8tracks



8tracks mixes allowed people to enjoy selections that hopefully shed some light and even enlighten.

They graced your ears and made for interesting and entertaining listening if you were so inclined.

Below was the one-stop-shop for my 8tracks mixes.  

Rest assured that there are no more mixes on the way because the site ceased to exist a few years ago.





This 8tracks mix features the songs DJ Solespin played during the epic 3-hour Seconds in Sound Session Mix at Montreal's Death of Vinyl record store.



As I was compiling these songs spun during the winter 2014, I realized I had a theme on my hands and in my ears.






In July 2013, I was invited to guest DJ alongside Chris Paré at Montreal's Kafein, one of Montreal's finest downtown cafes and bars.  This mix consists of some of the tracks I played that night.





Here is a little mix inspired by some children that were hard at play in a nearby park and to happier times.








Lady Macbeth Mix from DJ Solespin on 8tracks Radio.


The Lady Macbeth Mix is the first 8-tracks mix I ever created.



It was an honor to be the guest DJ at Kim Bingham's Café Cléopatra Halloween Party.





To commemorate my participation in the 17th edition of Under Pressure, I made an 8-tracks mix of my DJ set that Saturday afternoon.



I chose songs that had a youthful, dancing, jubilant and defiant spirit.





Three Blind Mice Mix was inspired by those that are senseless.  I refer to those people that are deaf, dumb and blind.




This is a mix of some songs I played at the record release party of Montreal hip hop artist.



The Sparse City Mix consists of the songs I played that night at Royal Phoenix.



Left To My Own Few Vices is a mix of tracks I spun at Death of Vinyl record store one night.


Live At The Hive Mix from DJ Solespin on 8tracks Radio.

The memories of that night of me DJing at Concordia University's The Hive is immortalized now on 8tracks.



The Turquoise Mix from DJ Solespin on 8tracks Radio.

Enjoy this collection of cool and calm tracks.




Freedom Writer Mix from DJ Solespin on 8tracks Radio.



To free or not to free is the question.  Ponder on the question for a few minutes with this mix.



Zero To One In Twelve Mix from DJ Solespin on 8tracks Radio.

I still can't understand why this is the most popular of my 8tracks mixes but I will not fight the feeling or listens. 



Record Store Day 2013 Mix from DJ Solespin on 8tracks Radio.


The 8tracks mix above was inspired by my Record Store Day 2013 DJ set at Death of Vinyl. 




 I compiled this mix with Magneto and Michael Fassbender's performance in mind.

The Beastie Boys - Paul’s Boutique (1989)

I may have mentioned it before but Paul’s Boutique went over my head.

I didn’t like or get what they were doing with Hey Ladies or Shake Your Rump.



It would take me nearly 20 years to understand the magnitude of that album.

I guess there was only room for one landmark album to shape my life and 3 Feet High & Rising more than took care of that for me.

The Soul Searchers - Salt of the Earth (1974)


I thank Harmless & DJ Pogo for adding Chuck Brown & The Soul Searchers' Ashley Roachclip to their The Breaks compilation.



It helped answer a few questions I've had for over 20 years.  Hopefully this helps clear up a few things for others as well.

D-Sisive



My reward for blogging about D-Sisive and his last Montreal show was a copy of his Vaudeville CD.

D-Sisive had been pretty busy releasing music. The reward for his hard work was being long listed for the Polaris Prize.


Things proved to be no different with the Jonestown 3: The Dream Is Over.



Above is the video for Don't Turn The Lights Out by D-Sisive featuring Neverending White Lights.
 

Please make yourself familiar with the link below for more.

Below is a podcast to bring you up to speed. 

Click here to download.

