Posts Tagged Hip-Hop Congress Denver

A.M. Soleil, Retrospectively: Blog #24 “Dee-Jay RMX”

Monday, June 14th, 2010

“Dee-Jay RMX” – SOULAJU w/ DJ Icewater (2010)

SOULAJU hosted a youth DJ workshop at the end of January 2010.  The workshop was one of five community-oriented events we hosted in celebration of the coming SOULAJU album release.

I’m focusing more and more on the visual aspect of the music.  In recent months I edited footage from our Youth Jam / Youth Climate Justice Workshop and made a music video for “In Sight”

Dee-Jay – the heart and soul of Hip-Hop culture.

Enjoy.

<a href="http://soulaju.bandcamp.com/track/dee-jay-rmx">Dee-Jay RMX by SOULAJU</a>

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A.M. Soleil, Retrospectively is a 52-week blog series in 2010, focusing on 5 years of music by your man Molina.

SOULAJU & the Colorado Music Scene

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Soulaju is making some noise in the Mile High City and around Colorado.  Within the past several months, SOULAJU has been written up in Colorado Music Buzz, 5280 Magazine, and now the Denver Post online edition: Reverb. Molina & Aju were also recently featured in the indie art series Colorado Stand Up. 

COLORADO STAND UP

The “Colorado Stand Up” Project is, in two words, Colorado Hip-Hop. The design will focus on the Hip-Hop Community in Colorado and feature those who have put in blood, sweat, and tears to make the scene what it is today.   

Molina. CO Stand Up Aju. CO Stand Up

Thomas Evans of Hip-Hop Congress Denver is the chief architect of Colorado Stand Up.  Check out the entire series at http://www.facebook.com/#!/album.php?aid=426035&id=501575696&ref=mf

“SOULAJU’S POSITIVE HIP-HOP IS GOOD FOR THE SOUL”

Write-up by Eryc Eyl for the Denver Post. Eryc is a veteran music journalist, critic and Colorado native who has been neck-deep in local music for many years.

“Molina Soleil and Aju released their first full-length album earlier this year. Produced in collaboration with Oakland-based DJ Icewater, the self-titled, 15-track collection bursts with head-bobbing beats, rhymes that flow like melted butter and melodic hooks that stick like maple syrup.

Its soulful jams and socially conscious lyrics recall Marvin Gaye and Gil Scott-Heron as much as the Roots and the Fugees. Strikingly professional and just plain good, ‘Soulaju’ would be a highlight for more mature artists, but is all the more remarkable as the duo’s debut album. In a way, though, it’s been years in the making…”

CLICK HERE to read the entire story.

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