Showing posts with label creative loafing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creative loafing. Show all posts

Monday, July 27, 2009

SMKA X illroots X Creative Loafing -> Song Writing Competition



The word is getting out and the contest is in full motion. We wanted to give artists we are not familiar with, an opportunity to get on the 808 Experiment: Vol 2.

HOW DOES THIS WORK?... very simple. Record an original song to the SMKA beat, "Back in my younger days" and if your song is chosen then you win free gear from DOPE Couture and a song on the 808 experiment: vol 2.

STEP 1: Download the Beat
BACK IN MY YOUNGER DAYS

STEP 2: Write a dope song

STEP 3: Record that dope song

STEP 4: Submit the recorded in mp3 format to smkaproductions@gmail.com

STEP 5: WIN free gear from DOPE couture and a spot on the 808 Experiment: vol 2

Friday, July 24, 2009

SMKA's DOPE GIVE AWAY ---> Contest!!!




So here is the deal...We get hit up a lot by ppl trying to get on VOl 2 and "Back in My Younger Days"... so we did the math, hooked up with DOPE Couture decided to do a contest...

THE BEST SONG gets on VOL 2 and wins a free hat and shirt from DOPE Couture.

DOPE COUTURE

BACK IN MY YOUNGER DAYS DOWNLOAD


HELPING OUT WITH PROMO and picking the song is CREATIVE LOAFING and Illroots.com

the contest ends on October 1st!!!!

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

CREATIVE LOAFING "BEST of ATLANTA"...VOTE NOW




Vote for SMKA wherever you can...but they dont have a "Best Producer" category so you figure it out.

DO VOTE FOR "The 808 Experiment: VOl 1" for best mixtape!!!!

Also VOTE FOR...

Bizarro local news story: "Super Maket Knife Attack"
Overall radio station: 88.5
Non-commercial radio station: 88.5
Local blog/blogger: SMKA
Local personality to follow on Twitter: smka
Free thing to do in Atlanta: Sexy Time
Annual event: A3C Festival
Local overall music act: Grip, Sean Falyon, TRIMM...Pick One
Sign that you can’t keep a good music scene down: SMKA
Local mixtape: SMKA: The 808 Experiment: Vol 1

and Whynatte (energy drink) & Esperanza (clothing designer)

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Mixt A, Vol. 1 record release show tonight @ Eyedrum



Creative Loafing celebrates this year’s music issue with the first of two record release parties for our 12-inch LP compilation the Mixt A Vol 1.

The record is strictly limited to 500 copies. The first show happens at Eyedrum on Thursday night. The $10 cover the door gets you into the show as well as a copy of the record. The N.E.C., Grip Playaz, the Balkans and A.Leon Craft are all scheduled to perform. Doors open at 7 p.m. Music starts at 8 p.m.





DOWNLOAD THE ALBUM HERE

A.leon Craft "Spaced Out" (prod. SMKA)

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Creative Loafing Mixtape Release Show

The Creative Loafing/ Criminal Records Release Show in Atlanta... you do not want to miss this event.





INFO HERE

The record is strictly limited to 500 copies that will be available at not one, but two record release shows. The first show happens at Eyedrum on Thurs, May 7. The $10 cover at Eyedrum gets you into the show as well as a copy of the record. The N.E.C., Grip Playaz, the Balkans and A.Leon Craft are all scheduled to perform. Doors open at 7 p.m. Music starts at 8 p.m.

The second record release party goes down at Criminal Records on the afternoon of Sun., May 10. The Carnivores, Stanza, Mums F.P. and Predator are on the bill. There is no cover charge to attend the show. LPs will be on sale at the store for $10 and the music starts at 3:30 p.m.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Creative Loafing x Criminal Record + SMKA = Mixt A, Vol. 1

A Mixt Vol: 1 -- An Atlanta Compilation & Limited Edition Vinyl

SMKA has TWO songs on the Compilation

A.leon Craft - "Spaced Out"

Supreeme ft. Fat Tony - "I'm on Fire"

DOWNLOAD THE PROJECT HERE


(listen to both @ www.myspace.com/smkamusic)


J Beans - Creative Loafing Article

Here is the story Creative Loafing just published on J beans. Beans is a great MC, performer and friend....


"Like every artist, Jason "J Beans" Hall found himself traveling down an uncompromising path in search of his voice. Until, that is, he stumbled upon a split in the road. Rather than steer clear of the fork, he took both. Now he uses the resulting dual personas - J Beans and alter ego J Bless - to reveal his full story on the new mixtape, One Man, Two Sounds.

Born in Brooklyn, raised in Jamaica and educated at Atlanta's Emory University, Hall lyrically represents equal parts street hustler and hip-hop philosopher. Complemented by the reggae-inspired hooks he channels for the first time as J Bless, his newfound range is as broad as his message. Had it not been for a recent tragedy, however, he might still be harboring that inner voice in total silence.

In 2005, Beans began fronting the Atlanta-based hip-hop band, Haze. Two years later, after the group disintegrated, Beans teamed up with old friend and local rapper Charles "CG" Price to form the Disciples. A relentless mixtape hustle earned them street love and heavy spins at local strip clubs. Within a year, they were inducted into radio hosts the Durty Boyz' Hall of Fame on Hot 107.9’s “Battlegrounds” (WHTA-FM).

But the future turned surprisingly sour last November when CG was fatally stabbed in Chicago, while visiting his family over Thanksgiving. The devastating loss made Beans reevaluate the course his life and art were taking.

Heartbroken, J Beans thought about putting down the mic, but decided instead to take his musical mission in a different direction. "The Disciples music was special to me, but it was mostly stories of hood life," admits J Beans. "I kinda felt like I was putting myself in a box that I didn't even need to be in. I was lucky enough to go to school and see a lot of things, and at times my story got lost."

His new mixtape resolves that. With seven past Disciples tracks he pays homage to the memory of CG, while seven new J Beans/J Bless tracks — including the SMKA-produced "I've Been Drinking" — thoughtfully cover his storied past and a hopeful future."

FOR THE FULL STORY CLICK HERE

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

1500+ Views for Caddys in 2 days

Want to thank OZONE and CL - and all the other blogs - who have written about the video thus far.

OZONE

Creative Loafing

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Creative Loafing will Buy Half your Meal - Cool Deal



Creative Loafing is running a cool offer that I recommend checking out...if you like the restaurants. You buy a certificate for 25$ and they match that with 25$ more. I imagine this is nothing new...but it is new to me. And if you like the places they have on the list you are losing money buy not buying the certificates.

Plus- CL is a dope publication that supports the community... so support it back!!!

Places like:

Graveyard Tavern
1245 Glenwood Ave SE
Atlanta, GA 30316
404-622-8686

Cantina La Casita
560 Gresham Ave SE
Atlanta, GA 30316
404-622-8081

Nancy's Pizzeria
265 Ponce de Leon Ave NE
Atlanta, GA 30308
404-885-9199

New York Pizza Exchange
2810 Paces Ferry Rd SE
Atlanta, GA 30339
770-434-9000

and many more...

LINK HERE

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Creative Loafing



In Case You Missed It

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

ATLiens phone home with SMKA's The 808 Experiment, Vol. 1 - CREATIVE LOAFING DEC 24-30


Sometimes Atlanta's new wave of underground hip-hop seems like a motherless child. Or an alien that lost contact with the mothership.

In a galaxy far away from the finger snaps that made Bankhead go pop and the traps that turned T.I. and Young Jeezy into hot commodities, there exists an alternate universe where beats are measured by the blogosphere instead of the bump produced in your trunk.

Over the past year, an emerging underworld (filled with hipster-leaning hoppers, second-generation ATLiens, and otherwise unidentifiable but fly MCs) seemed poised to forsake an authentic Dirty South sound for more of the same cocaine-laced synth lines and recycled computer love à la Kanye West. It became a desperate state of affairs.

But the new compilation The 808 Experiment, Vol. 1 from SMKA Productions proves there's still hope. By bridging the city's slicker, hipster derivative and its indigenous red clay swagger, the album may bring Atlanta's rap legacy back to the future. And a burgeoning scene could get the chance to redefine itself before some random blogger does.

The 808 Experiment features more than 25 MCs, including Gripplyaz, one of the artists on the standout track "Caddys." Once he says with a laugh, "I am not a fucking hipster" for the umpteenth time during a recent telephone interview, it becomes clear not only how frustrated he is with the label but also how much he embodies the sentiment behind the compilation. Grip, like a growing class of local acts, occupies that rare, hard-to-define space within Atlanta's underground between straight-up hood and hipster-hop.

Raised in Atlanta's Old Fourth Ward, Grip "grew up around the dope game [and] the skateboarders," he says. "We all hung out together."

