IF YOU DON'T LOOK LIKE ONE OF THESE KIND OF
HOES FORGET IT YOU NOT GETTING STRAPPED
INTO THESE MOTHERFUCKERS IN THE MIGHTY
CRIB OF PROTEUS AROUND 2018 ~~~ SORRY
LIFE IS CRUEL ~~~~~~~ ALSO I PLAN ON MAKING A
COLLECTION OF ALL MY FAVORITE NOCTURNE
MODELS www.facebook.com/NocturnalAgency
AND I WILL UPLOAD THEM TO THIS
SITE HERE filefap.com/info/PROTEUS
I ALSO PLAN ON GETTING A FEW MORE
DUNGEON SEX CONTRAPTIONS AS WELL
I WILL BE MAKING ANOTHER TUMBLR FOR THIS
SOMETIME IN THE NEAR FUTURE ~~~~~~~~~~~
JOIN THE NO SPAM / NO UNSOLICITED E-MAILS IMPORTED / 100
PERCENT FREE / GOD BLESS THE CAN-SPAM ACT / REVERB NATION
PROTEUS / ALTERED BEATS MAILING LIST !!!!! THERE IS A
500 RECIPIENT LIMIT SO IF I GET HUGE I GUESS I WILL HAVE TO
PAY SOMEONE .. OH WAIT IS MAIL-CHIMP FREE ??????
_
_-¯ ¯-_
- Proteus-_ _
¯ - Altered Beats-
¯-_ _-
¯¯
The open-source MC BY Chris Bilton December 16, 2008 13:12 In the world of hip-hop, sometimes the price tag on a pimped-out Escalade or a pair of custom Skytops is as important as a clever internal rhyme or a chorus hook. And in a genre where bling reigns supreme, the most unlikely rapper would be one that's doing it for free. But that's precisely how Proteus (a.k.a. Aaron Campbell) is making his mark: as the self-proclaimed world's first open-source MC. Of course, Campbell is working on the outer edges of hip-hop — far from the temptations of slick production and Auto-Tune trendiness. His raps are intended for sub-subgenres like underground IDM and modern breakcore. But despite working some relatively obscure genres, there appears to be a wealth of artists eager to take him up on his open-source offer. In the three years he's been making his stuff available, he's accumulated over 300 songs worth of collaborations. After Campbell ended his successful stint as the DJ behind local dance night Altered Beats, he wanted to start making the kind of music he was spinning. With the help of a team of cyber-junkies — most of whom started coming to his shows to find out just who was this Proteus character playing their flavour of glitchy dance tunes — the Altered Beats website was assembled for Campbell to begin uploading raps that he recorded. Basically, he just posts .ftp files of vocal tracks to be downloaded by anyone interested in pairing them with their own productions. In return for using his voice, he asks only that people send him a copy of the finished product so he can post them on the site as well. As a method of collaboration, this open-source approach is essentially the polar opposite of hip-hop's high-profile duets, which often demand the diplomatic talents of publicists, managers and lawyers more than any actual musical ability. And when it comes to intellectual property rights and illegal downloading paranoia, Proteus is sort of like the anti-Metallica. Plus, I can think of at least one post-modern musical entity who would do well to get acquainted with Campbell's licence-free output. For any budding MCs concerned with sloughing off their prime material without monetary compensation, keep in mind that his sharing service has landed Proteus on tracks created by artists throughout the world. Some of his notable online collaborators even include Rotterdam's FFF, Skerror from Oregon, Berlin's LFO Demon and Montreal's Blackjwell. When I asked Campbell if anyone was using his work in any kind of commercial venture, like in commercials, he said he wasn't aware of any. "I would be surprised," he added, saying that he considers the music to be too weird to be the soundtrack for any kind of money-making enterprise. After all, it's not like Campbell is rushing to turn the collaborations into a product for his own profit. For now, the project remains the kind of venture that would make Milo Hoffman proud. Email us at: LETTERS@EYEWEEKLY.COM or send your questions to EYEWEEKLY.COM 625 Church St, 6th Floor, Toronto M4Y 2G1 *
_
_-¯ ¯-_
- Proteus-_ _
¯ - Altered Beats-
¯-_ _-
¯¯
Freaked beat manifesto Altered Beats lets hip-hoppers go out of their heads BY ANDRE MAYER You could call Aaron Campbell a musical philanthropist. With a penchant for hyperbole and a zeal that borders on missionary, this DJ and sometime MC views himself as the city's biggest champion of avant hip-hop. "Most of the artists, if not all of them, make very, very, very little money," says the 26-year-old Campbell, who spins under the name Proteus. "I honestly feel that there are some people out there who have no choice but to make music. If they don't, it will actually cause them some degree of physical pain. People like [California-based] DJ Hive need to make their tracks. They're not making any money, and I feel I owe it to them to do what I can to basically help them." For the past two years, Campbell's patronage has come in the form of Altered Beats, a formerly bi-weekly and now monthly night at Queen Street club NASA, in which he and partner Loomr spin a heady, idiosyncratic repertoire of progressive hip-hop. While his enthusiasm is unstoppable, talk of Altered Beats' musical mandate tends to get bollixed up with terms like "hardhop," "futuristic" and "cyber-escapism." "The pinnacle would be science-fiction meeting hip-hop meeting deviant electronic experimental music," says Campbell in a moment of lucidity. "It sounds all melodramatic, but it's very groove-oriented." A few touchstones seem appropriate: to hear Campbell
IF YOU DON'T LOOK LIKE ONE OF THESE KIND OF
HOES FORGET IT YOU NOT GETTING STRAPPED
INTO THESE MOTHERFUCKERS IN THE MIGHTY
CRIB OF PROTEUS AROUND 2018 ~~~ SORRY
LIFE IS CRUEL ~~~~~~~ ALSO I PLAN ON MAKING A
COLLECTION OF ALL MY FAVORITE NOCTURNE
MODELS www.facebook.com/NocturnalAgency
AND I WILL UPLOAD THEM TO THIS
SITE HERE filefap.com/info/PROTEUS
I ALSO PLAN ON GETTING A FEW MORE
DUNGEON SEX CONTRAPTIONS AS WELL
I WILL BE MAKING ANOTHER TUMBLR FOR THIS
SOMETIME IN THE NEAR FUTURE ~~~~~~~~~~~
JOIN THE NO SPAM / NO UNSOLICITED E-MAILS IMPORTED / 100
PERCENT FREE / GOD BLESS THE CAN-SPAM ACT / REVERB NATION
PROTEUS / ALTERED BEATS MAILING LIST !!!!! THERE IS A
500 RECIPIENT LIMIT SO IF I GET HUGE I GUESS I WILL HAVE TO
PAY SOMEONE .. OH WAIT IS MAIL-CHIMP FREE ??????
