Tornts Interview: Tales Of Trauma

29 04 2012

From the depths of Melbourne, the highly respected rapper and venomous author, Tornts, is back with his highly anticipated LP, Concrete Slang. Broken Tooth Entertainment’s most prolific MC returns with a hard-hitting dose of reality rap and imagery riddled visions of city life in 2012.

Explain to us the concept behind the title of your new album Concrete Slang and how that relates to the tracks on the album?
I set out to do an album that had a lot real life rap content and story type joints about living in Melbourne…so ‘Concrete Slang’ relates to what I’m rapping/writing about…life in the city and how I relate to it. Out of all the albums I’ve done this is the joint that I think is the most killer. It definitely shows the evolution of my style.

How long have you been working on Concrete Slang?
I worked on the album for just over a year and at the same time it was getting mixed and engineered along the way. I ended up recording about 27 joints haha but cut it down to 16. Those other joints will end up coming out but on different projects or for download.

Broken Tooth Entertainment is the label you’ve been a part of for many years now. What’s it mean to you being an artist on the BTE roster and how does that flow on down to the final product you release?
Well I had the very first release on BTE back in early 03 and it meant a lot that they backed me and helped me get product out there properly. I’m proud of the music that has come out through the label and we have definitely been pioneers in street level/hardcore rap coming out in Australia. It’s good to have a label behind you and one that has always given me freedom to release whatever music I wanted to do.

For those that picked up your last LP The Deadbrain Diaries, how does Concrete Slang differ from that release or should heads expect something in the same vein?
Concrete Slang is a better album in my opinion. I put so much focus and writing in to it and the content I think is more complex and full of real life joints and story tracks. I fucked around with my delivery on this album too, going hard in the booth on some tracks, backing off a little on some joints… you know fuckin with my vocals to see how I could switch it  up. The mixing/engineering by 2Bladez takes it to a new level too…sounds real pro. I set out to do an album that stands up internationally rap wise and production wise and I think that’s been achieved.

For this release you’ve sourced beats from around the country and also internationally, was this a big change-up for yourself?
Yeah in the last few years I’ve been working with a few different producers/beatmakers it adds another angle to my tracks, I think its good to vary it up and show you can spit over any beat. I’ve got Beat Butcha from UK, Ciph Barker from Holland, WIK from Melbourne, Nebs from Sydney, 2Bladez and some others I’ve been working with.

The track City Life is a dark tale of Melbourne city living. How do you find living in Melbourne? Is there a touch of a love/hate relationship there?
I love living in Melbourne man, I moved around a lot when I was a kid but Melbourne’s my home, in the sense I’ve lived here way longer than anywhere else. In the track ‘City Life’ yeah I’m, talking about those days when you just think fuck, look around there’s a lot of stress and paranoia around the place and I’m gonna write about it…it should be written about you know. it’s a universal track man people overseas in other cities could relate to what I’m writing about as well.

You’ve always had a dark and hard-hitting style and the track Venom is no different. What were some of your inspirations for this album?
Venom is more of a straight up dis/battle rap joint taking foes out type shit hey, more of what I’m notorious for. My inspiration for this album was setting out to do some ‘life rap’ shit and do a few story type joints too. Melbourne inspires me daily and the people and shit that I see in general. I write with a lot of imagery and description in my verses.

A clip dropped a few weeks back for one of the lead singles titled Traumatic Cinema. The track deals with some pretty heavy issues. Why did you pick this track to apply the Full Clip treatment and what was the motivation behind this menacing track?
I showed Heata from Full Clip who’s a good mate of mine and in my crew some joints off the album and we both agreed straight away there had to be a clip for that joint! Traumatic Cinema…it says it all really. I started writing to that beat from WIK and ended up writing two nutso verses about kids getting revenge on their parental figures who abused them. It turned out so sick that clip! My motivation comes from knowing some kids like that who would have loved to have got revenge and I think that kind of subject matter should be talked about .

