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Antipop Consortium

 
Artist: Antipop Consortium

Group Members:

M. Sayyid, High Priest, Beans

Similar Artists:

Formal Connection With:

  • Formed: 1997, New York, NY
  • Disbanded: 2002 08
  • Genres: Rap
  • Representative Albums: "Fluorescent Black," "Arrhythmia," "Tragic Epilogue"
  • Representative Songs: "Ghostlawns," "What Am I?," "Ping Pong"

Biography

Antipop Consortium emerged in the early 2000s as one of the underground hip-hop scene's most inventive groups, bridging the gap between New York hip-hop and glitchy IDM. Group members Priest, Beans, and M. Sayyid first joined forces in 1997, along with producer E. Blaize. After some underground singles that didn't reach far beyond New York's boroughs, the Ark 75 label released Tragic Epilogue, the group's debut full-length, in 2000. Though the album wasn't quite as daring as Antipop Consortium's successive releases, it nonetheless garnered substantial acclaim, placing the group among similarly edgy New York underground rap artists such as Company Flow.

Warp Records -- the legendary IDM label based in England best-known for releasing artists such as Aphex Twin, Boards of Canada, and Autechre -- decided to sign the group and in turn released Antipop Consortium's The Ends Against the Middle EP in late 2001, followed shortly after in 2002 by a full-length effort, Arrhythmia. Both releases incorporated an obvious IDM influence, particularly from a production standpoint. Producer E. Blaize moved away from straight hip-hop breakbeats, going instead with glitchy beats and angular rhythms. As a result, Antipop Consortium crossed over from the stateside underground hip-hop scene to the more international IDM scene, which was becoming increasingly interested in rap during the early 2000s. After wrapping up DJ Shadow's North American tour in late July 2002, however, Antipop Consortium disbanded. It was expected that High Priest, Beans, and M. Sayyid would release solo material by the end of the year, but only Beans actively pursued a solo career, with the other two members banding together instead to form Airborn Audio.

By 2007, Antipop Consortium had announced its decision to reunite. The group resumed touring in 2008, including a British jaunt as the opening act for Public Enemy, and also found time to return to the studio for the creation of Fluorescent Black, which was released in 2009. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Antipop Consortium
Top
Antipop Consortium
Origin New York, NY, USA
Genres Hip-hop
Experimental
IDM
Years active 1997–2002, 2007–present
Labels Warp
75 Ark
Associated acts DJ Vadim
Matthew Shipp
The Isolationist
Airborn Audio
Website Antipop Consortium at warp.net
Members
Beans
High Priest
M. Sayyid
Earl Blaize

Antipop Consortium are an alternative hip hop group. The group formed in 1997, when Beans, High Priest, M. Sayyid and producer Earl Blaize met at a poetry slam in New York City [1]. They are notable for their stream-of-consciousness lyrics and musical references to contemporary composition methods.

They released several tape singles and two albums primarily on Dan the Automator's experimental hip-hop label 75 Ark before being signed by Warp Records in 2000. Their releases were met with mixed reviews from the mainstream music and underground hip-hop press alike, although they are noted for their inventiveness and the experimental electronic productions contributed by all members. They were frequently compared to other rappers with unorthodox lyrics, such as Kool Keith, MF Doom and Aesop Rock. In 2001, they opened for Radiohead during the European leg of their Amnesiac tour and subsequently toured with DJ Shadow.

The group disbanded due to creative differences in August 2002, with Beans pursuing a solo career while High Priest and M. Sayyid formed Airborn Audio, which released a single album, Good Fortune, on Ninja Tune in 2005, and toured with The Faint and Bright Eyes. All three members have pursued solo projects since the group's breakup.

Antipop completed their third album before they broke up, released in February 2003 as Antipop Consortium vs. Matthew Shipp.

They reunited in 2007. In an August 2007 interview[2], the four members stated that they reunited with the intention of touring and releasing a new record.

They played a reunion show at the Knitting Factory of New York City in March 2008 and formed part of the support for Public Enemy on the It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back Don't Look Back British tour in May 2008. They are due to perform at the 2009 ATP VS the Fans festival in Minehead, UK. A week later the group will play at the Incubate Festival in Tilburg, The Netherlands.

Discography

Albums


EPs, Singles & Promos

  • Disorientation 12" single (1997, Antipop Recordings)
  • Band-Aids for Bulletholes 12" single (1997, Antipop Recordings)
  • Diagonal Ryme Garganchula 10" single (1997, Black Hoodz)
  • Hydrogen Slush 12" single collaboration with DJ Vadim and Prime Cuts (1998, Jazz Fudge)
  • Orators of Advanced Thought early promo version of The Isolationist collaboration (1998, Ozone)
  • The Isolationist collaboration with DJ Vadim and Prime Cuts (1999, Jazz Fudge)
  • The Instrumentalist instrumentals from The Isolationist collaboration (1999, Jazz Fudge)
  • Lift 12" single (2000, 75 Ark)
  • Diagonal Ryme Garganchula 2.0 12" single released under the name Tri Pinnacle (2000, Ozone)
  • What Am I? 12" single (2000, 75 Ark)
  • Fear 12" single with Kaos and Patrick Pulsinger (2000, Studio !K7)
  • The Ends Against the Middle EP (2001, Warp)
  • Ghostlawns 12" promo single including remixes by Mike Ladd and LFO's Rik Waller (2002, Warp)
  • Dead In Motion 12" promo single (2002, Warp)
  • APC: Unreleased 1996 97 98 promo (2008, no label)


As Airborn Audio:

  • The Lucky Day 12" single with Buck 65 (2004, Ninja Tune)
  • From Antipop Consortium to Airborn Audio mixtape (2004)
  • Snapshots from the Forthcoming Mixtape mixtape (2004)
  • PhD mixtape (2004)
  • Bright Lights/Inside the Globe 12" single (2005, Ninja Tune)
  • Close Encounters mixtape (2005)
  • Good Fortune (2005, Ninja Tune)

Beans solo releases:

M. Sayyid solo releases:

  • Outside The Box 12" single (2004, Sound-Ink)
  • Twilight Zone mixtape (2006)

High Priest solo releases:

  • Mind Control/Disorientation 12" single (2000, Antipop Recordings)
  • Sonics For The Youth mixtape released under the name Anton Tonebarr (2000, Antipop Recordings)
  • Ghost In The Drummachine 12" single (2000, Antipop Recordings)
  • Book Of Keys 12" single (2004, Sound-Ink)
  • Book Of Ones mixtape (2005, Sound-Ink)
  • Prizm 2007 mixtape (2005, Sound-Ink)
  • At the Controls mixtape (2007, Prizm Audio)
  • Born Identity (2007, Sound-Ink)

They have also collaborated with Alec Empire, Gotan Project, DJ Spooky, Bill Laswell, DJ Krush, kid606, DJ Logic, MF Doom, TV on the Radio and The Infesticons, among others.

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
The Isolationist (Electronica Band, '90s)
Ghost Cauldron (Rap Band, 2000s)
Shopping Carts Crashing (2001 Album by Antipop Consortium)

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