News

March Madness continues this Mon & Tue, 3/15 & 16 in NYC – our 5-year anniversary w/special guests Rockwilder, Dame Grease, Sean C. & LV, and more

Friday, March 12th, 2010
iStandard Producer Showcase - NYC Edition March 2010
What’s Happening?

iStandard’s March Madness is in full effect at the top of next week, as this Monday, March 15th & Tuesday, March 16th, the iStandard Producer Showcase returns to its birthplace – NYC.  This won’t be just any event, but a 2-Night extravaganza filled with live interviews with the likes of Rockwilder & Dame Grease, 22 amazing new producers from all over the US, a star-studded judge panel, and networking galore.   Oh yeah, March 15th also marks the 5-Year Anniversary of iStandard, so you need to come celebrate with us!

As always, any past producers that have been in the iStandard Producer Showcase are FREE at the door, as well as any iStandardProducers.com members.

Full event details are below, including the judges, prize package, sponsors, and more.

We’ve just announced a string of 2-Night events in Los Angeles, Chicago, & Atlanta, plus the can’t-miss ASCAP “I Create Music” EXPO.

Any producers interested in being considered for these events, simply upload 2 tracks and the required information at www.istandardproducers.com/index.php?t=show_submit

Come celebrate with us, and we hope to see you next week in NYC, and anytime on iStandardProducers.com

iStandard Producer Showcase - NYC Edition 3/15 & 3/16
The word “iStandard” has become synonymous with Music Production over the past 5 years, and it’s easy to see why.  iStandard has showcased over 2000 producers worldwide in front of millions, both at the live iStandard Producer Showcase series and online via iStandardProducers.com.  iStandard is a platform that the Producer can spotlight their creations in front of packed crowds and individuals that can potentially change their careers.  Starting countless relationships, acting a catalyst for some of today’s hit records, and providing the utmost in knowledge and education, iStandard and has been branded internationally to become the #1 coalition in the world for the music producer.

This show is our 5-year anniversary, so come out and celebrate with us!

Details for March 15-16 NYC Showcase
- For a Map of Don Hill’s, Click HERE
- For Industry Guest List, Click HERE
- To Purchase an Advance Ticket for Both Nights via PayPal to save $5, Click HERE
- For All Sponsorship Inquiries, Click HERE

NYC March 15 & 16 Judges, Producers, and Artists

Prize Package for Winning Producer:

Ableton Live IntroABLETON LIVE INTRO: Ableton Live Intro gives you the essentials of Ableton Live at a
great price. Whether you’re a talented newcomer or a seasoned
professional, Live Intro has got what you need for writing songs,
making beats, recording, remixing, DJing and performing your music live
on stage.
If you’re just starting out, Live’s fluid workflow, real-time audio
manipulation and an impressive 7 GB audio content package provide a
smart step into the world of music production and digital DJing.


SampleTronIK Multimedia’s SAMPLETRON: SampleTron is a new virtual instrument from IK Multimedia and Sonic
Reality that combines the authentic recreation of “Tron” sounds such as
Mellotrons, Chamberlins, and Optigans with the powerful SampleTank
engine to take those nostalgic sounds into the new millenium. No other
product allows you to manipulate, process and stretch such gritty,
emotional and quirky lofi sounds like SampleTron. It’s a virtual
instrument made for many styles from hip hop to electronic to classic
rock and offers some of the most unique musically useful tones you can
imagine.

TRackS 3IK Multimedia’s T-RackS 3: has all the tools you need to create superb, tube-toned or
digital-tuned, mixes and masters. Its rich, warm sound combines new
tube-modeled and state-of-the-art digital processors on top of its
classic top-notch analog classics. A new modular chain gives you full
control and easy navigation/compare features. A new complete metering
section keeps all the most important variables of your sound under
control. A truly superior mastering and mixing system that will put a
polish on your tracks you may have never thought possible. All this,
while adding the beautiful warmth and space of the tube devices it
emulates. No other plug-in offers this kind of dedicated environment
for such an important task, and nothing sounds like T-RackS 3.

Kicks and Snares
KicksandSnares.com: Anindustry leader in helping music producers reach their fullest potential by providing the best music sample library material available online. Catering specifically to Hip Hop and R&B producers, K&S with thousands of  sounds from drums, loops, effects, instruments and vinyl record samples, with years of experience in the making.


Asylum RecordsMeeting with Asylum/Warner Music Group A&R Eric Beasley, and much more!


