PASSAGE "Pass Money Multi" EP

PASSAGE's new EP untitled Pass Money Multi is now available in digital format at Circle Into Square.

Tracklisting:
  1. Megashotz
  2. Pass Money
  3. Got It Hood
  4. Pretty Much
  5. My Word
  6. Shouldaz
  7. Boz Scaggs Drum Machine
  8. Down 4 Whatever
  9. Drizzle
  10. Grim Rascal
  11. Britespot


Here's what PASSAGE has to say about his new EP:

So real quick party corpses, I want to let you know about this collection of tracks I've been putting together. Pass Money Multi is eleven raw chunks of tracks in the making. If you like it's an EP, a premature follow up to the Restiform Bodies record the fellas and I dropped about a month ago. Or another way to look at it is a mix tape of one artist which is really what it's all about. Since nothing that happens happens slow and our "label" can't be bothered with us, I figured why fucking wait, so I've been bouncing back and forth across Oakland with Matthew Valerio's borrowed 13" powerbook, cooking these little cuts in order to put this music to work for us, nahmean. It is in this spirit that I encourage you to purchase this download of raw shit, unglossed, un tattooed/pierced, un-hairsprayed, un wardrobed un-bullshit for the new un-bullshit era which we are about to enter. And I thank you. Also I really did make a track on this mix with Boz Scaggs' Linn Drum drum machine. Plus there's four new vocal tracks on this piece. All you have to do is (hopefully) use the buy it button on my profile which should be up after 11/7. If not just message me. Peace and big ups to Bomarr for the lap top and cover art. Pa$$



» Listen to Shouldaz and Boz Scaggs Drum Machine here.

"Pick It Up, Drop It" Genghis Tron remix

Remix of Pick It Up, Drop It from the new RB's album TV Loves You Back by producer Genghis Tron:



» Download here.

"TV Loves You Back" review [RemixMag]


CD Review: Restiform Bodies, TV Loves You Back (Anticon.)

Oct 22, 2008 1:53 PM

Pushing beyond hip-hop conceptions
Apparently no one told Passage, Telephone Jim Jesus and Bomarr how hip-hop is supposed to sound. Reuniting for a second LP, they mash up bits of crunk bass and hyphy snares with new-wave synths and rugged guitars, and they make it sound good. With "Black Friday" jumping to double-time jungle, and "Pick It Up, Drop It" working piercing synthesized strings, the uneasy beats induce tension but prove to be ideal bases for lyrical critiques of the opulent American culture. The outsider approach proves hip-hop lacks limits, while the pointed lyrics hit as hard as the beats.—Noah Levine [4 out of 5 stars]

Source: RemixMag