On The Insider: Gorgeous Ladies at the ALMAs

Search:
Go!


The premier source for free music 111,052 FREE MP3s
FeaturedOther
advertisement
Click Here
Crossfade

For the latest songs, albums, videos, playlists, and artist news, bite into our music blog Crossfade.

advertisement
Click Here

Airborn Audio

Airborn Audio

  • Avg user rating: 3h stars Out of 7 votes
  • Your rating:  Write your review
  • Similar Artists: Beans, Majesticons, Aesop Rock

Playlist

Bright Lights (2:40) Date added: 01/14/06 | Total listens: 3,704

User reviews for Airborn Audio

Average rating3h starsOut of 7 votes

Hip-Hop artists you may also like

Count Bass D

Avg user rating:
4 Stars
Out of 7 votes

Exile

Rate this artist!

Beat Kings

Avg user rating:
4 and one half Stars
Out of 27 votes

J-Zone

Avg user rating:
4 and one half Stars
Out of 13 votes

Chapter 13

Avg user rating:
4 Stars
Out of 21 votes

Editor's review

Dealing their brand of guerilla-tech hip-hop, the Airborn Audio crew slam deep, irradiated beats into flamboyant lo-fi electronics coated in lyrical finesse with style to spare. Evoking the same experimental spirit as Anticon, Aesop Rock, and Antipop Consortium, the AA outfit's musical steez never goes to waste. Mind-prodding messages and deep lyrical styles get delivered in the perfect asphalt foundation every time.

Biography

If anything, APC's real achievement was to prove that hip-hop did not have to be a violation of the event of thinking. The group was lauded for its word wars and cerebral excursions into disintegrating beatscapes that liberated listeners from the braindead habits created by a decade of all-to-predictable postures and sounds. Now slimmed-down, Airborn Audio has reevaluated its stance, and spent the past eight months in the studio lab-ing out with a newfound precision and a new kind of savage love for their work.

With this album, High Priest and M Sayyid again promise a viral presence never to be equaled, yet sure to spawn another pox of unsuccessful imitators. Having blistered venues and audiences across NYC for nearly a year, Airborn has honed its live show to cackle in the face of expectation with a taut assault on convention and languor.

For this enigmatic duo, biographical information has always seemed a needless clutter given the singularity of their music. Good Fortune is a serious, unabashed, and self-aware, yet non self-conscious masterwork. This is a physical music that feels disjointed, yet hyper-connected by insisting on the absence of boundaries rather than making aims to blur them. M Sayyid and High Priest plunge headlong into competing reference points and clashing styles, mining both high-brow poetic tantrums and ecstatically obtuse jingles — what emerges is a sequence of pan-cultural aphorisms that sound something like the happy bastard of Sun Ra, Luc Ferrari era-musique concrete, and Moondog freestyling on an acid-fueled bender. On the track "Monday through Sunday", Sayyid and Priest are self-assured, staging invasive self-analysis over broken toy beats simultaneously influenced by early electronic music such as Alain Goraguer's soundtrack for Fantastic Planet (1973) and the tone-deaf instrumentals of early Nintendo. On most of the tracks, various strains of beats inbreed and collide with one another, creating an arrhythmic chug — a skewed momentum of falters and half-starts from which Priest and Sayyid deliver skittering lyrical passages where narrative and color explode. Airborn Audio's sonic braindance is populated by blissed-out tempos, nearly invisible allusions, and a verbal friction that briefly stutters before cascading into an avalanche of swords. No one else so effortlessly launches into such convincing party anthems directly on the heals of malevolent linguistic traps.

In the manic track Bright Lights, this hybrid speech gives way to an ambivalently robotic pronouncement: "Welcome to Airborn Audio/Your new provider for the finest in sound/Crews might come and crews might go/But it's the hottest new sound around." Although not such a thoroughgoing analysis — the mantra puts the complexity of Airborn Audio, well, impressively simply.



Good Fortune is a dense, psychedelic rap attack. Just when the beats start to sound the slightest bit jiggy, they're overtaken with alien drones and bits of electro-musique-concrete and when Priest and Sayyid's ultra-bugged, hyper-intellectual flows kick in, you can practically smell the acrid fumes from the burning microphones
-Anthem Magazine

Airborn Audio attacks from all angles, deploying beats ranging from sludgy screwed-down productions to master blast blip-hop and heady verses that materialize with varying degrees of precision, pitch and pace. Together the group is a spinning ball of next-level hip-hop thought moving towards your eardrums.
-Fader

Expand to read more Collapse
advertisement
Popular on CBS sites: Fantasy Football | Miley Cyrus | MLB | Wii | GPS | Recipes | Mock Draft


© 2008 CNET Networks, Inc., a CBS Company. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use