Bespa Kumamero

I am currently on an electronic J-Pop kick.  It doesn’t take much to set me off on one of these.  All I need is one amazing song from an artist I haven’t encountered before, and I’m off and running.  I seriously need to step away from the computer, or cancel my credit card before I do more damage to my bank account.  Fortunately, I realize that there has to be a limit to this phenomenal music…. right?  Artists can’t be creating fantastic music faster than I can discover it.  If that’s not true, I will need to get another job.

Bespa Kumamero “Kimi Ga Inai Asa”

Old School Rap Song of the Week! (Part 7)

Speaking of jazzy beats and smooth lyrical content:

Our next entry takes us to the early 90s… about 25 years ago to make you feel old. I don’t have a lot to say about these guys that isn’t relatively obscure. Pete Rock is still in the game as a big-time producer. CL Smooth… not so much. He should be with his voice and lyrics.

This song is about remembering a fallen brother. It’s got a good message overall.

Becky’s Goth Club Classics #5

In honor of the North American solar eclipse today, a song written about a solar eclipse.  I will not get to see the full eclipse from where I am today, but I know a few people who’ve traveled to be in the path of full totality.  I know that pictures won’t be remotely adequate to convey the awe-inspiring imagery, but I’m looking forward to seeing them anyway.

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Old School Rap Song of the Week! (Part 6)

Yoyoyo Old School Heads,

Here we go with this week’s entry. This is from one of the favorite Emcee / DJ duos of the 80s. It’s not everyone’s favorite group, but they are credited with being extremely influential. “The God Emcee” Rakim and his DJ Eric B! Rakim is constantly listed in the top 5 all-time for lyricists. Enjoy!

Becky’s Goth Club Classics #4

I actually don’t think I’ve ever heard this song in a club, but its genealogy is such that I’m sure it was played somewhere.  The band is The Tear Garden.  Members of the band come from Skinny Puppy and Legendary Pink Dots, and the album was produced by another member of Skinny Puppy.  Thus any goth club kid who cared to trace the familial relationships across bands should’ve known about this artist.  It’s certainly how I found out about them.

I had completely forgotten about this beautiful little song until I stumbled upon it in a playlist on 8tracks.  One of those moments in which you are reminded of something you lost but never realized was missing; because in the cascading passage of time you can’t keep track of everything.

Becky’s Goth Club Classics #3

Perhaps fittingly for this blog site, one of my all-time favorite clubs songs is written by Keith Arem, who has gone on to write soundtracks for video games, including Call of Duty and Titanfall.  While 1990’s pop music sucked (have you ever seen a 90’s music club night?), 1990’s industrial represented the glory days of the goth club scene.  It was gritty, aggressive, spare, and provocative.  We weren’t looking for oontz, oontz rhythms, or generic melodies and well-worn lyrical themes.  We just wanted something raw.

This song delivers that for me.  To this day, it evokes the emotions that I felt as a twenty-something when I hear it in the club, albeit somewhat muted.

Contagion “Scratch”

Becky’s Goth Club Classics #1

At a club not too long ago, on the song request list, someone requested “Old-school music, because we’re old.”  The club music world has evolved considerably since I first set foot in a dance club at the tender age of 15, in 1991.  Back then, there were clearly delineated genres, with distinct names that meant something specific.  Now the genres have seemingly blended together, often incorporating broadly-accessible pop elements that were defiantly not present in the music of my disaffected youth.

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Heaven60

There was never any question that I would post a song from Anything Box.  The only thing I wondered was which song I could possibly choose as representative of them.  A song that could possibly have the emotional weight I would want to share, along with a video that encompassed the artistry and conveyed the personality.  Anything Box has an extensive catalogue (both under the Anything Box moniker and under other names, with a couple side projects worth noting).  Their sound has evolved over time as well.  Many people mistakenly consider them an 80’s band.  Technically, they were around in the 1980’s.  But their initial entry onto the national music stage occurred in 1990, with the release of their album “Peace” on Sony Records.

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Old School Rap Song of the Week! (Part 4)

“It’s been 4 weeks and you haven’t done a Run DMC song?!”

That’s right. And now you’re going to have to wait longer for mentioning it. Next time you’ll be more patient.

Anyway, from the same era comes a man who is considered one of the top 10 emcees of all time. This somehow still current star used to ghost write songs for Run DMC at age 15 in the 1980s! Are you kidding me?! He went on to have a very successful music, TV, and movie (somewhat) career.

Ladies and gentlemen: LL Cool J

Engel (Evangelion AMV)

Rammstein has played Madison Square Garden, so I assume they are well-known.  I’ve never seen them live, though they are playing Long Island next year in June, so perhaps that will change.  I’m a fan, but not to the point where I’d seek out rare singles and travel to see them perform.  The real point of this post is to share with the baveblog.org audience the glorious wonder that is the anime music video someone created for this song.

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