Showing posts with label Pizza. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pizza. Show all posts

Monday, April 1, 2019

I'd Love to Turn You On #228 - MF Doom - MM...Food


          
            It’s hard to decide where to start writing about MF Doom’s 2004 hip hop masterpiece MM…FOOD. Do I start by introducing MF Doom, an artist who spent the better part of his career cultivating an enigmatic presence? Or do I kick this post off with grandiose statements regarding the influence of MM...FOOD on contemporary hip hop? Both options seem to stand at odds with the rapper’s mission, which has always seemed more concerned with digging up obscure samples and crafting a character than elevating the man behind the mask.
The only way that I feel like I can really honor this album is to compare it to a really fucking good meal. MM...FOOD is like good barbeque; it’s messy, with lots of sides, but rich with flavor. Every time you get tired of the sides, there’s always more of that tangy, delicious Doom that convinces you - just one more bite. By the end of your time with the album, you’re too full, thinking that maybe you’ll never eat at this restaurant again, but three months later, you’re back, salivating for more. All of this is to say that MM...FOOD is not full of itself. It seems designed to be served and enjoyed on a paper plate, thrown out, and linger on the back of your palate for days to come.
            Doom’s bars are never showy, with a flow as tender and easy as slow-cooked pork. Across his entire career, Doom spits some of his hardest verses on this album, making food-based insults that, taken out of context, could sound like a corny warning from the FDA; “I suggest you change your diet / It can lead to high blood pressure if you fry it / Or even a stroke, heart attack, heart disease / It ain’t no starting back once the arteries start to squeeze,” he raps on album opener “Beef Rap.” Reading this verse, I can only imagine that you are unimpressed; hearing these words from Doom sound so utterly vicious though, weaponizing the all-too-real (and very uncool) threat of a bad diet into something genuinely intimidating. His lyrics feel somehow familiar yet off the cuff, like turning Mom’s leftovers into something new.
            And yet, Doom’s rapping takes a backseat to his production. MM...FOOD is sublimely produced almost entirely by Doom himself, with only the occasional assist from longtime collaborators Madlib and Count Bass D. Songs on MM...FOOD are typically constructed around a single sample, a jazzy track that’s been chopped and screwed and layered with drum fills; Doom’s a chef working in a fully stocked kitchen. He saves his strongest production for the back half of the album, replicating that deeply complicated feeling of eating something delicious too fast. The back-to-back tracks “Rapp Snitch Knishes” and “Vomitspit” highlight Doom at his most accessible, with deeply groovy and intriguing samples that wiggle their way into your head relentlessly. The early album cut “Potholderz,” meanwhile, is one of the most impeccably produced rap songs I’ve ever heard, comprised in equal parts of turntabling, an earworm-y bass line, and hard verses from Doom and Count Bass D. This album is painstakingly catchy, sometimes standing at odds with the monotone - and sometimes intentionally tone deaf - cadence that Doom raps.
            This being an MF Doom album, there are countless references to supervillians, comic books, and radical politics. These are the sides that populate the album, and to many listeners, they might come as a take-em-or-leave-em characteristic. These fit into a larger tendency across Doom’s discography, which is filled to the brim with mythos and world-building, sometimes to the detriment of the album; here, though, you can’t help but laugh at the exasperated screams of civilians shouting their need for food. MF Doom, the character, is a villain; he’s hoarding all the food, only serving the civilians when he sees fit. To me, though, this man is a hero, a genuine innovator in the world of hip-hop. If I could award him a James Beard award, I would; I think he’d hate that, though.
-         Harry Todd

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

2016 Best ofs from friends of Twist & Shout Part 2



Rupert Morrison
Drift.

103 HIGH STREET, TOTNES
DEVON, UK. TQ9 5SN

Records Of Thee Year

The year 2016, or perhaps Thee year 2016 has been about one band for us at Drift, San Francisco's explosive Thee Oh Sees. John Dwyer's garage polymaths dropped THREE releases this year, firstly a face melting live LP back in the early summer, a paradigm for their assault on the senses. In August their seventeenth studio album (and our record of the year) in A Weird Exits, a duel drumming adrenaline bubbling rawk LP that we've played to death over the last few months. Finally, they saw the year out with An Odd Entrances, very much the companion to Weird, but an altogether more psychedelic trip into the marshy underground. Hell of a band.

