Thoughts on the De La Soul Kickstarter

The recent news that De La Soul have launched a Kickstarter campaign to get their new album out is part awesome, part sad.

Its awesome for obvious reasons. De La are one of the greatest hip-hop groups of all time, and have never released a bad album. No matter how it ends up making its way to us, there’s little doubt that the new album will likewise be worth it.

Its also for obvious reasons why its sad. The group has been on a noble anti-record label crusade for years, which has earned them respect for way more than just their music. But in all honesty, when a group as stellar as De La cannot get a budget for a new album, the music business has really become a fucked-up place.

It’s true that Kickstarter is one of the many new ways that music now gets to market, and its a process that is incredibly liberating and empowering for both the artist and the fan. As listeners, we get to be part of something we love, and are even rewarded for taking part.

It’s this community spirit that De La are pushing with their campaign, highlighting how this is a collaborative project between them and us fans, with some impressive items for those that pledge anything from $5 up to an eye-popping $10,000 (too late if you were thinking of splashing out that ten grand – its already gone).

For the artist, a successful campaign means getting their music out, usually in the hope of getting noticed on a wider scale, or in De La’s case, re-noticed. The sense of fan empowerment and of sticking a middle finger up at the industry only holds so much weight though, and it would be perhaps naive to think De La would likely have chosen this route had a label been willing to give them the cash.

In the campaign trailer the group looks genuinely passionate about this being a fan project, and they have certainly been the champions of new innovation and doing whatever they can to get music to us, from long legal battles, to recently giving away their entire back catalog for free download.

But despite all of the above, its hard to shake the feeling that we shouldn’t have got to this point at all.

We’ve already donated to the project, and as we write this, the funding target looks to be comfortably in sight. We encourage you to pledge money too, and support these three legends of hip-hop.

Click here to read more about the project, watch the video, check out the rewards, and pony up your cash.

UPDATE: De La Soul managed to smash the funding target in a matter of just hours. Congratulations to the group. We can’t wait to hear it, and get our copy on vinyl.

Adrian Younge documentary

Adrian YoungeAs egotistic and pretentious as he may come across at times, its hard to deny that Adrian Younge is something of a musical genius. This new short film breaks down his process, with DJ Premier, RZA and more sharing their experiences of working with the man himself, and how they dig his strictly analogue approach to making music. Definitely worth a watch.

http://www.nowness.com/iframe?id=4100703427001

J-Zone on NW3Radio

Screen Shot 2015-03-14 at 12.55.50We’ve been down with J-Zone from the very beginning, and since then, in addition to growing as a musician, he’s also become one of the most eloquent commentators of this thing we call hip-hop, delivering his message via books, Twitter, and his music. He recently appeared on the NW3Radio show, and you can listen to him drop serious knowledge below.

Godfather Don – ‘Bottom Line’

GODFATHER DONBack in that mid-late 90s golden era of independent hip-hop, Godfather Don made some incredible records, both as a solo artist, and with Kool Keith as the Cenobites. He’s been a bit quiet recently, but has re-emerged with new track Bottom Line, from what looks to be a new album coming soon. We only get a snippet, but it sounds damn good. Listen below and give us your thoughts.