May 21, 2013
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Posts tagged: Boston

Run Tune: Exclusive interview with DJ Child

Words by DJ Theory

Oakland's DJ Child

DJ Child is the hardest-working man in the reggae biz that you’ve never heard of–if you rely on mainstream channels for your music discovery, that is. As the mind behind Oakland-based Project Groundation, he is a pioneer on several levels; of a new mixtape format that condenses two or three LPs worth of original material into a coherent product with a central theme, of a particular musical vision that combines rasta-inflected reggae (think Sizzla) and fight the power gangster rap (think Dead Prez), and a post-digital DIY indie approach to music that encompasses everything from designing your own graphics to growing your own food. Appropriately, when Child and LARGE UP correspondent and music dude DJ Theory sat down to chop it up, they covered everything from dwarf banana trees to prison documentaries and the reggae scene in Mali.

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Dancehall, Mass: Boston Ragga Mix

Words by Eddie STATS Houghton, via Library of Vinyl

Photobucket

The archivists over at the Library of Vinyl just posted a thing they call the Mastermind Monstamix comprising Boston-area hiphop/reggae fusion released in the 90s heyday of Massive B, Salaam Remi, Nervous records, etc. We at Largeup always like to see somebody shining a light on an unexplored corner of the dancehall diaspora (and beaucoups thanks to reggaematical scholar Wayne&Wax for ringing this particular alarm). But it’s also nice to know there are some corners left to be trailblogged: I had to listen to this blend straight through twice to be sure that they omitted my favorite beantown steppers joint “Three The Yard Way” over the classic Special Ed/James Bond “On A Mission” beat. Hotter than the fire on the planet Mars!

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