Jazz Liberatorz (Madhi, Dusty and DJ Damage) a French hip hop group that I think is largely unknown in the United States have a new record entitled Fruit of the Past. The record features the Jazz Liberatorz typical blend of breezy, laidback soul and jazz soundscapes contrasted by more funky beat tracks that feature a top notch list of vocal guests including Aloe Blacc, Fat Lip, Wildchild, Mos D...
Talking about Jazz Liberatorz without going into a long rant about the world of bling & how despicable the "MTV/Cribs/Industry rappers" troupe are, seems impossible as the roots of hip-hop have been hijacked by the industry and turned into a simulacra of what it originally meant in the last decade.
I don't know much about the French Jazz Liberatorz and I don't have the time to investigate thoroughly. Nontheless I'd like to recommend you this album strongly if you like so called Golden Era HipHop and/or Jazz. I found them on a music blog and damn, this is a rare find. At times they remind me a bit of 4hero but also of Arrested Development or A Tribe Called Quest. Most of the following info...
With the launch of their new site The Find Magazine teams up with France’s DJ Tran Bert to give you 40 minutes of jazzy Hip Hop with “A God Time With DJ Tran Bert”.Any good? Ipod worthy? Indeed it is. Add this mix to your mixtape collection.1. Jazz Liberatorz – A Paris2. Common – The [...]Related posts (Script Generated):Find Magazine and DJ Tran Bert | A Good Time With DJ Tran Bert (Mix
Jazz Liberatorz (Madhi, Dusty and DJ Damage) a French hip hop group that I think is largely unknown in the United States have a new record entitled Fruit of the Past. The record features the Jazz Liberatorz typical blend of breezy, laidback soul and jazz soundscapes contrasted by more funky beat tracks that feature a top notch list of vocal guests including Aloe Blacc, Fat Lip, Wildchild, Mos D...
Talking about Jazz Liberatorz without going into a long rant about the world of bling & how despicable the "MTV/Cribs/Industry rappers" troupe are, seems impossible as the roots of hip-hop have been hijacked by the industry and turned into a simulacra of what it originally meant in the last decade.