Showing posts with label Sneaky Dee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sneaky Dee. Show all posts

Friday, January 28, 2011

United in Flow Monthly Hip-hop Showcase @ Sneaky Dee's, January 25, 2010



This past Tuesday Sneaky Dee's played host to United in Flow, a "socially conscious hip-hop movement" making waves for around half a year, all of which began with a mixtape. Producer James Pew of Toronto-based Euphonic Sound Recording Studio rounded up some hip-hop and slam acts from around the city last October to write on the theme of unity and community. The record, United in Flow: Volume 1 can be purchased for charity to help local neighbourhoods.



Their first monthly showcase, hosted by trip-hop T.O. general Mindbender Supreme, went off with a bang and delivered a vibe seldom seen in grassroots indie shows like this. Any uneasiness about the night was immediately ushered out in exchange for a unanimous love for the social music of hip-hop, which brought closer a community of like-minded people revelling in a weeknight of beats and rhymes.


Mindbender Supreme




"It's about the collaboration and community of the scene in Toronto," Pew told me, as the crowd slowly builded. "We want to build something that people can be part of." Mindbender Supreme debuted his new music video, "Reset Button", that night, and you can go watch it here. If you're a fan of clever, heavily delivered lyrics, and want to support Toronto hip-hop (or if you like old-school videogames), definitely check it.

All the artists delivered a uniqueness in their respective music, playing off influences and themes to a nicely varied crowd throughout a night of great music.

More pictures after the jump.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Surfer Blood @ Sneaky Dee's, March 6th 2010



Well, Surfer Blood is an interesting band. For one, they have made new waves over at Pitchfork with their record-selling blessing of the "Best New Music" insignia early this year, and have been enjoying an extensive tour (sure is cold in Toronto compared to their native Florida, eh guys?). For another, they are your standard indie-noise pop-rock-with-extra-little-original-but-not-really-hooks that generates a slowly swaying crowd of iPhone-dwelling hipsters that filled the "D" on Saturday night. For one more, doesn't their fucking synth/electronic drum banger look like Weird Al Yankovic?

I didn't really like these guys much. The opening acts were far more exciting and were at least hard to plant on the played out music spectrum this night revolved around.