We see a mammoth posse track feat. Jake Biz, Ciecmate, Gaz Hazard, Fluent Form, Briggs & Bigfoot. In your opinion what makes a quality posse track?
Yeah dope track that one…well I reckon for a quality posse track you have to get the talent on there and rappers that are varied and from different hoods/areas but speaking on a similar theme. Each spitter gotta carry their own weight and add some style up in the mix.

How did you go about selecting the guests on this album?
All the guest rappers on the album are either crew or friends of myself who I respect on all levels and also who I thought would add some extra style and content to the album. They all on some similar steez but different angle type shit heh

On the cover of Concrete Slang there’s a picture of you showing a bit of ink, did you what to tell us a bit about your tatts?
Well my first tattoo was a Decimation Recordings tattoo I wrote myself and got a fella I know at a shop to do up for me and I just kept going on from there. They all mean something to me, got some quotes off my tracks on there, got a whole Hells Burn Melbourne theme on one arm. There are too many others to go into here, this could sound like a Picture mag interview if I ain’t careful haha Basically they all link into my writing and my fucked up psyche.

There has been quite a bit of discussion on the state of Hip Hop in Australia of late, whats are your opinions on those who choose to rap over boom bap style tracks to those who go for more of the dance styled beats?
Everyone does their thing, fuck everyone’s got an opinion haha but it would be boring if everyone did the same rap that’s for sure.  I like more new 2012 sounding production that you tend to hear in UK gangster rap shit or new NY or Texas / Down South production than boom bap joints. I used to rap over them joints but I like to keep it moving and evolve and progress.

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Tornts – Concrete Slang

12 03 2012

From the depths of Melbourne, the highly respected rapper and venomous author, Tornts, is back with his highly anticipated LP, Concrete Slang. Broken Tooth Entertainment’s most prolific MC returns with a hard hitting dose of reality rap and imagery riddled visions of city life in 2012.

Since he exploded on to the scene in 2003 with his groundbreaking first album Adding Insult to Injury, his uncompromising approach has inspired young hopefuls nationwide. Concrete Slang is another chapter in the evolution of Tornts’ undisputed originality, as he continues to grow in his style, delivery, content, and as an artist. Stark and confronting, and always pushing boundaries, he has refined and honed his style of story telling narratives and rebellious social commentary to a new level. Tornts has garnered the reputation as a unique voice for the growing under-class of our sprawling cities and those who are downtrodden and frustrated with their place in society, and that voice is one that is truly to be reckoned with. This is the Australia that most people choose not to see, crime, violence, poverty, drug problems, racism, dispossession, and a general apathy and anger at a society that increasingly ignores some sections of itself.
 
The production is powerful, with modern synth laced beats from himself, UK’s Beat Butcha (Mobb Deep, Lloyd Banks, Brad Strut), Holland’s Ciph Barker (Killah Priest), Melbourne’s own Wik (Crate Cartel), Sydney’s Nebs (Kerser, That’s Them), and 2Bladez (Audio Zombie Productions). The heavy production line-up lends a varied, contemporary, and immense background for his aggressive wordplay and visual verses.

Known for his vigilance in providing a visual aesthetic to his gripping tales, the critically acclaimed and highly praised video clip (and single) Traumatic Cinema, is a vivid revenge tale of abused youth. The song is a powerful account of the issues faced daily by a forgotten segment of our society. The album delves deeper into the mind of a story teller, with such tracks as City Life – which depicts his street tainted visions of life in the Melbourne of ‘cold steel eyes and paranoid minds’ – and Undercover Maggot, a real life account of an undercover police and deceptive entrapment. The contrast is stark when highly personal stories of his life and dark past, such as The Rain and Rise Up, hit hard while anthems such as Danger feat. fellow cohort Diem and the cinematic tale of Smack Dust feat. Brad Strut add further impact. Any listener can tell that Concrete Slang is not your typical local rap album, but an evolved masterpiece from a veteran rapper, considered by many to be the most original and important voice of underground hip hop in Australia.