 Elsewhere we've played and grieved equally the last swansongs from David Bowie and Leonard Cohen. Nick Cave's Skeleton tree was almost too much to play with any kind of regularity and some gargantuan returns from Radiohead and The Avalanches really did not disappoint against all the anticipation. Most spun albums from Whitney, Angel Olsen, Hiss Golden Messenger, Ryley Walker, Kevin Morby, Heron Oblivion, Preoccupations and our good friends Ultimate Painting.

 Biggest "who is this?" sellers off the turntable have doubtless been BADBADNOTGOOD and Kaytranada, two of the most brilliantly sculpted albums and such a privilege seeing people loose their mind too for the first time. That's why we do it right? Turning people on, that's why record shops open the door every morning.



Frankie Brack
Pizza Cook/Cartoonist


Hello, My name is Frankie Brack and I am Twist and Shout family. I now live in Brooklyn, NY making pizza (of course) and drawing cartooons!! This is my sick list of 2016.

My top 20 albums from 2016. in no particular order.

1. Pizza Time – Todo
2. Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions - Until the Hunter
3. B Boys - No Worry No Mind
4. Parquet Courts - Human Performance
5. King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - Nonagon Infinity
6. Schoolboy Q - Blank Face LP
7. The Game – 1992
8. Ty Segall & The Muggers - Emotional Mugger
9. Feels – Feels
10. Angel Olsen – My Woman
11. Geneva Jacuzzi – Technophelia
12. Jeremih – Late Nights: Europe
13. Mild High Club – Skiptracing
14. Morgan Delt – Phase Zero
15. Cosmonauts – A-Ok!
16. The Reverberation Appreciation Society Presents – A Tribute To Pet Sounds
17. Alex Cameron – Jumping The Shark
18. Soft Hair – Soft Hair
19. The Julie Ruin – Hit Reset
20. Thee Oh Sees – A Weird Exits

My top 16 albums that didn’t come out in 2016 but I got OBSESSED wit em.  in no particular order.

1. Gato Barbieri – Caliente (1976)
2. Les McCann – Much Les (1969)
3. Miles Davis – In A Silent Way (1969)
4. Lou Reed – Coney Island Baby (1976)
5. Part Time – What Would You Say? (2011)
6. Aphex Twin – Selected Ambient Works Vol II (1994)
7. Good Morning – Shawcross (2014)
8. Brian Bennett – Voyage (A Journey Into Discoid Funk) (1978)
9. Horace Silver - Song for My Father (1964)
10. Venom – Welcome To Hell (1981)
11. Catherine Ribeiro + Alpes – Paix (1972)
12. Deru – 1979 (2014)
13. Graham De Wilde – Clouds (1981)
14. MC Pooh - Life Of A Criminal (1992)
15. The Liminanas - The Liminanas (2010)
16. Geneva Jacuzzi – Lamaze (2010)

I’d have to say my favorite show was Angel Olsen at a place called Warsaw here in Brooklyn. I even got to meet her that day! Swoon! <3 Second favorite was Junior Brown, got to meet him too! But I also went to a lot of other really great shows. Including Ty Segall & The Muggers, Morgan Delt, Cherry Glazerr, Still Corners, The Cosmonauts and many more that I can’t remember right now.

I didn’t go to a lot of new movies this year but my favorite movie experience was a 35mm print of David Lynch’s Wild At Heart. Which is like the best movie ever! I also got to see Ascenseur Pour L'echafaud by Louis Malle in the theatre, which was also excellent.


There were a lot of bummers this year but there were also some very cool things. Thank you Twist and Shout for reminding me that not everything sucks! Miss you, Love you!!



Terry McGibbon
RED Distribution, Sales & Marketing Rep


1)      Royal Headache – High.
2)      Q5 – New World Order.
3)      Sloucher – Certainly.
4)      Joseph Arthur – The Family.
5)      Ages And Ages – Something to Ruin.
6)      Anomalisa soundtrack.
7)      Neil Young – The Monsanto Years.
8)      Nick Cave – Skeleton Tree.
9)      J Churcher – Borderland State.
10)      Money – Suicide Songs.