- NYC: East Village Radio Festival (UPDATE: MOVED TO SUNDAY)
- Stylee Fridays: Lorick's Spring 2009 Wonderland
- Freeload: NeYo f. Fabolous & Jamie Foxx, "She Got Her Own (Miss Independent Remix)"
- Audio: Gang Gang Dance on Street Carnage Radio
- Contest: Koushik x Stones Throw Prize Pack
- Live And Direct: It's Still Hot
- Freeload: Passion Pit, "Sleepyhead" + Interview
- Grateful Dead Probably Play Rally For Obama
- Video: The Jim & Derrick Show
- Freeload: Johnson & Jonson, "Up All Night"
THE FADER MAGAZINE
Current Issue #56This year's edition of the annual FADER Fall Fashion Spectacular is filled with people and music that inspire us to be ourselves and do the unexpected, from The Tough Alliance, Sweden's surreptitiously seditious pop duo to Kingston's Busy Signal, the baddest loner in dancehall. We also have stories on the Dallas rap scene, Russia's zek gangsters, Brooklyn's High Places and the New Vogue underground, along with Tierney Gearon's fashion shoot, our regular jam-packed Gen F section and much more. And we promise it won't clash with your Hammerpants.
F2
The FADER's new digital-only quarterly publication powered by Timberland focusing on how classic genres are being reexamined and reinterpreted in 2008.
COLUMNS
-
FADER TV
The best music television on Earth
-
FADER MAGAZINE
Cover stories and features from our archives
-
STYLEE FRIDAYS
Listen to Chioma, You Will Look Better
-
SLEPT ON
Schnipper's Underrated Gems
-
PRANCEHALL'S BASS ODYSSEY
What's good in grime and bassline
-
GHETTO PALMS
Dancehall and the Ghetto Archipelago
-
DOLLARS TO POUNDS
Rock and Pop from across the pond
-
FREAK SCENE
The Week in Weird (archive)
NOW PLAYING (On Other Blogs)
Hating Hipsters (Street Carnage)
Metronomy, "Heartbreaker (DiskJokke Remix)" (Discobelle)
Justice Dior S/S09 Mix (Kanye)
Ferris Bueller Lost Soundtrack (Muxtape)
New Nick Catchdubs Mix (Trash Menagerie)
Japanese Hardcore Podcast, Part I (Néojapanisme)
Stream the Conor Oberst Album 'Conor Oberst' (Conor Oberst)
Stream Dr Dog Album 'Fate' (Spinner)
Wale f. Young Chris, "Whole Time" (Elitaste)
Caron Wheeler B-Sides (Mike B vs Dickie G)
Guinean Sign Paintings (Voodoo Funk)
FADER/SOUTHERN COMFORT 7" SERIES
Number SevenCheck out the latest edition of our FADER/Southern Comfort limited edition 7-inch featuring Get 'Em Mamis and Hood Headlinaz.
Artwork by Michael Genovese
FADER RADIO
The Let Out on East Village Radio, Fridays, 6-8pm ESTJam palaces, trash updates, special guests, random guests off the street and all the music you could possibly want to hear in two hours, brought to you by the editors of The FADER and made possible by Dewar's.
The FADER Email Newsletter
Get weekly highlights and exclusive content from thefader.com delivered via email.













DEPRESSSSED
If Dirty Projectors made Rise Above based on Damaged then (some of) their songs are further from the source material. We don’t know who wrote the lyrics to “Depression” originally, (was it Keith Morris? Dez?) but it wasn’t Rollins, and it creates a passed on multiplicity from first version(s), to Rollins/Damaged version to Dirty Projectors version. That evolution, seemingly, is one only of lyrics, Dave Longstreth says he wrote Rise Above from memory, piecemeal remembrance of the lyrics from his teens. He never mentions the music, and from listening to the album there is certainly a dearth of musical influence. Greg Ginn's guitar style may be ever present, but there's no specificity in that lineage, just the general loosey-goosey blink-blonk they both open into the guitar ether. Rise Above lists Greg Ginn in the thank you list, not Rollins, Damaged’s cover star and mouthpiece, and not any other Black Flag singer. So, while seemingly the only string from Damaged to Rise Above is the lyrics, Rollins is absent from acknowledgment, removed from the process again. Is he just an empty conduit, singing someone else's words and passing them pollination-style elsewhere through kinetic energy and pure power? Where is the place of the music of Damaged and the coalescence that Rollins brought to the band, a nebulous thing of influence and inspiration, a solidification of leadership. It's an opinion, surely, but we think the Black Flag of Damaged is really the Black Flag of perfection, so what if the words weren't his to start; he owned them most. And Longstreth, his Black Flag, by another name or not, isn't so bad, either.