Track Listing
1. Wandering Blocks
2. Traumatic Cinema
3. Danger – Feat. Diem
4. City Life
5. Undercover Maggot
6. Venom
7. Smack Dust – Feat. Brad Strut
8. The Rain
9. Soldier
10. As The World Spins
11. Shadows And Swine – Feat. Kid Selzy, Illuminate And Gutz
12. Stalk These Streets
13. Keep That Mouth Shut – Feat. Jake Biz, Ciecmate, Gaz Hazard, Fluent Form, Briggs And Bigfoot
14. Rise Up
15. Eight Bar Crime – Feat. Hosper The Horrorble
16. No Escape

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Trem – Animal Kingdom Video Clip

10 10 2011

With a small but revered discography including two sought after vinyl EPs and his work with the Lyrical Commission on his own Unkut Recordings label, Trem is an elder statesman. Finally, For The Term… makes good on all the promises of his back catalogue. Following up on 2010’s rapturously received teaser single Omega Man, this project hits every target set for it.

The second video clip taken from For The Term Of His Natural Life is here. Making it’s big screen début last week in Melbourne at the official listening party, Animal Kingdom features Dontez of Kingz Konekted with production from Beat Butcha. The clip was executed by Josh Davis, Heata, Discourse. Check the clip below.

Please remember this release is not available from major chains, it’s not an Urban or Skip Hop release, its real rap and available only from Hip Hop specialist outlets & Indy stores!!! The Trem camp also have street teams running spots around the country, keep an ear out for one on your block slangin the album.  For those who cant wait to trek to one of the indys or aren’t fussed on holding physicals with liner notes and lyrics you can grab it from iTunes here.

The rundown on stockists holding hard copies of the CD goes a little something like this:
VIC
This Is It
– 396 Church St. Richmond

Obese Records – 4A Izett St. Prahran
Northside Records – 236 Gertrude St. Fitzroy

Wax Museum Records ( Later this week)

QLD
Crush City – 423 Ipswich Rd. Annerley
Rockinghorse Records – 245 Albert St. Brisbane
Rehab Records – 4/57 Brunswick St. Fortitude Valley
(Gold Coast Stores TBA next week)

ADL
Clinic 116 – Shop 7, 22 Twin St, Adelaide
Cold Krush – 109 Unley Rd. Unley
Wax Department – 207c Sturt Rd Seacombe Gardens

SYD
Five Six Seven – 567 King St. Newtown

WA
Dada Records – (Available next week)
Planet Movies – 646 Beaufort St. Mt Lawley (Available next week)

ACT
Landspeed (Available next week)

TAS
(*TBA)

Do yourself a favour and head down to a local and pick up a copy of Trem – For The Term Of His Natural Life while you still can.

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allaussie hip hop’s spotlight on: Brad Strut

30 06 2010

A prolific wordsmith, Brad Strut has been fine tuning his craft and contributing to the growth and evolution of Australian Hip Hop since the early ‘90s. Engulfed in the breakdance craze that swept this country in the late 80′s, Brad became a staunch devotee of hip hop music and as his interest and skill level flourished, Brad could be heard on any sound system available to him. He released his first demo Rock On in 1993, regularly clocked air time on influential radio shows such as Steppin to the A.M. with Krissy and The Formula (PBS) and, intent on honing his lyrical dexterity, would be in attendance at any venue hosting a hip hop event.