The Suite Delight - February 25, 2014 (2) Playlist:

  1. Nas - It Ain't Hard To Tell (Large Professor Remix)
  2. Diverse - Uprock
  3. Jay Dee - Pause feat. Frank-N-Dank
  4. Strong Arm Steady - Questions
  5. Souls of Mischief - That's When Ya Lost (Remix)
  6. Soul Khan - Knuckle Puck
  7. Quasimoto - Rappcats, Pt. 3
  8. Supastition - Yada Yada
  9. Murs & 9th Wonder - Murs Day
  10. Mobb Deep - Win or Lose
  11. Wale - Um'Ricka feat. K'Naan
  12. K-Solo - Letterman (Pete Rock Remix)
  13. The Extremities - Cold Cheese
  14. D-Sisive x Tone Mason – Maybe I Will feat. DJ Grouch

The Beastie Boys



I saw everything from Check Yo Head onwards as extensions of Paul’s Boutique and had already shut shop on The Beastie Boys. However, So What'Cha Want (Soul Assassin Remix Version) and Get It Together did not fall on these def ears.


After realizing my error with Paul’s Boutique, I started revisiting their post-1990s work with some humility. I was happy to learn of their release and the cameo appearance crazy video for Make Some Noise.



Who would have thought those hip hop pranksters would get inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. I’m thrilled that it happened.

RIP M.C.A.

The Soul Searchers - We the People (1972)


One day while at Death of Vinyl, I heard a version of Think that I had never heard before.

When I saw the name on the 7", I immediately did what I could to get the song for myself. I went so far as to order the We The People reissue from not one but 2 local record stores.

I was so impatient and hasty that I literally had the stores race to get me a copy the fastest.  Unfortunately, or not so unfortunately, both copies arrived around the same time.

I gave one to the person I felt would most appreciate it as a token of my appreciation.




James Brown


There has not been a more influential musician or figure in music for me than James Brown. James Brown is not only immensely important to me but to hip hop music altogether.

I realize that in my years of The Suite Delight this is my first blog post about Brown.


Just as Chris Brown and Usher wanted to be like the late Michael Jackson, the late Michael Jackson wanted to be like the late James Brown. Heck, even I wanted to be like the late James Brown!


When I was old enough to start buying CDs for myself, I naturally claimed the soul, funk and rock sounds on records I saw and heard played since childhood.


Getting James Brown's music was obviously a foregone conclusion and I made do with the epic Star Time collection.


While waiting for the 2009 CMJ Daptone Records Showcase to begin, this vintage James Brown video footage was playing throughout the venue. It is now showing on my blog. Enjoy!



James Brown's birthday is May 3.

James Brown - Sex Machine (1970)




I remember seeing the Sex Machine album when I was a boy. 

I never played it for various reasons. 

Among them was my conviction that a grown up would know I touched the album before I even played it. 




I did however touch the double album. 

If I had actually played the album that much sooner in my life, I'm sure I would have been an even greater James Brown fan than I am already.

Rest in Peace James Brown.


The Suite Delight new time slot is Tuesday morning 2-3am EST on www.ckut.ca & 90.3 FM.

If you haven't already, please make yourself familiar with the link below for more of your favorite show and mine.

Check out the player below as well as the more recent playlists.



The Suite Delight - May 27, 2014 Playlist:


1. Quantic & Anita Tijoux - Doo Wop (That Thing)
2. Sola Rosa - Turn Around Ft. Iva Lamkum (DJ Vadim Remix)
3. The Seatbelts - Cat Blues (Mr. Scruff Remix)
4. James Brown - Funky Drummer
5. The Cactus Channel - Wooden Boy (Part 1)
6. The Roots – Don't Feel Right feat. Maimouna Youssef
7. J Dilla (aka Jay Dee) - Love Movin' feat. Black Thought
8. Nas - It Ain't Hard to Tell
9. Termanology - How We Rock Feat. Bun B
10. Marco Polo - Lay It Down Feat. Roc Marciano
11. Buff1 - Never Fall feat. Black Milk
12. The Extremities - New Season feat. Ohmega Watts & Moka Only
13. Lords Of The Underground - Tic Toc (Remix)
14. Lone Catalysts - The Ultimate (Kev Brown Remix)

James Brown - It's A Mother


I've stated many times that I've been primarily a greatest hits,

Best Of & Defintitive Collection kind of guy when it comes to musical artists' work.

