• Tag Archives DFI
  • Atha Cliath Records Presents – Dawn Till Dusk

    Jonnyboy and Jambo of ACR(Atha Cliath Records), have just dropped their long awaited, first full length album Dawn Till Dusk.

    Jonnyboy and Jambo, both from Donaghmede on the Northside of Dublin, have been involved with music for quite some time now, but have really only been taking it seriously since around 2005.

    Jambo is a well known emcee from around Dublin when he used to run Atha Cliath Records nights in Radio City and Eamonn Dorans etc. and where a lot of Irish emcees got their first gigs. He is possibly Irelands best battle rapper, well known for his harsh battle skills in DFI, winning all three battles he took part in, he also appeared on Redzer’s Dublife album and has been featured on some of Terawrizt’s albums.

    Jonnyboy is a producer/engineer/emcee and prides himself more on the production side of his craft. He has produced tracks for numerous Irish artists including a track from Lethal Dialect’s top rated LD50. He released a mixtape a good few years back called The Gospel According To John, which was his entry to the scene. Three years ago he released The Propaganda EP with Intox, an emcee from Tallaght and it featured some of his production on it along with guests Maverick Sabre and Terawrizt.

    Dawn Till Dusk is almost entirely produced, mixed and mastered by Jonnyboy, except for Take Off and Changes which were produced by Scimon Tist of the band Zombie Computer, who is based in Cork and who is also known for his work with dance DJ John Gibbons. There are features on the album by Hazy Jane, Jonnyboys’ sister, who does the female vocals and Joey Mac, both of whom are signed to ACR and also from Donaghmede, Damien Dempsey is sampled on the City’s Lur, another Donaghmede native and you also have Gary O’Brien, who tours with Damien Dempsey on the male vocals.

    The albums production takes on three musical genres which mix and separate as needed through the stories and emotion of the tracks portrayed. The production on the album utilises traditional HipHop style beats with pulsating basslines and with the use of soft melodramatic strings. Also the use of vocal samples as cuts on the beginning of some tracks is utilised excellently; well known samples, cut in rhythm to heighten the story you’re about to receive. The use of acoustic guitar and the traditional live drum styles give certain tracks a more deepened and realistic take, which give them a more singer/songwriter feel to them. Then you have the fusion of spacey, pad/synth sounds on tracks, giving them a dance/house type feel and with the use of some nice light keys sprinkled on top to create that twinkle and shine to the the beats. The tracks are all produced to enhance the ambience of the stories that are laced on top, so as you always feel connected to the rhymes.

    Jonnyboy and Jambo give an album that portrays their surroundings both physically and emotionally, from their youth to now and often leaping backward and forward as though reminiscing on times past. On The Sun, the first track, they explain the journey in getting the album completed, the struggle and the work put in to get it right and deliver a quality product. Jonnyboy breaks it down with a nice head nodding flow

    We took a little time, probably more than most did,

    Other rappers drop their albums with their braggin n bboastin

    But we stayed reserved, kept calm no need to rush this

    Perfect the album make it bang now we’ll push this

    Hazy Jane works a perfect hook, summing up the concept for the track

    The sun is coming up, you have to

    know when its down that you’ve done enough,

    We’ll keep on going up, until they knowing us

    The tracks seem to take you back and forth to different times, as though taken from the perspective of someone

    who has finally sat down after a long but young life and gets to reminisce. The rhymes dropped are intelligently sewn into the tracks, matching emotion and feeling, pulling the listener into their world, whether its the pits of their struggle or the release of their rebelled youth. A journey of mixed emotions, a rolercoaster of modern street life and the constant struggle to reach solidarity and stability in life. I think most people can relate to the topics and stories dropped on these songs. Jonnyboy and Jambo utilise their flow and styles, changing in unison with the production to enhance the message their trying to push, thus creating tracks that just feel somehow complete. You can feel this as they create totally different feelings on separate tracks, like on Leave The World, you can feel the good times that were still had while engulfed in the madness of youth, on Take Off, your engulfed in a club track which has a positive and confident feel to it and the style of rhyme that the guys drop on this creates that fusion of dance and rap which is not easy to pull off, it takes you back to the proper old school house, when the emcee hyped and “moved the crowd”. You get the impression they really went all out on this album to infuse that emotion on tracks and you can feel it, but that doesn’t take from their lyricism, skill, delivery or flow. On The Prophecy, they take us to street level and walk us on their path, pointing out the life within the life, between the lines, away from the mainstream smokescreen. Jambo delivers a steady, solid, image filled verse, with lines like