His development continued with his first studio experience, under the guidance of DJ Ransom, recording a demo for the unreleased Faces of Debt EP alongside emceesw Mama’s Funk (Strait Up Records), Raph Boogie (Crookneck) and MC Que (Nuffsaid Records). In 1999, he hooked up with Trem to record the Australian rap gem Basic Fundamentals. Released on Trem’s classic second 12”, Amateurs (Unkut Recordings), the song featuring a level of wordplay previously unheard within the local ranks.
In 2001 Brad released his debut long player The Authentic LP, an album which, along with Bias B’s Beezwax and Culture Of Kings 1, marked a turning point in Australian hip hop. With its unforgettable cover of a vicious looking kangaroo caricature wielding a microphone, The Authentic attained phenomenal sales, moving 8000+ units with no industry hype in a time of minimal support for credible Australian hip hop. The album was heralded as groundbreaking, receiving acclaim from hip hop fans the globe over and the track A Good Thing even appeared on Jurassic 5 DJ Numark’s mix CD Hand’s On (Sequence Records 2004). The Authentic LP featured names such as Lazy Grey, Sean B and a freshly formed Melbourne crew Lyrical Commission, who had recently featured on, Culture of Kings Volume 1 with their track Lyrical Mongrels.


During this period Lyrical Commission, alongside Bias B, worked with the infamous Australian criminal identity Mark Brandon ‘Chopper’ Read on the track Chop Chop for the soundtrack to the movie Trojan Warrior. This track also featured on the Obesity compilation under the name Machete. With intense hype surrounding the crew, Lyrical Commission released their debut LP The Stage is Set (Unkut Recordings) to a blood-thirsty market and an already intensely loyal fan base in 2002. It received the highest of accolades for the straight up, back to basics, no nonsense skill-fest it delivered both musically and lyrically. It created a street buzz unseen for a local underground hip hop act, exceeding sale predictions and becoming the first Australian hip hop release to attract significant interest on a worldwide scale.
The group toured the album extensively, all the while cementing their reputation as masters of individualised style and technique. There is no disputing that Brad is an accomplished live performer, and has shared the stage with the likes of Tha Liks, Hilltop Hoods, Eternia, Celph Titled, Apathy, Kool Keith, The Roots, Swollen Members, A-Trak, Aceyalone, Foreign Legion, People Under The Stairs to name a few, and has also played all major Australian festivals such as Livid and the Big Day Out.


After a year of touring, and recording with Celph Titled (Demigodz) for the title track All Out War on the Terntable Jediz All Out War EP (Unkut/Blue Corner 2004), LC got to work on their next release, Murderous Metaphors EP. Metaphors contained nothing but pure rap skill from beginning to end with tracks like F**k all the B.S., Indicted, and the Strut solo track Check the Strategy. With Lyrical Commission sound and style locked down, the time had come for the crew to branch out into new solo endeavours to appease the long time supporters and win new fans.
2006 was a pivotal year for Brad, as he reignited the fervour for his solo mission. Early in the year, he dropped Legendary: The Official Mixtape on his newly formed Peruvian Gemz imprint, a subsidiary of Unkut that would focus on his own projects and assist emerging artists. Intended as a teaser for his upcoming sophomore full length, the mixtape took on a life of its own and became one of the hottest underground releases of the year, featuring guest spots from Perth’s Clandestien, Rhys of Hospice Crew and notorious booze hound Billy Bunks. Later that year, Strut represented Australia at Hip Hop Kemp 2006 in the Czech Republic, a massive three-day hip hop festival (Europe’s largest and best) which hosted Non-Phixion, RA The Rugged Man, Planet Asia, Klashnekoff and the finest acts from across the continent. Here, Strut made international connections with crews such as Poland’s WWO, whose upcoming album he features on.
2007 saw the release of Brad’s sophomore LP, Legend: Official. Produced by Trem, it is the darkest, deepest manifesto to emerge from Antipodean hip hop. Featuring Lyrical Commission, Sean Price, Outerspace, Daniel Merriweather and Lee Sissing, the album is alternately sinister and soothing, melancholy and belligerent, and it shows Strut’s technique at its most developed. The real deal with all flows locked, Brad Strut delivers the full package, the “proper without the ganda”. His history is undeniable, and the future unlimited.