E-Powered By:

Yo Raps Logo

Sponsored By:

Ableton ASCAP IK Multimedia BLAP

Weapon X Promotions Coast2Coast Mixtapes Mic Fiend Promo
IllRoots Hip Hop Lives Midi Monsters East Coast Digital Radio
iStandard March (into April) Madness & The ASCAP “I Create Music” EXPO
- To see a full listing of our events, CLICK HERE

- To be considered for an iStandard Producer Showcase in your city,
CLICK HERE

iStandard Producer Showcase - LA Edition 3/23 & 3/24

iStandard Producer Showcase - Chicago Style - 3/30-31

iStandard Producer Showcase - ATL Edition

ASCAP "I Create Music" EXPO 2010 - Header

The Notorious B.I.G – A Story To Tell

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

By: Kristen Teesdale

Ask any hip hop artist in the industry today to list their influences and it’s a good bet that Notorious B.I.G. is among them. 
 
Christopher Wallace was born May 21, 1972 in New York City. When he reached his teenage years, drug epidemics permeated his Brooklyn neighborhood and Wallace found himself entwined in life on the streets. He dropped out of high school and began dealing. After three arrests, Wallace redirected his focus. Assuming the stage name Biggie Smalls, the boy from Brooklyn dedicated more time to his raps. Biggie was already a neighborhood entertainer, but it was his demo tape that catapulted him to new heights.  
 
With little expectation in place, Biggie’s tape was promoted by Mister Cee, a local DJ. The material found its way to A&R executives at Uptown Records and Biggie was signed immediately. When his friend Sean Combs was released from Uptown, Biggie followed. Combs founded Bad Boy Records and signed Wallace to the roster.  
 
While he was making advances in the industry, Wallace’s home life was also growing. His girlfriend gave birth to a daughter in 1993. But his street and financial struggles still plagued him. To support his family, Wallace returned to selling drugs. When Sean Combs discovered this, he forced Wallace to quit dealing. 
 
Biggie began to collaborate with other artists under the name Notorious B.I.G. Following his newly charted success, B.I.G. released his first studio album, Ready to Die, which saw immediate success among peers and on the charts. During a time when rap was synonymous with the West Coast, B.I.G. managed to refocus fans’ attention to the streets of the East. Its lead track, “Juicy,” jumped to #27 on the charts. The two subsequent singles released, “Big Poppa” and “One More Chance,” garnered increased popularity as they rose to #1 on U.S. charts and became best selling singles. B.I.G.’s smooth flow and semi-autobiographical lyrics resonated with listeners. The rapper famously married unedited, gritty content with pop-friendly beats and the combination expanded his audience exponentially. B.I.G. broke boundaries as his first album found mainstream popularity in spite of, or perhaps as a result of, its dark and menacing material. 
 
Wallace rose to intense levels of personal and professional success in 1995 and 1996. In the midst of reaping almost unparalleled fame and celebrity, he met and married Faith Evans with whom he had his first son. But success was priced high for the East Coast artist. B.I.G. found himself wrapped up in a feud with former friend and associate Tupac Shakur. When Shakur was shot in a robbery attempt, he blamed Wallace, Combs and their affiliates. After the feud was ignited, Shakur signed to Death Row Records. The battle consumed Death Row and Bad Boy as they represented their respective coasts and fan base. The opposition culminated in the deaths of Tupac Shakur and ultimately Notorious B.I.G. a year later. While neither of the crimes has been solved, many parties have theories in which the men’s rivalry is to blame.  
 
Christopher Wallace died just before the release of his second studio album, ominously titled Life After Death. The album received critical praise and commercial success and was one of just three rap albums to receive the honor of diamond certification in record sales by the RIAA. The success realized by the 1997 release cemented B.I.G. as a major influence in hip hop and in the industry.  
 
Since his death, many artists have sampled lyrics and beats from Biggie’s work. Notorious B.I.G.’s influences can be heard in music released by friends who had the opportunity to work with him and fans who are just beginning their journey in the rap game. B.I.G. burst onto the scene during a volatile time and chose to portray his tense, cold reality in rhymes. He paved the way for artists that followed and popularized a genre, sharing his life experiences, good and bad, with no apologies. 
 
Notorious B.I.G.’s ability to translate life into lyrics made him a household name. His capacity for telling the story of the struggle in an unforgiving, unrelenting city helped him portray the reality so many endured. His aptitude for honesty broke the boundaries that others feared to cross. As an artist, B.I.G. is survived by his flow, his talent and the musical legacy he left behind. As a person, Christopher Wallace is survived by his family, his friends and the artists that continue to be influenced by his work. His unbridled skill made him a hit-maker. His untimely passing and thwarted potential made him a legend.

Video: ‘Tracks with Tristate’ episode 2: Creating the Sample – ACDC

Saturday, February 27th, 2010

The Critics Have Spoken – Reviews of Sade’s First Album in Almost 10 Years

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Soldier Of Love by Sade

Sade reviews

78

7.7 User Score:

Generally favorable reviews

Based on 12 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?

Based on 14 votes
Read user comments
Rate this album >

Album Info

Label: Sony

Release Date: 09 February 2010

Discs: 1 disc

Genre(s): R&B, Soul, Pop

Summary

After a 10-year hiatus, Sade returns with her sixth studio effort and first since 2000’s “Lover’s Rock.”

