This clip of @KLEVERSWORLD in 2000 reminded me why I love DJ skills so much. #NoTurntablism
The Forger - My Son The DJ - Nasty video/music cut-n-paste project. Ben Stokes & Jack Dangers (Meat Beat Manifesto) are gods. Tino Breaks records and videos are stuff of legend.
DJ Nu-mark’s Vinyl Collection Via Fuse.
(Video) Speaking of mental DJ Shadow performances…
Some Words On Why The Beastie Boys Matter So Much To Me:
This was inspired by an article that came out on my folks site Largeup.com today about the Beastie Boys’ connection to reggae music. I left this comment on their article today:
The Beasties truly represented my musical path more than any other group ever. I came of age (11-13) going to see to hardcore bands like Bad Brains and Murphy’s Law, who obviously both had big reggae/ska influences. At the same time, I was being introduced to “The Harder They Come” soundtrack (which includes the “Stop That Train” sample), Eek A Mouse, Steel Pulse, Yellowman and the like. I remember, my boy had all these reggae artist names scrawled on his book bag, and it just had a HUGE effect on me. I went and found all those artists.
After being raised on classic rock, yacht rock and 80s music, hardcore and punk were the next logical step. Then, all the hardcore kids in Boston (where I grew up) took off their Doc Martens, and put on sneakers, started listening to/going to more reggae, ska and hip-hop shows, and called themselves “sneaker boys”. Precisely at this time, I moved to NYC. I never went to another hardcore show again. I got completely obsessed with listening to Red Alert, Stretch Armstrong, Kid Capri and Silver Dee on the radio, and just got consumed by hip-hop. Later on, I went back and caught back up on all these previous phases, which was great therapy.
The Beasties represent the true nature of hip-hop and dj culture to me. The people that started hip-hop (and dj culture), just loved music. ALL KINDS. But the Beasties also had a musical progression that mirrored mine, which transcends any of that for me. The connection between reggae, punk, hardcore and hip-hop is something that I think many people who call themselves “hip-hop fans” just don’t even understand.
This cat DJ Mysterio is just MYSTERIOUS.
This routine is nuts. I can’t even explain it, but I’ll try:
Dude has records stacked up on the one turntable, and he’s yanking each one out and dropping the needle back down on the next one, with only a split-second drop-out. It’s like “needle-dropping” to the nth degree.
This video was found on my Belgian-waffle home-skillet Rob Swift’s website, where you can find a nice interview with DJ Mysterio.