Fallout Shelter is the 2009 EP from Melbourne-bred, North London-based Brad Strut. In a radical departure from his acclaimed 2007 sophomore Legend: Official, the core member of Australia’s pioneering Lyrical Commission has crafted a stunning narrative that runs through six hard hitting tracks by Beat Butcha. Densely lyrical, personal and intense, this project fully exploits hip hop’s potential as a medium for storytelling. Ostensibly a post-apocalyptic diary, Fallout Shelter contains a wealth of insights into life, hip hop and everything. From the panicked opener Hello To Goodbye to the serene conclusion of Looking At You, Brad evokes the range of emotions facing the last man on earth: anger, denial, hope and a fatal acceptance. As with Strut’s previous work, his words seep in gradually, divulging deeper meanings with multiple listens.
Likewise, Beat Butcha’s nuanced production shows its true colours over time, providing enough flourish to accentuate Brad’s words without overwhelming them. From the heraldic outro to New Dawn to the synth bridge on Believe, Butcha shows how a good hip hop producer does more than chop and loop drums, but never overwhelms the emcee’s presence with unnecessary fanfare.



Rejuvenation is the 2009 full length remix project which finds Brad reaching out to the leading producers from Australia and the UK: M-Phazes, Trials of Funkoars, Simplex of Terra Firma, Chemo, Beat Butcha, Ciecmate of Hospice Crew, Tornts, Dazastah of Downsyde, Mortar of Clandestien, Dontez of KingsKonekted, Methodz, The Last Skeptik and Jehst. Each producer brings their own distinct ring to a Strut classic from Legend: Official or The Legendary Mixtape. From M-Phazes’s bombastic reimagining of live anthem Incite The Premises to Tornts’ vitriolic new verses on The Ritual to Jehst’s appropriately ominous take on Last Omen, these remixes all uniquely expand on Strut’s already impressive catalogue.





BRAD STRUT – EP & LP

14 06 2009

bradstrutoffer

Fallout Shelter is the new EP from Melbourne-bred, North London-based Brad Strut. In a radical departure from his acclaimed 2007 sophomore Legend: Official, the core member of Australia’s Lyrical Commission has crafted a stunning narrative that runs through six hard hitting tracks by Beat Butcha . Brad Strut has kindly given out a lyrics booklet for the tracks off Fallout Shelter EP. You can grab a copy over here, be sure to print yours out. The lyrics booklet is a cool little addition to this release and we’d like to see more of it.

We then have the Rejuvination LP. This release finds Strut reaching out to the leading producers from Australia and the UK: M-Phazes, Trials of Funkoars, Simplex of Terra Firma, Chemo, Beat Butcha, Ciecmate of Hospice Crew, Tornts, Dazastah of Downsyde, Mortar of Clandestien, Dontez of KingsKonekted, Methodz, The Last Skeptik and Jehst.

You can find out more information on the EP and LP over at www.falloutshelter.tv

Download a free Mp3 of N16 here.

TRACK LISTING:
Fallout Shelter – CD
1 Hello To Goodbye
2 NO!
3 Blastin’ Em’
4 New Dawn
5 Believe
6 Looking At You
7. Hello To Goodbye – Instrumental
8. NO! – Instrumental
9. Blastin’ Em’ – Instrumental
10. New Dawn – Instrumental
11. Believe – Instrumental
12. Looking At You – Instrumental

Rejuvenation (Remix LP) – CD
1. Incite The Premises Ft. Trem (M-Phazes Remix)
2. Terrordome Ft. Outerspace & Trem (Trials Remix)
3. Demon Speaks (Simplex Remix)
4. Automatic (Chemo Remix)
5. It’s Official (Beat Butcha Remix)
6. What Gives Ft. Rhys Aka Diem (Ciecmate Remix)
7. The Ritual Ft. Tornts (Tornts Remix)
8. Question Ft. Tomohawk & Graphic (Dazastah Remix)
9. Beast On The Mic (Mortar Remix)
10. Bounty Hunterz Ft. Lyrical Commission (Dontez Remix)
11. Short Souls (Methodz Remix)
12. Never Ending Blue (The Last Skeptik Remix)
13. Last Omen (Jehst Remix)


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