OutKast


Notes from a Different Kitchen has a new UGK track featuring OutKast “International Players Anthem” from UGK’s upcoming Underground Kingz.

Not sure I will be buying this album. I am still holding a bit of a grudge from the drama back in 02 or 03. If it weren’t for the presence of Big Boi and André 3000, I wouldn’t have played it at all.

The mini-Screw part is odd. I always wonder if people outside this region are familiar enough with Screw to not think something’s wrong with the track.

Still it’s a good club song, and I have the feeling I am going to be hearing it all summer.

We’ve been OutKast fans since the very beginning. We own every single album. (Yes,even Idlewild, of which I really enjoyed half, typical of most OutKast albums.)

So I was very disappointed last week when A announced that he was “over” Andre 3000 because of all the singing.

Happily, I told him that Andre 3000 had been rapping on other people’s projects.

While I haven’t convinced him yet to reconsider, you should definitely check out the three songs below.

Devin the Dude featuring Snoop Dogg and Andre 3000, What a Job.
Originally from Spine Magazine.

Rich Boy featuring Lil Flip, Andre 3000, Jim Jones, Murphy Lee & The Game, Throw Some D’s (remix).
Originally from Notes from a Different Kitchen.

Unk featuring Andre 3000 and Jim Jones, Walk It Out (Remix).
From Baller Status.

VH1 is taking a break from reruns of the Hulk Hogan show to re-air the documentary And It Don’t Stop.

A is sick, and I am editing so basically, we’re all in bed watching it. Again.

If you’ve never seen it, what the hell is wrong with you?!!! it’s fairly comprehensive, and it has great interviews with artists and with cultural historians like Nelson George, and Kelefa Sanneh, the music reviewer for the Times.

When I started scribbling this down, we were back in the midst of East Coast-West Coast and the murders of Tupac and Biggie. Because we’re in our 30s, we remember vividly Tupac’s murder, the days he languished in the hospital before succumbing to his injuries. I know, now, it must seem as relevant as my mother describing when Kennedy was assissinated, but it is a moment that is so present.

Now, the episode has moved on to the rise of regional rap with the Geto Boys, OutKast, etc.

Hearing the artists in their own words now and in the past is really powerful.

Watch it.

Since I lost my collection multiple times from July – November, I can’t say for certain which songs I listened to most in 2006, aside from the bands/labels with whom I worked.

My music preferences shifted a bit in 2006. I started listening to much more indie music and following some of the indie blogs more closely. My preferences over the past few years have been much more funk, soul, r&b, and hip-hop, but now I am reincorporating much more.

My current favorite song is the acoustic demo “Temple.” I can hear it five times in a row and love it as much each time. I also can hear how excellent it sounds currently on the rough mix and imagine how it will sound live and on the next EP. It’s an excellent song, and the guys should be really, really proud.

Here are what I think were my top non-client songs:

One Evening, Feist.

I heard it for the first time on the Hike and Bike and I could not get home fast enough to figure out who and what the hell this was. It was an iTunes free download and I was absolutely capitivated. To me, it has a lounge-y Montréal vibe that fit beautifully with my trips to Montréal. Plus, it got me listening to everything by Feist, and other songs that hit that same feel, including some chanson. Any song that can do that makes my list any year.

Naive, The Kooks/Lily Allen.

I first heard the Lily Allen Live Lounge cover and I loved it. Then I had to go find the Kooks. I have three versions of the song on iTunes and they get equal play — the sign of a great pop song.

Munich, Editors/Corinne Bailey Rae.

The original and the cover are two very different songs. Each completely compelling, but with very different meanings.

Morris Brown, OutKast.

Because of the “soundtrack” tag, people slept on this album. Morris Brown is destined to be a classic, and I will keep forcing it on everyone I know.

Wamp Wamp (What it Do), Clipse.

Despite my entreaties to have D cover it, I think it will remain untouched. Still I have gotten it stuck in the minds of many of my compatriots, and that’s almost good enough.

Is It Any Wonder, Keane.

This is a great song. The performance, lyrics, and that driving rhythm send me and I sing it at the top of my lungs every time it comes on. For that, I apologize to the neighbors.

Until Yesterday, JC Chasez.

Never in my life did I think I would love a song by this joker, especially after the suck he perpetrated on “Some Girls Dance with Women.” Thanks to Idolator, I have a new addition to my 5 star list. It has an American 80s vibe, which feels retro and current simultaneously.

Standing On My Own Again, Graham Coxon.

Thanks to Stereogum. What can I say, it reminds me of my youth.

SexyBack, Justin Timberlake.

A distractingly great club song. Watching the family dance to this at our impromptu Christmas party was a blast and cemented the generational appeal. I am sure ours was not the only family dancing to this one over the holidays. But maybe we were.

White Daisy Passing, Rocky Votolato.

A free iTunes track. It’s acoustic, but it has a soulful vibe.

Seems To Be On My Mind, Suburban Kids with Biblical Names.

One of the best band names I have heard in a while. It’s a jaunty song I can imagine being sung by people getting progressively drunker. Plus, it has two changes in the middle, which automatically bumps it higher for me.

The rest of my top songs are a combination of OutKast, Lily Allen, the Kooks, Artic MOnkeys, Phoenix, TTC and all of the covers from Live Lounge. Oh, yeah, and Crazy. Perfect song for a wacky year.

I have two preference lists in iTunes: favorites and all-time.

Favorites are songs I can hear over and over again and look forward to hearing. All-time are favorites to an nth degree.

Current favorites include:

Bounce That Girl Talk
Mad World (tears for fears cover) Gary Jules
Such Great Heights Iron & Wine
Love You Inside Out Feist
You Will. You? Will. You? Will. You? Will. (Live) Snow Patrol
Let Me Love You (Mario cover) Charlotte Church
Wonderwall (Oasis cover live) Ryan Adams
Guns and Cigarettes Atmosphere
1976 RJD2
Acousticon Theme Youngblood Brass Band
Everyday Is A Holiday (With You) (Featuring Sean Lennon) Esthero
Kryptonite Big Boi Ft. Purple Ribbons Allstars
Morris Brown OutKast featuring Scar & Sleepy Brown
Is It Any Wonder Keane
Naive The Kooks