_
_-¯ ¯-_
- Proteus-_ _
¯ - Altered Beats-
¯-_ _-
¯¯
The open-source MC BY Chris Bilton December 16, 2008 13:12 In the world of hip-hop, sometimes the price tag on a pimped-out Escalade or a pair of custom Skytops is as important as a clever internal rhyme or a chorus hook. And in a genre where bling reigns supreme, the most unlikely rapper would be one that's doing it for free. But that's precisely how Proteus (a.k.a. Aaron Campbell) is making his mark: as the self-proclaimed world's first open-source MC. Of course, Campbell is working on the outer edges of hip-hop — far from the temptations of slick production and Auto-Tune trendiness. His raps are intended for sub-subgenres like underground IDM and modern breakcore. But despite working some relatively obscure genres, there appears to be a wealth of artists eager to take him up on his open-source offer. In the three years he's been making his stuff available, he's accumulated over 300 songs worth of collaborations. After Campbell ended his successful stint as the DJ behind local dance night Altered Beats, he wanted to start making the kind of music he was spinning. With the help of a team of cyber-junkies — most of whom started coming to his shows to find out just who was this Proteus character playing their flavour of glitchy dance tunes — the Altered Beats website was assembled for Campbell to begin uploading raps that he recorded. Basically, he just posts .ftp files of vocal tracks to be downloaded by anyone interested in pairing them with their own productions. In return for using his voice, he asks only that people send him a copy of the finished product so he can post them on the site as well. As a method of collaboration, this open-source approach is essentially the polar opposite of hip-hop's high-profile duets, which often demand the diplomatic talents of publicists, managers and lawyers more than any actual musical ability. And when it comes to intellectual property rights and illegal downloading paranoia, Proteus is sort of like the anti-Metallica. Plus, I can think of at least one post-modern musical entity who would do well to get acquainted with Campbell's licence-free output. For any budding MCs concerned with sloughing off their prime material without monetary compensation, keep in mind that his sharing service has landed Proteus on tracks created by artists throughout the world. Some of his notable online collaborators even include Rotterdam's FFF, Skerror from Oregon, Berlin's LFO Demon and Montreal's Blackjwell. When I asked Campbell if anyone was using his work in any kind of commercial venture, like in commercials, he said he wasn't aware of any. "I would be surprised," he added, saying that he considers the music to be too weird to be the soundtrack for any kind of money-making enterprise. After all, it's not like Campbell is rushing to turn the collaborations into a product for his own profit. For now, the project remains the kind of venture that would make Milo Hoffman proud. Email us at: LETTERS@EYEWEEKLY.COM or send your questions to EYEWEEKLY.COM 625 Church St, 6th Floor, Toronto M4Y 2G1 *
_
_-¯ ¯-_
- Proteus-_ _
¯ - Altered Beats-
¯-_ _-
¯¯
Freaked beat manifesto Altered Beats lets hip-hoppers go out of their heads BY ANDRE MAYER You could call Aaron Campbell a musical philanthropist. With a penchant for hyperbole and a zeal that borders on missionary, this DJ and sometime MC views himself as the city's biggest champion of avant hip-hop. "Most of the artists, if not all of them, make very, very, very little money," says the 26-year-old Campbell, who spins under the name Proteus. "I honestly feel that there are some people out there who have no choice but to make music. If they don't, it will actually cause them some degree of physical pain. People like [California-based] DJ Hive need to make their tracks. They're not making any money, and I feel I owe it to them to do what I can to basically help them." For the past two years, Campbell's patronage has come in the form of Altered Beats, a formerly bi-weekly and now monthly night at Queen Street club NASA, in which he and partner Loomr spin a heady, idiosyncratic repertoire of progressive hip-hop. While his enthusiasm is unstoppable, talk of Altered Beats' musical mandate tends to get bollixed up with terms like "hardhop," "futuristic" and "cyber-escapism." "The pinnacle would be science-fiction meeting hip-hop meeting deviant electronic experimental music," says Campbell in a moment of lucidity. "It sounds all melodramatic, but it's very groove-oriented." A few touchstones seem appropriate: to hear Campbell
Straddling the threshold between studio performance and digital technique; the NYC artist applies "fake jazz" principles to synthpop. Bandcamp New & Notable May 2, 2024
A collection of tracks from the singer and multi-disciplinary artist's 111 collaboration series, featuring KMRU, Laraaji, and others. Bandcamp New & Notable Apr 25, 2024