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YBM’s “City Girl” on BET Jams

[Young Bull Premieres “City Girl” Video on BET Jams]

 

Original Article:  https://indyweek.com/music/news/young-bull-city-girl-video-bet/

Rolling Stone: Raleigh A Hotbed…

[How Raleigh, North Carolina Became a Hotbed of Independent Music]

In our new series, we look at eight cities where live music has exploded — from legendary hubs like Chicago and Nashville, to rising hot spots like Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Portland, Maine. The latest falls into the second category: the Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill “Triangle,” where college radio isn’t dead and collaboration is encouraged between artists, creating a sound you can’t find anywhere else.

Just a few months after they moved to Durham in 2013, Nick Sanborn and Amelia Meath of the electro-pop duo Sylvan Esso played their first-ever proper local show, at the Pinhook. “I thought maybe 30 friends would show up,” says Sanborn. But there were more people than that. One of the Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill area’s influential college radio stations had started playing the group’s “Hey Mami;” when Sylvan Esso took the stage, they saw a sold-out crowd of 250. “It was my first moment of ‘I can’t believe how cool this place is,’ ” Sanborn says. (Today, “Hey Mami” has been streamed nearly 30 million times, according to Alpha Data, the analytics company that powers the Rolling StoneChart.

The Triangle, as it’s called, has become a hotbed of independent music recently, with artists from across the country flocking to the area, driven by its cheap rents and ample service jobs. The influx has transformed a relatively insular scene into a thriving one. There’s dance music in Chapel Hill, hip-hop and Americana in Raleigh, and indie-rock in Durham. “Fifteen years ago, there were, like, six people here,” says singer-songwriter Tift Merritt. “Now, there’s a whole community.” “A lot of the same drivers of the music scene are still the same: great college radio, great record stores, college students,” adds Superchunk’s Mac McCaughan, who runs the Durham-based Merge Records. “[Now] the thing is, there are just so many great bands.”

Folk groups like Chapel Hill’s Mandolin Orange and Raleigh’s American Aquarium are long-standing local draws. The spirit of collaboration in the city’s fluid indie scene, meanwhile, has produced a score critical darlings like Hiss Golden Messenger, Mountain Goats, Sylvan Esso, bands that share members, tap into each other’s genres, and collaborate freely without worrying what it means for each other’s careers. “Pretentiousness is seen as a disease here,” says Sanborn. “I feel like I can kind of tell when something’s from North Carolina right now, just because it tends to include disparate elements you might not hear anywhere else.”

Rising Rap

Country and folk no longer run the game: The area is now home to tons of hip-hop talent, including Rapsody (who guested on Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly), Lord Fess and Young Bull. This boom is thanks in part to 9th Wonder, whose Raleigh-based Jamla Records has made the area a wellspring of nationally-recognized talent (The label teamed up with Roc Nation to sign Rapsody). The scene, says 9th Wonder, has become “so many kids doing their thing, too many to name. It’s grown tremendously.”

 

Wonderfully Weird Festivals

Visit the area in September, during Raleigh’s Hopscotch Music Festival, which features a mix of prominent local talent and major national acts such as Big Boi and St. Vincent. Then, stick around a week for the International Bluegrass Music Association’s yearly conference. If you’re coming in the Spring, check out local legend J.Cole’s Dreamville Festival, which featured SZA and 21 Savage in 2019.

 

Clubs that Musicians Love

The Cat’s Cradle, a divey two-floor venue less than a mile from the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill in nearby Carrboro, is beloved among road vets: “We’ve played, like, 15 times at the Cradle alone,” says Wye Oak’s Andy Stack, who recently moved to town with bandmate Jenn Wasner. Other mainstay local clubs include Motorco Music Hall and the Pinhook in Durham, which Sanborn described as “the epicenter” of his scene. “You get spoiled,” says BJ Barham of American Aquarium. “All my friends in New York and L.A. talk about how they get to see great shows every single night. The same could be argued with the Triangle.”

 

Original Article:  https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/raleigh-north-carolina-indie-music-938255/

“City Girl” Premieres on BET Jams

[Young Bull Premieres “City Girl” Video on BET Jams]

The ever-so-talented Durham R&B band Young Bull premiered the official video for its single “City Girl” on BET Jams last week. Directed and edited by Patrick Lincoln of Torch House Media, the video’s super-chill party vibe is a perfect introduction of the band to the world.

