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    smifnwessun

    Explore "smifnwessun" with insightful episodes like "Episode 71- Hiero Day Interviews pt. 1- All Hail The Queen", "Episode 71- Hiero Day Interviews pt. 1- All Hail The Queen", "Episode 120 : Lessons", "Episode 120 : Lessons" and "Episode 28- Mid90's Field Trip pt. 2" from podcasts like ""Felipe's Garage", "Felipe's Garage", "Air Adam Podcast", "Air Adam Podcast" and "Felipe's Garage"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    Episode 71- Hiero Day Interviews pt. 1- All Hail The Queen

    Episode 71- Hiero Day Interviews pt. 1- All Hail The Queen

    Here it is! Part 1 of our interviews with all the phenomenal artists that were at Hiero Day 2019!  It was an incredible weekend of pure hip hop that left us all hyped to no end!  On this week's episode, we talk to Khari Senghor, & a bunch of  the Hiero Day staff, we hear from Tajai, Opio & A Plus from Souls Of Mischief, then we got to chop it up with Black Moon, & Steele from Smif-N-Wessun.  We end it off with interviews from Breakbeat Lou, Locksmith, and Benny the Butcher & Conway!  But this episode wouldn't be complete without us wrapping the Hiero Day weekend up with none other than the Queen of the podcast herself, Candice Albert!!!  Mechanics....ENJOY!

     

    FOLLOW US!

    @FelipesGarage

    EMAIL US!

    FelipesGarage@gmail.com

    WEAR OUR SHIRTS!

    www.FelipesGarage.com

     

    As always, please SUBSCRIBE, RATE, REVIEW AND SHARE the podcast!  It helps a lot!  Peace!

    Episode 71- Hiero Day Interviews pt. 1- All Hail The Queen

    Episode 71- Hiero Day Interviews pt. 1- All Hail The Queen

    Here it is! Part 1 of our interviews with all the phenomenal artists that were at Hiero Day 2019!  It was an incredible weekend of pure hip hop that left us all hyped to no end!  On this week's episode, we talk to Khari Senghor, & a bunch of  the Hiero Day staff, we hear from Tajai, Opio & A Plus from Souls Of Mischief, then we got to chop it up with Black Moon, & Steele from Smif-N-Wessun.  We end it off with interviews from Breakbeat Lou, Locksmith, and Benny the Butcher & Conway!  But this episode wouldn't be complete without us wrapping the Hiero Day weekend up with none other than the Queen of the podcast herself, Candice Albert!!!  Mechanics....ENJOY!

     

    FOLLOW US!

    @FelipesGarage

    EMAIL US!

    FelipesGarage@gmail.com

    WEAR OUR SHIRTS!

    www.FelipesGarage.com

     

    As always, please SUBSCRIBE, RATE, REVIEW AND SHARE the podcast!  It helps a lot!  Peace!

    Episode 120 : Lessons

    Episode 120 : Lessons

    lessons.

    "...educate yourself. Don't depend on your school for help."

    - Charlie Brown

    Coming to the end of the tenth year, we have an episode this month with the selected tracks centred around the theme of education - either by title, or by content. We cover a span of over thirty years of Hip-Hop, many styles, with everything from multiple MCs on a track to none at all! Do the knowledge.

    Upcoming events worthy of your attention...

    Gang Starr Foundation - Jeru The Damaja, Group Home, Big Shug @ Gorilla (Manchester), June 7th

    Hip-Hop Psych @ University of Manchester, July 15th

    Smif-N-Wessun @ Band On The Wall, August 22nd

    And one more link...

    Agent J's review of the Manchester Gods of Rap gig, featuring my photography!

    Twitter : @airadam13


    Playlist/Notes

    Smif N Wessun : The A.L.L.

    The number of times I've played this since it was released, it's sure to be in my top Spotify tracks of the year. Brilliant title track from the new Smif N Wessun album, their first in a little while, this is concentrated dopeness. Nothing hidden, just Tek and Steele putting their hearts out there on the mics with 9th Wonder providing a somewhat ominous beat. It's got a little skip to the drum track, and a perfect use of the vocal and choir-like samples. Could not have been done any better.  

    Lil Will Productionz : Another Day, Another Dollar

    The Beat Tape Project released the 36-track "Common : The Beat Tape Project" back in 2014, but it's one of their projects I only recently picked up. Lil Will comes with the crunchy drums right here.

    Slum Village : Multiply

    This was the easiest of the four operators to find, since this track still gets regular play on the iPod! Slum flip an old prog-rock sample (but only a tiny piece!) to spit some pure sex talk. Find this one on their self-titled fifth album.

