Slum Village Fantastic Vol 1 Rar; Teklife; He released his debut studio album on in 2013 to critical praise. He died in April 2014 from a drug overdose. Sort by: Search Results. DJ Rashad - Teklife. On My WayDOWNLOAD LINKSoboom.com DJ Rashad – Teklife Volume 1 – Welcome To Chi (2012) MP3. Checklist of HQ inteational locations involves most of the Latin American inteational locations. XHamster pays $2. 00 for HQ nations despatched through embedded films.
The strain of Chicago dance music known as footwork or juke has been an unavoidable influence on electronic music since Planet Mu released its Bangs & Works Vol. 1 compilation back in 2010. DJ Rashad‘s two contributions to that compilation were located, fortuitously, near the very beginning of the album—prime real estate for an uncompromising collection that threatened to induce whiplash if heard in one sitting. Following closely behind another potent 2012 release, Traxman‘s Da Mind of Traxman, TEKLIFE Vol. 1: Welcome to the Chi is DJ Rashad’s first full-length and offers another push into the arist-album world for the formerly hyper-local scene.
Rashad’s Bangs & Works Vol. 1 tracks demonstrate two tendencies that wend their way through TEKLIFE—futurist techno on the one hand and backwards-looking soul on the other. Bangs‘ “Teknitian” and “Itz Not Rite” correspond, more or less, to TEKLIFE‘s “Fly Spray” and “Feeling,” but you’re just as likely to encounter twitchy avant-garde and mollifying humanity in a single track. Rashad’s reconfigures himself restlessly, morphing songs in sly but absolute increments and leaving you in a radically different place from where you started. It’s a neat effect, and at times he does so with orchestral bombast: check out how he flips “Kush Aint Loud” from typically hard-ass juke to psychedelic funk and back. Usually, longer track lengths in dance music accommodate a relatively consistent rhythm and vibe, but while TEKLIFE‘s tracks average around four minutes, they regularly feel around 50% longer than their runtimes thanks to their stylistic fluidity. Those tonal contrasts do as much as the soul influence to give shelter from the punishing barrage of aggressively lopsided 160-bpm drums and asphyxiating vocal samples. These 20 tracks are busy, yet feel really spacious; they’re alive with ideas and brutal contradictions. This is particularly true of the second half of “Walk for Me,” which marries “Swims” to a long soul loop, the relaxed electric piano and vocal harmonies sitting uneasily astride a militant take on the Boddika & Joy O tune. With the following track, “CCP,” Rashad goes in for gleeful and unchecked overdrive, with spattered tom patterns and samples warped into a frenetic wall of glossolalia.
Rashad’s control over his materials adds a great deal of momentum to tracks that already feel fresh and innovative. This volatile quality, spending as much time bothering groove as locating it, is what distinguishes Chicago juke from the music informed by it. Even when Rashad approaches familiar songs, turning “Niggaz in Paris” into “Welcome to Chicago,” the industrial pistoning of the drums and a wandering, pricking woodblock undermine the familiarity of Kanye’s exhortations to not let him get in his zone. Some of the same points could be made about the Traxman album mentioned earlier—his riff on Prince’s “Let’s Go Crazy” sermon, “Lifeeeee Is for Ever,” accomplishes something similar to “Welcome to Chicago”—but you’d be hard pressed to confuse one producer with the other.
Juke has been around substantially longer than the two years it’s been on the global radar. As thrilling as Planet Mu’s compilation was, it didn’t foreshadow what Rashad, and by extension the genre, would be capable of over the course of a dedicated album. In the case of TEKLIFE, what could have been a step toward museumification feels instead like the future arriving in its own time.
DJ Rashad performing in Moscow in 2013 | |
Background information | |
---|---|
Birth name | Rashad Hanif Harden |
Born | October 9, 1979 Hammond, Indiana, U.S. |
Died | April 26, 2014 (aged 34) Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Genres | Electronic, footwork, juke |
Occupation(s) | Musician DJ |
Years active | 1998–2014[1] |
Labels | Hyperdub Juke Trax Ghettophiles Lit City Trax Planet Mu |
Rashad Harden (October 9, 1979 – April 26, 2014), known as DJ Rashad, was a Chicago-based electronic musician, producer and DJ known as a pioneer in the footwork genre[2] and founder of the Teklife crew.[3] He released his debut studio album Double Cup on Hyperdub in 2013 to critical praise. He died in April 2014 from a drug overdose.[4]
- 1Biography
- 2Discography
Biography[edit]
Career[edit]
Born in Hammond, Indiana on October 9, 1979, Rashad Hanif Harden was the son of Gloria and Anthony Harden.[5][6] He grew up on 159th Street in the southern part of Calumet City, a suburb of Chicago.[7][8] He developed an early interest in music and began to DJ in his early teens, influenced by house and juke.[9] In high school, Harden gained further DJ experience at the Kennedy-King College radio station WKKC.[10] He also became a member of local dance troupes, including the HouseOMatics, The Phyrm, and Wolf Pac. In 1992 he made his first public appearance as a DJ at his high school dance party jubilation.[11]
