Showing posts with label Black Cloud Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Cloud Music. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Wiggy Wednesday: new single "Chocolate Hearts & Roses" from Ital Santos and Eugene O'Neill


Check out Ital Santos' catchy new single with Eugene O' Neill - "Chocolate Hearts & Roses" out now along with the new album "L'Amore" a clever commentary on modern dating from the Black Cloud impresario himself!

Tristan "Tanjint Wiggy" Acker is staff writer for JooseBoxx, a youth hip-hop and poetry tutor, and member of the Inland Empire nerdcore hip-hop group the West Coast Avengers. Catch more of their work at westcoastavengers.com, follow Tristan on Twitter @Tanjint or e-mail him at tristanacker@gmail.com

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

WIGGY WEDNESDAYS: FAIMKILLS BLACK CLOUD RE-ISSUES

Black Cloud Music alum and BrickToYaFace staple Faimkills has been re-issuing his material on major online outlets starting with Dystopia Cornucopia and Good Times for A Change.

Faimie’s brand of hipster lit-hop is unique and ultimately irresistible though it did take time to grow on me. The way he pokes at both stuffy literary culture and machismo-obsessed hip-hop culture is a delight and you never know what angle he’s going to be critiquing society from. Sometimes both and the target is often himself. All too aware of the ways that love and sex tear people down from their lofty stated ideas, his work drips with irony without being snobby and annoying. His wordplay and flows are different and engaging, switching between speeds and linguistic registers

The idea of these re-issues was brilliant and well-timed for this listener. I'd heard a couple singles and collabs from Faimkills and knew he was an educated dude but his large discography had been daunting up until now and I didn't know where to start. He polled social media followers on which records to re-issue on iTunes and the rest and casual new fans like me benefited and now have an easy jumping on point. Hearing this era of Black Cloud with him, Jynxx, Noa James, Curtiss King, Yasin and more is a real delight for someone like me who came into this community in 2014 and later.

One thing present in both albums is the juxtaposition of the hard and the soft. Hard banging beats by Dope Kid Danny, Jynx and Curtiss King soundtrack these albums where Faim gets vulnerable, poetic and honest about love and the other intricacies of youthful social interaction.

In particular, Good Times For A Change seems to nurture the seedlings of ideas explored on later Faim works Thrashed Out and Manic Pixie Dreams where he further explores among much else the  narcissism of modern love, the latent sexism in indie hipster scene culture through the lens of the stunted growth tough guy-ism of mid-2000s hip-hop culture. I look forward to getting into his work for the first time all over and over again as these re-issues continue. 
Tristan "Tanjint Wiggy" Acker is a staff writer for JooseBoxx, youth hip-hop writing instructor with CHORDS Enrichment Youth program (chordseyp.org) and member of the Inland Empire nerdcore hip-hop group the West Coast Avengers. Catch more of their work at westcoastavengers.com, follow Tristan on Twitter @Tanjint or e-mail him at tristanacker@gmail.com

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

It Was The Realest Shit He Ever Wrote: Review of Ital Santos' Decem

Ital Santos, the artist formerly known as Jynxx, recently released a well-curated collection spanning the first ten years of his career called Decem. Meditating on it a few times over a few months makes me think deeper on his double album The Transition. I always thought of the title as referring to the time in his life and his mindstate while creating the album but now I realize much of his career reflects the transition that West Coast Rap itself was going through in the first decades of the twenty-first century.

The music community in Cali was going through a Transition that Ital correctly identified- transitioning away from the dominance the 90’s held, transitioning out of losing 2pac and more broadly, moving beyond the Gangsta Rap narrative that had been dominant up through the late 90’s and the end of the century. Ital never lost sight of the idea that older cats go through these things for the benefit of the youth, so that they don’t have to.