    Show & A.G. ft. Lord Finesse and D-Flow : Add On

    Absolutely signature boom-bap from the 1995 "Goodfellas" album (second disk of my copy is still mysteriously missing...), with the beat magic coming from the SP and S950 of the legendary Show. The lyrics absolutely match up, with Lord Finesse opening up, D-Flow from the Ghetto Dwellas on the second, and A.G. bringing it home. 

    Soul Position : Share This

    Not something that was in my collection before this month, but I bought it as it represented "division" in this section of the show. This is very much from the early 2000s alternative Hip-Hop scene, the strain that was a little left-field even for the underground. Soul Position brought together RJD2 on the beats and Blueprint on the mic, and this is from their debut release, "8 Million Stories". If you like Anticon-type stuff, this will be right up your street!

    Wiz Khalifa : Take Away

    It was much tougher than I thought to get a track that would fit the "subtraction" theme! Eventually, Wiz' sophomore album "Deal Or No Deal" turned up the goods. Big Jerm has this one sounding big and bold, and Wiz comes off raw as he expresses the feelings that came from his then-newfound success. 

    Eric B & Rakim : Chinese Arithmetic

    When I was a kid and heard this track, I knew nothing about DJing and just imagined being able to scratch like Eric B does here - I'd say that nowadays I definitely could! An instrumental track from the debut "Paid In Full", this is pure 80s business.

    Cut Chemist : Lesson 4 - The Radio

    "Return of the DJ, Volume 1" was an absolute groundbreaker of a compilation. After years of the DJ being pushed to the back, and the demise of DJ tracks on Hip-Hop albums, Bomb Records had the great idea of doing an all-DJ album. The whole thing is an essential, but this particular track is significant not just because of how good it sounds, but because of the lineage it asserts. With the title "Lesson 4", it plants itself as the latest in the series of "Lesson" sample/break mixes as originally constructed by Double Dee and Steinski between 1983 and 1985. You might only know Cut Chemist as part of Jurassic 5, but he definitely holds it down on his own.

    The Roots : Table of Contents (Part 1)

    A short track - in fact, only half of the track as it's presented on the must-own "Things Fall Apart" album. This one is The Roots' take on/homage to "Kibbles and Bits" by Alliance - now that is digging in the crates!

    Gang Starr : As I Read My S-A

    Not the first song mentioned when the classic "Step In The Arena" is mentioned, but excellent just like all the rest. The young Guru (not to be confused with Young Guru) is fresh as ever on the mic, and DJ Premier is on production as well as cutting up fiercely on the turntables!

    Cut Chemist : Lesson 6

    Appropriately for his name, this track from "Deep Concentration" works in a bunch of chemistry samples that might just take you back to high school. The sheer volume of samples and the way they come in and out on this cut is quite something - and if you want some really deep background, check out this tape of his sketched-out ideas and sounds!

    Mark B & Blade : 24 Hours (Everyday) (Instrumental)

    There's always love for Mark B (RIP), but why this beat from the B-side of the "Ya Don't See The Signs" 12" in particular? Well, to follow up on the close of the Cut Chemist track, what is four times six? ;)

    MF Grimm : Teacher

    I love a good martial arts film, and Grimm channels that feeling on this pick from the "American Hungertriple album. JL on the production while Grimm works everything from pressure point techniques to "Fist of Legend" and "Karate Kid" into one long verse. 

    Kev Brown : Homework Part 2

    "No substitutes, but y'all students." It's a real shame that Kev Brown is retiring, because his records are so good. This isn't even him at full power but the quality is there to hear on this short track from the "Homework" LP, his long-awaited follow-up to the also mighty "I Do What I Do". Plenty of school references in this one, especially in the first part of the first verse.

    Poor Righteous Teachers : Each One Teach One

    Wise Intelligent has been on the podcast a couple of times, but this is the first inclusion of the whole PRT crew. Coming out of Trenton, New Jersey, this group hit the scene back in 1989 with conscious lyrics heavily influenced by the 5% (plenty of references in this track if you listen), and are highly respected by those in the know. This cut produced by the late Tony D from their sophomore LP "Pure Poverty" blends some reggae flavour into the mix, while Wise and Culture Freedom give us some words to live by!

