Tour day 1
Peace world and thanks for tuning in. Me and my brother R.A.P Ferreira are out on the road on tour getting things moving. Our first stop was Spirit Lodge in Pittsburgh. First shout out to Justin Strong for hosting us and promoting the event. As well shout out to the fans in Pittsburgh they showed mad love. For a medium sized show they really turned up and out on. Pittsburgh has some amazingly supportive fans and I’m definitely looking forward to one day coming back.
As for myself my trip started off well. After a 56 minute flight from Chicago I landed at Pittsburgh international airport with very little difficulty, grabbed my bags from baggage claim and scheduled a Lyft to pick me up. The layout of the land of Pittsburgh is very different from that of the midwest with lots of greenery and hills. I have never been to Pittsburgh so I had no clue as to what to expect. Upon the Lyft ride to the Motel 6 hotel room I had secured I was informed by my Lyft driver that there may be a prostitution ring being run out of the Motel which was hilarious but you know I’m all for a good time! Lol. Nah not really! I was kind of shocked but hey times are hard and people gotta get it how they live I guess and that’s a literal statement. Not that I expected much out of the Motel 6 it it seemed even expecting little was to expect too much at all because my room was crazy dirty. There were dirty boot marks in the shower and the room floors were sticky. I can’t really call it much, it was unsavory but yet it did provide a nights rest.
Moral of the story is to avoid the bargain priced motel rooms and spend a couple dollars. That is if you can. Next stop is Covington, KY. Check ya’ll on the next one.
Peace,
BLAX
BLAX processes grief and seeks truth on ‘Angeline’
“Gotta be yourself / Can’t be nobody else.”
That’s BLAX—a.k.a. Adebisi Agoro—in “Acknowledgement,” the opening track of his new latest LP, Angeline. It’s a fitting sentiment for the longtime Milwaukee emcee. Since co-founding and eventually leaving Fresh Cut Collective more than a decade ago, Agoro has moved to New York City, moved back to Milwaukee, and released numerous records under his BLAX and Armstrong Ransome monikers. But no matter the moniker, Agoro’s music belongs to him, and nobody else.
Take the ebullient “A Roller Skating Jam Called Liberation.” It borrows its title and vibe from De La Soul, but its truth-seeking, praise-filled mission statement is BLAX’s own. Elsewhere, the jittery “Technical” manages to get in shout-outs to The Wiz, Ludacris, and Julius Caesar and Brutus in its short runtime. “Shine” samples the hazy Curtis Mayfield song “The Makings Of You,” and the lovely “Does She Know” showers even more praise on an unnamed woman.
A certain woman is named on the record, however: BLAX’s grandmother Angeline, who passed away in 2013. Closing track “A Vibe Called Blessed” reveals that “the name Angeline means a messenger from God.” BLAX goes on to explain that his Angeline album is “an album that was manufactured out of grief, love, pain, and a sense of victory. A cathartic artistic process of the growth and evolution of man in a philosophical sense. A livid testimony from the one and only true and living Asiatic Black man from the original continent of Asia, more commonly referred to as Africa.
“I am him,” concludes BLAX, “he is I , he is GOD, we are ONE.”
BLAX’s ‘Roller Skating Jam Called Liberation’
Do you want to talk about folks who are in the rap game for the purity and the craftsmanship of the rap game? Well, Milwaukee is blessed to have BLAX (given name Adebisi Agoro), who is without question embedded in that conversation. When talking about his new record, Angeline (available now on all digital platforms), BLAX says, “Everything on the record is intentional.” That much is made manifest with even a cursory listen to the album.
There is a loose freedom in “A Roller Skating Jam Called Liberation” that takes the listener out of space and time and completely into a world of BLAX’s creation. The song is built on a sunny chord progression where the silky maestro pairs spirituality with a straight up disco bounce. The song will be featured as part of Light the Hoan and Radio Milwaukee’s series pairing local music with the shimmering lights of the Hoan Bridge on Feb. 26 at 9pm.
Angeline is coming out on Social Misfits/Next Records, a New York City based label. It seems fitting because though the record is obviously well-constructed, there still remains a New York type of griminess happening below a lot of the songs’ surfaces. “The Streetz” is a prime example, in which BLAX’s flow levitates and ponders dingy forgotten street corners over a whip-tight sample. BLAX says the narrative of the song centers around a real-life event that he was witness to.
Creative Fire
When asked about what stokes his creative fire, BLA. begins succinctly, “I’m an artist.” There is a deft transfiguration of pain that seems to run through the new record that somehow seems to prove his point. “I have been at constant creation since I can remember. As a child, I was always creating or drawing and imagining things. For me, art and creation isn’t a thing I do because people are watching or wanting. It’s just what I do,” BLAX continues.
For BLAX, no matter how far he and his art travel, it seems that Milwaukee is a constant in the nuclear center of his expression. “As a kid, I grew up all over the North Side of Milwaukee. Predominantly, the Northwest side on 38th and Custer. My music is a culmination of all of my life experiences from youth to adult,” he says.
On Angeline BLAX is a self-contained vibe machine, in that he produced all of the beats on the record where he also holds court as a prize-fighting emcee. “Producing the entire record definitely changed my approach to working on music. Being solely responsible for the music, this time around, was definitely important,” BLAX says. There are occasions across the record, like “Midnight Love” which features Shelly Conley and Jay Hubb, where the beat and the vocal approach can barely be separated, in a way that feels lived in and true.
Radiant Transcendence
It’s easily evident to hear that BLAX encountered a type of transcendent liberation while making this record. He shines, and he shines in his own way. His radiant spotlight even touches on the tragic loss of his son, with a vulnerability firmly rooted in strength that is uncommon. Frankly, it is worth giving Angeline a try just to witness an open soul who is committed to creation give so much of himself.
When asked to ponder success, BLAX’s lens is set wide, yet he digs into the thought with surgical precision which is completely on brand for him. “Success is being happy with self. Knowing that my actions today will continue to set and lay ground towards an even better tomorrow. There are a billion artists who never even get to find the means to express themselves. To have been one of the ones chosen to do so is success in itself before any accolades can ever be applied,” BLAX says.
Angeline takes its name from BLAX’s beloved grandmother who passed away in 2013. With the name itself being rooted in the word Angel, you can feel the divinity dripping from its grooves. The record drops a lotus flower growing from the mud type mentality, which is the type of perseverance music that is desperately needed in the current times.