Lincoln incorporates a wide range of creative visual techniques, and both Christian Sinclair and Tahmique Cameron appear comfortable performing for the camera. The video is full of recognizable Durham locations, including the skate park, and the incorporation of skateboarders with a mime hip-hop dancer is fitting for the group’s eclectic sound.

One of the most memorable feats of the video is the inclusive vision of Black women’s beauty. Hip-hop and R&B videos have a troubled history with colorism, as they tend to glorify only longer-haired, lighter-skinned models. But the leading lady in “City Girl” has glowing brown skin and natural hair—a bold contemporary Caesar haircut.

The video closes with infamous red cups all empty on the floor, a sure sign that the turn-up in the city with the pretty girl was well worth it. Young Bull fans can catch the video on BET several times a day between 10:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., stream it on the BET Jams website, or watch it below:

Original Article:  https://indyweek.com/music/news/young-bull-city-girl-video-bet/

Voodoo – Lyrical Lemonade Review

Voodoo – [Young Bull]

Rising rap group Young Bull bands together to create a polished single in “Voodoo.” Historically Durham, North Carolina are no strangers to harboring great a rap collective. In the early 2000’s rap group Little Brother consisting of 9th Wonder, Phonte, and Rapper Big Pooh took off and became one of the more prominent groups in hip-hop. Young Bull is a blend of hip-hop and r&b so you’ll always enjoy a little variety when switching from track to track. You feel the southern influence in their infused with a modern sound that creates a magical listening experience. “Voodoo” is a seductive single that in which Young Bull member Mique croons and glides his way over the smooth guitar and drum laced backtracking. After dropping projects in back to back years in 2016 and 2017 the Carolina collective didn’t drop one in 2018. That can only mean there has to be something brewing on the horizon form Young Bull in 2019.

Stream Young Bull’s new single “Voodoo” below.

Original Article: https://lyricallemonade.com/p/voodoo-young-bull

YBM Continues To Prove Versatility

Young Bull continues to prove their versatility with “City Girl”

Durham, NC based collective Young Bull may be the alternative Hip-Hop and R&B band you need in your life. The group who was recently co-signed by Grammy nominated female rapper Rapsody, consists of lead vocalist Mique Cameron, instrument savvy and talented producer Gabe Fox-Peck, and rapper/singer Christian Sinclair. The group originally jumped into action via SoundCloud back in 2014 and made their digital project debut in August of 2016 with their 11-track EP entitled Sopadelic . Following this release, the group released numerous track in which led to a second project release last December called Midnight Sun . With so much hard work and overwhelming support, the collective has attracted an abundance of traction with their soulful melodic meshes and new and old school styles that has led them to receiving over 2 million streams and 1 million of them from just the past year through Spotify. With two projects established thus far and a progressive fan base inside and outside the triad, the group continues to shape the sound that sets them apart.

Rather you’re watching them live or streaming a track from the band, you’re not guaranteed just a listen but an experience. The group recently released a feel-good track entitled “City Girl” and it’s simply another reason why you shouldn’t sleep them any further. Peep the track below and stay tune for what’s next from these artists on the rise.

Original Article: https://eboisterous.com/2018/10/31/young-bull-continues-to-prove-their-versatility-with-city-girl/

Soulful. Bumpin’. Sophisticated.

Soulful. Bumpin’. Sophisticated. It’s hard to describe with one word the sound of Young Bull, an electro-R&B trio based in Durham, North Carolina. With over 500,000 plays on Spotify and an acclaimed album, “Sopadelic,” dropping last year, Young Bull is making moves in the music world, drawing comparisons to The Internet and Anderson.Paak. Comprised of former high school basketball teammates Tahmique Cameron, Gabe Fox-Peck and now added Raleigh-based rapper Christian Sinclair, Young Bull has a deep chemistry, capping off a series of high-energy live shows with a sold-out album release party at their premier hometown venue, Motorco Music Hall. Now, with a brand new music video, a string of magazine features, and a brigade of online supporters, Young Bull is setting out to spread their musical message to the world.

 

Original Article: http://isisasheville.com/event/kassa-overall-young-bull/

An Interview w/ Durham’s YBM

t the Beats N Bars Festival in Durham, North Carolina

August 25th 2018, 4 p.m.

