Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Download this: Kid Sister mixtape

Cheeky Chicagoan rap mistress Kid Sister crept onto the end of my Top 10 albums of 2010 last week, pushing out the likes of Kanye West and (somewhat disappointingly) Kelis.

If you haven't come across this feisty femcee yet, imagine Salt-N-Pepa's bouncy, exuberant flow over Detroit Electro-House backing tracks and you'll be some of the way there. It's big, cartoonish party music for the raising of arms, the grinding of hips, the dislocation of joints, the agony of physiotherapy and the limping like an old man.

As a thank-you gesture for that Best Album accolade*, Kid Sister has released Kiss, Kiss, Kiss a mixtape of new songs, old songs and fresh remixes which you can download for free from this website. The highlight is a souped up cover of Debbie Deb's Lookout Weekend, a classic freestyle dance jam from 1984. I've posted the original and the Kid Sister version below. Enjoy!



Debbie Deb - Lookout Weekend


Kid Sister feat Nina Sky - Lookout Weekend


* I am 100% certain she knows about it

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Thursday, January 6, 2011

Top 10 albums of 2010

A little belated, but here they are. Enjoy!


1) Lissie - Catching A Tiger

In a year of grandiose 'masterpieces', this unassuming little record quietly became my go-to album. Illinois hippy-chick Lissie Maurus inhabits her material completely. Her ad-libs are so perfectly delivered that they become inseparable from the body of the songs. And what great songs: Torn from the Californian country-rock handbook, drawing on the best of The Byrds and Fleetwood Mac, and moulded for the 21st Century by Kings Of Leon producer Jacquire King. Stand-out tracks When I'm Alone and In Sleep could never claim to be original, but they were drenched in melody and so alive they had a pulse. A stunning debut.


2) Robyn - Body Talk

Six months, three albums, one Grammy nomination, dozens of five star reviews and only one bad song. It was the project that had everything except an audience. Still, those who sought out Robyn Carlsson's Swedish pop odyssey fell utterly in love with it. And who could blame them?


3) Scissor Sisters - Night Work

A glance through the tracklisting tells you what to expect from Scissor Sisters' third album: Sex And Violence, Skin Tight, Harder You Get. Back on filthy form after the vaudeville tripe of Ta-Dah!, Night Work is an album of sleek, hard, sexy disco. A celebration of the freaks who come out to play after dark, it allowed Jake Shears the chance to roleplay dozens of seedy characters, the timbre and cadence of his voice changing on every track like a method actor. Perfectly sequenced and eminently danceworthy, it also contained - on Whole New Way - the year's least subtle metaphor for anal sex. So that was nice.


4) Arcade Fire - The Suburbs

Like Scissor Sisters, Arcade Fire escaped the drab surroundings of their upbringing through music. But while the New Yorkers ran off to an "opiate utopia", the Canucks prodded and poked at their past, trying to make sense of it all. The Suburbs is about the geography of suburbia, and the impermanence of modern life. "All of the houses they built in the Seventies finally fall... It meant nothing at all," pines Win Butler on the title track.

The Suburbs is also the record where Arcade Fire discovered the spaces between the notes, the claustrophobic bombast of their first two records giving way to something more expansive and thoughtful. Having all that space to think gave the lyrics greater impact, too.

The top of most critics' end-of-year lists, it would have done the same here if it was just 10 minutes shorter.


5) Marina And The Diamonds - The Family Jewels

Its a tricky thing to be a pop singer with artistic aspirations. Too much of the throaty yelping and people steer clear of you like the shouty racist lady at the back of the bus. Too little, and people dismiss you as a disposable pop confection. Marina never quite got the balance right, veering wildly between bonkers balladry (I Am Not A Robot) and balls-out chartbusters (Oh No!). It didn't help that her lyrics often read like they'd been lifted straight out of "Opinions For Teenage Girls - For Dummies". Regardless, those who persevered - and thank goodness there were thousands of us - were rewarded with an album rich in melodic invention, musical dexterity and surprising vulnerability. The Family Jewels, indeed.


6) Vampire Weekend - Contra

Less direct than their debut, Vampire Weekend's sophomore album nonetheless had more heart. At least, I think it did. It's hard to be sure what Ezra Koenig is on about half the time ("fake Philly cheesecake but you use real toothpaste" - eh?). Still, the melodies, the trickling guitar riffs and - above all - the frenetic, polyrhythmic drumming are like nothing else. When they inevitably grow up and turn into Sting, let's remember them like this.


7) Sarah Blasko - As Day Follows Night

My heart, already a bit gooey from listening to Australian singer Sarah Blasko's third album, completely melted when I met her in May. Charming but fragile, awkward but funny - she's everything you'd expect from listening to this most intimate of heartbreak records. Captured in a secluded studio in the heart of the Swedish winter, it's an all-too-real exploration of the end of a love affair. What makes it poignant is that the break-up came in Blasko's mid-30s, raising the spectre of spinsterhood. What stops it being utterly depressing is the nimble arrangements, the delicate beauty of her voice and, ultimately, an all-pervasive sense of hope.


8) Tinie Tempah - Disc-Overy

Tinie Tempah delivered an entire Top 10 of best lyrics this year, from "I got so many clothes I keeps 'em in my aunt's house", through to "would you risk it for a chocolate biscuit?" Musically, he was no slacker, either. His morphing breakbeats lifted grime out of the loop-it-and-leave-it quagmire, as frequently as his lyrics showed up the dumb avarice of his contemporaries (Taio Cruz marked a new low for the genre this year when he sang: "I'm wearing all my favourite brands, brands, brands, brands, brands"). Stuffed full of ideas, Tinie's album equalled, but sadly never bettered, the promise of it's singles. Oh, and it earned an extra demerit for that AWFUL title.


