Swarm Riddim / KLASH77 / Shadetek

Matt Shadetek is involved in some HOT SHIT RIGHT NOW. He’s been working with 77Klash (the guy who mde the Scallawah riddim, popularized by Turbulence with his number one smash hit “Notorious”!!!!) on a new riddim with voicings from Lutan Fyah, Vybez Kartel and many more!!!

This is red hot clappers style dancehall from OUR CREW and it’s wicked. It’s the start of Matt’s collaborative label with DJ/Rupture, Dutty Artz. BIG TINGS!

Buy it from iTunes or there’s vinyl on Klash City Records with distribution through Tuff Gong(!!!).

Here’s the press release:

“In 2007, 77Klash has been busy concocting his latest riddim opus, The Swarm. Influenced by electro-rock and old school reggae, The Swarm features several notable artists including Luthan Fyah, up and coming superstar Idonia, Brooklyn Anthem singer Jahdan, the international dancehall phenom Vybez Kartel and a host of Jamaican voices new and old. The riddim is smashing up dances from Kingston to Brooklyn. The Swarm Riddim, now available for sale on iTunes is also available on Klash City Records with distribution through Bob Marley’s legendary Tuff Gong label on 7″ 45. With this and his future project 77Klash is set to usher in the new generation of reggae vibes.

77Klash and Jahdan along with Matt Shadetek are responsible for last years underground smash Brooklyn Anthem, currently featured on EA’s Madden ’08 soundtrack. The Swarm riddim medley will be featured on Iron Shirt’s forthcoming street album, the debut CD release on Matt Shadetek and DJ /Rupture’s Dutty Artz label.”

Blogariddims 26: Ben UFO

Fuck me.

Noone told me about this.

Don’t even think about the “D” word before listening to this mix – this is just totally out there music. The tragedy is that I reckon few will really appreciate what Ben is doing with the music when he, for examples, mixes two sparkling, almost-chthonic unreleased dubs from Untold and TRG with Slector Dub U with Mala’s notoriously un-mixable Learn – it’s artistic DJing of the highest degree, so good it is almost invisible. Stunning deep technoid dubstep, similar to the more meditiative moments of Sufferah 3 (the mixes share some tracks), and, I beleive, a live mix, not Ableton. And with few if any reggae references, it manages to be both warm and vitally alive without going down the minimal k-hole.

Best of all he moves on to one of my favourite 2 step records – Groove Chronicles’ Masterplan, then takes into Pangaea’s eeeeeevviiiilllly funky Coiled. You can bet I will be buying this when it coms out on Hessle Audio. Loooveeellyyy. And then going from Matty G’s lush 808 Bass into El B’s Serious – awesome. Just where I’m coming from right now. Like, absolutely spot on – since finishing the album I’ve been listening exclusively to old 2step and mixing it with the latest dubstep.

I LOVED IT. Download even if you’re bored with dubstep.

Spurn Point: liminal Yorkshire

Spurn Point

I spent a fantastic day at Spurn Point on Sunday. It’s a long, thin strip of sand pointing into the North Sea just outside of Hull which is in an endless cycle of destruction and rebuilding caused by the sea eroding and depositing material. It’s full of crumbling defensive positions dating from the Victorian era through the fifties and has an apparently abandoned (but possibly still functional) lighthouse. It also has the busiest, and only full-time, lifeboat crew in England.

There are no facilities there at all and the only access is via a single-lane track, which is a private toll road. It’s one of those definitively liminal east coast places that leave you walking between worlds, and it’s also a fantastic beach. Just two hours from middle-of-the-country Sheffield, it’s a broad, soft sandy cove facing out over the Hull estuary traffic, which even on a hot day such as Sunday is largely empty.

This area has always been on the edge and has frequently washed over it. There’s a great page about Spurn’s history and its position as the location of a near-mythical village, Ravenser Odd, here. Let me quote some of it for the hard-of-clicking (such as myself):

“From the chalk outcropping of the Wolds at Flamborough Head 122m (400 feet) high, to the silt laden out-flowing of the Humber estuary, a distance of some 45 miles or 72.4k., during recorded history, have vanished beneath the ever encroaching waves of the North Sea some 30 habitations including the townships of: Hartburn; Hyde; Withow; Cleeton; Northorpe; Hornsea Burton; Hornsea Beck; Southorpe; Great Colden; Coilden Parva; Old Aldborough; Ringborough, Monkwell; Monkwike; Sand le Mare; Waxholme; Owthorne or Sisterkirk; Newsham; Old Withernsea; Out Newton; Dimlington; Turmarr; Northorpe; Hoton; Old Kilnsea; Ravenspurn; and RAVENSER ODD. The last of these, Ravenser Odd, geographically was an odd place indeed. Its existence was but fleeting, but its historical impact more perhaps than should have been expected for a place of such physical insignificance… the township and port of Ravenser Odd was located at the mouth of the Humber Estuary, on the northern shore very close to the tip of the sand spit known today as Spurn Point. During its existence its name was recorded variously as Ravenser, Ravenser Odd, Ravenserodd, Ravenserod, and simply – Lod. This well known land/navigation mark is a fluid feature, it is thought to undergo a life cycle of some 250 years, during which it gets destroyed, is reborn some metres further westward, stabilises, and then is destroyed again… “The earliest reference to the headland is in the 7th century A.D. when according to Alcuin’s Life of St. Willibrord, Wilgils, the father of the apostle to the Frisians, Willibrord, is said to have settled there as a hermit. Known as Ravenser, from ‘Hrafn’s Eyr’ or ‘Hrafn’s Sandbank’, there are several references to Spurn in the Icelandic sagas, especially in connection with its use as an embarkation point for the defeated Norwegian army after the Battle of Stamford Bridge in 1066. The name Ravenser was also applied to a small settlement, probably of Danish origin, which seems to have been located somewhere near the base of the headland a mile or two south-east of old Kilnsea. Never itself a town of major importance and predominantly rural in character, Ravenser was to be completely overshadowed by what may be described as a mediaeval ‘new town’, its near neighbour, Ravenser Odd.”
RAVENSER AND RAVENSER ODD: THE EARLY HISTORY OF SPURN HEAD by Pete Crowther.”

The surviving place names in the area are very obviously evidence of Thor-worshipping vikings – much like half of England I suppose.

Reached via a weird mix of flat Anglian countryside and bleak industrial cityscape, it’s one of those places that is not hard to find but incomprehensibly distant. We put on our wet suits and had a high old time in the sea, dodging the occasional jelly fish and fighting the awesome undertow. I suspect in driving rain in midwinter it would be even more impressive but it was utterly captivating. Further along the coast there are gems such as Robin Hood Bay and of course Goth Mecca Whitby, but I recommend it to anyone seeking a Ballardian escape on the north east coast.

More here.