hyperadmin | Music | Saturday, September 4th, 2010
If you’ve been following Toronto’s R&B movement for a minute you might remember Khalel who had a few solid joints spinning on FLOW circa 2002-2005’ish (roughly, and if I remember right). After taking some time to focus on life outside of music, Khalel returns with his brand new joint called “We’ll Fly”. Remix coming in October featuring Sonny Seeza from ONYX.
The idea behind the single “We’ll Fly” was to create a get-away utopia (with that special someone) where ever you are in the world. This could happen at the beginning, middle, or peak of a couple’s relationship together. – Khalel
To get re-acquainted with Khalel here’s a couple links to check out as well:
hyperadmin | Audio,Music | Thursday, September 2nd, 2010
Kawzee gives us a taste of his upcoming “Finally” album with two tracks: “What Happened”(Remix) (Produced by Tone Mason) and “I Promise” (Produced by 2oolman).
“my album will be available for free download in mid September and features production from Rich Kidd, Tone Mason, Soundsmith, Vokab, Neenah, Davenport, 2oolman, Bluntologist and more…. ‘I Promise’ is a heart felt letter to my unborn son exploring… fears of being a first time father… ‘What Happened’, which was originally released on the highly acclaimed DJ Wrispect Bridging the Gap Series…. has been remixed by Toronto’s very own Tone Mason…. For those that have never heard this track… TAKE IT IN! For those that have… this version BANGS even harder than the original! Much love, David ‘Kawzee’ www.kawzee.com“
Deejays you got the Main, Clean 8 bar and Instrumental for “What Happened” and Main, Instrumental for “I Promise”.
hyperadmin | Music,Video | Thursday, September 2nd, 2010
Jully Black talks music, media generalizations of the black community, her relationship with her father and more for the CBC’s “One Take” viral series.
Been seeing more and more producers adopting this approach to marketing themselves. Definitely a great way to get yourself seen and heard as long as the actual video has STRONG context relating back to its primary purpose as a visual beat sampler. That way someone that randomly stumbles upon the video on the net knows it’s not just some random visuals with music in the background.