Hey producers, remix this dance party starter from Miami Horror and win some elite studio equipment. Here's now...
In dark times daring to hope for a brighter future is a revolutionary act. Welcome to Big Gigantic's new album featuring Logic, Waka Flocka and many more.
Mark Foster heard that a Japanese high school found refuge in music after bullying almost drove her to suicide. This is the story of what happened next
The story behind the legendary group's most innovative and independent album of their 30-year career.
A conversation with RATKING’s Sporting Life about reality bending, world connecting and the state of New York City hip-hop.
“It’s my version of some Wu Tang shit. They had kung fu, if I could have manga that would be totally ill. It’s breaking new ground with an old idea.”
A former Disney star's journey to independent freedom begins with a haunting new single.
Those words could only come from one man - Gucci’s back!
For The FADER’s Fall Fashion issue, they focused on people transforming their lives as they pursue their ideal selves. In Atlanta, Gucci Mane emerges from an extended prison stint sober, healthy and focused on achieving hip-hop immortality. In L.A., Charli XCX attempts to embrace her true rebellious self in the context of pop stardom and Branden Miller reckons with the reality of his personna Joanne the Scammer stepping into the internet's spotlight.
And that’s just the start. In addition, The FADER 105 includes stories about the life of Denis Cuspert, the jihadist formerly known as German rapper Deso Dogg, as told by his friends, a look inside the world of Atlanta dancers Meechie and Toosi and much more.
Download your copy here. Watch more from the FADER on BitTorrent Now app, available on Android and iOS.
The FADER Issue 105
01 Gucci Mane Interview (Video)
02 Lil Yachty "Good Day" Dance ft. SheLovesMeechie & Yang Quan (Video)
03 The FADER Issue 105 (PDF)
Frank Ocean is, without dispute, one of the most fearless artists of our age.
Certainly there are no shortage of other artists pushing the boundaries of creativity to the breaking point. Members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot were sentenced to two years in a penal colony for performing an anti-Putin song in a Moscow cathedral, and despite his staggering international renown, we still don’t know the true identity of Banksy.
Those are just two off-the-cuff examples among thousands of artists defying commercial, artistic and political limitations to a depth that even the almighty Ocean has yet to swim, but Ocean also sits in an extremely rare position.
Both the outsider and the GRAMMY-award winner, the recluse and the platinum seller, Ocean shoulders the unique burden of attempting to break convention while millions scream-tweet their demands for his art, and the weight of expectation and pressure had to feel suffocating at times. Perhaps all the time.
The easier, completely understandable response to that kind of pressure is to simply never release anything at all (see also, Detox, Andre 3000, etc.), and for years it appeared as if Ocean was heading down a similar path, but over the last three days he proved to be the rarest of exceptions; the recluse who willingly leaps back into the spotlight.
Not only did Ocean return, but he did so on his own terms. This wasn’t a surprise album release, and it wasn’t even a surprise album release paired with a visual film or Madison Square Garden runway show, a la Lemonade or The Life of Pablo. This was a cryptic, Endless visual album of Ocean building a staircase that, given the fervor for new music from the man, bordered on trolling, followed by an album release, Blond, that’s sure to go down as one the year’s best, paired with a magazine release, Boys Don’t Cry, that served as an extension of the album, or vice-versa.
Turns out the man had much more than just twooo versions.
Whether Ocean actually intended to teach the world a lesson about patience and respecting the artistic process or not, the effect was a powerful poke in the eye to both commercial and fan expectation, a multimedia experience that, without exaggeration, helps redefine not just what an “album release” can look like, but what it looks like the be an artist in 2016. Far more so than even the aforementioned Kanye West, Ocean is seemingly beholden to no one’s vision, demands or constraints but his own.
Except…for Apple Music.
Even though Ocean put out Blond as a joint venture with his own label, Boys Don’t Cry, even though he gave away the Boys Don’t Cry magazine for free, even though he spent years crafting a complex artistic work that was clearly unconcerned with any workings of the traditional music industry, when it came to distributing his visual and sonic work, he turned to the largest publicly traded corporation in the world.
We couldn’t have asked for anything more from Frank Ocean, it’s completely unfair to ask for more, but I still can't help but have hoped for more.
To paraphrase David Foster Wallace’s paraphrasing, two young goldfish are swimming in a tank when an older goldfish passes them and says, “Water’s warm today, huh boys?” In response, the two young goldfish turn to each other and ask, “What’s water?”
