XLogin

Password lost?  

Facebook Options


Sign up
download process

MP3 Illegoaliens - Blank Canvas

Price: 8.99 USD
Download
Now
Add to cart
Instant Download from music, digital version

MP3 Album Cover Musicians use tradebit:

Learn how to make music
Pick up cool karaoke downloads
Search for sheet music!
  • Contains these products:
  • Single items of this product are available separately.
  • Lifted Veil
    play button
  • Listen Close
    play button
  • Frankmax
    play button
  • Alienspaceships
    play button
  • Static Breeze of Revelation
    play button
  • Cursed Emerging
    play button
  • Chaivang Syndrome
    play button
  • Third World Poetry
    play button
  • Morning Sickness
    play button
  • Timeless
    play button
  • Sleep Paralysis
    play button
  • Wake Up
    play button
  • Mild Addiction
    play button
  • Venus
    play button
  • Cosmic Whistle
    play button
  • Dope Simplicity
    play button
  • Clamor
    play button
  • Wild Weekends
    play button
  • Call From Home
    play button
  • Picture The
    play button
  • Portrait of Evolution
    play button
  • Melted Symphony
    play button
  • Size: 66.3 MB   Platform: MP3

File Data:

Contact Seller: music, CDbaby reseller USA, Member since 06/19/2005
URL: Twitter this Tweet this
Embed: Create JavaScript Mobile Tag Widgets for your homepage

Description:

(ID 2573513)
Hip Hop Emceeing & Turntablism with a pinch of Pyschadelic, Folk and Experimental mixed IN. Cool Beats. Cool Cuts. Cool Lyrics. Grimey raw sound. What's not to like?

22 MP3 Songs
HIP-HOP/RAP: Underground Rap, FOLK: Alternative Folk

Show all album songs: Blank Canvas Songs


Details:
Illegoaliens consists of two emcees and one deejay.

Fres and Lase, two emcees from Oshkosh Wisconsin formed the group back in 1993 (middle school) and began circulating mix tapes and demos and started to participate in local shows.

Ten years later, 2003 Seed aka dj redbuttons joined the crew and now we are here with Blank Canvas.


Q&A with Fres.

q: How does this new album differ from the previous music that youâve released in the past? Including songs like, âBeacon of Lightâ and âHollow Man.â

a: The tracks on the new album, arenât too different from music weâve made and circulated in the past. Weâve just grown older and gained more knowledge, learned new things, opened the eyes to new experiences and matured.

The new tracks are just as confusing if not more then the old tracks. Weâve in someways simplified the words down a bit. I guess you can say we went from complex complexity to simple complexity, though, probably still confusing in some sense.

q: You make a lot of references to different folklorish/mythical creatures (vampires, werewolves, aliens, etc.)â especially vampires â can you explain the significance of these creatures? Are you a vampire?

a: Iâve always been a sci fi nerd and a fan of universal studioâs classic monster characters. Not only that, but greek mythology fascinates me. Also, I love to read and get inspiration from a variety of different books. Back when I was a preteen to teen, Iâd spend countless hours in the library, just reading up on odd things here and there. I just wanted to learn anything and everything and now itâs the meshing of everything Iâve retained.

With my music I write to be creative and i like to think outside the box of the usual hip hop clichés and norms.

The comparisons, the references to odd folklore, mythical stories, again is to have fun with what you write. Thinking outside the box. Emceeing in hip hop is about being creative, about entertaining the listener.

And if it seems I have a cynical edge to my storytelling, I write a lot of songs to myself. Some days itâll be my optimistic self talking to you or even myself, sometimes itâs my pessimistic self. Itâs all on how Iâm feeling at that moment, that day in life.

q: What do you hope to accomplish with your music?
What is your approach to creating your music?

a: With my music I hope to intrigue people, maybe even inspire people. Show them that you can be creative and think outside the box.

My approach to creating music is, again, being creative. I donât count bars or have a specific set pattern. Once I write something, when Iâm through telling the story or message, the song is complete. If I donât feel there needs to be a hook, then there wonât be one.

Most of the tracks, I donât have a concept until itâs done. I write what I feel at the moment, or how the beat inspires me. Sometimes, Iâll flip though my notebook, gather up verses Iâve written and put them together. Iâm sure if I was upset this day, and Iâm upset this other day, it would make sense that these verses do go together, but just didnât stream out my head in sequence.

I really donât have any sort of structure, whether thatâs good or bad, itâs what works and how I will continue to make music.

q: What is the most satisfying part of being involved with Hip Hop music?

a: Itâs a well needed outlet, being able to project all this cumulated energy and thoughts in my head into something positive. Thatâs satisfying.

At the same time, Iâm learning new things about myself with each song written. Iâm riddling myself and at later times in life I come back and listen, Iâll catch things that didnât make sense before, but do now.

You can say my music is a collection messages and stories for the future self and future listener, and if someone can take what Iâve written and relate to it, even more satisfying.

Also, by myself putting in the effort to get to know and be part of the hip hop culture, I was unintentionally trying to escape my ethnic heritage and culture, which I didn't feel was accepting me. Now after all these years enriched with the beauty of hip hop, I'm now getting back to the roots of my own heritage and culture. The effort used to find the beauty in hip hop is the same effort I now use to find the beauty in my own culture.

That is why I feel I owe it to the hip hop culture to be involved in it in anyway. Hip hop raised me up as much as my parents did and taught me things I would have never learned or tried to learn.

