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Baron Zen

Baron Zen

  • Avg user rating: 3h stars Out of 12 votes
  • Your rating:  Write your review
  • Similar Artists: Roger Troutman, Zapp, One Way, Spacek

Playlist

Burn Rubber (3:21) Date added: 10/02/07 | Total listens: 8,979

User reviews for Baron Zen

Average rating3h starsOut of 12 votes

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Editor's review

The first response on listening to Baron Zen, a turn-of-the-'90s jack-of-all-synths who was helped by the young Peanut Butter Wolf, is that it couldn't possibly have been made then. The funky-but-melodic keyboard tones have the hooky electro style of Daft Punk but the taste of James Murphy.

Biography

Peanut Butter Wolf, before making his name as a DJ and Producer and before founding Stones Throw Records, was programming drums for a one-man punk rock/disco army known as Baron Zen. Known, that is, to almost no one, because Baron Zen did not play shows, did not release records, rejected all forms of publicity, and above all, rejected the bounderies separating hip hop, disco, punk rock, and pop.

Sweet Steve is the man behind Baron Zen. His recording career as Baron Zen lasted from 1988 to 1992, the best of which is collected on this album – his first and only. He was ahead of his time in the '80s, but the times have been threatening to catch up with him. Baron Zen today sounds like the missing link between PIL and DFA ... or sububan punk rock garage bands of the 80s and the DJ culture of today ... or The Dead Milkmen if they had been hip hop b-boys.

Baron Zen is DIY music that wears its pop influence on its sleeve: covers of Joy Division, Gap Band, Katrina and the Waves, and high-energy disco classic "When I Hear Music" by Debbie Deb play along side Sweet Steve's originals, many of which are odes to Steve's frustration of being a hip hop & disco DJ stuck in suburbia.

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Where to buy

Amazon
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