Just hit the inbox from Vice‘s Noisey Music:
No matter which way you look at it, it’s a really good time to be a fan of hip hop in New York. It seems like there’s as much great, truly unique music coming out of the New York hip hop scene as there was there was back in the 90s. The fact that a scene of sorts has catalyzed around an intensely talented bearded white dude who used to be a chef is perhaps the coolest thing ever, especially since it’s Action Bronson and he’s signed to our own VICE Records.
We’re beyond psyched to be premiering his newest project, Rare Chandeliers, which he made with the prolific (and equally great) producer the Alchemist. Roc Marciano, Meyhem Lauren, Styles P, Sean Price, and A.G. Da Coroner all guest, but Action wins Best Line Of The Album with, “Flick chives in the soup/ Stick knives where you poop.” At times opulent, at others mining the pulpy grit that Alchemist specializes in, this gets our award for Mixtape Of The Year.
Download Action Bronson x Alchemist – Rare Chandeliers [direct zip file link]
This dropped a few weeks back but I missed posting it then. I’m just getting into it myself but this is worth checking out imho just based on who’s involved. Drop a comment below and let me know what you think of it though…
BUY The Closers: iTunes | Signed CD on Bandcamp
This is something slightly off the usual path for the Kitchen. Check out a couple tracks from new artist, Krissy Krissy sent to me by my good friend, Fiona who is working with this Brooklyn-based artist. The tracks are from her Above All EP that dropped in September. I don’t dig the entire EP, some of tracks were a little too down straight down the middle classic Top 40 pop for my taste, but these two just about pass muster so I thought I’d post them here and see what y’all thought. Y’all dig?
Long-time Kitchen/COC-affiliate, T.Shirt is going global!
Had the chance to collaborate with the young ill producer FLUME from Australia, on his self-titled debut as it currently sits at #1 on the Australia iTunes Top 100 Albums chart.
Really happy for the kid.
Our joint from the record especially getting a lot of love, with Rolling Stone mentioning it as one of the standout cuts. It’s a shame they call me an “LA rapper” but I’ll take it…
Listen:
[via]
This is latest incarnation of something I used to do on the old blog. Back then the ‘The Hot Ish’ was a post rounding up links to my favorite songs or albums I had posted about for the previous month. We started off slow at the beginning with only six picks over three months at the end of 2003 when I had just started the blog but had gotten up to sixteen picks by time I did the last one in 2005. Well it’s 2012 and the technology and tools for blogging and music discovery have grown by orders of magnitude since I was hot-linking wma audio snippets from Turntable Lab and streams from Hipghopgame.com!
Nowadays I’ve become an active proponent of streaming options like soundcloud and bandcamp and use them frequently here at The Kitchen which regularly readers will be more than aware of. I’m also a huge fan of the streaming music service, RDIO. Full disclosure: I do some work with RDIO as part of my day hustle but that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t use the service even if I didn’t.
If you go back just a few years I and I think others were still tied to the concept of having to ‘own’ our music which meant having a tangible, physical object that we could call ours. Many let go of that concept and became comfortable with buying digital copies of songs and albums but moving a couple times over that period and having to pack up 50 boxes of vinyl and thousands of CD’s has disavowed me of that ‘romantic’ notion and I am fully on board with concept of ‘renting’ music via streaming services like RDIO or Spotify. The plus: no more of those moving nightmares and being able to live in smaller apartment but actually having more living and breathing space not choked up with racks of CDs and records. The other plus: access to way more music than you could ever have physical copies of. But if I love a record that much or just want to support the artist with a purchase, I can always still do that and do. Now though, I only buy the albums that I really love and am still playing months after their release because I know those are album I’ll probably still continue to play in the future.
So anyway, the final plus of RDIO is that it allows you to create custom playlist and share/embed them on your website and via social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter so I’m resurrecting The Hot Ish concept and will be posting playlist of the best, most notable or my favorite tracks each month in RDIO playlists. Above is the first one. Check in every month for the follow-ups. And follow me on twiiter or RDIO to get these first. Also, drop a note if you have any comments, positive or negative, on my selections. Finally, dig RDIO? Then sign up for the service HERE.