You can hear the cultural Transition throughout Decem. The older tracks bristling with a little more trigger-happiness and aggressive masculinity. Their pre-track shout outs sound Death Row-style and Yasin, a frequent Santos collaborator on the earlier works, throws down hard bars over powerful and grimy boom-bap. The later tracks are more chill and even stoner-hippie in their wizened observations and wisdom. Noted posi-gawds like Noa James show their earlier more gangster side on older tracks from the collection too: again, the Jynxx / Ital Santos Transition reflects the larger cultural shift, here is a musician who has been here for all that. Songs in between like an addictive R & B number, "Black Brown Soul Revue" sung amazingly by CornBreeze near the end help show Ital’s diversity and vision.

The record's given me a new appreciation for how Ital develops choruses- 'Realest shit', 'Crisis', 'All for the money', 'Rain Check' and plenty more show his understanding of the interplay of the sung soul sample and the rapped refrain but more importantly they are catchy and give his music an enjoyable momentum.  More recent tracks include standout performances from Slick C, D'zyl 5k1 and of course a frequent Ital collaborator Mando the DJ on the cut.

Santos shows us his part in local lexicon development with tracks like “the 9”, and the collection’s standout almost-closer “The Realest Shit I Ever Wrote” on which he says "I got friends but sometimes I feel alone." The whole song is a bluesy soul slapper which encapsulates, I think, Ital's desire to shed light on the struggle of people in the I.E. This record commemorates a decade of him doing exactly that, through different collaborators, different eras and personas of the self, just trying to give the I.E. the kind of musical shading and texture so many other hard-up communities have had in the past. He's been busy in this last decade and I look forward to what he produces in his next.

Tristan "Tanjint Wiggy" Acker is a staff writer for JooseBoxx, youth hip-hop writing instructor with CHORDS Enrichment Youth program (chordseyp.org) and member of the Inland Empire nerdcore hip-hop group the West Coast Avengers. Catch more of their work at westcoastavengers.com, follow Tristan on Twitter @Tanjint or e-mail him at tristanacker@gmail.com.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Turning New Leifs with Ital Santos, the Artist Formerly Known As Jynxx




        I wasn’t sure what to think was going to happen when OsOne of the G.I.A.N.T.S. Music, Grizzly State and S.A.D.C. collective asked me to come pick him up, puff one and talk music. He had been ribbing me for a week or two over my unexpected entry into Abstract Rude’s Sixteen Bar Rap Competition which he was personally asked by Mr.Rude AKA Abbey Rizzle to participate in and “Os” -as we more commonly refer to him- being a massive man, a big intimidating presence, I had just the slightest suspicion that one false move could get my ass kicked by some Grizzlies. As I pulled up to his pad in Moreno Valley area, he finished off a cigarette and introduced me to his girlfriend. It occurred to me to calm down because everyone here was a self-respecting adult.

He got in the car and suggested we grab Swift Dixshun in Riverside and being a fan of the G.I.A.N.T.S. (and their bomb-ass weed), I was down. Once in my car, Os directed me to a familiar neighborhood in Fontana off of the 210 where the beatmaker and performer formerly known as Jynxx resided. We walked in with a twelver of Heinekens and settled into some chairs at his music desktop station near a backdoor we could blow blunt smoke out of.

Being in a crew that has many beatmakers in it myself, much of what the quiet, green-eyed Mr. Santos had going on was familiar to me: an inexhaustible collection of beats that only he knew the ages and origins of, rappers with blunts and brews sliding through hoping to be part of the magic of banger-creation, a quiet demeanor and an active mind. He slid through diverse productions with confidence, scrolling down his studio computer screen as Os and Swift freestyled and came up with hooks on the downbeats,

“Y’all ain’t ready….y’all ain’t ready for this real shit,” Os intonated over a particularly swinging and bassy midtempo soundscape. I looked around Ital’s studio walls and saw many familiar names on posters that dated back to 2008: Noa James, MC Mega, Curtiss King, MC Prototype, Urban Poets Crew, Black Cloud, many more. “This is my region’s recent musical history…” I thought as I sat and sipped with Giants.

