Black Spade – To Serve With Love (Advance) (2008)

Posted by HHB Admin on January 16, 2008 – 11:46 am

01 To Serve With Love (Intro)
02 To Serve With Love
03 Her Perfume She Wore
04 Love’s Right Here
05 She’s The One (20’s Love Song)
06 Evil Love
07 Lavish Life
08 Actioneer
09 The Ship Has Sailed
10 Good Crazy
11 Revolutionary Bullshit
12 The Half That’s Never Been Told
13 Tale Of 32
14 Not For The Bullshit
15 Enjoy The Experience
16 True Friends
17 The Genius In You
18 As We
19 Where I’m Coming From

::Notes:: Cat reminds me Common for some reason….

Armed with little more than his father’s extensive record collection of jazz, soul, psychedelic rock, folk, comedy and a Kurzweil 2000 keyboard – Black Spade’s music is a melting pot of sounds hailing from St. Louis by way of New York, Detroit, LA, and everywhere that hip-hop has carved a distinctive and influential sound for itself.

Writing and producing all his music along with MC’ng, Spade’s one man team approach is full of burbling synths, and off-kilter drums while his voice slides smoothly over choruses coated in multi-tracked vocals and skipping roughshod drums. Attributing his distinctive sound to his home of St. Louis, Black Spade explains “We get a piece of everything by being in the middle.” However, he feels no harmonious connection to where St. Louis pop acts like Nelly, Chingy, etc. have taken hip-hop lately. Spade’s style is not like the norm. This undercurrent shows through all his music and can be heard in songs like “Evil Love,” where the keyboard hits less than a second after you expect it to. It’s subtle, but these little things are what make Black Spade’s music so compelling.

Despite his strong ties to hip-hop, Spade’s taste in music walks across genres. He listens to Prince and Dilla, alongside Bloc Party and Radiohead while using all these sounds as a blueprint for his future, one that sits under the guiding light of Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew era electronic sax skronk. Then there’s his rapping – Spade’s cadence flutters up and down like Pharoahe Monch, but stays introspective like Common. Before you know it, he’ll switch to singing and suddenly his songs become less like hip hop experimentation and more like fully fleshed sketches.

In addition to music, Spade is a clothing designer who makes blazers from bits of bomber jackets and whatever odds and ends he finds while thrift store shopping. Creating clothing the same way he does music runs parallel to Spade’s sampling from his father’s record collection.

At his core, Black Spade is a producer who makes music because he loves to. His sounds are grounded in the past while still sounding futuristic, and most importantly come from the heart. Spade says, “To get my music out there to people… at the end of the day that’s what really counts.”

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  1. 1. Lafayette Said:

    Damn…been waitin’ for this for ages! Thanks!

    /Lafayette

  2. 2. DROK Said:

    Laf recommended this so imma have to peep it, and yhea cat do sound like some laid back common.

  3. 3. mnminn Said:

    I went to the myspace page and the song “as we” played. I totally agree that his flow and delivery are a lot like Common. It’s always nice to have another great Hip Hop artist in the mix. Thanks for the share. Much appreciated

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