Club Infinity – New York City’s premiere club night for future-minded dance music from around the world – is back this month! Come hear the newest mutations of House, Garage, Dancehall, Crunk, and everything in between. Brought to you by resident DJs Dre Skull and Kingdom, with special guest Dubbel Dutch and a live MPC performance by Dipset’s AraabMuzik.

Check out this video of AraabMuzik live on an MPC to see what you can expect.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4I8wQmoPqRQ

WHEN : Saturday, September 18th
WHERE : Santos Party House // 96 Lafayette St
DOORS : 11pm
COVER : $5 with RSVP ($10 at the door)

September 1st, 2010

Natalie Storm Vs Redlight

A couple of weeks back we posted on Bristol boy Redlight’s latest big offering for the dancefloor: the MDMA riddim. Now the riddim has made its way to JA, where ex-TNT crew member Natalie Storm has done what Ms. Dynamite did over in the UK: put a talented female vocal to that dirty bassline. It bang bangs.

Natalie Storm’s mixtape (from the mighty Federation Sound and Prodigal – Perfect Storm) will be hitting the net at the beginning of October. Hold tight.

[audio: http://www.mixpakrecords.com/mp3/Natalie%20Storm%20-%20Bang%20Bang.mp3]

Natalie Storm – Bang Bang (mp3)

I believe in Bonjay.

Not only are they some of the most fiercely creative, humble, genuine and ridiculously talented artists reorganizing the borders and boundaries of dancehall today, but their forthcoming  fall 2010 EP “Broughtupsy” is set to turn heads. As in, a lot of heads (think “global takeover” status). I got a chance to talk to Alanna and Pho from Bonjay about versatility, fake patois, making post-exorcism music, and dreams of a posthumous Arthur Russell collaboration. Also, if you haven’t already heard Broughtupsy’s fantastic kinetic spooky stomper “Stumble”, you should absolutely download it here.

Interview by Brendan Arnott (my text in bold).

How was life breathed into the idea of Bonjay? Talk a bit about your roots.

Pho: I grew up really into hip hop and that eventually led me to all the original weird soul and funk samples, dancehall, and bass music out of the UK. There used to be a show on TV here called “Xtendamix” that would play hip hop, R&B and dancehall videos. It was hosted by a guy called Master T who completely took the screwface out of those scenes – he was friendly on-camera, his co-host was a synthesizer, and he would sometimes host the show dressed as “his Scottish cousin McT” (he was black). Watching him inspired me to start deejaying because here was a laidback, intelligent guy who could joke around with all the biggest names in hip hop and dancehall and R&B. I figured if he could be himself and get deeply involved in music then I could too.

Alanna: I definitely picked up the same Xtendamix influence as Pho. Everyone in our generation of Canada did. When we were little, music wasn’t so Internet-based and Muchmusic was still the main outlet to expose kids to cool new music. So every Saturday we all watched Master T play low-budget dancehall videos alongside Kardinal and Monica.

But my singing and music roots originally come from the church. I started singing gospel music when I was eight. Looking back, I was lucky to have the training that I did – church is like boot camp for musicians. During competition season I would sometimes spend 30 hours a week rehearsing. We had poor equipment and weren’t always that refined, but our teachers experimented a lot with our sound and we always tried new things with harmonies and arrangements. I remember singing in the large ensemble at one teen competition. We were an anglo West Indian gospel group, but we sang in French too and we added the vocal riff from the Fugees version of ‘Killing Me Softly’ to the end of our tune.

I spent part of my childhood in Ottawa, which is a mix of French and English. And my Mum ran a short-stay foster home growing up, so we had kids pass through who were everything from Portugese to African to Inuit. It didn’t necessarily inform my musical influences, but it definitely planted the seed for trying new things

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August 28th, 2010

Rude Gyal Riddim

Remember that scorcher of a bashy ‘Rude Boy’ remix featuring Agent Sasco? Now Board House Records have made it into a full blown riddim, naturally titled the Rude Gyal Riddim. And who’ve they got to voice? Only JA’s finest rude gyals from the Ward 21 camp: Tifa, Timberlee, and D’Angel. Some serious feminist vibes gwaning here, from Tifa’s ‘Me love you, but me love me more’, to Timberlee’s goodas (and she’s still rocking that Clueless accent in the opening lines just like she did in the embarrassingly catchy ‘Heels’), while D’Angel goes straight in for the ‘fasten your seatbelt for this rude gyal’ line. The shoes on their feet, they bought ’em.


D’Angel – Rude Gyal


Timberlee – Goodaz


Tifa – Greedy Greedy

August 25th, 2010

Oneman’s new label

We’ve caught wind that Oneman’s new label will drop its first release – FIS-T’s ‘Night Hunter’ – next month. Alls we know is it’s going to be called 502 Records and it’s probably going to be awesome.