CL flickr

Visit our You Shoot page.

SMKA travels at the speed of sound

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009
THE RE-UP: Producer 808 Blake preps the sequel.

THE RE-UP: Producer 808 Blake preps the sequel.

A lot can happen in a year. Just ask production duo SMKA. That’s just about how long it’s taken for them to bogart Atlanta’s other-ground rap scene. And they’ve got the schedule to prove it.

They’re currently working on mixtapes featuring Atlanta artists Trimm, A. Leon Craft (formerly of the Backwudz) and, of course, the second installment of the compilation that started their buzz in the first place, The 808 Experiment: Vol. 1. Tack on a gig with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra (they’re remixing a classical piece with lyrics by A. Leon Craft), and it’s easy to see why they’ve become one of the brightest spots emerging from Atlanta’s music scene.

“We learned a lot this past year,” says Mike Walbert, business manager for the duo, made up of primary producer, 808 Blake and Bobby Ray’s guitarist, Kyle “7” King. “We want Vol. 2 to have a bigger impact. Our goals are loftier. We want to open more ears to our music and even put our music on a larger plateau.”

Continue reading “SMKA travels at the speed of sound”

(Photo by Dustin Chambers)

Air Loaf: Mixt A, Vol. 1 record release party

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

CL’s Chanté LaGon and Chad Radford discuss the first of two record release parties celebrating our 12-inch LP compilation Mixt A, Vol. 1, taking place tonight, May 7, at Eyedrum. The N.E.C., Grip Plyaz, the Balkans and A. Leon Craft all perform. Cover is $10 and includes a copy of the limited-edition vinyl. Doors open at 7 p.m. Music starts at 8 p.m.

Air Loaf is broadcast weekdays on 1690 WMLB-AM at approximately 8:10 a.m., 12:20 p.m. and 6:20 p.m.

Download

Subscribe to the Air Loaf RSS feed to download each new episode automatically

SMKA Productions’ The 808 Experiment: Vol. 1 reclaims Atlanta’s hip-hop identity

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

God bless the child that’s got his own.

From the outset of SMKA Productions‘ newly released compilation, The 808 Experiment Vol. 1, it’s clear that Atlanta has finally arrived.

Surely, you say, the hip-hop capital of the world is no newbie to rap’s all-encompassing map. And you’re right. But among Atlanta’s emerging rap underworld — filled with hipster-leaning hoppers, 2nd generation ATLiens, and otherwise unidentifiable but objectively fly MCs — that original, Dirty South sound had been all but bleached out and forsaken. Until now.

With The 808 Experiment, SMKA accomplishes the seemingly impossible: It bridges Atlanta’s slick, hipster-hop derivative with the indigenous, red clay swagger for which the A has always been known.

Beats simultaneously swim in bass-drunk, 808 kicks while dancing between melodic, pastel-colored keys. Even when SMKA dares to sample esoteric pop songs like Sting’s “Englishman in New York,” the resulting track ["Alien (When in Rome) feat. Jay West, Savage and Gilles] is certifiably stamped “ATL.”

Their secret weapon? SMKA producers Blake “808 Blake” German and Kyle “7King” King, along with in-house “hustler” Mike Walberg, are all Atlanta natives. Damn near unheard of in this day and age, right? Meanwhile, the compilation features plenty among the city’s rising crop of natives and transplants alike, including Gripplyaz, A. Leon Craft, and Young Trimm (”Caddy”), trio Supreeme (”I’m On Fire”), Wil May (”Sweet Confusion”), and o8o of T!Katz (”Fire in the Hole”). But some of the biggest surprises come from lesser known cats who turn in equally stellar performances, including Double R of Miami, Nuff Sed, J Beans, Dee Rail, Fat Tony, Niko Villamor, Jay West, Rome Fortune, J Young, Radcliff Hyphen, Crysis, Brandon Michael, Toussaint, Alexandria Lushington and Tom P of Decatur. El da Sensei of New Jersey-based Artifacts is also featured.

With only 48 hours since it’s release it’s impossible to say just yet, but here’s hoping The 808 Experiment represents a truly formative moment in what’s already proven to be a watershed year for Atlanta’s slightly off-the-radar hip-hop movement.

Needless to say, I had to talk to the guys behind SMKA to find out where the heck they’ve been hiding. Oh, and you’ll never guess what SMKA stands for?

DOWNLOAD: The 808 Experiment Vol. 1

Y’all seem to have come from out of nowhere?
Mike: I’d say that’s pretty much right. 7King has been an engineer for awhile, he’s worked out of a couple of studios around town. 808 Blake has been producing for about five years since his freshman year in college. And I went to a business school out in L.A. So it’s kind of a motley crew. But we went to high school together at Paideia, but since graduation we all started doing our own thing and then Blake kinda got us all together and wanted to get serious about it. So it started about four months ago, man, at Chik-Fil-A during lunch, and we just kinda said let’s start a company and get serious about it.

What Chik-Fil-A were y’all at?

(more…)