~90 degrees Fahrenheit

Young Bull photo by Andrew Cheek

We met on the brick pavilion under the Lucky Strike water tower on the American Tobacco campus.

Born and raised in Durham, Young Bull is a hip-hop trio composed of Tahmique Cameron, Christian Sinclair, and Gabe Fox-Peck. They often perform with a band, and at Beats N Bars Festival they did just that. Their music weaves hype trap hip-hop with old-school kick-back soul auras that are especially bright played live (accented by bass notes and occasional drum solos). Poetic vocal harmonies and poignant twirls on the keyboard (played by Gabe Fox-Peck) are also known to suffuse their music (as in their acclaimed song “Chocolate”). When asked about what defines their musical style they answered, in a few more words, “Durham.”

Young Bull performed on the main stage of Beats N Bars Festival, following Ace Henderson, as part of the array of performances and live events (and panel discussions) that compose the Beats N Bars Festival. I met up with Young Bull (and their bass player, Butler Knowles, making a cameo) for an interview on a warm Saturday. Afterwards we snapped a few 360° pictures on the pavilion and at their concert (see below).

Andrew Cheek: So, how did you get started making music together and how has that evolved into today?

Tahmique Cameron: Gabe and I met on the J.V. basketball team and we were already kinda friends before that, but we got closer as we played basketball together. There was a talent show, and the talent show only had one spot left and there was a line of people. The teacher said Gabe and I would get the spot, if we did it together… so we did it together, then… there was chemistry, you know, making the music. We did John Legend, Ordinary People, for the talent show then we went, and were supposed to record that at the crib. He played the beat for “I Can’t Get You Out of My Head” and he had some words written down and we just added to it. So that was the start, and the foundation of it.

Christian Sinclair: That song they ended up making I found about eight months later on Soundcloud while I was at NC State. When I was there I was recording stuff and mixing in my room and I just found it (their song)… I used to go through Soundcloud all the time looking for music and, I basically just reached out to them through Soundcloud messaging.

Christian and Tahmique photo by Andrew Cheek

Gabe Fox-Peck: Shout out to Soundcloud messenger.

Christian: For real. They sent some stuff over and we started recording from there. First when we started, I was recording in Stanhope Apartments then sending it to them through email. Then they would do all the mixing and whatnot.

Gabe: We recorded that first song in my bedroom after school one day (we went to the same high school) on a mic I got at Guitar Center. And he [Christian] was recording in the bathroom at NC State, haha. Very unprofessional in retrospect.

Christian: It was tight, though. I still have a mixtape up where everything was made in that bathroom.

Gabe: We didn’t even meet Christian until we shot a music video for the song he was featured on.

Tahmique: Which was “Quiet.” That was the first day we met him, the day we shot that music video.

Christian: Yeah so when you see me acting awkward, it’s because I was trying to figure everybody out.

Christian Sinclair photo by Andrew Cheek

Andrew: Per the name Young Bull, what does Durham (and the Triangle) mean to you all? In the sense of how being in Durham and the Triangle influences your music, and the stories you tell.

Christian: When I first started, I made everything by myself. For me, being in Raleigh and coming down to Durham and making music… Durham was the first place I started collaborating. We started recording videos around Durham and I didn’t really do that anywhere else. So, it influenced me a little bit in that sense.

Gabe: I think Durham is, well, obviously it’s in our name (that’s the “Bull”). Young Bull. I think it’s been pretty huge to the sound from the beginning just because we grew up here. Even the musicians we play with live are all people that I knew before, just from playing music around Durham and playing gigs with… mostly jazz musicians. So just the sound of Durham, of the Durham music scene, and also, like there’s a whole different side where Tahmique is coming from within that Durham sound. It’s pretty essential to our sound, that’s why it’s in the name. Even when we go play shows in NYC or wherever else, Durham is still a part of the sound.

Butler Knowles: Yeah I never even lived in Durham. I grew up in Raleigh.

Gabe: Then why are you talking?

{All laugh}

Butler: From an outside perspective, though, I can see that it’s such a rich community of artists. Even, like, John P. Kee is one of the biggest gospel artists in the world and his church is in Durham. So, it’s a huge part of the sound.

Christian: You can feel it.

Butler: It’s unique to this place.

