Can't Knock the Shuffle Sean Kantrowitz, Stony Island Audio
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- Music
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Every song has a story, but some get lost in the shuffle. Sean Kantrowitz (The Questions Hip Hop Game Show) sits down with some of hip hop's most prolific artists, throws their catalog into a randomized playlist, and what ensues is a discussion about the songs that don't always get talked about. A Stony Island Audio experience.
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New Podcast: The Questions Hip Hop
SUBSCRIBE HERE: https://smarturl.it/8rjx39
As some of you may know, Can't Knock the Shuffle host/creator Sean Kantrowitz also hosts a live hip hop trivia game show called The Questions – and now that show is available in podcast format. Each week, Sean connects with hip hop's biggest fans – rappers, DJs, producers, writers, comedians, actors, and everything in between – to test their rap trivia skills, discuss their careers, and talk about how the music changed their lives. Subscribe/follow wherever you get your podcasts!
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Dante Ross
Dante Ross isn't an artist in the traditional sense, but the music industry exec/A&R/producer/engineer had a hand in dozens of classic records and is responsible for helping to cultivate the careers of some of hip hop’s biggest names. In the 90s, Dante was hired by Elektra Records as the first hip hop A&R man – not just Elektra’s first, but the record industry’s first. Dante signed artists such as Brand Nubian, KMD, Leaders of the New School, Busta Rhymes, and Ol’ Dirty Bastard, to name a few. Along with his friends John Gamble and Geeby Dajani, Ross was also one third of production group Stimulated Dummies, who worked with many of those acts behind the boards as well. Dante played a significant role in crafting the sound and songs on House of Pain leader Everlast’s breakthrough solo album, 1998’s Whitey Ford Sings the Blues, and would later co-produce the Everlast and Carlos Santana song “Put Your Lights On,” on the latter’s Grammy-winning smash album ‘Supernatural.’ Dante is still active in the business to this day, and has signed and worked with more recent artists like Lil Dicky, Made in Tokyo, and Marlon Craft. And this fall he will release ‘Son of the City,’ a memoir detailing his life as a crucial player in hip hop’s Golden Era. In this episode, we discuss:
3rd Bass "Kick 'Em in the Grill" feat Chubb Rock ('Derelicts of Dialect,' 1991)
Del the Funky Homosapien "Ya Lil Crumbsnatchers" ('I Wish My Brother George Was Here,' 1991)
Ol' Dirty Bastard "Brooklyn Zoo" ('Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version,' 1995)
Everlast "Tired" ('Whitey Ford Sings the Blues,' 1998)
De La Soul "Me, Myself, and I" ('3 Feet High and Rising,' 1989)
Pete Rock and CL Smooth "All Souled Out" ('All Souled Out,' 1991)
Brand Nubian "Step to the Rear" ('One For All,' 1990)
Dante Ross:
danteross.com
cantknocktheshuffle.com
questionshiphop.com
instagram.com/seandammit
twitter.com/seandammit
Email: cantknocktheshuffle@gmail.com
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El Da Sensei
As a member of the Newark, New Jersey group Artifacts alongside Tame One and DJ Kaos, El Da Sensei is responsible for some bona fide 90s hip hop classics, including "C'mon with the Git Down” and "Wrong Side of da Tracks," the group’s homage to the art of graffiti. After Artifacts split up following their second album 'That’s Them' in 1997, El went on to have a prolific solo career, releasing nearly a dozen projects and consistently touring the globe on his own as well as with Polish hip hop duo The Returners. El’s a true working class emcee, and his dedication to his craft as a writer and as an independent artist has granted him a pretty unique experience that we uncover throughout this conversation. We also talk a little bit about the impromptu Artifacts reunion in 2009 that brought El and Tame together and set the stage for their upcoming third Artifacts album, produced entirely by Buckwild and carrying the torch for DJ Kaos, who unfortunately passed away in 2019 ; the album is scheduled to be released later this year. In this episode, we discuss:
"Speakin'" ('Relax, Relate, Release', 2003)
"Live Noise" feat. Akrobatik (w/ The Returners, 'GT2: Nu World', 2010)
"Wrong Side of Da Tracks" (Artifacts, 'Between a Rock and a Hard Place', 1994)
"It Takes Two" (w/ Sadat X, 'XL,' 2018)
"Money" feat Roc Marciano and Reef the Lost Cause ('The Money EP', 2009)
"Got Fire" (w/ The Returners, 'Global Takeover', 2008)
"31 Bumrush" (Artifacts, 'That's Them,' 1997)
El Da Sensei:
instagram.com/senseifromnj
cantknocktheshuffle.com
questionshiphop.com
instagram.com/seandammit
