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From:
N. Graham Worthington
To:
Date:
Wed, 4 Jun 2003 13:02:08 -0400 (EDT)
Subject:
[idm] beans / prefuse 73 bmore show
Msg-Id:
<Pine.GSO.4.44L.01.0306041121490.20361-100000@solaris1.gl.umbc.edu>
Mbox:
idm.0306.gz
Despite nasty weather and virtually no local promotion, last night's beans & prefuse show at the ottobar in baltimore drew a healthy crowd ready to rock. Here's my amateur breakdown and review... Beans took the stage sporting a meshback hat with faux peacock feathers adorning the front. Even though anticon has enjoyed good turnouts and positive response here in harm city, it seemed like most of the crowd was there to see prefuse (the "nerd" to "head" ratio in the crowd was kinda high). Yet beans quickly grabbed the crowd's attention with a fast paced spoken bit about herb, crack, and the drug war. After the first couple tracks everyone was obviously converted to his particular brand of simple hard beats and rapid fire ragga-styled flow. He even inspired a few people to echo the ends of his lines during some of his beatless pieces, without asking for any sort of call-and-response. In an age where platinum-selling rappers have trouble putting on a half decent live show, beans proved that the other end of the spectrum is alive and kicking. His energy and connection with the crowd was so tangible, it made me wonder why more of that wasn't captured on his Warp recordings. His talent was most evident when he performed acapella, leading me to speculate on when he might collaborate with a more accomplished producer. After he had finished his prescribed setlist, the crowd demanded more, and he delivered another acapella and another beat-backed track to the delight of the assembled. Prefuse and his dj took the stage not long after, and jumped right in to a set that seemed designed to feature the party-rocking side of his output. He divided his time between twiddling a moog, triggering and retriggering beats on his mpc, and manning his mixer. Even though it was obvious to any half-educated producer/beat-maker/etc that most of his set was presequenced, as evidenced by the way his transitions went seamlessly together, the overall output was more than enjoyable. He threw in a few cut and paste bits of some older material along with newer unreleased/unused parts of a wide variety of hiphop, soul, and funk tracks that kept everything rolling along in between the more sustained passages. Having never seen prefuse live before (though I have heard more than a few live boots) I was most impressed with his mpc work. Many times he furiously augmented his beats by pounding away on the pads only to suddenly cut out everything save the retriggered beats and wash over everything with a wall of squelchy noise. On the downside, I felt he could have left his moog at home, as it rarely added anything beyond a few eardrum-raking filter sweeps. I was similarly disappointed that prefuse's dj was so low in the mix that he was rendered virtually inaudible. Roc Raida he wasn't, but still I felt that as long as he was gonna be on stage, the audience should have been able to hear him. Again, once prefuse had concluded his planned setlist, the crowd demanded an encore and he delivered. All things considered, the show was a big success. Baltimore's hiphop/club scene has been notoriously crippled by the popularity of "club breaks" over the years, but last night's show (and the attendance of quite a few people with more melanin than I) proved that it ain't dead yet. While most people showed up for prefuse, I think beans won more converts and very nearly stole the show. I've heard varying responses from people who've attended shows on this tour, and maybe it's the beginning of a backlash, or maybe it's just all the biters getting tired of being one-upped, but I just don't see how anyone who's been a fan of either beans/anticon or prefuse could not want to check this line up out. ...from the city that bleeds, N. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org