| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 2018年11月16日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | Brainfeeder |
| 構成数 | 2 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | BFCD077 |
| SKU | 5054429135077 |
構成数 : 2枚
合計収録時間 : 02:09:49
It was the name of an online radio broadcast, then the title of the opening track on Los Angeles, and ultimately the name -- and seemingly the purpose -- of Flying Lotus' heterogeneous label, launched in 2008 and celebrated with this tenth-anniversary compilation. A crucial node in the L.A. beat scene since inception, Brainfeeder has also thrived with other forms of underground club music and left-field strains of R&B, jazz, and pop, and reached a new level of acclaim in 2015 with the release of Kamasi Washington's The Epic. A fair portion of Brainfeeder X could have been picked off the label's releases of 2018, a year in which Brainfeeder's stature continued to heighten with albums from the likes of Ross from Friends, Dorian Concept, Brandon Coleman, and Georgia Anne Muldrow. Instead, the previously released portion of the compilation, significantly less than half of its 36 selections, all dates from 2010-2017, an era represented with Teebs and TOKiMONSTA's warped beatmaking, Daedelus' MPB-tinged folk, Martyn's pellet-spraying U.K. garage mutation, and disparate varieties of funk from Mono/Poly and bass god Thundercat. Flying Lotus' own releases have been issued by other labels, predominantly Ninja Tune and Warp, so none of these flashbacks are from him. The label boss does contribute to Matthewdavid's swirling ambient inclusion, transforms one of Coleman's Sunlight-era Herbie Hancock emulations into chunky hip-hop, and with Shabazz Palaces and Thundercat whips up the aberrant funk of the George Clinton-enhanced WOKE. He's also behind one of the new highlights, the delightfully grim "Ain't No Coming Back," a blasting anti-spiritual jazz showcase for vocalist Busdriver, whose performance resembles an unhinged hybrid of Mark Murphy and Eugene McDaniels. Among the other exclusives and glimpses officially issued first through this set are Thundercat's trippy "King of the Hill" (with BadBadNotGood), Miguel Atwood-Ferguson's sublime "Kazaru," and Moire's Prescription-meets-Dial beauty "Lisbon," progressive slices of soul, jazz, and house. ~ Andy Kellman
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