    Let me take you to the place where we live these lines

    to the estates where the youngfellas commit these crimes

    see the hate that resides in the publics eyes

    where we die for a price that the government decides

    The tracks take us through a social, a street and a political level but its never done in an “in your face” type of way, instead there is an underlying subliminal feed of these aspects that as a listener you decide what level you want to ingest, if you listen deep then you can feel the social angst and pain created by societies injustice but also the positive that exists in such surroundings and if you just breeze through, you can have a great musical experience with great tracks, twinned with great lyricism that will both lift you and pace you at different stages.

    Jonnyboy & Jambo have scrapped two albums previous to this one, a sign of the persistence for perfection in their sound and their search for self contentment in their art. They could have had their first album released twelve months ago but then it wouldnt be the installment that is Dawn Till Dusk. This is an album that you can listen to with anyone and they will appreciate it, even that friend that will only listen to one style of music will appreciate the diversity and boundary pushing brashness of this album.

    Next up for Jambo is the release of his solo album Die Or Develop, produced by G.I and Jonnyboy which will be out in the next few months. Jonnyboy is also executive producing Jambo’s next album which is as yet untitled, both to be released on ACR. Next up after that will be Joey Mac’s debut album on the label. Jonnyboy is also currently working on dance material, under the name Jacknife. Overall there will be some big releases and major happenings on ACR in the coming year.

    You can find them on Facebook @

    http://www.facebook.com/AthCliathRecords

    and the album can be purchased @

    http://athcliathrecords.bandcamp.com/album/dawn-till-dusk

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  • Lethal Dialect – LD50

    Back in January of this year Paulie Alwright, better known as Lethal Dialect, released his debut album LD50.

    Hailing from Blanchardstown in Dublin, Lethal Dialect has been on the scene here for a good few years. He started out working with Terawrizt, back when he was part of DHT, but when the group split, Lethal linked up with Jambo, another North Side heavy weight. He took part in two battles in the DFI league, against Genesis of Cork and Rob Steenson of Dublin, both of which he won. This took him up to his first release, the album LD50.

    The production on this album goes to G.I and Jonnyboy who have given this album its dark sound and gritty visuals. Utilising a lot of mid to low end frequencies on keys and strings, they really emphasized the darkness on these tracks which perfectly match Lethal Dialect’s style, flow and gritty urban storytelling. Throw on top the use of synths and some clever basslines on certain tracks that give defined emotion to match the nature of Lethal’s stories. The flow of the tracks are perfect, from the beat patterns and the progressions through the tracks, creating the perfect changes at the right times to enhance the rhymes on top.

    Straight off understand that this album is a street album, it’s a gritty and grimy tale of urban life told by an emcee who sits in that pit and spits outward. His flow is never rushed but instead steady and paced throughout as he drops syllables and couplets that pop to the beats, emphasising the stories within. The layout of the tracks on this album really work, you can feel the progression from beginning to end. He covers everything on a street level from the mentality, the respect, the generations of it, the corruption, the women and the whole link up of society to it from the top to the bottom and the craving to succeed and escape it.

