
Bringing turntablism to a wider audience.
DJ Logic - Zen Of LogicPosted by Tim Karan on 01-Mar-07 @ 02:10 PM
[4/5] People outside of turntablism often find albums from the genre to be hard to listen to. With DJ Logic, that's rarely the case. Since 1990, the Bronx-based DJ has been on a mission to educate people on the use of the turntable as an instrument, as well as trying to fuse it with a live-band setting (Project Logic, Eye & I). He's worked with an impressive list of musicians that includes Vernon Reid (Living Colour) and even members of the Grateful Dead. And on his third solo recording, Logic continues to mix hip-hop and jazz into a crisp and refreshing blend of genres that also touches on Latin and Middle Eastern sounds. He pieces together a funky and vibrant musical collage and then dresses it up with some impressive scratch work. It's a concoction that sounds like nothing else, and it's also proof that the turntable is definitely not just for playing records-and that DJs are more than just hipsters with iPods. (ROPEADOPE) Eddie Fleisher
Official Website: http://www.ropeadope.com
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Also in this issue:
- Killswitch Engage
- Samiam
- The Walkmen
- Melvins
- The Killers
- Squarepusher
- Bad Astronaut
- Beck
- It Dies Today
- Owen
- The Prize Fighter Inferno
- Badly Drawn Boy
- Califone
- The Dears
- Electric Six
- Mute Math
- Joanna Newsom
- Swan Lake
- TV On The Radio
- Deftones
- The Esoteric
- Four Letter Lie
- Fucked Up
- The Haunted
- Righteous Jams
- Scars Of Tomorrow
- Totimoshi
- Twelve Tribes
- Cities
- Jandek
- Cale Parks
- Subtle
- Other sections...




























[4/5] People outside of turntablism often find albums from the genre to be hard to listen to. With DJ Logic, that's rarely the case. Since 1990, the Bronx-based DJ has been on a mission to educate people on the use of the turntable as an instrument, as well as trying to fuse it with a live-band setting (Project Logic, Eye & I). He's worked with an impressive list of musicians that includes Vernon Reid (Living Colour) and even members of the Grateful Dead. And on his third solo recording, Logic continues to mix hip-hop and jazz into a crisp and refreshing blend of genres that also touches on Latin and Middle Eastern sounds. He pieces together a funky and vibrant musical collage and then dresses it up with some impressive scratch work. It's a concoction that sounds like nothing else, and it's also proof that the turntable is definitely not just for playing records-and that DJs are more than just hipsters with iPods. (ROPEADOPE) Eddie Fleisher
Official Website: 
