Hiphop/bluegrass mashup: Gangstagrass
Mashup artist Rench has released a free album of "gangstagrass" music -- hiphop mashed with bluegrass. The mixes are really good, in that, "Hey, who knew those two really different flavors worked so well together?" way that makes mashups so much fun to listen to.
Link to Gangstagrass album download, Link to information about Rench (Thanks, Brooklyn Twang!)
Introducing block rockin' honky-tonk, New American music for the 21st century, built with love in a little studio, hand crafted, running on inspiration and imagination and duct tape, calling on the spirit of Gram Parsons and Otis Redding and KRS-ONE and Dolly Parton and Nina Simone and Willie Nelson and Missy Elliott and Johnny Cash, to write about what we feel and play what our hearts tell us, because to make it happen is reason enough, and to share it with the world is all the reason you need, because we tell the truth with music and the truth is beautiful.



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I am really enjoying this. The style of guitar lends itself to beats so well. The sampling is quite good too, in track 4.
Thanks, but be sure to check out Groovegrass (1998), a cool collaboration of Bootsy Collins, Doc Watson, Mac Wiseman, if you can find it.
Downloading zip and listening to the tracks. Very, very good. Thanks for sharing this.
Site seems a little swamped at the moment - anyone know of a torrent?
Looks like he has a myspace page if you want to listen to it http://www.myspace.com/gangstagrass
People who enjoy this would also probably like Applindia by The Beatgeek (a mixing of hip hop, Appalachian folk music, and traditional Indian music) and Porch by Buck 65 (purely acoustic versions of his songs, including a mash-up of his song Wicked and Weird with Coo-coo Bird). Unfortunately, both of these are pretty tough to find, but I thought that I'd plug them anyway, since they're both done by talented struggling underground hip hoppers, and both excellent.
And here I was worrying that I've not been finding enough new good music lately.
This stuff is brilliant. I'll only stop listening to it because there's a Miyazaki movie on the TV.
This is awesome. My favorite is Pistol Packin. The stuff on www.myspace.com/renchaudio is great too.
i'm a bit disappointed that rench chose to use little-known independent MCs for this. a lot of the fun of mashups is recognizing the source material, so using unknown acapellas limits the appeal somewhat. no disrespect to the MCs who were used, as they're clearly talented, but i probably would've enjoyed this more if it actually used acapellas by KRS-ONE and missy elliot rather than merely name-dropping them in the description.
the tracks are quite well-produced, though.
p.s. shameless self-promotion: mashup fans might enjoy my latest EP, which has been described as "girl talk meets john oswald". there are no bluegrass samples, but there are missy elliot samples.
This scheisse is awesome in every way.
STALLIO - I know what you meen, mash-ups are funnest when its two tracks you know already layered over each other. But maybe pitching Gangstagrass as a mash-up was not quite accurate, though it seemed like the closest term I could think of. In fact, the emcees on Gangstagrass actually recorded their vocals at Rench's studio, and then he went and created new beats and sampled lots of bluegrass and edited it around the vocals. So it's kind of beyond mash-up, it's sample based but creatively built, rather than just lining up two existing tracks and putting a whole acapella to a whole instrumental.
Also, the Missy Elliot and KRS-ONE references are from a description on Rench's site about his influences, he's generally not a "mash-up artist" and does lots of completely original recordings with custom recorded fiddle and pedal steel with singing, beats and scratching.
GOTTA find GrooveGrass!
brooklyn twang: yeah, i'm not sure what else to call it, either. and in fairness to you, rench describes it on his site as a "full-length mashup".
the term "mashup" is used so broadly these days it's hard to know what it means anymore. there's been some debate about whether my own work constitutes "mashup"; it's definitely not under the definition you just gave, but i think it's coming from a similar place and would appeal to a lot of the same people. so i know where you're coming from in trying to promote music that isn't-quite-mashup-but-close.
as for gangstergrass, though, it's not so much a mashup as a simple hip-hop record based around bluegrass samples. stylistically it reminds me more of that classic age of hip-hop sampling in the '80s and early '90s, back before the lawsuits came and changed everything. but that's a good thing.
This is awesome.
reminds of The Asylum Street Spankers performing Wammo's Hick Hop:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=uhJx1gpl0kM
I think the Gourds' cover of Gin and Juice is the definitive blend of hiphop and bluegrass:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=wCAM3C3dpIA
Wow! Flashback 1984, 10 years old... my best friend and I recorded our own songs via holdin down a "play" and "record" button on my cassette deck. Our new style of music. It was a fusion of country music and rap. We called it "Crap". :) (Gosh I wish I still had that tape.)
Let's not forget Wes (John Wesley Harding) Stace, the inventor of Gangsta Folk:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wesley_Harding_(singer)
I don't wanna be all, "I liked him before he was cool," but I've had the pleasure of collaborating on some theatre pieces over the past few years with him when he was still in New York. He's an incredibly talented artist and performer and a kickass DJ. So glad all of you know about him now!
I don't wanna be all, "I liked him before he was cool,"
Why on Earth not? What's wrong with justifiable pride in one's judgement and taste?
My sixth grade English teacher rarely went a day without telling us that she saw Tom Jones perform in a little club in Wales with only a dozen people in the audience. Since she's still teaching the same class in the same school forty years later, she's probably still telling the same story.
and not a bad story
what's your best?
Downloaded this morning, only had the chance to listen now- this is amazing! Will tell all friends etc. Wow.
piratebay ftw:
http://thepiratebay.org/tor/4182350
pardon if this is a re-comment. piratebay has a torrent: http://thepiratebay.org/tor/4182350
Looks like he's now got a link to a bit torrent of the album on the gangstagrass site.
I like this!
I officially added it to my library :D.
The two go together beautifully - I'ts not unusual that I will sing the Yin Yang Twins' "Get Low" while playing a clawhammer banjo accompaniment.
A non-trivial portion of the lyrical content of bluegrass is about shooting, killing, going to prison, women doing you wrong, and all that sorta gangsta stuff.
' had a 44 buckled around her, and a banjo on her knee'
In high school, my friends and i created a fictitious "industrial gothic country rap" band, thinking it might never be possible.
Little did we know...
Futurama, Mars Day episode.
Last year, I made a bluegrass/pop mashup of "Man of Constant Sorrow" and "London Bridge". Check it out if you care to at
http://share.ovi.com/media/creeto.mymedia/creeto.10018
It's worth mentioning Jonathan Coulton's "Baby Got Back"
See http://www.jonathancoulton.com/songs/ under "Thing A Week One", about half way down the page.
Rench has a great hip hop version of Man of Constant Sorrow on his site -- http://www.renchaudio.com/amv.shtml (track 10).
grumpff, won't play
ever heard Luther Wright and The Wrongs do The Wall?
This is awesome - any chance of higher quality mp3's (somewhat let down by the 128 crap sound) Thanks a lot!!!
Is there a central place to check out a bunch of mashups?
I'm so glad someone else beat me to shouting out "Hick Hop!"