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something will happen at 3 hours and 33 minutes on 3 March 2033, which will make it 03:33, 3/3/33. I don't know what. I don't know how. but something major will happen.
I can foreseen the fulfillment of my the visions.
Lailah Gifty Akita
which yasuahri ship do you have according to the universe?
aries- foxfire/high noon
taurus- rising legend/truth dragon
gemini- arcade/battle boss
cancer- star guardian/odyssey
leo- immortalised legend/genesis nightbringer
virgo- dynasty/foreseen
libra- ruined king/sea dog
scorpio- coven/prestige inkshadow
sagittarius- snow/blood moon
capricorn- midnight/nightbringer
aquarius- arcana/inkshadow
pisces- spirit blossom
this really is riff on riff, crazy ass crossover hc that doesnât suck
Live Review: Frozen Soul with Creeping Death, Foreseen and Overthrow at The Underworld, Camden, London (12/02/2024)
Its a chilly Monday night in London and things are about to get a lot colder as we head to The Underworld to check out the icy death metal outfit, Frozen Soul. The Texas based band are a few dates into a huge European tour and this is the first of 5 shows here in the UK with Bristol, Manchester, Glasgow and Birmingham next in line before they head to mainland Europe. Well known for theirâŚ
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Georgia Anne Muldrow Interview: Rhythm Is A Form of Gravity
Photo by Antoinette A. Brock
BY JORDAN MAINZER
âThe people keep you fresh. They keep you on your toes,â Georgia Anne Muldrow told me over the phone last month. The prolific L.A. musician, whose output ranges from experimental hip-hop to neo soul to jazz and everything in between, is releasing her fifth record in four years on Friday, and the third overall in her beats series. VWETO III (FORESEEN + Epistrophik Peach Sound) follows last yearâs Mama, You Can Bet! (released under the name Jyoti), 2019â˛s collaboration with Dudley Perkins and VWETO II, and 2018â˛s acclaimed, Grammy-nominated Overload. Unlike any of the previous albums, it was put together with some âcalls to actionâ in mind.
Thought some of the songs were around for longer, VWETO III as an entity was made last year, âover a course of time where things were changing in terms of different recording techniques I was trying,â said Muldrow, harking back to techniques and inspirations from her early years of music making. The record was also, obviously, formed during a global pandemic that caused folks to lock down, and Muldrow is conscious to giving listeners opportunities to reach out on her very active Instagram account. Each of the albumâs singles have been paired with those aforementioned calls to action. âUnforgettableâ, which combines 80â˛s-sounding synths with 90â˛s G-funk, calls for vocalists to submit performances to go along with Muldrowâs vocals on the song. âMufaroâs Gardenâ, inspired by an illustrated folktale book called Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters, asks for visual artist submissions. On the day of the albumâs release, Muldrow will ask for dance submissions to âSlow Dragâ, a throwback Hammond-guitar-piano ditty named after the juke joint dance of the same name. Next month, itâll be âAction Grooveâ, with calls for turntable scratch ânâ sampling remixes from DJs. And itâs not just the singles that exemplify Muldrowâs desire to connect with listeners on a granular level. Many of the songs on VWETO III refer to or are inspired by specific eras, from the Afrofuturist jazz of âAfro AFâ to the genre tribute âBoom Bap Is My Homegirlâ. That the titles are clearly referential, too, like âOld Jack Swingâ or âSynthmania Rockâ, shows that Muldrowâs not winking and nodding or trying to fool us, earnestly inviting us to dive in.
Moreover, VWETO III is coinciding with what Muldrowâs calling the Teacherie, classes sheâs trying to develop to spread knowledge of what sheâs learned throughout her own career, everything from philosophy to instrumental-specific classes. Right now, from her saved Instagram story called âTeacherie!,â you can take an assessment to fill out what youâre interested in. âIt helps me to see what skill levels people have and what they want to learn in the class,â Muldrow said. âI seek to continue to stay open enough to make relevant music and have relevant things to share with people.â Overall, Muldrow is the type of artist that uses online platforms the way theyâd be used in an ideal world. Her use of NFTs, too, is noble; the album art by Cape Town-based Breeze Yoko is being auctioned off, with 50% of proceeds going to prison abolitionist organization Critical Resistance. Even when the offline world returns--Muldrowâs slated to play Pitchfork Music Festival on Saturday, September 11th--Muldrowâs created a blueprint for navigating an increasingly isolating digital world, by seeking out real connections.
