Showing posts with label miss platnum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miss platnum. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Music Video: Marteria - Kids

There are a lot of artists out there who come out with a great first album, then kind of fade away as they run through their best material.  Other artists only seem to improve with every album that they put out.

Marteria is one of these artists.

I have always liked Marteria's German-language hip-hop sound.  Even in his alternate incarnation as Marsimoto, his beats and rhymes were pretty decent - even if the Marsimoto concept gets old very quickly.  But over the course of his three albums as Marteria, it has been exciting to watch him grow and improve.  His first album, Base Ventura, was decent enough.  His second, Zum Glück in die Zukunft, with its track Secundenschlaf, was really good.  His collaborative EP with Miss Platnum and Yasha, Lila Wolken, was freakin' awesome.

So, today I bring you Marteria's hit track Kids from his recently released album Zum Glück in die Zukunft II.  I don't know whether it's the chorus that burrows into my head, or just the visuals of attractive female German field hockey players busting through an office in the video that I find so appealing (the latter predilection dating from my years attending a private prep school in the United States), but a month or so after first hearing this track, I still find myself frequently humming it to myself.  Oh, and the rest of the album is equally good too.

Friday, December 21, 2012

2012 Open World Music Dance Party

As with last year, this year Open World Music is having a dance party in my newly renovated dance hall - "The Geyer Palladium" (aka my family room).  A new sound system is installed.  New lighting has been turned on.  All we need now is a playlist.

Well, here it is:

1)  Blumio (Germany): Intro
2)  Carly Rae Jespen vs. PSY (USA/South Korea):  Call Me Gangnam
3)  Fettes Brot (Germany):  Kontrolle
4)  Irie Révoltés (Germany):  Explosion
5)  Malik Adouane (Algeria):  Get Up I Feel Like Being a Sex Machine
6)  Boris Grebenschikov and Aquarium (Russia):  Shumelka
7)  Scandal (Japan):  Shojo S
8)  2NE1 (South Korea):  I Am the Best
9)  Marteria, Yasha, and Miss Platnum (Germany):  Feuer
10)  Dendemann (Germany):  Stumpf ist Tumpf 3.0
11)  Paula (Germany):  C'est comme ça
12)  Rachid Taha (Algeria):  Rock the Casbah
13)  Laing (Germany):  Neue Liebe
14)  Culcha Candela (Germany):  Schöne Neue Welt
15)  Nosliw (Germany):  Heiss und laut
16)  Mexican Institute of Sound (Mexico):  Yo Diga Baila
17)  Seeed (Germany):  Seeeds Haus
18)  Plastilina Mosh (Mexico):  Naranjada

This playlist has been test marketed by my 7 year old daughter, and she gives it two enthusiastic thumbs up.  I hope you enjoy it too!

Merry Christmas from Open World Music!!!!

Friday, May 4, 2012

Awesome Disqualifications - Part 1

When I created Open World Music three years ago, I had to be very strict with myself about what parameters I would use to select music to post.  Artists had to come from non-English speaking countries and the song that I post had to be in their native language.  The first part is easy.  The whole premise of this blog is that there are great bands from just about every country on Earth.  The second part is somewhat more difficult.  Because most poplar modern musical genres had their genesis in the English speaking world, because many of the most influential artists to gain world fame have performed in English, and because performing in English is generally considered the only way to be marketable in the world at large, many artists opt to leave their native tongues behind when they write and perform.  Personally speaking, I think this is too bad.  The point of this blog was to bring the artists who have opted to perform in their own languages to a broader audience.

However, I have always felt pangs of regret that I couldn't also post music from artists from outside of the English speaking world who have made that choice to perform in English.  Often readers will refer me to artists, or I will stumble across artists, who are absolutely awesome, but because of my arbitrary and harsh rules I cannot post here. 

Well, rules are meant to be broken - particularly rules that I made up myself.  And so I bring you the first in what may be a multiple installment series:  Awesome Disqualifications.


The Dodoz - Do You Like Boys
This French band is a great example of hard driving alternative rock.  Sometimes they have an angular sound like Franz Ferdinand.  Other times they are more straight forward.  They're always interesting.





Jaqee - Moonshine
This is a borderline call.  Jaqee is originally from English/Swahili speaking Uganda, but for the past several years she has been working out of Sweden.  I originally heard of Jaqee from her work on the Koalas Desperados project, but I quickly fell in love with her solo work.  I just can't get her voice out of my head.




The Peacocks - Gimme More
This one is an oldie but a goodie.  This Swiss band has been around since 1990, and have been pounding out energetic psychobilly ever since.  







The Van Jets - Down Below
The Belgians are producing some amazing artists these days, including The Van Jets.  This is angular alternative rock, with a hint of a 70s vibe. 




Selah Sue - Raggamuffin
While we're in Belgium, I invite you to also check out Selah Sue.  Stylistically, she looks like a much healthier Amy Winehouse.  Her music is very soulful, and in this particular case, also very heavily inspired by reggae.  Another artist with a voice that will burrow into your brain.




Miss Platnum - She Moved In
I first became aware of this Germany based Romanian singer when she backed up Peter Fox on his breakout solo album, "Stadtaffe".  But Miss Platnum has earned quite a following in her own right, particularly for this soul influenced dance track. 







Lyre le Temps - Go Down/Hit the Road Jack/About the Traum Drum
A few years ago in the United States, swing made something of a popular comeback.  Since then, a new batch of artists - particularly in France - has taken that swing groove, and added heavy electronica elements.  Lyre le Temps takes this hybrid sound to amazing heights.



Ill Inspecta - Like Puppa San
Germany has a huge reggae scene.  As part of this, Ill Inspecta made ripples with his own dancehall take.  He has since left performing, spreading the story that Ill Inspecta was "killed".  But in the meantime, Ill Inspecta left some real gems that would be right at home heard out of a Kingston sound system.





The Bawdies - It's Too Late
Japan is famous for bands that take established musical genres from the United States and Great Britain, and giving them their unique cultural stamp.  The Bawdies don't do that.  They just play straight ahead hardcore R&B that would blow most American bands out of the water.