While attending Thornwood High School, Harden met Morris Harper (aka DJ Spinn) during homeroom class. The two began to spend time at each other's houses producing tracks and performing at parties.[11] Harden was one of the founders of the Teklife crew and developed the footwork style around dance battles in the Chicago metropolitan area.[10] His first recording released to vinyl was the track 'Child Abuse' on Dance Mania in 1998.[5] He gained further global attention after releasing his single 'Itz Not Rite' on Planet Mu and being included on their Bangs and Works album in 2010.[5]
In 2013, Harden released the EPs I Don't Give a Fuck and Rollin' on Kode9's Hyperdub label. These were followed by the debut full-length album Double Cup (2013), which featured collaborations with DJ Spinn, Taso, DJ Phil, Manny, Earl and Addison Groove.[5] He was one of the performers at the Pitchfork Music Festival in Chicago in 2013 and completed support-slot on the tour of Chance the Rapper in December 2013.[12] His last performance as a DJ was at Vinyl Club in Denver, CO on April 24, 2014.[5]
Death[edit]
On Saturday, April 26, 2014, Harden was found dead at an apartment on West 21st Street, Chicago.[12][13] An autopsy confirmed that the death was drug related, with cocaine and alprazolam (Xanax) being found in Rashad's system.[14]
A variety of artists paid tribute to Rashad, with Vice writing that 'Rashad will undoubtedly be remembered as one of contemporary dance music's most innovative stylists and most irreplaceable presences.'[15] On June 29, 2015, Hyperdub released the 6613 EP, a four-track EP of previously unheard tracks by DJ Rashad. Afterlife was Harden's last album. It featured previously unreleased songs in collaboration with other members of the Teklife crew. It was released on April 8, 2016, as the first release of the new Teklife Records label.[16]
Discography[edit]
Albums[edit]
- Juke Trax Online Vol. 3 (2006)
- Something 2 Dance 2 (2008)
- Just a Taste Vol. One (2011)
- Teklife Volume 1 – Welcome to the Chi (2012)
- Double Cup (2013)
- Afterlife (2016)
EPs and singles[edit]
- 2004: Girl Bust Down (with DJ Spinn; Juke Trax)
- 2004: The White Tees EP (with DJ TY; Juke Trax)
- 2007: Jukestacy (Juke Trax Online)
- 2007: Send It Up (Juke Trax Online)
- 2007: Get It Shorty (Juke Trax Online)
- 2008: We Break It Down (with DJ Chi Boogie; Juke Trax Online)
- 2008: You Know What It Is (Juke Trax Online)
- 2008: Juke Trax Online Vol. 13 (Juke Trax Online)
- 2008: Imma Do Me (Juke Trax Online)
- 2008: Freakin Me on the Flo (Juke Trax Online)
- 2008: Tek-9 (Databass Online)
- 2010: Grace (Ghettophiles)
- 2010: 4 The Ghetto (with DJ Spinn; Ghettophiles)
- 2010: Itz Not Rite (Planet Mu)
- 2011: Meet Tshetsha Boys (with DJ Spinn and RP Boo; Honest Jon's Records)
- 2013: I Don't Give A Fuck (Hyperdub)
- 2013: Its Wack (Grand Theft Auto V)
- 2013: Rollin' (Hyperdub)
- 2014: We on 1 (Southern Belle Recordings)
- 2014: Don't This Ish (with Alix Perez and DJ Spinn, Exit Records/Mixmag)
- 2014: Make It Worth (with Alix Perez and DJ Spinn, Exit Records)
- 2015: 6613 (Hyperdub)
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^FACT Magazine (April 28, 2014). 'Hyperdub release statement on the death of DJ Rashad'. FACT Magazine. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
- ^'BBC item' Entertainment Newsdesk, 'Chicago's DJ Rashad found dead', BBC News, April 27, 2014
- ^http://teklife57.com/releases/001-Afterlife/
- ^https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/dj-rashad-cause-of-death-autopsy-reveals-musician-died-after-drug-overdose-not-blood-clot-as-cousin-9656360.html
- ^ abcde'Pitchfork news' Amy Phillips and Evan Minsker, 'DJ Rashad Autopsy Inconclusive', Pitchfork Media, April 28, 2014
- ^Los Angeles Times (April 28, 2014). 'Passings: Michael Heisley, DJ Rashad'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
- ^Greg Kot (April 27, 2014). 'DJ Rashad dead; dance music innovator Rashad dead at 34'. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 27, 2014.
- ^LAST Q&A with DJ RASHAD
- ^Staff. 'Autopsy: DJ Rashad, music innovator, died of accidental drug overdose'. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
- ^ ab'Suntimes newsitem'Archived April 29, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Becky Schlikerman, Mark Guatino & Brandon Wall, 'House music, footwork icon DJ Rashad found dead on South Side', Chicago Sun-Times, April 26, 2014
- ^ ab'Billboard – incl. official statement' Harley Brown, 'DJ Rashad Dead at 34 (Update)', Billboard, April 28, 2014.
- ^ ab'Chicago Tribune Newsreport'Archived April 27, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Ernest Wilkins and Carlos Sadovi, 'Chicago juke pioneer DJ Rashad reportedly dead' Chicago Tribune, April 26, 2014
- ^FACT Magazine (April 27, 2014). 'DJ Rashad has died'. FACT Magazine. Retrieved April 27, 2014.
- ^Gordon, Jeremy (August 7, 2014). 'DJ Rashad Died of Drug Overdose, Autopsy Confirms'. Pitchfork Media. Retrieved August 8, 2014.
- ^Kramer, Kyle. 'DJ Rashad Has Died'. Noisey. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
- ^Records, TEKLIFE. 'TEKLIFE001 : AFTERLIFE - RIP DJ RASHAD'. teklife57.com. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
External links[edit]
- DJ Rashad at AllMusic
- DJ Rashad discography at Discogs
- DJ Rashad on SoundCloud
- DJ Rashad discography at MusicBrainz
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