Showing posts with label Kutmah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kutmah. Show all posts

Saturday, January 19, 2019

How Do You Feel

In keeping with something I’ve blogged about previously, and in fond memory of my old friend Scott Bulloch, who was a big part of the Hit + Run label family prior to his death in November 2017, I downloaded the label’s end-of-year 2018 compilation, How Do You Feel.

It’s a decent overview of Hit + Run’s work, featuring a mix of material from the label’s 2018 releases, and some essentials from past output, including work from label favourites like Kutmah, Esgar, CrimeKillz, and Zackey Force Funk (who I had the pleasure of meeting - via Bulloch - at a Hit + Run screen-printing event back in late 2013).

In fact, that Zackey Force Funk track, ‘Funky Gangster’, midway through the release, is almost an exact template for the “warped out funk” Bulloch loved so much, “offensive if you’re a puritan, dirty, and reeking of sex” …

Released three weeks ago, the digital album is on Bandcamp as a “limited time free download”, so get in there …

 

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

HNRMMXV

The end of another year inevitably means the release of another sumptuous compilation album from the LA-based Hit+Run label.

The 2015 edition features prime cuts from blog favourites like Kutmah, Zackey Force Funk, and a new discovery (for everythingsgonegreen) in the form of the Contact Field Orchestra, plus many others.

Check it …

Friday, January 31, 2014

Hit+Run Sampler 2013

Here’s something I wanted to blog about a few weeks back, but didn’t quite get to ...

On NYE the Hit+Run Crew released a sampler of some of the imprint’s best work from 2013 – it was initially up on Bandcamp as a festive freebie but now has a small “buy now” (minimum $5.00) price to download.
 
Anyone already familiar with Hit+Run’s output will appreciate that the release represents great value, showcasing as it does some of the label’s more prominent artists and a fair few hidden gems. There’s some cool stuff on this – in particular, check out Crimekillz, Esgar, Kutmah, Seven Davis Jr, and Al Dobson Jr.

Here’s a short blurb from the H+R Bandcamp page ...

“Throughout 2013, H+R CREW released ELEVEN amazing albums consisting of original music, remixes and more (some in collaboration with IZWID and BLACK JUNGLE SQUAD). Also included here are two unreleased tracks from forthcoming 2014 HIT+RUN releases (January & February 2014) plus an additional super secret bonus track”.

Get the sampler HERE

Saturday, December 7, 2013

IZWID, Kutmah, and Hit + Run

Last weekend I checked out the Red Bull Sound Select presents … /Hit + Run gig at Wellington’s Bodega venue. It was a rare night out, not only for the opportunity it presented to hook up with a bunch of old faces from way back, but for the promise of a handful of top drawer travelling DJs, and to experience live screen-printing as performance art … or to witness live art as performance. Or something.

I’d committed to doing it sober … (ish), so it’s fair to say the night had a sharper edge to it than it normally would, but the vibe around the venue was warm and generous, and the beats were never anything less than the main attraction … despite one half of the dancefloor seamlessly morphing into an art studio for much of the night. The first 100 punters walked away with a hand-picked design screen-printed tee, as the smoothly oiled Hit + Run Crew did its thing. It was a lot of fun. 
I went primarily to catch up with Hit + Run marketing guru Scott Bulloch, a long-time friend of some 30 years. I’d been in touch with him via social media earlier in the week, after noticing another project he’s been heavily involved with – IZWID – was starting to gain some serious traction. I was keen to learn what that was all about, and after experiencing the artistic aesthetic of Hit + Run first hand last weekend, I can now see exactly what IZWID is setting out to achieve … a compelling blend of art, music, and performance.

I asked Scott to explain where IZWID comes from, what drives it, who’s involved, and what we can expect in the future …

“IZWID is the imprint of an artist called Kutmah, a place we can release the music and art which have been secret signatures in Kutmah’s performances over the last few years. From what I understand, “Iswid" is Egyptian for “black”… Kutmah (of Egyptian heritage) explained to me that his mum always pronounced her “S’s” as “Z’s”, IZWID id iz then!


Kutmah is probably one of music’s best kept secrets in London right now, he’s a tight friend, so we decided to make his stuff less secret with an arts and crafts style label without any (of the) record company bullshit. The motivation was that he really wanted to help these musicians to get heard beyond his sets … people go mental on this stuff on the dance floor, but labels don’t want to know, so time to start a “record label”.

Kutmah is not just a DJ, he’s a curator, a digger, a creator, and a super nice guy who really only comes out to play and enlighten others. When he plays, who the hell knows what he is playing at any time, but when he does play a set just seems to meld together into some story about your life. You get touched, and that’s a rare thing in these days of super pop shit and pre-genrefied prejudice. It’s hard to explain but there are these often unreleased elements that he uses to tell stories with his performances; they can be sad, they can be motivating, they can be disturbing … to me they are simply mesmerising when knitted together in a mix. Kutmah has the ability to take music from any age and make it sound like it was supposed to be played right now.
Kutmah

I met Kutmah just over a year ago through my good friend Brandy Flower, who has championed Kutmah since he was a freaky kid. Brandy and the HIT+RUN Crew is the reason IZWID exists. He is the link that brings art and music back together.

IZWID’s first release was Esgar, hard out energetic Future Bass with dub overtones and a hypnotic bass space. The second release from Seven Davis Jr I’ll describe as Shroom Funk. It’s all over the place as much as the 1999-2012 time it was created in, but I have to say it’s one of the finest musical deliveries I’ve ever been part of; it’s house, it’s warped out funk, it’s offensive if you’re a puritan. It’s funny to me, I love it, so dirty, analog, and it reeks of sex.

The next instalment is from Peckham, some beautiful loose beats from a young talent sonically travelling under his grand-dad's name, Al Dobson Jr. He is IZWID-003 and I can’t wait to make this record. We have a busy schedule going into 2014 that was pre-planned a year ago. In saying that, you should not expect anything … we’ll just plonk it in front of you anyway”.


And here's a slice of warped out funk sex from Seven Davis Jr: