Author Archives: Jeff Giles

About Jeff Giles

Jeff Giles is the founder and editor-in-chief of Popdose and Dadnabbit, as well as an entertainment writer whose work can be seen at Rotten Tomatoes, Paste Magazine, and a number of other sites.

Secret Agent 23 Skidoo

Desert Island Discs with Secret Agent 23 Skidoo

If you had to go away for awhile and you could only take five of your favorite albums with you, which ones would you choose? Yes, we know it isn’t a fair question, but that hasn’t stopped us from asking music fans who happen to be recording artists in their own right. This edition of Desert Island Discs comes courtesy of Secret Agent 23 Skidoo, whose latest LP, Make Believers, arrives May 22. You can preview the first video from the album below — after reading his Desert Island picks, of course!

Secret Agent 23 Skidoo is a golden age hip hop freak! The golden age of hip hop is the early to mid and maybe late nineties, where originality and intelligence flourished, and funky samples and analog, vinyl, crunchy drums made heads nod worldwide. The desert island he is stranded on would be a straight up, soul fried, butt bumping GIT DOWN! And these five albums would be the soundtrack..

A Tribe Called Quest, Midnight Marauders

Though Tribe really changed the game an album earlier with their second album, The Low End Theory, this third album is their high water mark for me. Banging drums, soulful jazz, and the endlessly inventive and inspiring style of Q Tip, the Abstract Poetic perfectly balanced with the gritty but hilarious battle rhymes of Phife Dawg, the 5 Foot Assassin. For me, classic hip hop gets no better than this.

De La Soul, Buhloone Mindstate

Another third album — and the one I consider De La’s opus. Funky and different tracks from Prince Paul and the super creative confidence of a couple of the game’s best MCs knowing the world embraced their abstract, sophisticated and playful raps. This was when hip-hop on the radio was challenging the listener to be intelligent and pay attention, pushing them up to the next level of artistic thinking. An absolute masterpiece. As the hook explaining the title says, “It might blow up, but it won’t go pop!”

KRS ONE, Edutainment

KRS is probably the first MC to truly dedicate himself to “consciousness.” His abilities both as a lecturer on social justice and global politics and as the most fierce battle rapper in the history of hip-hop combine on this album in a perfect balance. The right formula of important information and dope beats and rhymes is the meaning of “Edutainment,” and it’s something all us rappers who attempt to make a point or teach continually strive for.

Beastie Boys, Check Your Head

Yet another third album, this is probably my favorite from the Beasties discography. Though Licensed to Ill was my first cassette, and an argument could be made that Paul’s Boutique was the most groundbreaking of their albums (and I probably wouldn’t have a comeback), I grew up on this one most and I love every note. This is also the moment that the Beasties really stepped up the use of their own live playing incorporated into making their tracks, and when MCA (RIP!) began bringing the Tibetan Buddhist influence into the crazy lyrical gumbo.

Outkast, ATLiens

Outkast is beyond a doubt one of the most if not the most creative, unique and different group in all of hip-hop history. This album was truly the beginning of their ascent into the strange cosmos of their stellar musical voyage. Subtly psychedelic production from Organized Noise create a heady landscape for the mindbending flows of Big Boi and Andre (before he was 3000!), and the lyrics and methods of delivery are brilliant and inspiring. This is where these stars were truly hatched, and still has some of my favorite of their tracks.

Secret Agent 23 Skidoo’s new album Make Believers comes out on May 22, and it is his third!

Okee Dokee Brothers, "Can You Canoe?"

Album Review: The Okee Dokee Brothers, ‘Can You Canoe?’

Okee Dokee Brothers, "Can You Canoe?"

All About the Okee Dokee Brothers: Folk and bluegrass music for kids is nothing new — sometimes quite literally, with the same hoary covers taking up space on countless records from Burl Ives to the present day. Joe Mailander and Justin Lansing, a.k.a. the Okee Dokee Brothers, offer an exception to the rule: traditional instrumentation and tight harmonies blend artfully with sharp original arrangements and lyrics that swing gently from tender to funny and back again.