9) John Legend & The Roots - Wake Up!

Inspired by Barack Obama's "yes, we can" campaign, and revisiting the classic ghetto protest songs of the 1970s, this was the best band of their generation, allied to the smoothest singer of his, making a rallying call to socially-concious America. Mmm-hmm. Whatever. Simply the best covers album of the year.


10) Kid Sister - Ultraviolet

Putting the fun back in funky and the rap back in... er, "not crap", Chicago's Kid Sister delivered a spritely party album for her long-gestating debut. It didn't set the world on fire, but it did heat up my living room by a couple of degrees. Inspired by electro, handbag house, rave and "boxes of doughnuts", it left me with a big, daft grin all over my face every time I heard it. OK, it probably doesn't deserve to be considered a classic, but it was either this or Kanye banging on about intense personal issues and and his penis. I rest my case.

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Monday, July 26, 2010

Hip-hop video convention smashed

Kid Sister misunderstood when the photographer suggested taking "the money shot"Here's the latest video from utterly brilliant / completely underrated hip-hop star Kid Sister. Filmed in and around her stomping grounds in downtown Chicago, "she makes it pop from the roller rink to the Superdawg" (it says here).

In blatant contravention of the Golden Rules Of Rap Videos, Kid Sister spends the entire three minutes with a smile on her face. Not once does she shower herself in money, disembark from a helicopter, crack open a bottle of champagne or drive slowly past a police car, giving the cops a disrespectful glare. What on earth is she thinking?

The song - Big N Bad - isn't my favourite track from her debut album, Ultraviolet, but it is the most obviously commercial. Structured around a hyperactive, replayed sample of Yazoo's Don't Go (note to Professor Green: This is how it's done properly) it will undoubtedly spark a fist-pumping three minutes of mayhem at a beach party near you this summer.

Kid Sister - Big N Bad

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Thursday, April 15, 2010

Summer anthem alert

Kid Sister remix artwork


Last week, we alerted you to the laid-back Chicago sound of Kid Sister's new single, Daydreaming. We spoke to Ms Sister (Melissa Young to her friends) earlier today and learnt the following things:

1) At the age of 13, she had false nails like "a whore".

2) She used to steal body spray when she worked at The Gap, despite an entirely reasonable 30% staff discount.

3) She doesn't like it when people compare her house music / hip-hop hybrid to the Black Eyed Peas, so don't do it, okay?

Daydreaming is out next week - but we're already loving this blissed out disco remix by Finnish club supremos Top Billin. Once the sun finally comes out, we're playing at full blast this at any barbeque or open-air cocktail party where the host lets us hog the stereo like twats.


Kid Sister - Daydreaming (Helsinki 78-82 remix)

Read more about how the remix came about on Top Billin's rather good blog.

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Thursday, April 8, 2010

Sister Act

Kid SisterWe went all gooey-eyed over Kid Sister's last two singles Pro Nails (with Kanye West) and Right Hand Hi - both records you SHOULD have on your iPod if you like Queen Latifah, Salt'N'Pepa, Missy Elliot or Eve. They're seriously, seriously good records.

Daydreaming is the next single off her debut album, Ultraviolet (out in May) and it's a bit of a deviation from the bug eyed electro-rap we've gotten used to.

Co-written with Gnarls Barkley's Cee-Lo Green, it shares musical DNA with Boy Meets Girls' Waiting For A Star To Fall and Kelis' Little Star - aka the one everyone said Cheryl Cole ripped off for Fight For This Love, even though the only similiarity was the use of a glockenspiel in the bridge, as if those were the only two songs in the history of music ever to feature that obscure and outlandish musical instrument you find in EVERY ORCHESTRA IN THE WORLD.

Anyway, the song is pretty catchy in a summery, carefree way. A solid 6/10, compared to the 8/10 we'd have given Kid Sister's previous efforts, but well worth three minutes of your day.

Kid Sister ft Cee-Lo - Daydreaming

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Friday, November 13, 2009

Kid Sister - Right Hand Hi video

Right Hand Hi is quickly becoming one of my favourite rap tracks of the year. Perky and sassy and cheeky and funky, it's everything the Eminem's comeback and Wale's debut promised, but failed to deliver.

Speaking of which, I reckon the BRAND NEW video could have done with a dollop of Slim Shady's dayglo, knockabout energy. Kid Sister is clearly a charismatic performer but, for most of this clip, the director just leaves her flailing around like a pigeon trapped in a tumble dryer.

It's a big old hands-in-the-air party anthem, so why has she been left on her own, trying to find her way back home from the launderette with a broken heel and inadequate lighting?

At the very least, they could have stuck a kebab in her mush.

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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

New music: Kid Sister - Right Hand Hi

We last checked in with Chi-town rapper Kid Sister back in May 2005, when her day-glo debut Pro Nails popped up on Kanye West's Can't Tell Me Nothin' mixtape.

Since then, she's been working on her debut album, Ultraviolet, and working part time in a children's clothing store. We're not saying the two are connected, but the schizophonic soundclash of her new single Right Hand Hi suggests she's having a tartrazine-induced musical tantrum.

That's a good thing, though. The record grabs your attention, then dunks its head in the toilet, puts electrodes on its nipples, wraps it in fariy lights and takes a polaroid to send to your boss. Which is just a fancy way of saying we like it.

Another way of saying that is: "It's the noise you'd get if Missy Elliot belched Lady GaGa's Poker Face on a kazoo"

Oh, forget it, here's a clip:



If you like it, it's probably coming out on a CD at some point this year, but why wait for that old technology when there's a free, legal download at RCRDLBL today?

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