You see, B the Wizard had lived with me for 4 months at the end of 2014 and beginning of 2015; when he was still known as MC Mega. Ital or “Jynxx” was always a presence in old stories of Urban Poets Crew that Mega had constantly shared with me. I had thought that the UPC era had preceded the Black Cloud era which preceded the era we were currently in (confused yet?) but subsequent interviews with Jynxx  corrected the record that Jynxx started Black Cloud Music almost right after he began making music and the Urban Poets Crew work was largely contemporaneous with Black Cloud.

One thing appearing to link all of these admittedly recent eras together was the production of Ital Santos. Days after this encounter, my friend and collaborator Ras Josh reminded me of shows and beat battles we’d seen “Jynxx” at as far back as 2008. I’d been hearing his name, but this sit down session with Swift and Os of G.I.A.N.T.S. was my first real exposure to the musical stylings of one of the IE’s most consistent creators. 

My only complaint about his solo outings is the same thing that makes their lyrics so fascinating: we are joining the story after much has happened and as the audience is left to put pieces together. Unlike newer listeners like myself, Ital is not interested in litigating the past as much as he is in building his future.

His new record, Leifs is a triumphant evolution and statement of survival from someone who has been pivotal in the last decade’s several sub-eras of Inland Empire hip-hop. His production as melodic, banging and inspired as ever, his raps are cool, detached, laid back and conversational. The artist formerly known as Jynxx bluntedly and bluntly tells us where his values, priorities and artistic curiosities lie in the current day.
   

Upon a relatively thorough examination of his work, the theme of rising from the ashes of life’s struggle, phoenix-like pops up again and again. His double disc album Transition is probably his magnum opus at this point though he has a plenty healthy discography, only a bit of which is discussed in this piece. The Supremo EP he created in the wake of Noa James and Curtiss King’s departure from Black Cloud Music is an interesting piece of history for Inland Empire hip-hop nerds as he copes with the new landscape of his company and talks about life over previously released DJ Premier beats. As a buff of the scene myself, I cite it as the best work I have yet to hear by KastOne, whose personality and attitude-filled hooks and raps helped Ital shape something new, raw and interesting out of what could have just been a remix EP.


On Transition, Ital shows his production and performative versatility, showcases pillars of the Inland music community and does some fun experiments with vocal samples and telling stories of his life with songs like “Black Pen” and “That Day” in which normal days take a turn for the unexpected. True stories, Santos says.

On my favorite song on Leifs, “Snakes”, Ital and guest MC D’zyl 5K1 spit on the snakes in their lives but never despair. Santos’ attitude towards life’s setbacks is always defiant.

Another highlight is “Keep Quiet” with particularly standout verses from Notiz Yong and Jig. The song drips with the idea that in the I.E. you must earn your right to raise your voice high- an honest reflection of how brutal it can be here and many active hip-hop communities.

“October” with Yung Miss, Ric Rahk and Edgar Sosa is a brilliant concept about how October in California’s Inland Empire has a lot in common with the rest of the nation’s summer months. The funky light production gives Miss, Rahk and especially Edgar Sosa lots of space to flex their quirky and clever styles and raps.  

“I Pray” shows more of Santos’ constant struggle to not let the negativity of life stop him. The music to this track and ones like it is 2pac-ish in its religious deference and hints of mysticism. The honest simplicity of his struggle is admirable and relatable as a persona guiding you through albums. The rest of the album showcases his continued freshness as a hip-hop producer and more of his clever stories such as a multiple song trip from Fontana to Mexico and back.

Leifs as in the turning of a new? As in burning some? The meanings are many says Santos. The name reminds me of Transition in its desire for change and to showcase the artist as renewed and vigorous despite the troubles life throws our way. I find Ital’s music relatable in its IE tribulations, shout outs to family and desire for loyalty and consistency out of life. I relate to the funk and the smart deployment of his compatriots. To go through his discography is to hear the evolution of many of the region’s brightest stars from Dirty Birdy to Westside Bugg, Noa James, Curtiss King, Notiz Yong, Mando the DJ and more.