Below, read my conversation with Muldrow, edited for length and clarity, as she discusses making the record, being inspired by African rhythms, the influence of Digital Underground, and why her work logically extends into prison abolition. You can also catch her tomorrow on Bandcamp Live at 8 PM CST.
Since I Left You: Why did you decide this was a good time to revisit your beats album series?
Georgia Anne Muldrow: The people love it, you know? I always like to post beats on Instagram and share my poetry or state of mind of whatâs going on in the world according to my people, and provide a place of joy and uplift. The voice of the people kind of determined what songs were on there. There are some songs that nobodyâs ever heard. Different ideas, something a little bit more energized.
Something for the people. Itâs really great that I have direct contact with them. Some of the songs are things I like to try based on the vibes I get from their feedback. Itâs great; itâs a beautiful thing for me. Iâve gone through phases where critics love me, but the voice of the people that really support your work is really cool to hear. Itâs like a little focus group. I just like sharing my music with folks because itâs my way of contributing love energy to the world in a direct, immediate way.
SILY: A lot of folks are still staying home and needing that connection. Youâre connecting with them but also providing a platform for them to connect with each other.
GAM: Yes. Iâm way into that and seek to be expanding that in an even more literal sense with my classroom project [Teacherie], like a live webinar sort of thing, that enables folks to speak amongst themselves. A more extended form of what I do on social media. An intimate look at whatâs really going on in music. They can see where my emotions end and the music begins and try to make things seamless within their own music. Teach what Iâve picked up along the way, because I wonât be here forever. Spreading the love but the knowledge, too, with the music that I share. Thereâs a certain quality that you can achieve if you have patience.
SILY: Did you always know you wanted to do these calls for action, like for vocalists on âUnforgettableâ? And how did you decide which tracks you wanted to do them for?
GAM: Itâs definitely my way of trying to promote some sort of hip hop jam in lieu of the isolation that folks are weathering...Iâm really inspired by the early age of hip hop where everyone had different dances. They brought their art books to the hip hop jams. The jackets with the art on it, the MCs rapping. The breakdancing, the DJs. All of the different things in place for it to be complete. Thatâs part of what got me hooked on production. One night years ago, [when I first played] my stuff, and folks started to dance, it got me hooked--to make somebody move. Somebody can rap over this, somebody can dance to this or draw to this. Thatâs the reason for the calls to action. Opening up a hip hop jam all over the world. I hope it gains some momentum. That would be nice, for more people to put themselves out there. But I do understand we live in different times right now and people are trying to get by. I still have to post some of the artists from âMufaroâs Gardenâ and these rap videos from âUnforgettableâ.
SILY: Youâre giving people an opportunity, even if theyâre just trying to get through the day, to take a break or have a beneficial creative exercise.
GAM: Yeah. Being creative together, and togetherness. The thinking that the songs arenât complete without dance. Lyrics are a certain kind of fulfillment of music. But the movement of the body is another one. [It] goes back to gravity. Drummers harness the power of gravity and manipulate it so things can fall at a certain time. Same thing with dance--[dancers] donât manipulate gravity, but interact with it and create an interdependence with it. When somebodyâs dancing, they come back down to the ground, and you could let that go and let gravity guide what your dance looks like. Rhythm is a form of gravity--a form of gravity engaging with life. I feel like movement is the fulfillment of all the arts. I just seek to do my part.
SILY: You mentioned being inspired by a specific early era in hip hop, and thereâs a lot on here inspired by genre or era-specific trends, like the G-funk in âUnforgettableâ and âBoom Bap Is My Homegirlâ.
GAM: [Boom bap] is one of the things that I specialize in. Itâs a home base for me. In my experience, itâs a very African point of access. A lot of the boom bap rhythms are straight from Africa. Most of them are. Off the shores of West Africa. I heard so many of them, from The Gambia, Senegal, Mali. Over there, you hear so much of it. I want to be part of that. At the same time, I might wake up and make a free jazz record. I donât feel like a traditionalist; I just want to preserve the culture of Black music from this hemisphere. I love traditional ideas, but itâs not like Iâm gonna do this one idea for the sake of staying in a lane. Thereâs no place that Black music hasnât influenced, molded, shaped, nurtured.
SILY: When was the last time you were able to perform in Africa?
GAM: I believe it might have been 2017. These years have started to run together. I donât mind it, though. Keeps me young. [laughs]
VWETO III cover art by Breeze Yoko
SILY: How did the songs on here with vocals come together, whether the ones with your singing or the ones with featured artists? Did the words or beats/melodies come first?
