Deltron 3030 est un groupe de hip-hop américain. Il se compose du producteur Dan the Automator, du rappeur Del the Funky Homosapien (connu sous les noms Deltron Osiris ou Deltron Zero pour l'album), et Kid Koala.
Le premier album du groupe, Deltron 3030, est publié le 23 mai 2000[3] ; il s'agit d'un album-concept dont l'histoire se déroule en 3030 et raconte un combat entre Deltron Zero (le surnom de Del) contre des sociétés toutes puissantes régnant sur l'univers. L'album atteint plusieurs classements[4].
Deltron 3030 - Deltron 3030 (2000) 320kbps
Des rumeurs d'un second album sont retracées en 2004[1],[5] ; en novembre 2006, Del explique à IGN que l'écriture de quatre chansons pour l'album est déjà terminée[6]. Dan the Automator annonce le début des enregistrements en décembre 2006, et une date de sortie pour 2007[7]. Après plusieurs reports successifs, les membres annoncent l'album pour 2008[7], 2010[8], 2011[9],[10], et 2012. Le 11 juin 2012, Deltron 3030 joue au festival Luminato de Toronto en Ontario, un spectacle que Kid Koala considère comme une avant-première du Deltron Event 2 World[11].
Le 11 octobre 2016 sort Live, le premier album du groupe enregistré en public. Certains des artistes ayant participé à Event 2 apparaissent sur le disque, comme Zack de la Rocha, Mike Patton, Jamie Cullum, Emily Wells, et Aaron Bruno. Le groupe est accompagné sur scène par les 16 artistes du 3030 Orchestra, formation classique.
Handsome Boy Modeling School is an American collaborative project between hip hop producers Dan the Automator (Gorillaz, Dr. Octagon, Deltron 3030) and Prince Paul (Stetsasonic, De La Soul, Gravediggaz). The collaboration originally lasted from 1999 to 2006 and resulted in two albums, featuring a vast cast of guest rappers, singers, comedians and DJs.[1] In February 2018, the duo played a concert in New York City.[2]
SIXX MIXX 029 - 2/06/2004 Right-click to download: 74MB 320kbps mp3 Sixx Mixx 29 - 2/6/04 - Get You Naked By The End Of This Mixx Edition 1. Lyrics Born "Callin' Out" 2. Jane's Addiction "Just Because" 3. Moby "Porcelain" 4. AC/DC "Back In Black" 5. AC/DC vs. Urban Takeover vs. Beastie Boys. vs. Peter Schilling "Unknown" (DJ Z-Trip Mix) 6. Avalanches "Frontier Psychiatrist" 7. Beck "Where It's At" 8. Beck vs. Pharoah Monch "Simon Says" (2manydjs version) 9. Jerky Boys vs. Eminem "My Name Is" (2manydjs version) 10. The Streets "Sharp Darts" 11. Outkast "Happy Valentines Day" 12. Deltron 3030 "Positive Contact" 13. Beastie Boys "Body Movin" 14. Heiroglyphics "Let It Roll" 15. Cypress Hill "Insane In The Brain" 16. DJ Shadow "The Number Song" (Cut Chemist Mix) 17. Run-DMC "Peter Piper" 18. Rob Dougan "Clubbed To Death" 19. Crystal Method vs. Janet Jackson "Keep Janet Alive" (Party Ben Bootleg) 20. Dsico "Seven Nation Electro" 21. Blondie vs. The Doors "Rapture Riders" (Go Home Productions Bootleg) 22. Eric B & Rakim "Paid In Full" 23. Dizzee Rascal "Fix Up Look Sharp" Commentary: Another major leap forward for the show, although it relies on the "easy-to-mix" hip hop tempo for most of its length and includes a lengthy segment of Sixx Mixx 21 (see below) as well as shorter segments of Z-Trip's Uneasy Listening and 2manydjs As Heard On Radio Soulwax Vol. 4. Perhaps most significantly, it's the debut of Lyrics Born's "Callin' Out," probably the biggest "hit" I ever brought to LIVE 105. A few weeks before I had read a review of the Lyrics Born album Later That Day in the local SF Bay Guardian, and ambled down to Aquarius Records on Valencia Street (so hip!) to buy the CD. As the album version says "...make this shit happen right here right now," over and over, I had to make my own edit to play on Subsonic, our Saturday night electronic show. Eventually I got Quannum, the local label, to get me a clean version ("make it all happen") and an acapella, and I went to town. At this point the track had not been put in rotation on LIVE 105 and I was kicking off the show with it just out of my own belief in the song. Of course the more notable "Callin' Out" mashups were to come later, but the rapid-fire blast of Jane's Addiction, Moby and AC/DC is a lot of fun. The hip hop section is still nice although, again, a repeat; "Clubbed to Death" is sort of apropos of nothing here but does create a nice dramatic lead-in for #2 in what eventually became my 4-part "Keep Stuff Alive" series, as I noted that just about any spoken word recording, layered over "Keep Hope Alive" with a ton of echo, sounded cool. Amazing to think the nip slip was 10 years ago, huh. Anyway, perhaps equally as significant as the Lyrics Born appearance, this is also the debut of Go Home Productions' toweringly great "Rapture Riders," a seminal moment in bootleggery. Ending the show with Dizzee Rascal, who never really took off in America, was a bit of a stretch, and again, a deduction of a few points for the repetition, but a Sixx Mixx Milestone, for sure. Party Ben Scientific Sixx Mixx Score: 6/10
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