Hip hop taught me creativity, imagination and dedication.

q: Some of the most vibrant and intriguing moments of your songs on the new album is the production and how your vocals blend but donât always overshadow the music of the production. Who is behind everything from the music, samples, to effects of the instrumentals?

a: This album and all the music Iâve made in the past is low budget. My studio does not consist of much. I am comfortable with what I use and I feel it's the creativity that must be priority in music.

The instrumentals behind the album were a collaboration of KshKsh, Cad of dreamlogic, Seed and myself.

KshKsh is a beast when it comes to beats. His sounds are astounding, extremely dope and different. I canât go wrong with a Kshksh beat. Tracks like, Cursed Emerging, were written thoroughly after only one listening. Weâve been collaborating since 2001 and I hope to continue doing so. KshKsh also provided the illustration for the insert. He is currently concentrating on his film career.

Cad of dreamlogic, Iâve known this cat for sometime now and heâs been always fucked up in the head. Thatâs why we click so greatly together. Weâre all âbothered individuals.â Cadâs use of electronica sounds and arrangements will mess with your head, be it intoxicated or sober. Cad and dreamlogic are also onto something as well as ON something. They dabble in electronica and progressive trance, but can also make some dope hip hop music.

Seed, one of the illest deejays Iâve ever known and will ever know. Creativity just oozes out of this catâs fingertips. He contributed all the cuts and wicky wickies on the album. Seed is currently out of the country on one of his many expeditions.

Everything was mixed down by myself, as well as arranged and I added effects and manipulated some of the beats provided by KshKsh, Cad and Seed to accommodate the sequence of the album. Samples were then added to where the storyline of the album would run smooth.

Again, this is a low budget album, so donât expect to hear everything sounding crisp and clean.

q: What/Who are some of your musical influences when creating your own music?

a: Iâve got tons of musical influences. I listen to all sorts of music and try to absorb all types of sounds.

Hip hop influences: Krs One, Rakim, Amosphere, Sage Francis, Anticon, WuTang, Galapagos4, Molemen, Kool Keith, Del and the Heiroglyphics family just to name a few.

To be honest, during the process of this album, I rarely listened to hip hop.

What I do listen quite a bit to, is 60s/70s classic rock. I love hippie rock or psychedelic rock. Anything from Bob Dylan, The Beatles, Pink Floyd, Rolling Stones, Janice Joplin, The Doors, The Who, The Ramones and many more.

I love the lyrics of the 60s/70s era and I love the beats of hip hop. So itâs the formula I use.

When it comes to arranging music and production, Dan the Automator/Handsome Boy Modeling, Ant, Pink Floyd and Queen are big influences. The change ups, the melodies, the lyrics and passion found in their songs/albums are mind blowing.

But, not only does music influence me when Iâm writing or arranging/composing. Art and artists, such as, Salvador Dali and Picasso are big influences. Their creativity and abstract depictions are beautiful.

With my music, I try to create audio optical illusions, something to bewilder the mind, magic eye for your ears, if you will. Movies for the ears, soundtracks for the eccentric.

q: What would you like to end off with?

a: Hip hop is extremely influential in this time and age. Hip hop music is a powerful art form. If you choose to use it, use it wisely. Donât disgrace not only, hip hop, your ethnicity, but yourself.

Portray yourself how you would to your own flesh and blood, your own kinfolk. Be true to yourself. You may not want to be a role model, but youâre participating in an art form that younger folks want to be a part of and emulate.

Remember, your work will be taken literally by some and of course, as art to some. Youâre going to be criticized. Youâve got to take the good with the bad and ugly.

Learn the history of HIP HOP. Learn the history of MUSIC. To be an outsider to any culture and want to be involved, does not mean, simply picking up from where the culture is and developing from knowledge of the current status. It means you have to dig deep, get to the roots and discover what molded and made the culture and music what it currently is.

Enjoy life. Take it seriously, yet take it lightly.

If you feel youâve made a dope track. Youâve made a dope track.

Take it slow. Donât rush. If you feel itâs not perfect. Make it perfect.

Think outside the box. Think outside the social norm. Be unique. Be intriguing. Donât cater to one mind state. Music, hip hop or not, is a creative outlet, use your imagination.

Look into the arts. Look into the past, present and future for inspiration. Theyâre great resources. Read some books! Learn new words! Read poetry! Use wordplay, metaphors, ambiguity. Make people think. Let people make you think. Listen to other types of music. Eat other foods. Visit other places. Experiment. Trial and error. Think different, be different! But be yourself. Find yourself. Itâs all on this album. Listen, take notes and apply.

in partnership with CDbaby
User tags: hip-hop rap underground, folk alternative, mp3 album

More Files From This User

Related Files

Mp3 Tunsi Wrap - Hip-hop/rap: Underground Rap

REAL underground hip hop. 15 MP3 Songs HIP-HOP/RAP: Underground Rap, URBAN/R&B: Urban Details: Bio: TUNSI, born and raised on the East Coast (CT) is an ar......


Mp3 F.i. Division - Hip-hop/rap: Hip Hop

F.I. division. Famous idiots? Freakin infidels? Forever infinite, finally impressionable. None of the above. Fuck it. is what F.I. stands for. Produced by DJ......


Mp3 Top Left - The Warning

Fresh Northwest hip hop. 17 MP3 Songs HIP-HOP/RAP: Hip Hop, HIP-HOP/RAP: Underground Rap Details: Top Left is an emerging crew of artists from the pacifi......


Mp3 Other People's Money - The Chronicles Of Debauchery Vol. I

Classic Hip-Hop, East Coast, West Coast, Down South, and Worldwide, Other People''s Money. 17 MP3 Songs HIP-HOP/RAP: Hardcore Rap, HIP-HOP/RAP: Underground ......