However there are cuts as good or sometimes better than the hits

Profile Records


As I was stepping out from a Manhattan record store during one of my CMJ pilgrimages, I took a leisurely glance around the store and something caught my eyes and attention.

Hanging on a wall above the cash register was a multiple vinyl compilation of Profile Records’ greatest hip hop singles. I reached up, took the box set from the wall and looked at it carefully.

I was not aware a collection of Profile Records’ hip hop music was released. I reminisced about the days when I used to see the logo on cassettes, 12” singles and albums as a boy and teenager.

Profile Records is one of the most iconic labels in hip hop history.

Among its pioneer roster are Sweet Tee & DJ Jazzy Joyce, England’s Derek B, Pumpkin, Dana Dane, Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock and Run-DMC. Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock’s pivotal It Takes Two was released on the label in 1988.

During the late 1980s to the late 1990s, DJ Quik, King Sun, Poor Righteous Teachers, Smoothe Da Hustler, Camp Lo were the label’s most visible artists.

The image for the label’s deluxe set of vinyl is just as hip hop as the label itself. For an enthusiast of hip hop music and culture like me, one can only imagine the songs DJs spun at those legendary block parties. 

It stands to reason that a good number of songs from Profile Records’ catalog were played at those parties from as early as 1984 with a certain Hollis, Queens’s trio’s debut. 

That compilation of the label’s music will allow anyone to revisit those glory days. It is for that precise reason I would want to add classics from Profile Records to my DJ setlists &  playlists. 

I vowed that if it was still there by some miracle when I returned, I aimed to acquire that collection that hung on the New York record store wall.

I thank Profile Records for its contributions to hip hop music through its artists, videos and catalog.

The Bee Gees - First of May (1969)



If it hasn’t been made clear, I love The Bee Gees. Evidently a lot of other people do too.



What else explains how this posted video of the group singing First of May appears on said date?



There was arguing over which song, Robin’s Lamplight or Barry’s First of May, should be the album’s lead single.
This post, video and countless greatest hits packages reveal which song was chosen.

Marva Whitney ‎– It's My Thing (1969)


Marva Whitney was one of the female soul singers in James Brown’s camp along with Vicki Anderson and the late Lyn Collins.



Her singles Unwind Yourself and It’s My Thing are of prime importance where hip hop is concerned. DJ Mark the 45 King used the former to make the hip hop classic 900 Number.




It’s My Thing was sampled numerous times to make numerous hip hop classic songs. One that I can draw from memory is Big Daddy Kane’s Mister Cee’s Master Plan. See if you can identify where it is used.





I found a reissue of the classic album where those singles are found and it has found its way onto many a playlist of mine in 2012. For my purposes, it was a strategic way of playing James Brown’s production under the radar and to give the soul sister a spotlight.



In this computer age, I am able to not only see what she looked like but what she looked like while performing as well.





Marva Whitney died in December 2012.


The Bee Gees - 1st



I’ve been playing The Bee Gees like crazy. I only recently removed their music from my MP3 player.

I've been a Bee Gees fan since childhood. My mother had the 7" single of To Love Somebody long before I would care. Even from childhood to now, that song is one of my favorite and greatest love songs I've ever heard in my life.



Their 1960s songwriting was fantastic. What else can I say about To Love Somebody that hasn't been said or sung? As great as that song is, they have about a dozen plus songs that are just as strong. The Every Christian Lionhearted Man Will Show You beat is heavy while their harmonizing is light and sweet.




I've been killing Nina Simone's To Love Somebody since I found a vinyl copy of the album. She covered The Bee Gees I Can’t See Nobody & the title track on that album. It just goes to show the Bee Gees were getting props from their contemporaries just as they do from fans like me today.