What They Sound Like Put together a guitar, a banjo, and some brotherly harmony, and you’ve got the idea — although the Okee Dokees understand the value of a little production, too (more on that in a minute).

Album Highlights Folk artists have had to walk a tricky line in the recording age, trying to balance between presenting an honest account of their performing gifts while making room for enough audio sweetening to keep listeners interested at home, and the Okee Dokee Brothers are no different; on previous albums, they’ve struggled to deliver recordings that sounded raw while still boasting full-bodied arrangements. They hit the target square on the bullseye with Can You Canoe?, which offers the best of all worlds — the production (by the inestimable Dean Jones) is actually pretty involved, but it leaves plenty of room for the songs to breathe, creating the illusion of a campfire performance that somehow includes a cast of dozens (and a tuba, and an upright bass, and a few fiddles, and a couple of accordions, and…)

All of which would be little more than pleasant if it weren’t for the songs themselves — which are, to a number, outstanding. Unlike a lot of trad-focused performers, the Okee Dokees have always been songwriters first, and one of the pleasures of their discography is listening to them hone their craft — and I don’t think it’s overstating the case at all to say that with Can You Canoe?, Lansing and Mailander make a persuasive case for themselves as two of kindie’s best songwriters.

There just aren’t any bad songs here — and what’s more, the Okee Dokees manage to seamlessly weave and interpolate their original ideas with elements of traditional songs, all of which hold up solidly against covers of unimpeachable standards like “Haul Away Joe” (featuring Garth Hudson) and “King Kong Kitchie Kitchie Ki-Me-O.” It’s an aspect of the album that I think a lot of people probably won’t hear, but it might be the most important one; it reflects Lansing and Mailander’s respect for their musical roots as well as their confidence in their own maturing gifts.

Suggestions for Improvement Beats me. No clue. Best of luck trying to top this one, guys.

Target Age Group Everyone

Final Verdict Can You Canoe? had a lot to live up to. As we discussed with the Okee Dokees in last year’s interview, the album came out of a monthlong canoe trip down the Mississippi River that took Lansing and Mailander from Minnesota to St. Louis — a beautiful idea with amazing potential, but one that might have seemed like sort of a waste for the audience if it hadn’t produced an album that holds up to repeat listens. Well, it doesn’t: It demands them. Just ask anyone who lives in my house — I’ve had it in heavy rotation right alongside the kids.

Like the Mississippi, Can You Canoe? has a generally calm surface — including some of the loveliest ballads you’re likely to hear all year — but it also holds a lot of depth. This is a record about kindness, patience, friendship, brotherhood, travel, respect for the natural world, and a whole lot more — all big concepts for a little 38-minute collection of songs, but ones that move gracefully below the surface, lending calm, cool resonance to what was already a beautiful journey.

And speaking of the journey, I’d be remiss if I didn’t point out that Can You Canoe? also comes with a DVD that outlines the Okee Dokees’ trip, including a number of funny looks at life on the river, some music videos, and at least one can’t-miss segment featuring a few words to live by from Kenny Salwey, the self-proclaimed Last River Rat. It’s all decidedly homespun, but digital recording has come an awfully long way, and the film benefits greatly from the Okee Dokees’ decision to turn that part of the trip over to director Alex Johnson, who (along with editor Jed Anderson and assistant director Bryan Sieh) captures a lot of natural beauty with a canoe-ready rig.

It all adds up to the album to beat for the best kindie release of the year — a set of songs that should provoke family singalongs and discussions in equal measure. I can’t wait to hear where their journey takes them next.

New Video: Sugar Free Allstars, ‘Sunday Afternoon’ (featuring Trout Fishing In America)

Today’s youth are in desperate need of a family-friendly funk infusion, and just in time, here comes the leadoff single from Sugar Free Allstars’ upcoming album All on a Sunday Afternoon. Featuring the duo’s trademark drum kit kick with Hammond special sauce, “Sunday Afternoon” makes extra room for the additional song stylings of Trout Fishing in America’s Keith Grimwood and Ezra Idlet.

buy clomid online buy clomid no prescription

Check it out below, and visit the band’s site to get more information on the new album, due June 12: