Kinda like this jam, a bit unsure. Funny that dubstep is using vocoders now. A natural progression I guess.
Let the man kick some shit to ya.
This video is pretty Venice beach but man this dude is amazing.
This song is dope. A classic Frankie Valli number reworked by this french dude Pilooski. The song is called beggin’ and it goes off in a club.
Fuck Tony Robbins, bump this!!
I listen to this for motivation. Maybe strange but effective.

Bad Brains - Sailin’ on
Here is a disco track me and 22 did a while back. Listen here or download at http://www.zshare.net/audio/5715644752a8558a/
A taste of things to come. This kid is the nicest rapper I have heard come out of this country. Get in behind and support.
For 20 years, a subculture in Brazil has emerged under society’s radar. Favela on Blast tells the stories of sex, love, poverty and pride for Rio’s marginalized people. They have their own language, style, and heroes. It’s a movie that’s fast, heavy and violent like the city itself. This film is a flash of a few lives of charismatic people that relate to the funk music and a retelling of the subculture itself.
Favela on Blast shows the culture surrounding “Funk Carioca,” a musical rhythm that mixes the American electronic funk of the 1980’s with the most diverse influences of Brazilian music. It is one of the most interesting musical movements in the world, and it comes from one of the most violent and poorest places too: the slums of Rio de Janeiro. Bombastic rhythms coming from the Miami Bass and loops and samples are united to powerful rap vocal using Brazilian slang. This is music that is designed to be listened to as loud as possible and with high bass pumping through the tropical nights of Rio.
Wesley Pentz (Diplo), teamed up with Leandro HBL in 2005 to tell the story of the MC’s, DJ’s, dancers, and cultural producers who have spent their lives in the favela and are creating this vibrant scene. Together, they visited 60 favelas and conducted more than 100 interviews in order to explore the culture that surrounds Funk Carioca. In doing so, they have created a portrait of a subculture that defines the youth of Rio’s dismissed population. It’s music that is crass, dirty, violent and loud – but regardless, it is the soundtrack of their lives.