    Lord Jamar ft. Sadat X and Queen Tahera Earth : Study Ya Lessons

    Unabashed Gods & Earths content here, from Lord Jamar's lone solo release, "The 5% Album". Sadat X is of course Jamar's bandmate from Brand Nubian with an incredibly deep catalogue of his own, but Queen Tahera Earth, the extra guest on here, makes her mark on her only on-wax appearance to date. Lord Jamar does a solid job on the production here too, it should be noted!

    Kev Brown & LMNO : We Got This (Instrumental)

    Went back to the "Selective Hearing" album for this beat, nice and low-key to follow the production on the Lord Jamar track without being jarring.

    Leaders of the New School : Teachers, Don't Teach Us Nonsense

    Long Island's Leaders were still young when their debut "A Future Without A Past" was released, and they may well have been writing from extremely recent experience here! As it happens, they were also influenced by a song from the legendary Afrobeat musician Fela Kuti, who years before recorded "Teacher Don't Teach Me Nonsense". While Busta Rhymes closes things here and ultimately became the big breakout star of the crew, I personally think Charlie Brown had a better verse on this particular track. 


    Please remember to support the artists you like! The purpose of putting the podcast out and providing the full tracklist is to try and give some light, so do use the songs on each episode as a starting point to search out more material. If you have Spotify in your country it's a great way to explore, but otherwise there's always Youtube and the like. Seeing your favourite artists live is the best way to put money in their pockets, and buy the vinyl/CDs/downloads of the stuff you like the most!

     

    Episode 120 : Lessons

    Episode 120 : Lessons

    lessons.

    "...educate yourself. Don't depend on your school for help."

    - Charlie Brown

    Coming to the end of the tenth year, we have an episode this month with the selected tracks centred around the theme of education - either by title, or by content. We cover a span of over thirty years of Hip-Hop, many styles, with everything from multiple MCs on a track to none at all! Do the knowledge.

    Upcoming events worthy of your attention...

    Gang Starr Foundation - Jeru The Damaja, Group Home, Big Shug @ Gorilla (Manchester), June 7th

    Hip-Hop Psych @ University of Manchester, July 15th

    Smif-N-Wessun @ Band On The Wall, August 22nd

    And one more link...

    Agent J's review of the Manchester Gods of Rap gig, featuring my photography!

    Twitter : @airadam13

    Episode 28- Mid90's Field Trip pt. 2

    Episode 28- Mid90's Field Trip pt. 2

    HAPPY THANKSGIVING, Y'ALL!!!!

    Ya boys take no days off!  We drop pods even on holidays!

    Enjoy part 2 of our Mid90's road trip, where we finish our lists, and differ in opinions here n there.  But you DON'T wanna miss the explosive ending!  We'll just leave it at that! Play this wit your mom & Grandma during turkey dinner! They'll LOVE it!

    PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, RATE, REVIEW AND SHARE THE SHOW!

    It helps us get the word out, & helps our visibility on the podcast players!

    GET YOUR TEE SHIRT, & 1 FOR YOUR MOM TOO!

    www.FelipesGarage.com

     

    FOLLOW US!

    @FelipesGarage

    @MURS316

    @CookBookthePR

    @PlatformCollection

    Episode 28- Mid90's Field Trip pt. 2

    Episode 28- Mid90's Field Trip pt. 2

    HAPPY THANKSGIVING, Y'ALL!!!!

    Ya boys take no days off!  We drop pods even on holidays!

    Enjoy part 2 of our Mid90's road trip, where we finish our lists, and differ in opinions here n there.  But you DON'T wanna miss the explosive ending!  We'll just leave it at that! Play this wit your mom & Grandma during turkey dinner! They'll LOVE it!

    PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, RATE, REVIEW AND SHARE THE SHOW!

    It helps us get the word out, & helps our visibility on the podcast players!

    GET YOUR TEE SHIRT, & 1 FOR YOUR MOM TOO!

    www.FelipesGarage.com

     

    FOLLOW US!

    @FelipesGarage

    @MURS316

    @CookBookthePR

    @PlatformCollection

    Episode 86 : Significant Figures

    Episode 86 : Significant Figures

    "I speak to your soul, and that's above money..."

    - Pusha T

    A rough month out there. With yet more ...ings of unarmed Black people by police hitting the news and galvanising protests worldwide, the issue feeds into some of this month's selection. Overall, I've got a couple of good local tracks, one song almost everyone will know...and a stack of stuff you probably don't! It's certainly not an exclusively human rights/political selection, so hopefully I'm not out of line with this month's cover art.

    Don't forget to get your ticket for Pete Rock & CL Smooth in Manchester in September!

    Episode 86 : Significant Figures

    Episode 86 : Significant Figures

    "I speak to your soul, and that's above money..."

