The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Big Hurt  |  CD Reviews  |  Classical  |  Jazz  |  Live Reviews  |  Music Features
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Fantastic damage

Anti-Pop Consortium’s unfinished business
By CHRIS FARAONE  |  September 28, 2009

0909_antipop_main
GAME CHANGERS: “We were just trying to see the future ourselves,” says APC’s High Priest (third from left, with MC Beans, M. Sayyid, and Earl Blaize) “and do things that no one had ever done around us.”

Unlike hip-hop acts that deny bucking convention for the sake of eccentricity, Anti-Pop Consortium were as clear on day zero as they will certainly be at Great Scott next Thursday about their maverick intentions. As their high-school classmate Pharoahe Monch did with Organized Konfusion, the eclectically inclined New York troupe put their profound oxymoronic mission statement right up in the group name.

With a Seinfeld-esque anti-blueprint, APC launched circa 1997 to tweak the game around the time that formulaic sludge was booming. Such inventive teams as the Artifacts and Organized were being purged from major labels, and there was no point in compromising to impress executives. Fading quickly was all hope of pushing complicated urban art on mass audiences. As a result, APC beat chef Earl Blaize plus MCs Beans, High Priest, M. Sayyid, and a basement-full of other Gotham fringe-hop architects fled the grid.

“At the time, we didn’t think about how people would look at us 10 years from then,” says Priest over the phone from New York. “We were just trying to see the future ourselves and do things that no one had ever done around us.” Adds Blaize: “We had influences like Ultramagnetic MCs and Mantronix, but production-wise we were just looking to them for guidance. It wasn’t about making us sound like anybody else.”

Beyond their appetite for odd rhythm and synthetic frequencies, APC also adopted the old alt-rock credo that lyrics need not make sense to anyone but their author (if that, even). Kool Keith and other angel-dust aficionados sparked the figurative revolution that frauds now call “postmodern,” and, in a sense, Wu-Tang’s delusional fiction also rode the unprecedented waves crashing through the five boroughs in the ’90s. But Priest, Sayyid, and Beans brought raw verbosity that especially violated the continuum on which rhymes traditionally fell.

And what of APC cuts that wait till the two-minute mark for verse one to drop, and the group’s seminal glitch-hop efforts? Blaize explains his crew’s approach in simple terms: “This is just what we feel to do. Was like that then and still is this time out.”

APC’s early 12-inch work, subsequent 2000 classic Tragic Epilogue (on Dan the Automator’s 75 Ark imprint), and 2002 Warp release, Arrhythmia, found hysterical recipients beyond critical circle jerks. The group toured with DJ Shadow and Radiohead, developing an overseas following comparable to that of such harder acts as M.O.P. and Gang Starr. “Everybody thinks our music is specific to them,” says Priest. “In France, they ask us how people in the States respond to our stuff.”

Shortly after finishing the 2001 Amnesiac tour with Radiohead, APC made their first cliché move ever, citing creative differences and disbanding. But the following years spent harvesting experimental side and solo projects gave way to a triumphant reunion. On their comeback full-length, Fluorescent Black (due October 13 from Big Dada), the Anti-Pop operatives reveal both their most polished and their least refined antics yet. So, what will follow in their trendsetting wake this time?

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Chairmen of the boards, WFNX's top 101 songs of the decade, War of the words, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Hip-Hop and Rap, Music,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 02/14 ]   The Addams Family  @ Shubert Theatre
[ 02/14 ]   "Aphrodite and the Gods of Love"  @ Museum of Fine Arts
[ 02/14 ]   "Processes and Dreams"  @ Panopticon Gallery
ARTICLES BY CHRIS FARAONE
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   J THE S | THE LAST DAYS  |  February 07, 2012
    J the S has been promising The Last Days since he went by Jake the Snake.
  •   HE WILL NOT BE MOVED  |  February 03, 2012
    A few months ago, Boston hip-hop vet Marco Antonio Ennis stepped into a home studio in Dorchester to cut a verse for an old friend's teenage son.
  •   WILL GOVERNOR PATRICK STRIKE OUT?  |  January 25, 2012
    Governor Deval Patrick used part of Monday's State of the Commonwealth address to break his public silence on pending law-enforcement legislation.
  •   OCCUPYING THE NEW HAMPSHIRE PRIMARY  |  January 11, 2012
    The nation's first presidential primary isn't new terrain for activists.
  •   KENJI NAKAYAMA TAKES AN AGE-OLD CRAFT TO NEW PLACES  |  January 11, 2012
    This winter, the Butera School of Art in Back Bay commences its last-ever sign-making classes, teaching students how to hand-letter everything from yachts to mom-and-pop shops.

 See all articles by: CHRIS FARAONE

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed