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Predicting
Doomsday
Sole
keeps on prophesizing, but this time he's not alone
BY
SARA BRICKNER
Most of the artists on Oakland-based hip hop label
anticon make unique, intellectual music that bears only a cursory
relationship to hip hop as most people know it. But Sole, a co-founder
of the label, is one anticon artist that still does the job of an
emcee — even if his lyrics don't always rhyme.
Those already familiar with anticon and Sole know
better than to expect hyphy or anything even faintly resembling
the upbeat, formulaic club hip hop that dominates the airwaves.
Because while some of Sole's songs are actually fairly danceable,
Sole's embittered prophesizing lends itself better to serious personal
reflection … or shock and awe. And after years working alone
and collaborating with other artists (including Odd Nosdam of cLOUDDEAD
and Jel of Subtle), Sole moved in a new direction and teamed up
with a live band.
Sole began working with the Skyrider Band not long
after he met the original Skyrider, Bud Berning. Berning was working
in Orlando, Fla., as a lone electronic artist and dub bassist when
Sole was invited to stay at his house while touring. While there,
Sole found himself enamored with Berning's sound. On his next tour
of the Southeast, he returned to Orlando to collaborate with Berning.
It went so well that he invited Berning and new Skyrider recruits
John Wagner and William Ryan Fritch to come to Sole's home in Flagstaff,
Ariz., and make an album. What was meant to be a pop album turned
out to be a surreal, absorbing blend of strings-heavy psychedelia
and brutal, political lyrics teeming with fury and despair.
Sole tours with Telephone Jim Jesus, another anticonian
whose trippy, somewhat morbid electronica briefly nods at hip hop
before venturing into eerie, ambient compositions without lyrics.
His second album, Anywhere Out of the Everything, is a twist
on a Baudelaire poem, "Anywhere Out of the World," which describes
the sensation of a heartsick individual who believes that relocating
would revive his shattered soul. Turns out the album followed the
dissolution of Telephone Jim Jesus' eight-year relationship and
European travels; hopefully Telephone Jim Jesus can follow up this
album with music that doesn't require similar life-altering events
to inspire him.
Sole,
Telephone Jim Jesus, DoublePlusGood. 9 pm Sunday, March 2. WOW Hall
• $10 adv., $12 door
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