Ethan Spalding & Supa Trippa – “Baby Steps (Remix)” (Video)

Ethan and SupaTrippa teamed up agian on this one. This is a spin off of the 422 Traprock Band’s Baby Steps song. This remix was produced by Hitman Hunter. The baseline and the hook catches your ear right after you hit play. Ethan went melodic on it. Then when SupaTrippa comes in with his verse it comes full circle. The teamed up with earfux on the visual. Ethan brought his bike out. The colors matched up well with the whole feeling of the song. The Location was somewhere way out maryland past Germantown but before you get to Fredrick on 270. Complete Dopeness!!!

Kelela: Tiny Desk Concert (Video)

Kelela took her opportunity at the Tiny Desk to create something new. She swapped key pieces from her recordings (hard drums and effects) for a harp and piano. She also presented us with a challenge or two as well. While there weren’t many bodies behind the Desk, the instruments left little room for movement. Pianist Briley Harris was barricaded by the keys, and background vocalists Brittney Mills and Alayna Rodgers were nestled next to Ahya Simone’s big beautiful harp. When an artist presents us with a distinctive, creative vision for their performance, the fun part is collaborating to execute that idea.

This Tiny Desk was a homecoming for Kelela. She let the music do most of the speaking but not before shouting out Washington, D.C., where she was born. The setlist seamlessly showcases most parts of her catalog with a couple of brand new arrangements. “Enough” and “Take Me Apart” are almost unrecognizable, recast to allow Kelela’s vocals to sit gently within the harp and keys. The singer found a thunder tube in our percussion section and tinkered with it during soundcheck. Toward the end of “The High,” she sings through it to alter her voice. That exploration and experimentation perfectly capture the essence of the show.

Kokayi – ‘An Eponymous Jont’/”Hump Day” (Videos)

The creativity of the legendary Kokayi knows zero bounds, as can be proven with his latest:

Hump Day is about making it over, not just a Wednesday but over the feeling of carrying the weight of the world on your shoulders, the Sisyphean pursuits as we trade labor for wages, the seemingly unending work that needs to be done. aka stress. shout out to Organized Konfusion, Dooable Arts, the homie @geology365 the bars in Prince Po’s opening salvo, the cover art for that single still resonates. Hump Day was recorded out west at my brother @ommaskeith sanctuary, with Wynne Bennett on keys Guillermo Brown on drums, and Solomon Dorsey on bass. The entire contents of “KOKAYI: an eponymous jont” is the 1st of 3 projects capturing spontaneous composition all supported by the Guggenheim Fellowship.