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DJ Shadow & Cut Chemist

February 20, 2015

DJ Shadow & Cut Chemist play Afrika Bambaataa

Renegades of Rhythm, Melkweg Amsterdam.

DJ Shadow & Cut Chemist managed an awesome performance excluding any computer. Turntable auteur DJ Shadow has performed conceptual sets with Jurassic 5’s Cut Chemist before; their legendary product placement mixtape lifted liberally from jingles and funky commercials. Tonight’s themed set, culled from records belonging to pioneering 70s DJ Afrika Bambaataa, whose Bronx block parties invented hip-hop, is altogether more momentous – a tour of vinyl that, to aficionados of the genre, is as holy and profound as Moses’s stone tablets.

As sleeves from Bambaataa’s record library are projected behind the duo’s six turntables, the ageing B-boys and bedroom DJs in the room murmur: “got … got … need …” But onstage there’s little fetishisation of the objects themselves, as the duo abandon any kid-gloves reverence and cut and hack through this treasure chest of vinyl with the fluid skill and lunatic joy of seasoned beat-miners.

Classic breakbeats – James Brown’s Papa Don’t Take No Mess, Esther Williams’s Last Night Changed It All – are broken down, juggled and built back up, segueing into bustling salsa throw downs and threatening breakdance epidemics. Disco deep cuts slide into Bambaataa’s own productions; the only existing copy of the original acetate for his Looking for the Perfect Beat gets an airing. The duo even conjure the beat to Groove Is in the Heart from its constituent samples, chopping and scratching with the flair of virtuosos, but never losing the dance floor. When they drop Kraftwerk’s Trans-Europe Express, the fact that this is probably the very copy Bambaataa sampled on his epochal hit Planet Rock delivers an extra charge.

Afrika Bambaataa’s record collection would prove a most worthy cornerstone exhibit in a museum of hip-hop. But maybe it’s better the albums live on like this, pressed into service again to get the party started. Bambaataa understood – as the hip-hop generation understood and Shadow and Chemist understand – that, preserved on wax and spun with skill, funk never ages nor loses its power. “These records don’t belong to us,” Shadow says, at one point. But tonight they do.

DJ-Shadow-Cut-Chemist-Renegades-of-Rhythm-Melkweg-Amsterdam

Dj Shadow & Cut Chemist, Melkweg Amsterdam.

DJ-Shadow-Cut-Chemist-Renegades-of-Rhythm-Melkweg-Amsterdam DJ-Shadow-Cut-Chemist-Renegades-of-Rhythm-Melkweg-Amsterdam

DJ Shadow (born Josh Davis) is widely credited as a key figure in developing the experimental instrumental hip-hop style associated with the London-based Mo’ Wax label. Inspired by hip-hop’s early years, he then grew to absorb the heyday of crews like Eric B. & Rakim, Ultramagnetic MCs, and Public Enemy; groups which prominently featured DJs in their ranks.

DJ Shadow & Cut Chemist Renegades of Rhythm Melkweg Amsterdam

Cut Chemist helped form a group called Jurassic 5. He is a founding member of Ozomatli, He is the only sample based DJ ever actually signed to a major US label (not by a merger or annex label association). Father to a concept which became something called Brainfreeze. Headlined the Hollywood Bowl with DJ Shadow and got booed by 15000 people opening up for Shakira. Give him a whirl!

DJ Shadow & Cut Chemist Renegades of Rhythm Melkweg Amsterdam


Concert tip:

Arrive early if you are going to a smaller music venue. Don’t arrive late and get stuck at the back!

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Any Dj Shadow & Cut Chemist fans out there? Let us know what you think of their music in our comments section!

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