twitter.com/seandammit
Email: cantknocktheshuffle@gmail.com
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Sage Francis
In this episode I’m joined by Sage Francis, a rapper who was independent before claiming indie was cool. A veteran of the underground battle scene in which he won the Scribble Jam emcee battle in 2000, Sage was early in adopting a tour-heavy business model that found him relentlessly doing shows and hitting smaller markets in the 2000s. From the jump, Sage has never been afraid to occupy his own unique space in the landscape of rap music, incorporating influences from different genres of music, a rotating cast of collaborators, and a writing style that ranges from the fiercely political to the vulnerably personal. He was the first hip hop artist signed to legendary punk rock label Epitaph, and he would later go on to launch his own Strange Famous Records, where he continues to release his own projects as well as the works of other artists. Songs discussed:
"Jah Didn't Kill Johnny" ('A Healthy Distrust', 2005)
"Grace" ('Copper Gone,' 2014)
"Doomage" feat. Brother Ali and Slug (prod. MF DOOM) (Non-Prophets "Damage" single, 2004)
"Whoremonger" ('Still Sickly Business,' 2005)
"Underground For Dummies" ('Human the Death Dance', 2007)
Sage Francis:
strangefamousrecords.com
cantknocktheshuffle.com
questionshiphop.com
instagram.com/seandammit
twitter.com/seandammit
Email: cantknocktheshuffle@gmail.com
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Slimkid3
Simply put, Tre Hardson aka Slimkid3 is a legend. Hip hop was forever changed in 1992 when his group the Pharcyde emerged onto the scene with their classic debut album 'Bizarre Ride II The Pharcyde.' The group brought a decidedly animated and imaginative element to their songwriting and presence on the microphone – and Tre definitely stood out with his distinct melodic voice; you could really even say that a lot of these rappers who sing owe a bit to Slimkid3. The Pharcyde’s second album Labcabincalifornia sported a darker sound (and early contributions from the great Jay Dee aka Jay Dilla) that reflected the frustration the group was going through with both the industry – and internally. Tre did one last album with the group (2000’s Plain Rap) before embarking on a solo career that also has seen him team up with DJ Nu-Mark from Jurassic 5, Ozomatli, and occasional reunions with various members of his Pharcyde brethren. Here are the songs we break down in this episode:
"Groupie Therapy" (Pharcyde 'Labcabincalifornia', 1995)
"Trust" (Pharcyde 'Plain Rap', 2000)
"King" feat Diamond D and K-Natural ('Slimkid3 & Nu-Mark', 2016)
"Life is Love" ('Liberation', 2002)
"Pick It Up" feat Dillon Cooper (TRDMRK, 2019)
"4 Better or 4 Worse" (Pharcyde 'Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde', 1992)
Slimkid3:
slimkid3.com
cantknocktheshuffle.com
questionshiphop.com
instagram.com/seandammit
twitter.com/seandammit
Email: cantknocktheshuffle@gmail.com
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Esthero, Pt. 2
We're back with the rest of the conversation with singer/songwriter Esthero. In this episode, we talk about her work with Kanye West on his 808s and Heartbreak album, the making of her classic debut Breath From Another, and how she decided to only release a trailer of her new music on streaming services rather than put the whole thing online – a seriously revolutionary move that definitely caught the media’s attention in 2019. Songs discussed in this episode:
"Streetlights" (Kanye West, '808s and Heartbreak', 2008)
"Amber and Tiger's Eye" ('We R in Need of a Musical Revolution!', 2004)
"Breath From Another" ('Breath From Another,' 1998)
"Gimme Some Time" (2019)
Esthero:
esthero.net
cantknocktheshuffle.com
questionshiphop.com
instagram.com/seandammit
twitter.com/seandammit
Email: cantknocktheshuffle@gmail.com
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Customer Reviews
Goddamn!
Great show. Interesting premise, great conversations and always leaves me with more music than I would have anticipated. Not to be missed!
Incredibly Fun and Insightful
Of course, the concept is incredible. But the host makes it. Sean knows how to open the artist up, listen, follow up appropriately, and clear the space for greatness to happen. There’s so much magic in here. I particularly loved the Murs, J-Live, RJD2, and Dante Ross eps and still have more to go.
Third Seat
An almost unique, and definitely novel, approach to making musicians travel through and talk about their own music, without knowing what it is beforehand. Sean is an exceptional host and his access to artists by being an artist helps the conversation flow very, very well. He's disarming, but also super knowledgeable about who he's talking to and why it matters.