Christian: Right. And maybe ya’ll don’t fully realize it because we’ve been around it but… from Greensboro, Winston, there’s not… I don’t know. Winston doesn’t have as much of that musical community feel. Durham is kinda small in the grand scheme of things, but… it has its presence.

Butler: But I mean 9th Wonder is from Durham.

Tahmique: Well, he’s from Winston.

Butler: Oh, word.

Gabe: But he lives in Durham.

Butler: Yeah, right.

Tahmique: He lives in Raleigh. He teaches in Durham, that’s different.

Butler: Yeah.

Andrew: He’s all over the place.

Tahmique: Yeah.

Gabe: He’s North Carolina.

Tahmique: For sure. Yeah.

Butler: And then there’s the Art of Cool project and stuff.

Gabe: Right.

Christian: Right.

Butler: Which brings in a ton of different sounds.

{Everyone starts talking at once}

Tahmique: Well anyways, to speak on the Triangle aspect of it, like, what does it mean… Even the state of North Carolina, really, we’re just different… and not that we intentionally try to be… Even as individual people, you know. We’re the cool outcasts in a sense.

Young Bull photo by Andrew Cheek

Andrew: Where’s your favorite place to hang out in Durham? It could be anywhere. To hang out, be creative, walk around…

Christian: My least favorite place is Gabe’s basement. It’s hands down my least favorite place that I’ve spent the most time in.

Gabe: It’s a little dirty down there.

Christian: It is a little dirty, but it’s not that. I’m not a big spider guy.

Andrew: Me neither.

Christian: Dude, they freak me out.

Gabe: I’m a big spider guy. I’m big into spiders, roaches, raccoons. All that stuff. But honestly, downtown is a cool place to hang out. Durham has changed soooo much since we started making music here. Some good ways, some bad ways. But definitely a lot of growth, and more venues to play at. I don’t know. I like to go to Surf Club. That’s where I hang out.

Christian: I like to hang out at The Building.

Tahmique: The Building… I like to hang out at The Building, at the Sweepstakes, um..

Gabe (leaning forward in his chair): Nobody knows what The Building is!

Tahmique: They don’t have to. It’s incognito. Just put “The Building.”

Christian (seconding): Yeah that’s my answer, too.

Tahmique: Just put “The Building” in quotations. The Building. But yeah, I like to hang out there, and, at the Sweepstakes… that’s really it. We don’t really hang out much. We’re homebodies.

Gabe: When we’re hanging out we’re making music chilling in the house.

Young Bull with Will Darity photo by Andrew Cheek

Young Bull with Will Darity photo by Andrew Cheek

Andrew: So, what have you been doing here at Beats N Bars? And do you have anything planned while you’re here? I know you’re performing tonight.

Christian: We did our sound check.

Tahmique: We’re going to get something to eat!

Gabe: We made a video with Runaway a couple of months ago with John Laww. He was big in the video behind the scenes. We had to memorize all the words in reverse, it was a crazy concept.

Andrew: Ohh, it was that video!

Gabe: Yeah. John Laww, who’s the founder of this [Beats N Bars], or at least one of the co-founders, he was big in that video.

Christian: Another thing we’re doing at Beats N Bars is we’re selling merch. And, we’re about to open our online store.

Tahmique: And we’re about to drop a new music video “Space” coming August 31st. Really, we’re just out here enjoying a good time. That’s really it, just trying to enjoy the festivities and see some good performances. Shout out to everybody that’s on the bill. I don’t like to say, and I try refrain and stop other people from saying it – “local acts.” It just contains people in this little local box. No. I like all the people that are from North Carolina that are on this bill and putting on for the state. Putting on for whatever city they come from. Especially when people hit us up asking for local acts. Like, most of the shows we do aren’t even in North Carolina…! {Smacks hands on table four times} Stop-calling-us-a-local-act!

Gabe: Of course, we’re happy that we’re from here. It’s just that “local act” means, “Oh, they’re going to get paid less.”

Andrew: It’s kind of limiting.

Christian: It’s a little demeaning, too.

Tahmique Cameron of Young Bull photo by Andrew Cheek

Andrew: What’s the coolest thing you’ve seen in music this year? The whole musical world. It doesn’t have to be Hip-Hop.