    On the first track The Beginning, he sets the scene painting a dark gloomy picture but tells it with a celestial poetic twist, comparing the mental and physical of his scheme to the heavenly bodies

    On cold nights corrupting, my pattern of thoughts,

    Yeah, picture how the planets revolve,

    Just like a chamber when a hammer is cocked,

    Robbing the ring Saturn has got, give me the ice caps u have on,

    9 planets in a barrel get shot, some-body, some murder-one, potential stars are lost

     The tracks on the album progress in a time-frame type of form, it’s hard to pinpoint exactly the nature of the progression, whether its the mentality that is progressing or what, but somehow it just feels that the album truly has a beginning and an end. Beginning at the start and the mentality of the street, the tracks progress to deeper levels of darkness and tales of corruption, as though he grows to a higher level of awareness in the game from track to track. By track eight, The International, Lethal Dialect is engulfed deep in a story about death, murder and corruption where he delves from all angles into the truths of the matter and the whirlpool of deceit involved

    The only villainous thoughts was an illegitimate law

    abiding citizen caught within a sinister force

    Never in prison before the only criminal law

    was for a ticket he got in the municipal courts

    Till opposition made his sister a corpse….

    Within an instant his willingness for living was lost

    His ability to tell the story while keeping intelligent rhymes and utilising phonetic and syllable rhyming styles is truly well mastered on this album. From the second you press play and right the way through, you realise you are listening to a well crafted and well produced product. The album is pieced together excellently and I can’t even fault any aspects of it. The production works so well with Lethal’s dark and gritty delivery that it’s like they were fused together. Lethal Dialect has a deep knowledge and intelligence that lies underneath his rough, gritty life portrayal but it seeps through every now and again, almost as though he chooses to bury it within the harsh tales that he portrays.

    Next up for Lethal Dialect is his sophomore album LD50 Pt II, which is near completion and the first single/video Keep It Real, is almost ready for release. The album features production mainly from G.I again, along with Tony Mahoney and Mook of Sons Phonetic. He is also featured heavily on Costello’s upcoming album Illosophical and has a collaboration album with him in the works at the moment called Soul Literature. He has also got a track featured on the next season of RTE’s, Love/Hate due to air soon.

    Cop the album here  http://lethaldialect.bandcamp.com/

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  • Spekulativ Fiktion & K-Snatch – My Habitat

    Cork natives Spekulativ Fiction and K-Snatch have joined forces and have just released their first track together, My Habitat.

    Spekulativ Fiction is from Passage West and is a dedicated emcee and beatmaker, he released his first EP last year Living Proof That The Pen Is Mightier Than The Sword to great acclaim. K-Snatch hails from Ballypheane and is a well known emcee for his battling in DFI and is also a member of the Cork group Rebel Faction.

    The guys have teamed up to work together and release a joint effort, the Ritual EP, over the next few months. This is the first release from that upcoming project.

    The track was produced by Spekulativ Fiction and starts with a raw sounding guitar sample chopped and looped which forms the basis of the track. The intro is fed well as some rhythmic toms build it until the main beat enters and Spek drops in first with his verse. Obviously well comfortable on his flow and with the beat, he delivers a good liquid verse with some nice couplets ;

    fuck gimmicks

    Im leaving you flat on your ass like a slab of guinness,

    slap you cross’ the face with it

    then proceed to drink it till the whole thing is finished

    its witchcraft, my crafty ways are wicked

     

    The drums on this track go very well over the sample and are used well as they switch up and drop in and out to change up the track and emphasise certain parts. Spekulativ is certainly aware of how to work the beat off the vocal.

     

    The chorus comes next which is split between the two emcees. K-Snatch is on the first part where he drops a great two bar section ;

     

    Snatch and Spek stay raw spitting classic raps,

    we breath that holy type of high, we’re wafting in the back of mass

     

    The last verse is K-Snatch’s and with no let up, the flow stays constant keeping the tempo as he ebbs back n forth over the catchy beat dropping his own flavour in his lyrics such as ;

     

    Snatch is dope

    keeping it underground like catacombs.

    On a Spek beat

    dirtier than tattered robes.

    Not your average bloke,

    session in the nude and

    my saliva’s poisonous,

    I breastfed off Medusa

     

    This is the first release from the duo, coming off the future EP Ritual and if the rest of the tracks are anything like this, it will prove to be a smash. The guys will be releasing a video for the track soon. In the meantime they are going to be doing some live shows incorporating live drumming, scratching and noise artists. Stay posted for more from these guys repping for Cork.

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