Masego – Bandwidth http://bandwidth.wamu.org WAMU 88.5's New Music Site Tue, 02 Oct 2018 15:23:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.2 The Black Sparks, Outputmessage http://bandwidth.wamu.org/the-black-sparks-outputmessage/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/the-black-sparks-outputmessage/#respond Sun, 28 Aug 2016 08:20:10 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=68140 Songs featured Aug. 28, 2016, as part of Capital Soundtrack from WAMU 88.5. Read more about the project and submit your own local song.

Foozle – 😛
The Internal Frontier – Gravity
Daniel Barbiero & Chris Lynn – …and the Trees As Gnomens On a Plane of Snow
Cynthia Marie – Song for the End
The Iris Bell – Globe
J.R. Flynn – Across the Campfire, Part I
Masego – Small Talk (TrapScat T0 Cali)
Rock Creek Jazz – Mojitos
The Black Sparks – Rocketbird
The Funk Ark – Doom Buggy
Matt Rippetoe – Green Apples
Beau Finley – The Sky Is Falling
Outputmessage – Lungs
B Side Shuffle – Tappy McFunkington
Sunwolf – Big Feelings (instrumental)
A Shrewdness of Apes – Summer Job
Birds and Buildings – The Dumb Fish
Sam Hesh – Shadows
Sun Machines – Mono Mind
Golden Looks – Hey Say

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Title Tracks, Opus Akoben http://bandwidth.wamu.org/title-tracks-opus-akoben/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/title-tracks-opus-akoben/#respond Tue, 23 Aug 2016 08:20:42 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=68124 Songs featured Aug. 23, 2016, as part of Capital Soundtrack from WAMU 88.5. Read more about the project and submit your own local song.

Title Tracks – All Tricks (Instrumental)
Beauty Pill – Idiot Heart
Masego – Disconnected (Shorty From VA)
Diggs Duke – Crazy Like A Fox
Yeveto – Remote Unelectrified Villages
Letzkus Lanou – Ted n Lindsay
Dupont Brass – Can We Talk
Opus Akoben – Ronin
Fort Knox Five – Swinging On a Rhyme (Instrumental)
Spirit Plots – Pssst
Stephen Allen Kochersperger – Headhunter Serenade
Deathfix – Hospital
00Genesis – Inside the Brown Paper Bag
Tereu Tereu – Savage Love
Stephen Robey – Charlotte’s Song
The Petticoat Tearoom – Kundalini
ZOMES – Black Magic Band
Teen Mom – Kitchen
Patuxent Partners – Victoria Waltz
GroundScore – Here We Are

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Patuxent Partners, Justin Jones http://bandwidth.wamu.org/patuxent-partners-justin-jones/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/patuxent-partners-justin-jones/#respond Fri, 15 Jul 2016 08:20:04 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=67041 Songs featured July 15, 2016, as part of Capital Soundtrack from WAMU 88.5. Read more about the project and submit your own local song.

Patuxent Partners – Washington County
ZOMES – Ruminants
Supper Club – Chambray
Fort Knox Five – Swinging On a Rhyme (Instrumental)
Tomás Pagán Motta – Love In Her Lies
Justin Jones – Miracles
Kev Brown – Always (Instrumental)
Be Still, Cody – Wrong Right
Buildings – Everything Is Possible
Lifted – Silver
Sun Machines – Mono Mind
Derek Evry – Wake Me Up
Iritis – Pedal
A Tale Of – Oh, We Owe This to Ourselves
Nitemoves – Ashe
The Petticoat Tearoom – Kundalini
Jonathan Parker – CO86
Girls Love Distortion – Sleepwalking
Dawit Eklund – Lies Are Chic
Masego – I Do Everything (More For Cruisin’)
Otis Infrastructure – Furniture
Oooh Child Ensemble – Diko’s Groove
Extra Golden – It’s Not Easy
Kev Brown – Party People Dedication (Instrumental)
Marian McLaughlin – Your Bower
The Greatest Hoax – Opus no. 28
Marvin Gaye – What’s Happening Brother
Aerialist – Naiad
Wanted Man – Interlude
Baby Bry Bry – Slumzzz
April + Vista – Theme In Adagio
Stranger In the Alps – Love/Afraid
Swings – New Year

 

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Bill Emerson & Sweet Dixie, June Gloom http://bandwidth.wamu.org/bill-emerson-sweet-dixie-june-gloom/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/bill-emerson-sweet-dixie-june-gloom/#respond Thu, 07 Jul 2016 08:20:20 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=66686 Songs featured July 7, 2016, as part of Capital Soundtrack from WAMU 88.5. Read more about the project and submit your own local song.