{All mutter in agreement that a lot has been going on}

Tahmique: Cool as in cool cool? Or cool as in, like, whaaaaat?

Andrew: Any of those. Wild, cool, weird, exciting…

Tahmique: Maybe the Tekashi takeover. It’s not even cool! It’s just the wildest  “what just happened?”

Christian: But it does make sense though. “Cool” is tough. There’s been a lot of cool shit. The Kanye stuff was crazy.

{All agree thoroughly}

Tahmique: Jay and Beyoncé too.

Christian: That too. But Kanye, what he did, this whole “I’m going to produce this many albums (3 or 4) and they’re all my artists.” That was cool. And it’s never happened before. Where somebody has had everybody’s attention for…

Tahmique: For weeks. Back to back.

Christian: As soon as I heard Kid Cudi and Kanye were going to drop something together…it was amazing.

Christian: Lebron going to L.A. was cool, but that wasn’t music.

Gabe: That wasn’t cool.

Butler: I like seeing the way people are responding to the political climate. I remember Marcus Gilmore (he’s this great drummer) posted the night Donald Trump was elected something along the lines of “We artists have a lot of work to do.”

Gabe: Especially right now with the mid-term elections coming up. And a lot of crazy stuff coming out with the Trump administration and how he might get impeached. It’s neat to see how activism and art are at a peak high. Also, the re-birth of live music in Hip-Hop. Which is kind of where we fall.

Tahmique: Festivals also. In the grand scheme of how they’ve been going on in the U.S. And festivals in the Hip-Hop community.

Gabe: Hip-Hop, in general, is on the rise.

Andrew: And Kendrick Lamar won a Pulitzer Prize.

Christian: And Jay-Z was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame, I think. Well, last year.

Tahmique: Jay becoming the President of Puma Basketball might’ve been the coolest thing to happen in music this year.

Gabe: I don’t know about that. That’s dope though.

Tahmique: I just like to see a black man succeed that’s all.

Gabe: I feel like in general we can say Hip-Hop’s acceptance into the mainstream culture. In every aspect. And not just acceptance like it’s being consumed, but it’s being controlled by Hip-Hop artists. Respected in a different type of way. Also misunderstood, still, as it always has been. To finish that thought on what I was saying before about live music – the fact that people are valuing musicianship is exciting, and there’s a place for musicianship within Hip-Hop as far as live musicians go… who have been around playing for a long time. But now, it’s becoming popular for big hip-hop artists to tour with a live band. And that hasn’t been the case, I don’t think, ever. Until now. It’s always been, like, DJs.

Andrew: I don’t think Chance the Rapper was the first to do it, but I saw him at UNC-Charlotte a few years ago and he had a whole band with him.

Christian: Jay-Z used to do it when he was on his Black Album tour, I think, or for one of his tours. I feel like we’re still forgetting something else that’s happened recently.

Gabe: Yeah. Anyways. I feel like we pretty much hit it. We’ve covered a lot.

Andrew: There’s no one right answer.

Gabe: We love Hip-Hop. And we’re happy about it.

Tahmique Cameron of Young Bull photo by Andrew Cheek

Andrew: Would anyone like to add anything?

Christian: North Carolina is getting bigger music-wise and I feel like it’s super important for people in Durham to just support. We have new stuff coming out soon, too.

Gabe: And realize we’re from here. You don’t have to look at us as some… I don’t know. We’re regular people. We’re just Durham (or– Triangle-based) people. We’ve been a lot of places, but this is where we’re from. We’re accessible. If you hit us up on social media we’ll probably respond. In fact, that’s what Tahmique is doing right now. Haha.

Christian: And just keep updating with us. Yeah. That’s it.

Gabe: Okay.

Andrew: Thank you very much.

 

Original Post: http://clarioncontentmedia.com/2018/09/young-bull/

Young Bull Does Durham Proud

When Tahmique Cameron and Gabe Fox-Peck showed up to Durham School of the Arts’ spring talent show auditions in 2014each with his own prepared musical number the show’s coordinator informed them that there was only one slot left. Choose between yourselves or audition together as one act, he said. The two high school juniors, who knew each other casually from the JV basketball team, opted for the latter, singing John Legend’s “Ordinary People” with Fox-Peck playing accompaniment on the piano.

