I've been a fan of Benny Benassi for a long time; ever since his hit single Satisfaction came out in 2002. While going through my ipod play list i came across this song which left me speechless. Benny Benassi - Whose Your Daddy (fuzzy hair remix)
Summer is a soulfull time. Trade the sweaty denim for the comfort of white linen. Toss the sneakers and slip on a pair of retro Sperry Top-sider boat shoes. Mornings start with espresso (not terrible coffee!?). Days off are spent with friends patio-side, sipping a Pinot Grigio (or a Sauvignon Blanc for all you PG haters) and late-night dinners over a bottle of Riserva Ducale.
During these months I am heavily influenced by Italian casual-chic, so I want to share a perfectly playable summer mixtape by a DJ with an Italian name.
DJ Ferrari isn't Italian, and he has a pretty lame name, but he can sure mix funk and soul records.
It's all about the little flat control panel peices, that you stuck on spaceships in the cockpot, but realistically you could stick any Lego peice you want on the Lego Ring (here is the catalog). Pirate Ship gold peices, parrots, lego man heads, crazy vent peices, or just wear it bare. I'm stoked to get mine. More colours coming soon.
BBTRGDC which stands for Backstreet Boys Total Rude Ghetto Dancing Club, which ever way you say it, it's still a mouthful is an up and coming duo from Montreal. Even though they're fairly new to the scene and have just recently started producing and DJing they've got quite a few remixes done, most notably their remix of the song Divine Gosa by Bonde Do Role. Check out this new songs they've just released titled Britney which is sure to make you get really hyper and dance your ass off.
Hi! I'm Jules Andre-Brown. Thanks for reading. I've just started contributing to this blog - here's a cool mix I did with my pal Marcus in London last month. We did it at the infamous Glenarmy Headquarters in London. Not only is home to where the radioclit parties started - it's also the best BBQ place in hackney. Anyway -- I hope you like it.
I discovered this really cool duo from the UK, called Cassetteboy. Their first appearance was on the Di and Dodi Do Die 7” Record which was released under the label record Barry's Bootlegs. As well they've produced two albums on their own, and have a appeared on an album with DJ Rubbish where they parody a song by Alanis Morrisette and also The Streets. Their musical approach is really different from any other musician out there. Most of the songs are constructed mainly from thousands and thousands of of audio snippets taken from TV, radio, film and popular music. The Parker Tapes which was their first full album release, which had a staggering 98 tracks was constructed using the the primitive process of manually splicing segments of audio together via a two-deck tape system. How many musicians out there still do that???
So, if you want to become like Cassetteboy all you need is:
a tv
a computer
an audio out cable
Sound Forge, Acid and Vegas
loads of free time
another computer because you're bound to break one
patience, lots and lots of patience, plust a bit more patience if you can find it. You'll need it.
If i've they've caught your attention please check them out on their myspace.