TrackBlasters Radio: 06.01.17

Da Fat Friday Afternoon – The Official Soundtrack To Your Weekend Host: DJ P.R. Happy Friday, ya’ll! Record Of The Day: Russ – Sideline Number Playlist Kool Keith feat. MF DOOM – Super Hero (L’Orange Remix) **Record Of The Day** Russ – Sideline Number J. Cole – Ville Mentality Mpulse – Jack Move 2 Tyga feat. Kanye West – Feel Me TLC – Diggin’ On You (Kaytranada Edit) Latrelle – House Party (Kaytranada Edit) Lupe Fiasco feat. Jake Torrey – Wild Child Baauer – Candy Man **Gorillaz – Noodle (Mix)** Download here (right click and save as…)

Read more

Kool Keith feat. MF DOOM – Super Hero (L’Orange Remix) [Audio x Download]

Nashville based producer L’Orange is keeping busy, having just released a a record with Mr. Lif (“The Life & Death Of Scenery”) with Adult Swim and MMG, then releasing a free EP (“Koala”), and preparing to go on tour with Wax Tailor. But forget being busy, when two of the world’s biggest rap super heroes call, you break out the MPC. The original song “Super Hero” appeared on Kool Keith’s most recent solo album “Feature Magnetic”. Feature Magnetic by Kool Keith

Read more

Kool Keith Talks “Feature Magnetic” Album And Other Random Topics [Video]

Kool Keith releases his 935th album, Feature Magnetic, and calls it “…one of the best masterpieces” due to the fact he’s personally produced 78% of the beats. Additional producers include Ocean Ave Records, Ol Man 80zz & Futurewave, and Giz for Crazy 100. With many emcees featured on this project, the Ultramagnetic MC frontman wanted to showcase his versatility on a wide range of topics and sounds. Features include Godfather Don, Craig G, MF DOOM, B.a.R.S Murre, Dirt Nasty, Psycho Les, Necro, Mac Mall, Edo.G, Bumpy Knuckles, Slug (Atmosphere), Sadat X, and Ras Kass. Keith has played this album every night for five months, in preparation for its release. In addition to Feature Magnetic, Keith talks about how he got the nickname MC Voltron in the 80s. He expresses interest in speaking with Tyler Perry about a creating documentary on Ultramagnetic MCs and Boogie Down Productions. He also seeks to collaborate with both Gucci Mane and Drake for music and other business ventures. Finally, he discusses an upcoming movie with Leonardo DiCaprio and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles called Pissy Scars.

Read more

Kool Keith feat. MF DOOM – Super Hero [Video]

From the new album Kool Keith – “Feature Magnetic” out on Mello Music Group. Super Hero feat. MF DOOM premiered at FADER and finds two of Hiphop’s biggest Super Villains uniting over crashing, hypnotic cymbals and driving bass. Enter the twisted comic book world conjutred by Keith & DOOM over spliffs in a dank London basement. This is director Kris Merc & animation studio Aardman Nathan Love sonic-vision.

Read more

Kool Keith – Feature Magnetic [Album Stream]

In a world full of cheesecake rappers, one man has assembled a phenomenal team to bring you madness. So stop stop what you’re doing and get ready for a journey you’ve never taken before. Enter the sinister doctor, the Ultramagnetic visionary, Kool Keith, whose “Feature Magnetic,” released Sept. 16 on Mello Music Group, is his latest bizarre transformative odyssey. As always, Keith seems unstuck in time, oblivious to geography, brilliantly mixed unflinchingly grim details with surreal, fantastical tangents. He’s from the Bronx, but belongs to far-reaching astral dimensions. And Where many of his contemporaries have become legacy acts or revivalists, Keith continues to originate and perfect his wild style. He’s parked behind Oracle Arena in Oakland with Norah Jones — riding a horse and carriage through Central Park (bystanders shout that he looks like Mike Tyson). He drinks with MF DOOM in dusty London basement and recruits a legendary squadron of fellow travelers including Sadat X (Brand Nubian), Bumpy Knuckles, Boston pioneer Ed O.G., Slug from Atmosphere, and Vallejo legend Mac Mall. Throughout, Keith weaves in and out of our reality, stopping only long enough to dap his friends and pass the mic. The songs are straightforward: spare, innovative beats, simple hooks, and razor-sharp verses from an unlikely collection of geniuses. Keith switches moods, cadences, and points of view effortlessly. On “Tired” he’s world-weary and unappreciated; on “Bragging Rights,” the mink coat melts off his shoulders like butter. “Peer Pressure” cryptically considers his career and the shifting racial demographics of

Read more