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	<title>Linqua Franqa &#8211; HHBTM Records</title>
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	<link>https://www.hhbtm.com</link>
	<description>HHBTM Records is an independent record label based in Georgia. Since 1999.</description>
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	<title>Linqua Franqa &#8211; HHBTM Records</title>
	<link>https://www.hhbtm.com</link>
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		<title>WesdaRuler &#8211; Ocean Drive</title>
		<link>https://www.hhbtm.com/product/wesdaruler-ocean-drive/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Barbara Uhler]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Jul 2019 12:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hhbtm.com/?post_type=product&#038;p=1769</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<div>Wesley Johnson—AKA <span class="il">WesdaRuler</span>—knows the highs of artistic and personal fulfillment and the deep lows of struggle and burden. Which is to say, he’s like most folks. <em><span class="il">Ocean</span> <span class="il">Drive</span></em> is more than likely the first exposure the world at large will have to Johnson and, coincidently, it’s no small matter that it’s on <em><span class="il">Ocean</span> <span class="il">Drive</span></em> that we find him most exposed. The Athens, GA beatsmith has spent years making his distinctly idiosyncratic music which has included time spent making headphone heavy boom bap to collectively conscious psychedelia. It wasn’t until a couple of years ago that his voice was ever heard on his recordings and it surprised so many longtime listeners that he was asked more than once who the MC was. Once he unleashed his lyrics, though, there really was no turning back. Although deftly skilled in the lab and a solid producer for multiple collaborations –neither of which have slowed down or show any signs of receding from his heavily scheduled calendar—<span class="il">WesDaRuler</span> is a man, paradoxically, transitioning while arriving.

<em><span class="il">Ocean</span> <span class="il">Drive</span></em> is a journey across the full breadth of Johnson’s inner dialogue. His role as son, husband, and father are all explored in loving detail and confessional honesty. His alternating desires to bring the party or hibernate are on full display. For the most part, though, his ministrations are self-facing. <em><span class="il">Ocean</span> <span class="il">Drive</span></em> is imbued with both themes of escape and promises to stay. More than once it dips down into the territory named by 16th Century poet and mystic St. John of The Cross as the dark night of the soul. But, significantly, it doesn’t stay there.

But what of the tunes? Ah, yes! There’s the bedsit <strong>De La Soul</strong>-ism of “<em>Stay At Home</em>”, the get up and go dance floor mechanics of “<em>Let Da Music Play</em>”, and the Lyricist Lounge groove of “<em>LoseIt4Tonite</em>”. The central theme of <em><span class="il">Ocean</span> <span class="il">Drive</span></em>, though, is encapsulated on the affirmative declaration “<em>GeturAssintheCar</em>”. Johnson is addressing himself but making his promises public. He’s true. He’s there, he makes time, and he suffers silently but recognizes that at some point this becomes indulgence. He is, in short, wide awake. And while Johnson cuts his own artistic and stylistic swath, <em><span class="il">Ocean</span> <span class="il">Drive</span></em> is no less a transitional and transformative piece of work for the artist himself than <strong>Marvin Gaye</strong>’s 1971 LP <em>What’s Going On</em>. Just like that landmark album, the title of which is both a question and statement, <em><span class="il">Ocean</span> <span class="il">Drive</span></em> works on two levels.

Indeed, what is an <span class="il">ocean</span> <span class="il">drive</span>? It’s a path cut between the landed wilderness and the endless deep. On one side is the hard work of survival, civilization, and responsibility. The other, is an opportunity to be free from worldly bonds. The choice had beguiled mankind since he knew there was a choice to be made. To this end, Johnson chooses the struggle. His acknowledgement of its hardship, and that no matter which way the wind blows he’s committed to his internal compass staying true, doesn’t mean he’s not completely in love with life.

Indeed, he is. As noted, this record is transitional and transformative, just as is the setting and rising of the sun. And no matter the midnight Johnson works through across these eleven tracks, on <em><span class="il">Ocean</span> <span class="il">Drive</span></em> one can still feel the breeze and fresh air. It’s an album for late night listening and resolution making but the time of day doesn’t really matter. <em><span class="il">Ocean</span> <span class="il">Drive</span></em> is a state of mind that Johnson tried to keep pinned at midnight but, as it turns out, his honesty, vulnerability, dedication, love, and truthfulness to his own art reassures the listener that—through it all—the whole thing is happening just about an hour before sunrise.</div>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Vinyl colors: black / white. Comes with MP3 Download. Deluxe version comes on white vinyl w/ bonus instrumentals cassette &amp; button.</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">1769</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>Linqua Franqa &#8211; Model Minority</title>
		<link>https://www.hhbtm.com/product/linqua-franqa-model-minority/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Barbara Uhler]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Mar 2019 19:40:19 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hhbtm.com/?post_type=product&#038;p=329</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<div id="tracklist" class="section tracklist" data-toggle="tracklist">
<div class="section_content">

The <em><strong><span class="il">Model</span> <span class="il">Minority</span></strong></em> LP is the first full-length release by Athens-based linguist-rapper Mariah Parker, whose scientific fixation with hip hop is obvious in the intricate rhymes she weaves over boom bap beats. Written and recorded while Parker completed a master’s degree in linguistics at the University of Georgia, The <em><span class="il">Model</span> <span class="il">Minority</span></em> LP tells unflinching tales of emotional instability on <em>Up Close</em> and <em>Eight Weeks</em>, drug addiction on <em>Midnight Oil</em>, race and politics on <em>The Con &#38; The Can</em> and feminist swagger on <em>Gold Bike</em> and <em>Raw</em>. Side-B of the album treats listeners to several remixes of previously released tracks as well as new collaborations with <a href="https://www.hhbtm.com/product/wesdaruler-ocean-drive/"><strong>Wesdaruler</strong></a>, also of Athens, and <strong>DopeKNife</strong>, of Savannah. Longtime hip hop heads will hear echoes of nineties New York underground in both her playful vocal delivery and piano-centric, classic R&#38;B-inspired compositions, especially with...<em>Eight Weeks</em>, which tackles sensitive topics of depression, self-injury and abortion with both ferocity and grace, or ...<em>My Civilian Life</em>, which shreds class privilege and falsity in the music business without batting an eye, or...<em>Raw</em>, a playful nod to <strong>Busta Rhymes</strong> and an anthem for black intellectuals.

</div>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tracklisting:</p>
<ol>
<li>Up Close</li>
<li>Eight Weeks</li>
<li>Midnight Oil</li>
<li>Breathe In</li>
<li>The Con &amp; The Can</li>
<li>The Good Feels</li>
<li>Breathe Out</li>
<li>Gold Bike</li>
<li>Raw (ft. Wesdaruler)</li>
<li>My Civilian Life (Wesdaruler remix)</li>
<li>My Civilian Life (Dopeknife remix)</li>
<li>Midnight Oil (Wesdaruler remix)</li>
<li>Gold Bike (a capella)</li>
</ol>
<p>Release date: February 23rd, 2018</p>
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