    - Pusha T

    A rough month out there. With yet more killings of unarmed Black people by police hitting the news and galvanising protests worldwide, the issue feeds into some of this month's selection. Overall, I've got a couple of good local tracks, one song almost everyone will know...and a stack of stuff you probably don't! It's certainly not an exclusively human rights/political selection, so hopefully I'm not out of line with this month's cover art.

    Don't forget to get your ticket for Pete Rock & CL Smooth in Manchester in September!


    Playlist/Notes

    Smif-N-Wessun ft. Junior Reid : Solid Ground

    The first time I heard this, Smif-N-Wessun were performing live at The Roadhouse (RIP) and the second time, they were at Band On The Wall. Now I have my own copy of the "Born & Raised" project and I can play it at home as much as I like :) Great Beatnick & K-Salaam-produced track with the reggae influence that has marked so much of their work, highlighted by the featuring of the titan Junior Reid from Black Uhuru.

    Sven van Hees : Flute Salad

    Can't even remember how I first found out about this one, but it's a nice relaxed number from the Flemish chill-out master's "Gemini" album - good Sunday morning track.

    Freebass 808 ft. Janelle Monae : Many Moons

    Freebass 808 is a side project by Geechi Suede of Camp Lo and the group's sometime producer Apple Juice Kid, and for their first inclusion on the podcast we go to their 2008 debut release, the "MoonBass EP". At the time, I didn't really know who Janelle Monae was, but it was a great move of them to bring her in on this one - she fits the experimental vibe to a tee.

    Pusha T : Crutches, Crosses, Caskets

    Pusha is an incredibly adept MC, and what comes across in his bars here is an air of utter contempt towards anyone who thinks they can compete with him. The beat is apparently a Diddy production, and while I don't know if he was actually the man on the MPC or whatever, this is some quality work. Those muted horns work really well underneath the loosely-timed hats and tight kick drums, and where the barely-there hook comes in, you get some keyboard bass too. Straight fire from the "King Push - Darkest Before Dawn : The Prelude" LP.

    dead prez : Hip-Hop

    One of the classic Hip-Hop singles - I think most of you will know this one, or at a push, recognise the beat from a recent car advert in the UK! Truthfully - having first heard dead prez on tracks like "Selling D.O.P.E" and "The Rain & The Sun", I absolutely couldn't get my head round why this record sounded this way when it came out, and wasn't much of a fan. In fact, I passed on buying the 12" and got this on "let's get free" when that came out. Over time, this self-produced bomb grew on me, in no small part because the lyrics were always on point!

    Levelz : LVL 07

    Big crew coming out of Manchester, both in terms of their work and just sheer numbers - there are at least fourteen heads that make up this versatile collective. You'll have heard some of them on the podcast in the past, and this is pure "forms like Voltron" business, the first release from their "LVL 11" mixtape. On the mic here, we have T-Man, Sparkz, Skittles, Fox, Truthos Mufasa, Chimpo, Chunky, and Black Josh with a dizzying array of flows exploding all over the place! The production of the distinctly British-sounding, booming electronic track is headed by Biome, with Metrodome, Skittles, Zed Bias and Rich Reason all getting their oars in too. It might be a bit much to call this a modern Manchester "Protect Ya Neck", but you can't deny it's a hell of a first statement. And the video? Insanity...

    Moxiii Double Dee : Hurt

    Needed something around 80bpm here that was also kind of technological and after enjoying the production on Trae's recent "Another 48 Hours" mixtape, I sought out the men behind the beats to see if they had any instrumental projects, eventually finding the "Hurt" EP/mini-album. Not all my speed, but the Sade sample in the background on this one pulled me in!

    Joyner Lucas : BakWords

    Shout out to my man Black Robb for putting me up on this track! Interesting idea; each verse is made up of eight bars of lyrics, followed by another eight bars of (mostly) the same lyrics backwards. A kind of palindromic structure, in rhyme form! It's not perfect, but the difficulty involved in writing this way is something hard to comprehend for a non-lyricist. I've heard this likened to Nas' "Rewind", but that really is something different - a story told with time running in reverse. He's generously offered this one up free on Soundcloud, so get yourself a copy there.

    Killer Mike : Don't Die

    Many of you will primarily know Killer Mike as half of Run The Jewels, but this tale of an illegal police raid comes from "R.A.P Music", his most recent solo release - preceding the RTJ catalogue. This album was the genesis of the El-P/Mike combination, and the heavy, aggressive production of El-P matches the vocal performance perfectly. Oh, and just so you know - he really is the son of a cop.