Reconciling those two extremes through music is exactly what primary producer Blake "808 Blake" German, producer/engineer Kyle "7" King, and business manager Mike Walberg had in mind when they decided to form SMKA Productions over lunch one day at a Midtown Chick-Fil-A. The trio immediately began work on a project to highlight the range of local talent.

The three Atlanta natives and former Paideia classmates "wanted to come up with something new," says German. So they started with something old – the Roland TR-808. Introduced in 1980, the drum machine produced the menacing, trunk-rattling beats that became synonymous with the earliest strands of Southern bass music and booty-shake later in the decade.

From the outset, it's clear The 808 Experiment intends to resurrect that classic period and update it with an array of samples and melodic keys. "The Instrumental Introduction" is constructed around a 12-second loop of Rose Royce's 1978 classic "Love Don't Live Here Anymore," with its midtempo, gurgling bass line and eerie keyboard melody that almost sounds paranormal taken out of its original context. Then the voice of OutKast's Andre, sampled from 1996's ATLiens song "Elevators (Me & You)," repeats: "Now everyday we looked up at the ceiling (yep)/watching ceiling fans go 'round trying to catch that feeling off instrumentals." By the time the first 808 beat kicks in one minute and 25 seconds into the track, the curtain has been raised.

"It was almost paying a little homage to the dudes that came before us," says German. "OutKast, to me, they represent a very creative side of Atlanta that we forget about and I wanted to definitely showcase them because they provide a little bit of light sometimes [compared to] a lot of other stuff on the radio."

The CD offers a range of voices, from street-worthy (J Beans, Double R, Young Trimm) to rowdy (Supreeme, Tom P) to quirky (Rome Fortune, Wil May, o8o of Thunderkatz). With both natives and transplants represented, the album's unifying factor is its diversity.

FOR THE FULL ARTICLE CLICK HERE!!!

Thanks CL and Rodney Carmichel

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Creative Loafing Interview - "SMKA Productions’ The 808 Experiment: Vol. 1 reclaims Atlanta’s hip-hop identity"



Thanks to Rodney Carmichael and Creative Loafing....


"God bless the child that’s got his own.

From the outset of SMKA Productions‘ newly released compilation, The 808 Experiment Vol. 1, it’s clear that Atlanta has finally arrived.

Surely, you say, the hip-hop capital of the world is no newbie to rap’s all-encompassing map. And you’re right. But among Atlanta’s emerging rap underworld — filled with hipster-leaning hoppers, 2nd generation ATLiens, and otherwise unidentifiable but objectively fly MCs — that original, Dirty South sound had been all but bleached out and forsaken. Until now.

With The 808 Experiment, SMKA accomplishes the seemingly impossible: It bridges Atlanta’s slick, hipster-hop derivative with the indigenous, red clay swagger for which the A has always been known.

Beats simultaneously swim in bass-drunk, 808 kicks while dancing between melodic, pastel-colored keys. Even when SMKA dares to sample esoteric pop songs like Sting’s “Englishman in New York,” the resulting track ["Alien (When in Rome) feat. Jay West, Savage and Gilles] is certifiably stamped “ATL.”

Their secret weapon? SMKA producers Blake “808 Blake” German and Kyle “7King” King, along with in-house “hustler” Mike Walberg, are all Atlanta natives. Damn near unheard of in this day and age, right? Meanwhile, the compilation features plenty among the city’s rising crop of natives and transplants alike, including Gripplyaz, A. Leon Craft, and Young Trimm (”Caddy”), trio Supreeme (”I’m On Fire”), Wil May (”Sweet Confusion”), and o8o of T!Katz (”Fire in the Hole”). But some of the biggest surprises come from lesser known cats who turn in equally stellar performances, including Double R of Miami, Nuff Sed, J Beans, Dee Rail, Fat Tony, Niko Villamor, Jay West, Rome Fortune, J Young, Radcliff Hyphen, Crysis, Brandon Michael, Toussaint, Alexandria Lushington and Tom P of Decatur. El da Sensei of New Jersey-based Artifacts is also featured.

With only 48 hours since it’s release it’s impossible to say just yet, but here’s hoping The 808 Experiment represents a truly formative moment in what’s already proven to be a watershed year for Atlanta’s slightly off-the-radar hip-hop movement.

Needless to say, I had to talk to the guys behind SMKA to find out where the heck they’ve been hiding. Oh, and you’ll never guess what SMKA stands for?"

DOWNLOAD: The 808 Experiment Vol. 1

For the Full Interview....Click HERE