- Audio: TV On The Radio, "Dancing Choose"
- Style Icons: Woody Allen's Women
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- Freeload: Wiley, "Summertime (Crookers Remix)"
- Video: The Walkmen, "In The New Year"
- Audio: Get Real High With Songs From The Alps
- Welcome Back, Interview.
- Freeload: Rafter, "Juicy" + Two More
- Prancehall's Bass Odyssey, Part 28
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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.
COLUMNS
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FADER TV
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FADER MAGAZINE
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STYLEE FRIDAYS
Listen to Chioma, You Will Look Better
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SLEPT ON
Schnipper's Underrated Gems
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PRANCEHALL'S BASS ODYSSEY
What's good in grime and bassline
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GHETTO PALMS
Dancehall and the Ghetto Archipelago
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DOLLARS TO POUNDS
Rock and Pop from across the pond
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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)
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Freeload: Assassin, "Money" (Work Out Riddim)
Download: Assassin, "Money" (Work Out Riddim)
Beat Construction
BIG YOUTH
Stephen McGregor's unstoppably underage riddims
Stephen McGregor first caught the attention of bashment aficionados as the 15-year-old boy genius tapping out stuttery clap-and-kettle drum patterns behind the curtains of the “Red Bull and Guinness” riddim (produced in collaboration with, and officially credited to, veteran deejay Delly Ranx). Before long the “Red Bull” had given wings to Mavado’s “Weh Dem a Do,” propelling the singer into rotation on New York’s Hot 97 (not to mention the cover of this magazine) and soon non-bashment aficionados were paying attention too. In the two years since, the now almost-a-man-genius has built a riddim resume more suited to a studio vet twice his age. In fairness though, McGregor, the younger son of roots reggae legend Freddie McGregor, got a monster of a head start, literally growing up in the Big Ship studio his father built, picking up proficiency in five different instruments and taking his first turn behind the boards by the time he turned ten.
Besides a strong work ethic and natural ease at the controls, the junior McGregor’s productions so far have little in common with his father’s trademark lover’s rock, instead favoring a darker double-time sound more suited to gun tunes than sunny cultural jams. “Red Bull” was quickly followed by the “12 Gauge” riddim, a similar stutter-step rendered in rockish guitar and cold funk synths that could have been lifted from “Give It to Me” or any recent Timbaland production, but flipped into a straightforward, ’90s-style dancehall track—a perfect bed for Bounty Killer’s hit “Bullet, Bullet!” McGregor’s next riddim, “Power Cut,” spawned Mavado’s “Top Shotta Nah Miss,” one of the hardest songs on Gangsta For Life.
Yet a departure from his formula may end up defining McGregor in the long run. “Always on My Mind,” an acoustic composition for crooner Daville, was re-done as a collaboration with Sean Paul, and the platinum DJ’s “Watch Them Roll,” a trap-tempo, strip-joint take on a bashment track voiced on McGregor’s “Tremor” riddim, soon followed. The pairing is threatening to develop into a more solid relationship now that Sean Paul’s mentor Jeremy Harding has signed a management deal with McGregor—an unprecedented move for Jamaica, where producers are not rated as “talent” until they’ve made a name by bankrolling their own labels. Discussing these developments by phone from Kingston, McGregor sounds just as precocious as his resumé, reeling off assured platitudes like “Sean is an easy artist for me to work with because we have the same love for music.” But he’s quick to point out that his real strength lies in not growing up too fast. “I think I definitely have an upper hand when it comes to making ‘young music.’ I don’t have to guess what kinda vibes young people are into, cause I’m on a level with them.”
EDWIN 'STATS' HOUGHTON