Distribution to artists is often water to goldfish, a fundamental necessity so pervasive, so all-encompassing that it often goes unthought about. And for all of Ocean’s fearless creativity, for all the wars he waged over artistic and commercial freedom, for all the countless hours (actually, if we do count there have been more than 3,600 hours between Channel Orange and Blond) spent gathering collaborators and meticulously tweaking mixes, releasing the project through Apple Music, or Spotify, or TIDAL, or any company fighting not for art but for market share, feels distinctly and jarringly like a business decision, a capitulation to the “new rules” that are really just the old rules under a new URL.
Releasing his album through Apple Music brings up more issues than the ones we've already heard in terms of exclusivity shutting out fans, although there’s certainly a case to be made there. On an artist-level, artists are also allowing giant corporations to control all their consumer data in a way they would never allow a record label to control their music.
Apple, or any streaming company, knows exactly who listens to Blond. They know their email address and their age and where they live and how much they make a year and much more, information that’s the true reason Apple has a music streaming platform at all. That’s enormously valuable information Frank Ocean could use to directly reach fans, furthering enabling him to make the kind of art his supporters love with even less corporate interference, but Frank Ocean has no idea who the millions of people who listed to his own album are.
Signing an exclusive deal with a streaming platform is money I would never deny an artist, but that’s short term money. Apple’s willing to pay for a release because it knows that over the long term the data they collect from that streaming will make them millions, not thousands, and artists deserve their own millions, not thousands, for supplying the art that generates that revenue.
Of course it’s part of BitTorrent’s mission to transform the way artists distribute their art to the world, and it’s worth saying that BitTorrent does transparently share data with artists, but I don’t want the larger point to become lost in a self-serving fog.
My larger point is that, while I’m aware that creating powerful, amazing art is hard enough without also having to think about, and potentially construct, distribution channels, this is the age we find ourselves enveloped in. Controlling their own art, as every artist should, without any control over how that art is experienced and consumed is like a master chef cooking for a restaurant they can never set foot in.
It’s no coincidence, then, that the two artists who epitomize control own your artistic destiny, Louis CK and Donald Glover (aka Childish Gambino), have also created their own distribution channels. From Glover’s Pharos app to Louis’ Horace and Pete film, they’ve proven there’s a highly profitable market for art and experiences made outside corporate channels, and artists like Gambino understand that the programmers and designers who build and program their sites and apps are just as integral to their teams as their producers and cinematographers and the people making the art itself.
Ocean is far from alone. Breaking free from traditional distribution is the next evolutionary step for Chance the Rapper, Tech N9ne, Kendrick Lamar and many more artists who have already broken every other barrier once assumed to the insurmountable. Hopefully the next time around Frank Ocean will transform the way we experience his art as powerfully as he’s transformed the art we experience, and that's when we'll start to see, and hear, real change.
If history is any indication we’ve got about four years before that happens. I'll be waiting - patiently.
[By Nathan Slavik, @refinedhype]
The NY producer arrives with a new video that marries instrumentals, Japanese manga and basketball into a beautiful blend.
Heavy AF.
LNDN DRGS is back for Burnout 2, and it’s jamming. Out on Fool’s Gold Records, the release finds the duo, comprised of Compton rapper Jay Worthy and Vancouver producer Sean House, in full control, creating a world of west coast gangster rap that feels so good. Sean delivers a landscape full of silky, psychedelic soul samples and throwback synths for Jay to do what he does best - deliver straightforward, honest raps about the life he lives.
Littered with phone-call interludes and appearances from The Batta Ram, Lench Mob OG Dazzie Dee, and Queens’ Meyhem Lauren, Burnout 2 feels like a first person perspective of an LSD-tinged summer afternoon in south LA, complete with the emotional rollercoaster of daily life. Clocking in right under 11 minutes with no breaks, this is a soundtrack meant to be enjoyed with the windows down and not a care in the world. Its hard to turn this up and not think that you’re invincible.
Burnout 2 Tracklist
1. 2 Brand New Phones feat. The Batta Ram
2. Another One feat. Meyhem Lauren
3. Hurt My Hand
4. One Thousand feat. Dazzie Dee
5. Free Throw
The bundle includes Burnout 2, along with the artwork, and the entire Burnout 1 audio and accompanying digital zine. Download it here.
The Colorado producer-luminary gives us 13 select tracks and more for his live Live Band.
Celebrate July 4th with the new mixtape from Flosstradamus's Josh Young.
Getting into beast mode.
The Nashville electro-pop songwriter drops his latest visual on BitTorrent Now.