“That was the beginning,” Fox-Peck, now twenty-one, says. “We found that we had a good chemistry, and a few weeks later we recorded our first song, ‘Can’t Get You Outta My Head,’ in my bedroom after school.”

“Can’t Get You Outta My Head” is a laid-back number, featuring Cameron’s smooth, emotive voice over funky keyboards, steady tambourine, and sparkling synth. It epitomizes the sound that would go on to become Young Bullin the group’s own words, “distinctively Southern, fusing trap and old-school soul influences into an unmistakably electric aesthetic”showcasing Cameron’s background in church choir and Fox-Peck’s studies in jazz piano. Since then, Young Bull has established itself as one of Durham’s most promising young acts, energizing the hip-hop scene as they one-up themselves with each new song.

Cameron and Fox-Peck continued to put songs together post them on SoundCloud, with Cameron singing, Fox-Peck producing, and each writing songs. They took on the title Young Bull, a name Cameron says was given to them by their friends.

“We’re young and from the bull,” Cameron explains, referring to Durham’s Bull City nickname. “For a while, we were really thinking of changing it, because we ain’t gonna be young forever, but then we just decided that we represent our youth. The youth lives in us forever.”

During the summer of 2016, as Cameron and Fox-Peck were finishing up their first album, Sopadelic, they received a message from Christian Sinclair, a Winston-Salem based rapper and singer interested in collaborating with Young Bull. They sent Sinclair a track called “Quiet” and within the day, he wrote an accompanying verse, recorded himself in his dorm room at N.C. State, and sent it back. They loved it, and Sinclair officially joined the fold shortly after.

“Christian brought rap, and an energetic, bouncy sound,” Fox-Peck says. “He gave some of the songs a different vibe and completed the circle of emotional expression.”

In parallel with his vocals, Sinclair brings a positive spirit and high aspirations to Young Bull.

“We’ll be one of the bigger groups in the country for sure,” Sinclair, twenty-three, says. “I want to go global with our sound and represent American hip-hop and R&B in a new way.”

As Young Bull developed their signature sound, they also refined their lyrics to better convey the sentiment they hope to leave with listeners.

“We’re all writers, and we’ve gotten better at saying what we’re trying to say,” Fox-Peck says. “We want to give an everyday voice to something that people can relate to, but not cliché-sounding. We want to sound like you’re in the same room as us when we’re talking.”

Through years of hard work, Young Bull has transformed a few casual SoundCloud uploads into two albums and multiple singles with millions of plays on music streaming services, leading them to gigs at clubs and colleges, spots at music festivals like Hopscotch, Art of Cool, and this weekend’s Beats N Bars Festival, as well as critical acclaim. Their general success is impressive, given that Cameron, Fox-Peck, and Sinclair currently live hours away from each other, in Durham, Boston, and New York City.

Fox-Peck attends Harvard University and schedules all his classes on one day so he can devote the rest of the week to making music and performing. They use FaceTime and voice memos for long-distance collaboration and endeavor to book shows that fit with each other’s schedules.

“We’re constantly making things work, but we’ve had to miss funerals and all types of things,” Cameron says. “[Young Bull] is our number one priority.”

“Even when we’re not in Durham, it still lives through us,” Fox-Peck says. “I think especially with so many artists who are from big cities like New York or Chicago, the fact that we have a local city that’s a dope place with a unique character sets us apart and adds to who we are.”

The city’s abundant creative energy also makes it easy for the band to work closely with other local artists and businesses, which they’re eager to do. The band recently teamed up with the streetwear brand Runaway for an event; both sides reap the rewards from helping each other get a leg up.

Whether it’s fusing musical genres, finding new fans across social media and streaming platforms, or collaborating with other artists, creative cross-pollination has proven to be Young Bull’s secret weapon. The band has its finger on the pulse of not just the music industry, but the entire aesthetic of what young people are into. They’re trendsetters with the talent to back it up, paving the way for Durham’s talent to come.

 

Original Article: https://indyweek.com/music/features/young-bull-durham-proud-inventive-fusion-hip-hop-jazz-soul/

Young Bull Shows Growth

Young Bull Shows Growth, and their youth, on new Midnight Sun EP

By Ryan Cocca

The first symphony by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was written when the composer was just eight years old. The German composer Frederic Chopin delivered his first piece at age seven. Juicy J’s first rap? Three years old (I have this on good authority).