GAM: The beats came first except for âShanaâs Backâ. Shana Jensen is my sister; sheâs the mother of my niece. Every time sheâd come over and I had an idea to compose songs around her, theyâd end up being huge songs. Sheâd be like, âBye!â [laughs] I guess she wanted something a little more understated. Iâd always end up doing big Motown sounds. Thereâs a song on The Blackhouse called âShanaâs Grooveâ. Itâs a like a reoccurring situation and character. Itâs kind of funny at this point.
The other ones, like âUnforgettableâ, Iâm very much matching the vibe, the punk-funk aesthetic. Sometimes a little hook just pushes it over the edge and gets them into the mindset I was in when thinking about it. Other songs like âLove Callâ I just wanted to sound like it was in an arena. Arena rock, funk, Digital Underground-inspired, all the way.
SILY: Are you a big Digital Underground fan?
GAM: I think it shows in a lot of the music I make. I donât think I can hide it. This record has so many examples of that. I love Shock G so much. He was so bad, as a thinker, a philosopher, a community builder, artist, pianist, maestro. The âLove Callâ groove, âUnforgettableâ, â[Old] Jack Swingâ, you can hear it. I was raised with that kind of music in my head as a child. Unashamed to be funky and make a groove have extra grease on it. Thatâs what distinguished our sound from other regionâs sounds. Getting greasy. While still doing the boom bap and all that other stuff. For me, it was always a goal to represent where Iâm from in my music in a non-traditional way. Bringing what I love about the West Coast to whatever I was working on.
Shock G lives in all of us. He brought so many different vibes. A rhythmic pocket that breathes. Somewhat right under "Atomic Dogâ. It keeps you moving. It has a breath of life in it. Iâm so thankful to have lived in an era where I could hear and experience his work.
SILY: How did âAyun Vegasâ come together?
GAM: Ayun is my little brother. I think Iâve known him since 2014 or â15. Heâs quite a talent. I love his style. Heâs from [New] Jersey. I love his sense of rhythmic dynamic. His use of metaphor, double entendre. I feel like heâs really a gifted poet. He can do all types of different things. Heâs an amazing MC--he just released a project with Jacob Rochester called Slaps & Hugs. Iâm gonna lean towards people who are creative themselves and insert themselves into everything they do.Â
Ayun is very secure in being different. He came out to Vegas, and I had this song. Usually, when I play leftfield stuff, MCs want that beat they can crush and not feel challenged by. This song is really old. I feel like it was made in 2016. I feel like that was the first time when somebody was willing to rap on an idea that was out of the ordinary. Itâs not just in your face. Itâs something different, but I want you to rap for your life on this. Something more like a movie score, where you find your character. He did it! He didnât leave one beat behind.Â
Heâs rhythmically gifted and quite the poet. He almost went into pro football but he chose music. Heâs a very enterprising brother, doing all types of apparel. He was working in the visual artist community, in the videographer community. Any time I can showcase what it is that he got to share, Iâm there. Heâs not afraid to speak the truth. This verse is impressionistic. Itâs like somebody is taking a really big brush and making a beautiful image, strong-arming it. Itâs dope. I love it.
We did another song together on the Overload album, but it didnât make the cut. The Japanese version of Overload has a song called âWhat Can We Do Nowâ, and it has Ambrose Akinmusire, Ayun, and me. Iâd love for that to be heard stateside, because itâs definitely about whatâs happening over here.
SILY: Why did you choose to have the proceeds for this record go to Critical Resistance?
GAM: Iâve always wanted my music to be a tool for the motion of people. It doesnât stop with dance and rapping and singing and drawing. It begins with that. Where it ends up, the movement of people coming into their powers, truths that in order to have a more humane society, we are going to have to throw some of this bullshit away. The spoils of enslavement. Weâve got to get rid of those spoils so we can get to a more realistic place of folks being cognizant of the activities that they take a part in. Jails ainât gonna help people feel like theyâre part of the community. They cage people and endanger their lives and run the risk of ruining somebodyâs mental, emotional, and spiritual state even if they did commit the crime theyâre in there for.
Thereâs a sense that all crime is committed from a place of fear. Many crimes people are locked up for is just folks trying to find a way. I donât see how more fear is going to rehabilitate. The idea that punishment leads to enlightenment. People in the public school system are taught about some of the baddest people that ever lived--mass murders. But theyâre not the type of people held accountable. Theyâre who brought over the imprisonment systems from their failed nations.
I donât believe in reform at all. Critical Resistance seeks to abolish prisons as we know them. I love that their resolve is so sure and bold.
Photo by Antoinette A. Brock