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DJ Craze
Rugged Radio Saturday
Audio Research/Stomp
'Rugged Radio Saturday ' is the first release by Audio Research, founded by Montreal's DJ A-Trak and designed to showcase the record labels' uniquely talented roster. Mixed by three time consecutive winner of the DMC world champion mixing competitions DJ Craze, who also forms part of the Allies with A-trak, with this release we have a true definition of the word "mix." DJ Craze's mixing style is magnificent - he adds scratches between records, between chorus's, between breaks - and they're not merely random but often feature vocal elements of the previous or forthcoming tune.
Not only does this CD act a platform for Craze's skills as a DJ, but
also highlights some of the best hip-hop to come out of Canada and
the USA. And, once again, it shows that there is more to this kind
of music than bling bling and booty. Beginning with a Craze intro
that contains the cheeky sample "let's show you how this rap shit's
s'posed to be" it breaks down into Obscure Disorder's 2004,
a typical lyrical hip-hop battle hymn with awesome scratching by A-Trak.
A snapshot of the world of hip-hop follows with DJ Serious' Snakes,
and the mix continues the serious tone with D-Shade's Space & Time,
Simahlak's Under Pressure, DJ Serious and Nish Rawks' Frostbite,
and D-Shade vs. D-Styles' Like That Chall Freestyle.
After this, the tone lightens with Serious and D-Sisive's Popped,
an awesome rhyme about how they "can't take it no more; this whole
industry is pop." With lyrics talking about abusing P-Diddy's limo,
and calling bomb threats to Hanson's tour bus, it's simple in its
rhyme but clever in its reason. Troy Dunnit's Mindblowin and
Obscure Disorder's Back To The Lab follow, leading to the best
tracks on the mix: Troy Dunnit's Not Gangsta and Ill Bill's
Cult Leader. Not Gangsta is, surprisingly, not gangsta,
but is one hell of a tough tune with phat beats and bassline. Cult
Leader is similarly tough, and Craze's scratching of "cult leader"
samples great in its subtlety.
The Grill, by Obscure Disorder is a similar to the Avalanches
with it's 70's vocal stab, and the mix is rounded off nicely by D-Styles
featuring Q-Bert, Babu and Melo-D with the A-Trak Remix of Felonious
Funk. The scratching on this track, needless to say, is remarkable,
and it's impossible to tell where the track has scratching and where
Craze adds to it. This is a fantastic way to introduce the world to
Audio Research- the way the scratches interact sublimely with the
tunes, the way the tunes weave into one another, and the way it shows
that hip-hop is alive and well in the States.
Julian Cram
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