Akira Otsuka

“White Orchid”

from First Tear

00Genesis

“Say Something”

from 00Remixes Vol. 1 - Instrumentals

Masego

“I Do Everything (More For Cruisin')”

from Loose Thoughts

Bearshark

“Canyonlands”

from Canyonlands

Dan Deacon

“Of the Mountains”

from Bromst

Projected Man

“Grey Razor”

from A New Breed

2nd Story Band

“LP Cool”

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Brian Settles And Central Union, Nox http://bandwidth.wamu.org/brian-settles-and-central-union-nox/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/brian-settles-and-central-union-nox/#comments Thu, 23 Jun 2016 08:20:39 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=66066 Songs featured June 23, 2016, as part of Capital Soundtrack from WAMU 88.5. Read more about the project and submit your own local song.

Time Is Fire

“100 Pieces”

from Time Is Fire

Masego

“Loose Thoughts”

from Loose Thoughts

Calm and Crisis

“Moving Parts”

from In A Real Good Place

The Funk Ark

“Bouzouki Song”

from Man Is A Monster

The Rail Runners

“Get Off the Tracks!”

from The Rail Runners

AXB

“Easy Morning”

from Seven

Fat Kneel

“Solaris”

from Missing Beats: Volume 1

Thievery Corporation

“Samba Tranquille”

from The Mirror Conspiracy

Sherwood Gainer

“The Company”

from Bubble Burst Mode

Cosmic Romp

“Bandana Jam”

Dan Jacobs

“Voices”

from Creatures

Class Portrait

“Time Zones”

from Time Zones EP

Ephemeral Sun

“Prism”

from Harvest Aorta

Go Cozy

“Our Best Reflections”

from Bruises

Hailu Mergia and The Walias

“Eti Gual Blenai”

from Tche Belew

Jan Knutson

“Amsterdam”

from Looking Both Ways

Nox

“Insane”

from Nox EP

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Extra Golden, Masego http://bandwidth.wamu.org/extra-golden-masego/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/extra-golden-masego/#respond Wed, 15 Jun 2016 08:20:24 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=65696 Songs featured June 15, 2016, as part of Capital Soundtrack from WAMU 88.5. Read more about the project and submit your own local song.

M.H. & His Orchestra

“Where Are You Going? (The Easy Song)”

from The Throes

Deleted Scenes

“Ithaca”

from Birdseed Shirt

Near Northeast

“Cenote”

from Curios

Masego

“I Do Everything (More For Cruisin') ”

from Loose Thoughts

Extra Golden

“It's Not Easy”

from Ok-Oyot System

Dawit Eklund

“Lies Are Chic”

from Ouroborous EP

Wanted Man

“Interlude”

from Wanted Man

April + VISTA

“Theme In Adagio”

from Lanterns

Chris McClenney

“All I Want Is You”

from Soulection White Label

Supper Club

“Chambray”

from Supper Club EP

Marvin Gaye

“What's Happening Brother”

from What's Going On

Kev Brown

“Party People Dedication (Instrumental)”

from South Africa Dedication

 

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Is It Rap? Is It Jazz? No, It’s TrapHouseJazz, Masego Style http://bandwidth.wamu.org/is-it-rap-is-it-jazz-no-its-traphousejazz-masego-style/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/is-it-rap-is-it-jazz-no-its-traphousejazz-masego-style/#comments Wed, 30 Sep 2015 19:11:40 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=56903 “Blessed.” That is what “Masego” means in Tswana, the official language of Botswana — and 22-year-old multi-instrumentalist Masego picked the name for a reason.

Born in Kingston, Jamaica, and raised in a Christian community in Newport News, Virginia, Masego — real name Micah Davis — could be called musically blessed. He’s a vocalist who also plays cello, trumpet, drums, guitar and piano, but he specializes in the saxophone, both alto and tenor. So even though he could be classified as a hip-hop artist, that doesn’t begin to tell the whole story. He prefers a genre of his own making: TrapHouseJazz.

Released in June, Masego’s Pink Polo EP (stream it below) is the fullest realization yet of his TrapHouseJazz style. It merges traditional jazz sounds — saxophone, scatting — with the thump of trap music and the swing of house. That combination is probably what attracted eclectic, tastemaking label and collective Soulection to the Virginian’s music: He works within hip-hop, but burrows deeper, down to its roots.

Masego doesn’t limit himself to just music, either; he dabbles in comedy (on Pink Polo and on social media, he plays a lecherous-but-lovable character called Uncle Sego, inspired by a Dairy Queen employee he’s known for years) and he’s even broken into tech, helping build an app that makes it easier for musicians to link up and collaborate. Called Network, the app is expected out next year.

Before Masego came to D.C. last week to play a midnight brunch hosted by Made in the DMV, Bandwidth asked him about his DIY approach to music composition, his love of comedy and how he sneaked onto Soulection’s radar with a bit of Internet trickery.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Bandwidth: You don’t know how to read music. Do you ever plan to learn?