As you are probably aware, these well-known cases of precocious childhood virtuosity are aberrations in the context of all professional musicians, most of whom were still learning the concept of “sharing is caring” at age seven, let alone creating multi-instrumental arrangements out of thin air. For the most part, these things (“these things” being long, successful, enriching musical careers) take time.

So perhaps some forgiveness can be granted to any Triangle music enthusiasts (including yours truly) who thought that, a mere year or two removed from high school, the promising hip-hop/soul/jazz/everything outfit Young Bull would deftly finesse their way around any and all of the numerous pitfalls that laid underfoot for a band of their years, burning a white-hot, linear trajectory of fire straight into the music industry solar system and reincarnating the ghost of pre-neck tats Vic Mensa to become Durham’s version of Kids These Days.

In hindsight, we (I) may have gotten a bit ahead of ourselves (myself).

Not because Young Bull isn’t a very talented group. Not because lead singer Tahmique Cameron isn’t a great singer, or because Gabe Fox-Peck isn’t as capable a young producer as I’ve heard. Not because they aren’t the single most exciting new act to come out of the city I live in since I’ve been here (not counting GYMZWA because he lives in LA). Because they are. No, it’s because young people — as anyone who has ever been 18, or 19, or 20, can attest — are known to make a misstep here and there. And this EP, although in some ways an impressive follow-up to last year’s out-of-nowhere revelation Sopadelic, has its own share of them.

You’d never know it though, not from how immaculately the album begins. In a fog of ethereal, hypnotic sounds that sound like the next chapter of a journey taking shape, a man at a music venue, clearly the MC for an out-of-town tour date, welcomes Young Bull to the stage. The studio track starts to consume everything, and as the cheers of the crowd fade to black, a voice emerges to ask a question…

“I ask a shooting star, could you make a superstar?”

The transition from skit to song is seamless. It’s the kind of nondescript detail that on a major label release would barely raise an eyebrow, but on an even semi-local level, feels like splitting the atom. This is how Young Bull tricks you into thinking they are infallible, even though they were at Durham School of the Arts more recently than you were in college.

As the album’s opening track, “We Up,” builds with the help of smooth, engaging verses from rapper Christian Sinclair that trade places with infectious, irreverent party-singing from vocalist Tahmique Cameron, an early mythology around the album begins to take shape: If Sopadelic was a few raw, scrappy kids sneaking a foot in the door, Midnight Sun is going to be that group stepping back, charging the door, and emphatically putting their foot through it. This will be the year of Young Bull. But seriously, what if 2018 is the Year of the Bull — has anyone seen the upcoming Chinese calendar? This is starting to feel cosmic.

But wait, don’t get carried away.

Because like a transcendent athlete batting or shooting with his wrong hand for the sake of sport, Young Bull seem fixated on the very material that, as a fledgling act, is predictably the most difficult for them (or really anyone) to execute well. Fun raps and hooks on topics ranging from growing up, to hating Donald Trump, to wondering if a particular girl likes your songs — you’d expect this to be the bread and butter of a group like Young Bull, and it is. When they go for it, the result is almost always a slam dunk. As much fun as dunking a basketball might be (I wouldn’t know), Young Bull seems to understand that they can make fun, lively songs at the drop of a hat, and their artistic choices on Midnight Sun suggest they aspire to do more. It’s an admirable tact, but one that the project as a whole pays a price for in the end.

After “We Up,” and the skit that follows, it feels as though the brakes get thrown on everything, and we never really get back to cruising speed again (with the exception of the trappy, radio-inflected “I Love My”). The buttery-smooth, molasses-thick love song “Chocolate,” helmed by Cameron, is perfectly suited for his voice, and he shines. Sinclair — smartly added to the group full-time after being a sneaky-good X-factor on Sopadelic — contributes a sharp, melodic verse, but it gets tucked in the middle, easy to miss in the sea of Cameron’s singing.

In the songs that follow, from “Sorry,” to “Lie To Me,” to the closer, “Take Ya Load Off,” the slow pace rarely shifts, and the understated yet attention-demanding energy from “We Up” never returns. Make no mistake: even when YB pumps the brakes, it sounds good, and no one could call 28 minutes with Midnight Sun an abrasive or unpleasant listen. Nor could you call Midnight Sun a case of treading water, as the group’s musical growth from their debut album is evident, even in its less engaging moments. But it still doesn’t scrape the surface of what this group is capable of.