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more…

100
Entertainment Weekly

On songs like the space-folky ”Long Hard Road” and the reggae-scented ”Babyfather,” Sade exhales peerlessly while the boys behind her fluff one heck of a sonic pillow. Weary bones, rest here.

Read Full Review >

88
Los Angeles Times

“Soldier of Love” is unique in its confrontational tone, but it connects to the other best tracks on this album, which employ minimalism and the rules of cool to carefully reconstruct various musical styles.

Read Full Review >

82
Billboard.com

The release is Sade’s first new material in 10 years, but the act hasn’t lost a beat.

Read Full Review >

80
BBC Music

There is gospel organ (Be That Easy) and a mid-tempo reggae-ish gait on Babyfather, but mostly Soldier of Love is as mournfully one-paced as previous Sade albums, with the same attention to texture and surface lustre but, alas, not to melody or moving autobiography.

Read Full Review >

80
NOW Magazine

Sure, the production on Soldier Of Love sounds a bit tougher and chunkier than the band’s early work, but the classic Sade vibe we love is still front and centre.

Read Full Review >

80
PopMatters

The qualities that millions of devoted fans enjoy about Sade are placed in new contexts on Soldier of Love.

Read Full Review >

75
Chicago Tribune

But mostly “Soldier of Love” presents Sade as a genre unto herself; after 25 years, she remains alluring and subtly rewarding, while still keeping the listener at a safe distance, as if she had even deeper secrets to guard.

Read Full Review >

70
Boston Globe

Like its predecessors, it mimics the rhythms of a new relationship – it’s up one minute and down the next, loving in places and wounded in others – and it’s a rich and rewarding album, but only after multiple listens.

Read Full Review >

70
Rolling Stone

Soldier is sumptuously melancholy, exquisitely beautiful R&B, perfect for crying on a very expensive sofa.

Read Full Review >

70
Slant Magazine

Apart from the futuristic sound of the title track and a mini-tribute to Michael Jackson on “Skin,” Soldier possesses the same timeless quality as any of the band’s previous albums.

Read Full Review >

60
Uncut

Sade Adu and co return with more snoozy, expensively produced, quiet-storm soul. [Mar 2010, p.95]

60
The Guardian

The remaining nine tracks on her sixth album can’t quite match it for shock value. They glide by elegantly, registering subtle variations.

Read Full Review >

Timbaland/Dr Dre’s New Artist Hayes Discusses LP, New First 48 Mixtape

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Courtesy of AllHipHop News

Several months ago Timbaland and Dr. Dre signed their mutual protégé, Hayes and the Hip-Hop world rolled out the red carpet for the Detroit rapper.

Fresh off performing select dates with Timbaland on the Shock Value 2 Tour, Hayes is enjoying the buzz he is receiving from his most recent release, First 48 a compilation of 48 mostly original songs.

“Yea, that’s why it’s called First 48. n***as think I’m trying to bite off the show or I’m gonna kill them in 48 hours or something. No n***a its 48 songs. I don’t know why n***as are diggin into it so deep,” Hayes told AllHipHop.com. “Right now I just want to promote that First 48 and getting that to as many people as possible. I think that it’s worth it.”

While many fans enjoy First 48, which features production by JR Rotem, Hit Boi, Akon, The BreakFast Club and Midi Mafia, Hayes is confident that his official release will be a great success with the production assistance from Dre and Timbaland, along with his own lyrical content.

“The situation is 100% fresh. Listen to the First 48, listen to the music. It came out I think like January 14th we started putting it out on the streets and internet,” Hayes told AllHipHop.com. “I want them to feel that there.”

Although his actual album does not have a set release date, Hayes said he is currently working on several songs with Dr. Dre and recorded on Timbaland’s “studio bus” while performing on the Shock Value 2 Tour.

“Timbaland would do a thing where he brought out everybody in each state that we would go to, or people who he worked with, or had a good relationship with, or who was in town,” Hayes told AllHipHop.com. “So the tour had a lot of surprises and it was a lot of fun. We was coming from the concert straight to the studio bus and making music. “

Hayes has been bouncing around the industry for several years now, resting his head in Detroit, New York, Atlanta, Oakland and Las Vegas.

He traveled on the Hard Knock Life Tour with Def Jam in his younger years and was previously signed with Jimmy Iovine at the height of Interscope’s recent success with 50 Cent and Eminem.

“Just being involved with Dr. Dre and Timbaland makes my album highly anticipated off top. And that’s the best thing about the situation, I just signed and the album is already highly anticipated” Hayes told AllHipHop.com. “Just because it’s Dre and Timbaland, people are gravitating towards all my music and whatever type of presence that I have on the internet”

Listeners can check out the First 48 street album for free on www.IAmHayes.com