Masego: I feel like I need to learn it eventually just to open up another door of connections. There are some people who aren’t going to respect you if you can’t read music. I don’t need to, but I will [learn how] eventually, just so I can write sheet music and give it to people. Everyone communicates with music in a different way. With some people, if there’s not sheet music, they’re not playing it.

So what about writing music — can you do that?

If I sit down for an hour, I can figure it out, but I’m not fluent. I made my own rulebook. I made this chart of my own that’s not staff or music. [I] say, “This [symbol] represents a G note.” In my mind, I know what G sounds like. I show it to people and they’re like, “That’s not [notes].” But to me, it makes perfect sense.

I really just go with what my soul says. There’s not a lot of thinking in my music. I freestyle a lot of things and organize it later, and then it becomes a song. Or I just turn my piano on and put my hands on the keys and whatever happens, happens. It’s real soul-driven. Anytime I’ve tried to make this recipe for dopeness, it just doesn’t work.

I saw an interview you did back in January in which you said you wanted to get down with Soulection. About eight months later, you play their Sound Of Tomorrow show in L.A. How did you make that happen?

Basically, I ripped three songs from YouTube from Soulection recap videos, put it in a beat, played sax over it and titled it “Soulection x Masego 2015.” I was like, “The public is going to think that we collaborated,” and “[Soulection] is going to think [I’m] bold for stealing [their] content and playing sax over it, claiming that we’re about to be a thing in 2015.” So Joe Kay [a Soulection co-founder] found that and emailed me shortly afterwards. [Laughs] I’m pretty much like, “Come fight me if you think this is bad.”

You’re extremely active on Soundcloud and you work closely with people who are also active online. But some of those people are across the country, like Medasin, the Dallas producer you collaborated with on the Pink Polo EP. How does that dynamic work, versus recording with someone in person?

With younger producers nowadays, the Internet really works out the best. People are very, “I don’t want to tell you I don’t like this, I’m just going to change it.” It works out to where I do what I feel is dope, I send it off to you, you do your thing and then send it back and we just create this thing.

But as far as being in the studio with somebody, the vibe definitely has to be right because I’m not going to force it. I wouldn’t want someone to be like, “Create ‘Girls That Dance’ again.” Music doesn’t work that way for me. I don’t go in the studio with the mission to kill the game.

Tell me about TrapHouseJazz, the band.

There’s 100 people that are in TrapHouseJazz. In Virginia, people get it now. I had a bunch of auditions to see who understands that you can’t just play gospel music your whole life. I played some Soundcloud beats to see if they could get down with that, and then they were just in the band. So it’s two things after that. I can call you for gigs that make sense with you, and we just get these different combinations of instruments. I got a harp player, a stand-up bass, violin, violas. And then on top that, I have stems from everybody. So anytime I make a beat with their stems, it’s a TrapHouseJazz band song.

You made the song “Peace & Love” after the Charleston church shooting. Do you feel a certain social responsibility as an artist?

I’m aware and I feel like we should be consistent more as a culture. I try to help with that via music. I can try to allow someone to be changed by a song. I made “Peace & Love” right after Mike Brown [was killed]. First I just made a small loop, then another incident happened and I worked with it again. So each time something happened, I kept making that song. And by the end, “Peace & Love” kind of came out — the lyrics came last. I feel like it’s my responsibility to contribute to a good vibe in the world and to do what I can, when I can.

In addition to everything that you do musically, you have your app, Network. How did that come about?

Early on, I wanted to help out other people that were low-key. I feel like I was one of those low-key gems in Virginia, and I feel like a lot of my friends are as well. There are so many people that aren’t poppin’, but they should be. With the app, I tried to make an environment where everybody that’s dope could be in the public eye.

What I’ve been learning with music, at least at this stage, is that there’s not crazy money in it if you just do it the music way. If I just do shows, I’m not really [earning a lot] because I’m trying to bring my band with me. That is to say, I wanted to make something that was the foundation of my income and my lifestyle so that I could continue to do music for fun. I don’t want to create music or do a partnership because of the money. I don’t want to be money-influenced. A lot of my friends are [doing well], but music is not fun for them.

You have an alter-ego you call Uncle Sego. Who is he? Can you describe the marriage between your music and comedy?

There are, like, four people in my life that I enjoy making fun of, but it’s in a flattering type of way because they’re cool and influential people. [One of them is] the ice cream man that’s worked at Dairy Queen for as long as I can remember. He’s who he is 100 percent of the time. He’s got that Uncle Sego voice and he’s always hollering at women. Uncle Sego is a character that exists in a lot of places and allows me to have more fun onstage.

I think I structure my show around stand-up comedy, and we just sprinkle music into it. That’s just the easiest way for me to do what I do. Jamie Foxx was one of those people where I could see how you finessed the comedy and then hopped on the keys and then you’re making them laugh four seconds later. I felt most comfortable doing it like that.

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