    Aceyalone : Takeoff

    Originally coming out as part of the LA group Freestyle Fellowship, Aceyalone is a highly creative MC who's appreciated by the connoisseurs of lyricism. The 2003 "Love & Hate" album, his fourth solo release, isn't afraid to go left-field, and right here RJD2 gives him a backdrop derived from Jean Michel Jarre's "Equinoxe 4" to rhyme and rhyme over. No hook, just an absolute torrent of lyrics.

    Above The Law : 1996

    One of my (many) favourites from the outstanding "Time Will Reveal" album, I thought that for this year's commemoration of the passing of KMG that we'd go with this selection that of course is twenty years old this autumn. Cold 187um and KMG split each verse down the middle, going back-to-back over 187's ridiculously dope, dark instrumental work - once again showing he's one of the unsung heroes of the artform. This track makes me sad there'll be no more ATL releases...those contrasting vocal styles over those beats...classic.

    [Ayatollah] Cash Brown : Last Man Standing (Instrumental)

    Of the people who do recognise this instrumental, I think most will know it as the beat from Styles P and Pharaohe Monch's "The Life", but it originally came from this Major League 12", on the B-side of "Clubber Lang". I'm not sure how it came to be re-used at a time when such things were pretty uncommon, but it clearly made an impression on all three MCs.

    Above The Law : One Time Too Meny

    Back with just a piece of another ATL track which fit perfectly here, this time from the "Uncle Sam's Curse" LP, which is an expensive one to buy these days - wish I'd bought two when it came out! The creep on this beat is mean, and Cold 187 kicks a tale that some of us know all too well; being stopped by the police for no good reason. The second verse, while still a good one, kind of strays from the topic so I decided to cut it short - but it's still worth getting the full version, and the whole album if you can afford it!

    R.C. : Let The Maddness Begin

    I've seen this labelled as a Dr.Dre unreleased track, a Sam Sneed track, and as listed above - whatever it is, I picked it up in the dark, wild west days of the early 21st century internet, and as far as I know it hasn't had a commercial release, so here it is for you! It takes the same sample as Heltah Skeltah's "Letha Brainz Blo" as well as centring the "let the madness begin" lyric they use on that track. The vocalist R.C. (aka Ruben Cruz) released an album "Rubenaughty" that was so under the radar that Discogs have missed it from his discography!

    Chalk : The Ghost

    Now we come to an MC and producer from Manchester who's been honing his craft for many years! We performed together with me on the beats in his younger days, and he rose to the next level with his work with The Natural Curriculum before spreading his wings as a soloist. His first album, "One For Being Me", from which this is drawn, was as true a picture of the man and his outlook as you could imagine - one to check.

    Termanology : Sorry I Lied To You

    Going back to Termanology's first studio album "Politics As Usual" (following on from the "Hood Politics" mixtape series) for a reflective cut produced by the legendary Large Professor. Along with the low speed, check how the groups of three hi-hats - with the "fourth" missing - affects the pace. That bassline is the star of the beat though, expertly done.

    Kay & Luke of The Foundation : The Moon Sings To Me

    Glorious instrumental from the free "Laura Mvula Chopped" project, a tribute to Birmingham's own songstress! As with the rest of the tracks on it, they chop up a tune from her live performance of her "Sing To The Moon" and then add layers of extra flavour. This is a beat project that every appreciator of the artform should make time to go and download.

    Jerry Beeks : I'm A Cop (NYPD)

    Recorded in 2007, but thought this was a fairly fitting month to break this out. Jerry Beeks of Bronx Slang is a personal friend and friend of the show, and when I was more in the flow of making beats, we had a little routine of me sending him a few things, him picking from there and writing/recording his lyrics, and then me assembling everything back over this side. As I recall, I wasn't necessarily expecting him to pick this beat, which I cooked up while on a family trip with whatever records were immediately to hand - but he made it work, as always! Great lyrical approach, personifying the dirty cop and referencing real-life incidents from Eleanor Bumpurs to Amadou Diallo to the NYPD officers who acted as hitmen for the Mob (yes, really).


    Please remember to support the artists you like! The purpose of putting the podcast out and providing the full tracklist is to try and give some light, so do use the songs on each episode as a starting point to search out more material. If you have Spotify in your country it's a great way to explore, but otherwise there's always Youtube and the like. Seeing your favourite artists live is the best way to put money in their pockets, and buy the vinyl/CDs/downloads of the stuff you like the most!

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