Word: remixed
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From the lilting Afrobeat groove of Madlib’s take on “Where Do I Go,” to the soaring heights of Styrofoam and Shannon’s “I Found Love” remix, this album is high concept to the fullest–a collection of remixed tracks by the Free Design, a ’60s psychedelic folk family band whose records are highly sought after in the collecting world. The collaborative approach highlights the talents of some of the most innovative producers out there (including Danger Mouse, Caribou, Koushik...
...world were an extension of his satin sheets. He tours, makes videos, writes songs in which he announces, "I want sex in the kitchen, over by the stove/ Put you on the counter, by the buttered rolls," and on his undeniably good Step in the Name of Love (Remix) even proclaims himself "the Pied Piper of R&B." It's possible that Kelly doesn't know the pedophiliac connotations of the reference (in the fable, the piper leads the town's children into a secret mountain cave as revenge for getting stiffed on the exterminator bill), but one surmises...
...Only,” featuring The Game, has the most oomph of any non-“Closet” based track (at least for three weeks—after which you will never want to hear it again). It is certainly no “Ignition (Remix)” and feels a bit too much like an out-take from the ill-fated Jay-Z/Kelly “Best of Both Worlds” series. The Game has strong flow to his rhymes, but it only works in his verses. And Kelly’s work doesn?...
Even as the recording and movie industries sue hundreds of college students for illegally swapping files, popular musicians such as David Byrne, the Beastie Boys, and Chuck D. and Fine Arts Militia are encouraging the very behavior the industry is trying to stop: sampling, copying, remixing and circulating their songs online for free. Under a novel licensing scheme called Creative Commons (CC), developed by Stanford law professor Lawrence Lessig, artists can publish their work under middle-ground protection as "some rights reserved" instead of "all rights reserved." That way, others can listen to or remix the work--usually for noncommercial...
...group gained an underground following for their live remix of the presidential debates, which took the visual, audio, and closed-captioned text straight from the TV signal. While one of the crew acted as DJ, creating and mixing beats on the fly, the other two manipulated the text and image...