DA’s Sunday Morning Medicine – Holiday Edition
Although you're most likely sick of Holiday music at this point, we're going to infiltrate you with even more festive cheer, but this time with a dance music flare. It's officially time to kick up your holiday season into high gear with the below remixes.
The Bloody Beetroots teams up with classic rock legends for new album ‘Hide’
Several weeks before Sir Bob Cornelius Rifo, better known as The Bloody Beetroots, is due to release his second studio LP, HIDE, the album is available for a full stream on Rolling Stone's website. With guest appearances from talkbox legend Peter Frampton on "The Beat," Sir Paul McCartney on "Out of Sight," and Mötley Crüe drummer Tommy Lee, the album serves as a symbol of not only rip-roaring electro house of the day, but also its ability to cross generations and genres. Listen to the full stream below.
The Bloody Beetroots ft. Paul McCartney and Youth – Out of Sight (Riva Starr Raw Dub)
The pairing of The Bloody Beetroots and Paul McCartney left some excited for an eccentric outing, and others pondering its abnormality. The end result highlighted both act's strengths, fostering a pop-friendly release on all fronts. The track placed in Riva Starr's hands, nevertheless, gets an entirely new facade; diving into the unexpected deeper and darker realms of progressive and minimal house. Most have come to expect bouncy tech house from Riva Starr, but this rework sees a throbbing bass line, using weird chord sequences to make an entirely new track of its own. Borrowing marginally from the original, Riva Starr strips down the track's core elements and demonstrates what a proper remix ought to be.
Watch This: The Bloody Beetroots, Paul McCartney and Youth in ‘Out of Sight’ music video
This year's most unlikely collaboration "Out of Sight" featuring The Bloody Beetroots, Paul McCartney and Youth, goes one step further and debuts its official music video. Just as the production hearkens back to the hard rock of yore, "Out Of Sight's" music video is as rock n' roll as the distorted guitar riffs that drive the track's soul. Like everything Sir Bob Cornelius Rifo touches, the mind behind the mask leaves his chilling stamp on the cinematography here -- a smokey kaleidoscope of rock opera imagery.