Ital Santos stays chasing these dreams of funk, fun, friendship and family. In the time since the album was released and this review’s completion he’s completed countless collabs and commissions, a beat tape and an album with longtime collaborator Slick C. He’s still a staple of several circles of IE hip-hop and can be found rocking a beat set in the area often. He will always seek to prove his doubters wrong and to continue to build his Black Cloud in the I.E. and beyond.

Update: Ital Santos has generously provided Joose Boxx and its readers with free download links to the works discussed in this piece:

Transition: https://www.mediafire.com/download/0kjbq12yj7i7t3d

Supremo: https://www.mediafire.com/download/s7dx4017dsf6vp1

Leifs: https://www.mediafire.com/download/uizbkh5k9fypkhg

 Tristan “Tanjint Wiggy” Acker is a staff writer for JooseBoxx, youth hip-hop writing instructor with CHORDS Enrichment Youth Program (chordseyp.org) and member of the Inland Empire nerdcore hip-hop group the West Coast Avengers. Catch more of their work at westcoastavengers.com, follow Tristan on Twitter @Tanjint or e-mail him at tristanacker@gmail.com.


Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Dat Heathen - Tell Em I Did It (Audio)

Black Cloud Music's Dat Heathen dropped one hell of a track today entitled "Tell Em I Did It". The combination of Heathen's rhythmic flow and a beat bound to evoke emotion from any emcee resulted in a track that I will definitely be listening to over and over. & He produced the beat too?! Aww snaps! Check it out after the break!

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Dat Heathen - Black Cloud (Produced By Oh Gosh Leotus)

Dat Heathen, Black Cloud Music's newest signee drops his first release under the label "Black Cloud". His new single is produced by Oh Gosh Leotus. Stay tuned for his album.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Noa James - Hockey Masked Haitian (Prod by Curtiss King) (Audio)

Black Cloud Music monster Noa James has finally dropped some new music, after a short tour hiatus. Check out his new track "Hockey Masked Haitian" which he describes as "very raw, grimey, a little bit offensive but you'll love it." Noa will be dropping an EP on Oct 21st called "Fat Boy Love Letter" which will be entirely produced by Gypsy Mamba and presented by KevinKnottingham.com. Stay tuned!

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Faimkills - Total Babe (Music Video)

Black Cloud Music artist Faimkills is back with another HOT single called "Total Babe". This joint has already gotten plenty plays in the whip and I must say every time that beat drops I tend to drive 5mph faster! The track is dope but have you seen the VISUALS?! Filled with a beautiful cast of MOVintage girls, how could you not watch every second of this video? Check it out after the jump

Monday, June 17, 2013

Phantom Thrett - Wonderfool (Official Video)

Black Cloud Music artist Phantom Thrett just dropped a new visual for his single "Wonderfool"... Click "read More" to check it out! :)

Monday, April 22, 2013

Phantom Thrett - Wonderfool (STREAM/DOWNLOAD)

Tell us what you think in the comment box below! :)

Yung Miss - The Soul ft Waju

Road To Paid Dues 2013: Black Cloud Music - Coast to Coast (Ep. 1)

Black Cloud Music family members Noa James, Curtiss, David May, Lesa J, Jynxx, & DJ Kid Disko recently were asked to join the Road To Paid Dues tour with hip-hop artist Murs. Here is some footage from that tour. I.E STAND UP!!! Enjoy :)

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Noa James - The Adventures of Young Orca EP(Stream/Support)

Black Cloud Music gentle giant Noa James drops his newest project "The Adventures of Young Orca" for fans while on a nationwide tour. Enjoy the music and get ready to see him at Paid Dues!


Saturday, December 22, 2012

Yung Miss Performing at Grimey Dankmas (Footage of FULL Set)



Some bunkered down and "bugged out" as the Mayan calender apocolypse neared on December 21st, 2012, still others knocked a few items off their bucket lists... just in case it was in fact doomsday. I can testify, Yung Miss and a star-studded cast of talented performers took over The Glass House in Pomona for Brick to ya Face's Grimey Dankmas concert. Check out Yung Miss' set in it's entirety after the break.