Midnight Sun is an EP by a group of young artists, who may occasionally make some young decisions, and who, as it so happens, go by the name Young Bull. It doesn’t massively outshine the group’s last outing, but still drops a couple major gems along the way (“We Up,” “Space”). Basically, it’s exactly what we should expect from a group of kids growing up, having fun, and figuring it out. No one wants to party with Mozart or Chopin anyway.

  
Original Post: https://www.runawayclothes.com/blogs/life/midnight-sun-ep-by-young-bull-album-review

On the Culture Front

On the Culture Front: Music Videos from the Underground, Part 1

Lance Oppenheim’s video for Young Bull’s “Voicemail” (above) plays like a short indie film. It’s bookended with footage from a recent show the hip duo did in Raleigh that was shut down by the cops. An officer is seen early on as the music comes to a halt and an off-screen voice asks “turn it down?” and the office replies, “Off. You’re done.” It’s the kind of terse exchange that’s reminiscent of Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre’s epic videos from “The Chronic.” The music then swells with an electronic arpeggio crafted by Gabe Fox-Peck atop Tahmique Cameron crooning “running away, running away.” A beat with a reggae sense of timing opens the song up and leaves room for some interesting guitar flourishes. Cameron’s croon morphs into a tightly phrased rap, which acts in counterpoint to the relaxed beat. The visuals jump between a forest, a water tower and dimly lit interiors before ending up in a waffle house at the point of end-of-the-night exhaustion. An instrumental interlude follows, and then we are thrown back into the club from the opening moments as organizers are trying to clear the space. Some of the video’s sage parting words: “Fuck Donald Trump. We live in a Police State.”

Long Island-based band Patent Pending write punchy pop songs, but their latest is a mashup of two EDM tracks: Tiesto’s “Wasted” and Avicii’s “Wake Me Up.” If you’re not familiar with those songs as I wasn’t, “Wasted/Wake Me Up” sounds like a cohesive energetic anthem to excess. The video is an explosive burst of color directed by Nick Zinnanti and frontman Joe Ragosta that uses paint flying through the air to visualize the intoxication process. Ragosta thrashes about in a small room as he’s pummeled with a barrage of several colors as the signature chorus line kicks in: “I like us better when we’re wasted.” It’s not until the last fifty seconds of the song that “Wake Me Up” kicks in with added refrain “when I’m wiser and I’m older.” This could be seen as a coda if another “wasted” chorus didn’t immediately interrupt it. The visuals show the room being put back together but the lyrics tell a different story.

The Dead Daisies video of “We’re an American Band” combines footage from their live shows with shots of cities from San Francisco to Nashville and landscapes from the red rock mountains out west. Directed by Lukas Hambach, it feels like a catchy advertisement of the band’s ethos, but it’s actually a cover of a 1973 Grand Funk Railroad song that landed that band their first number one hit. With drum rolls, power chords and blazing guitar riffs, this faithful bare-chested cover is an ode stadium rock. For a song this “Amurican,” it ends fittingly with fireworks.

Atlanta-based pop/rock band All the Locals have created a feel-good anthem with “Weatherman.” The song is heavy with rain metaphors that are delivered through Johnny Schmarkey’s airy falsetto. There’s a lot of heart that’s felt through the lyrics though some are sappier and soggier than others. One of the better lines comes towards the end: “Don’t confuse your path with the end of the road.” Aaron Wynia’s video combines black-and-white footage of the band playing with a drenched Schmarkey singing in the rain. As the song propels towards its climax, the band snaps into color.

The video of Drew Vision’s “Want ‘em All” reminds me of 90s R&B videos that featured scantily clad women in steamy bathtubs and usually an excess of champagne. Jose Omar’s video plays into this style before subverting it with whimsy. A woman appears in a bathtub of rainbow sprinkles and then another one is covered in what appears to be a mixture of chocolate and pretzels – yum indeed. The video almost feels like it could be an SNL Digital Short, and I half expected Justin Timberlake to pop up and join in the over-the-top antics.

Original Article:  https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/on-the-culture-front-music-videos-from-the-underground_us_5970fb07e4b0d72667b05f12

 

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