The Canadian rapper has always admired Hendrix, but when he got a DVD of the guitarist performing at Woodstock, admiration grew into obsession: "I play it constantly on my tour bus," Drake says. "He had to play around 8 a.m., after a huge storm, but he went out there and put on one of the greatest shows I've ever seen. I love watching that before I go onstage. When I played Seattle, we drove out to his grave site. I left a note for him that said, 'Still inspired.' "
  1. "Voodoo Chile" 1968
    I use "Voodoo Child" as my nickname when I DJ. This song's just got that classic Hendrix sound. I'm very much into the lyrics — they have a real eerie vibe to them.
  2. "All Along the Watchtower" 1968
  3. "Machine Gun" 1970
    This song was a protest against the Vietnam War — it's from a time when music was being used to address real-life situations as opposed to just money and cars and women. That's what's most inspiring to me: It's revolution music.
  4. "Purple Haze" 1967
    It's one of the greatest guitar songs of all time, and it's also a classic for anybody who likes to indulge in, you know, leaving this world occasionally.
  5. "The Wind Cries Mary" 1967
    It's, like, psychedelic bluegrass rock — a sound he invented and really crafted and perfected.
  6. "Little Miss Strange" 1968
    It's got a crisper sound than most of his songs.
  7. "Hey Joe" 1967
    My guitar player and I talk about Hendrix a lot. He knows way more than I do. When I hear this song, I imagine I'm a kid at Woodstock.
  8. "Star Spangled Banner" 1970
    He's ripping the national anthem apart with a sound that's just so aggressive. You can hear his pain in his playing.
  9. "House Burning Down"1968
    Hendrix's music was very psychedelic, but it could also be nightmarish. I didn't realize until later that this song was about riots in urban communities. The burning house, the smoke: He paints a really scary portrait.
  10. "Foxy Lady" 1967
    That opening riff, it's like a drop off a cliff. I've been trying to figure out how to sample it for, like, six months now. I'm not sure if I should even touch it.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

ROLLiNGStONE - tHE PLAYLiSt SPECiAL - JACk JOHNSON



"I guess it's the island culture — I grew up listening to Marley," says Oahu native Jack Johnson. "He's royalty here." Like all true Marley freaks, Johnson has no time for Legend: "There's just so much other good stuff."
  1. "Mellow Mood" 1970
    It's one of the earlier recordings, and there's a real rawness to it that I love.        
  2. "Concrete Jungle" 1973
    This is one of the greatest album-opening tracks ever. There's a looseness at the beginning, then they land in the pocket.
  3. "Natural Mystic" 1977
  4. "Three Little Birds" 1977
    I performed this with Ziggy Marley and Taj Mahal in Hawaii this year. It's such a simple song, but Marley was the master of singing simple messages with all this heart, making them real.
  5. "Easy Skanking" 1978
  6. "Don't Rock My Boat" 1973
    It's like "Satisfy My Soul," on Legend, but it has no backing vocals and less of a dance beat, so I prefer it.
  7. "So Much Trouble in the World" 1979
    He took big issues head-on, and the way his music felt has a way of giving you hope. 
  8. "Trench Town Rock (Live at the Roxy)" 1976
  9. "Bend Down Low" 1967
  10. "War" 1976
    Marley was able to dive into politics and take on the darkest issues. That's what made him amazing. The thing is, he had sweetness in his voice, but he also had fire, and when he opened up, nobody could do it better.




SLiM jAMS 2


I must have practice this mix a million times (and it STILL SOUNDS OFF TO ME).

Again this was back in late 90’s

Again using Pioneer CDJ-700s

YES FOLKS I WAS A PROUD OWNER OF ROLAND’S DJ-70!!
(if you’re from the T Dot then you know her better as Master T’s Roxxy)

Sit back and feel my mellow smooth!



III


freezerburncompared2cool