Soul of SydneyTV: Full Concert – Michael Jackson – HIstory World Tour (Munich, Germany 1997) | FULL CONCERT, FULL VIDEO, RARE SHOW. michael jackson, download, concert, rare, full video,
Soul Of Sydney, Soul Sounds & Mama Feel-Good Funk Collective will be throwing down the goodness this weekend with a stack PRINCE inspired SOUL, FUNK & BOOGIE as well a solid dose of PRINCE gems from 10pm THIS SATURDAY (MAY 12th).
THE PRINCE AFTER PARTY – TRIBUTE!
Right after the Concert from 10pm – Late This Saturday (May 12th).
Tracklist: Can I kick It Intro – A Tribe Called Quest
Dirty Old Bassa Nova – Howard Roberts Quartet
Jam – A Tribe Called Quest
Jazz…(We’ve Got) – A Tribe Called Quest
Love Your Life – Average White Band
Check The Rhime – A Tribe Called Quest
Award Tour – A Tribe Called Quest
Oh My God – A Tribe Called Quest
Who’s Gonna Take the Weight – Kool & The Gang
Buggin Out – A Tribe Called Quest
Can I kick It – A Tribe Called Quest
Hot Sex – A Tribe Called Quest
Scenario – A Tribe Called Quest
Daylight – Ramp
Bonita Applebum – A Tribe Called Quest
Technova – Towa Tei
Find A Way – A Tribe Called Quest
On The Road Again feat. Q-Tip (Remix) – Jungle Brothers
Wrath Of My Madness – Queen Latifah
Straight out the Jungle – Jungle Brothers
The Choice is Yours (Revisited) – Black Sheep
Buddy (12″ Remix) – De La Soul
Because I got it like that – Jungle Brothers
You Can Make It If You Try – Sly & The Family Stone –
Crossword Puzzle – Sly & The Family Stone
Say No Go – De La Soul
It’s A Shame – Spinners
It’s A Shame – Monie Love
40days – Billy Brooks
Catch STOLEN RECORDS on Sunsets, Wednesdays from 6PM on FBi 94.5FM
Shantan Wantan Ichiban (aka Emperor Nasi Goreng) and Donny Trump mash up the ill-est local and overseas Hip Hop; Grime; Mormon Gangsta Hyphy; Baltimore; Dancehall; Reggae; Nu Soul and New Jack. We pride ourselves on our off-the-wall freestyle sessions, bumping guest DJ sets and Q&A style interviews of only the best hip hop journalistic quality.
If you would like to get at us with any requests, comments, death threats and ‘Hey? what is that track?’ then hit us up at stolenrecords@fbiradio.com. Alternatively if you’re mean keen to see our playlist after each show, or previous shows, we upload them on our programs page right here.
Stolen Records represents all things Hip Hop in Sydney, and of course the land down unda! We are proud to rep our local emcee’s, DJs, singers, dancers, breakers, shakers and fried chicken makers. And mostly importantly we’re here to support community radio on FBi, so show some lover-lover and lets be friends.
Iconic east coast Hop Hop MC ‘Guru’ from Gangstarr (with DJ Premier) & Jazzmatazz Vol 1-4 suffered a heart attack & is presently in coma in a NYC hospital.
To show some love & pay homage to the legendary Hop Hop, Jazz & Soul messenger we put together a mini tribute including a rare live clip of his Sydney concert freestyle in 2004, our favourite releases & even tribute mix-tapes from around the world.
Get well soon Guru!!
Best of wishes & many blessings to you at your ‘moment of truth’…
Guru Live in Sydney 2004
GURU freestylin’ with Chug @ The Basement in Sydney 2004.
Moment of Truth
Royalty
Lifesaver
‘The Tipping Point’ Radio Show Guru Special
Check the Guru special on Sydneys own weekly hip hop radio show ‘The Tipping Point’ on radio Alchemy, with Kween G and Ran-Dee
From the underground to the mainstream, The Tipping Point redefines the future of Hip Hop music as it brings you cutting edge new beats. Each week a local and international guests drop into the studios including the legendary Afrika Bambaataa and Australia’s own Bliss N Eso. The Tipping Point is all about spreading love to Hip Hop Communities world wide as well as paying respects our local scene.
Check out ‘The Tipping Point’ every Tuesday at 11pm on Alchemy radio (97.7 FM ) or Info & Streaming here
Iconic east coast Hop Hop MC ‘Guru’ from Gangstarr (with DJ Premier) & Jazzmatazz Vol 1-4 suffered a heart attack & is presently in coma in a NYC hospital.
To show some love & pay homage to the legendary Hop Hop, Jazz & Soul messenger we put together a mini tribute including a rare live clip of his Sydney concert freestyle in 2004, our favourite releases & even tribute mix-tapes from around the world.
Get well soon Guru!!
Best of wishes & many blessings to you at your ‘moment of truth’…
Guru Live in Sydney 2004
GURU freestylin’ with Chug @ The Basement in Sydney 2004.
Moment of Truth
Royalty
Lifesaver
‘The Tipping Point’ Radio Show Guru Special
Check the Guru special on Sydneys own weekly hip hop radio show ‘The Tipping Point’ on radio Alchemy, with Kween G and Ran-Dee
From the underground to the mainstream, The Tipping Point redefines the future of Hip Hop music as it brings you cutting edge new beats. Each week a local and international guests drop into the studios including the legendary Afrika Bambaataa and Australia’s own Bliss N Eso. The Tipping Point is all about spreading love to Hip Hop Communities world wide as well as paying respects our local scene.
Check out ‘The Tipping Point’ every Tuesday at 11pm on Alchemy radio (97.7 FM ) or Info & Streaming here
This is a mix we put together right after witnessing the magic of ‘Stevie Wonder’ live @ Acer Arena, Sydney, October 22 2008, its a mix with some of the Funk, Foul & Disco gems of he has put out over the year. It should be perfect for an Australia Day BBQ in the sun,
ARE you with me? Are we together?” cried Stevie Wonder at the top of a reggae-tinged Master Blaster, asking perhaps the most superfluous question in the history of questions. If love was in need of love in 1976 – as the man born Stevland Hardaway Judkins put it on his classic album Songs In The Key Of Life – there was certainly no shortage of it last night.
Wonder gave love, dedicating the whole show to the Four Tops singer Levi Stubbs, who died this week, before a jubilant rendition of the soul band’s classic I Can’t Help Myself. (It ended with Wonder crying visible tears.)
And boy, did he receive love. Before his daughter, Aisha Morris, had even led him all the way to his piano and banks of keyboards, the sold-out arena screamed with adulation.
Wonder at first just ambled towards the centre of the stage, beat-boxing to himself. Then he pulled out a harmonica, jammed along with his band to a Miles Davis jazz classic and pretty much earned every last scream.
His band was deliciously tight – a crack 14-piece unit including multiple horns, guitars and percussionists – and their leader almost shone with the star power and charisma you expected. You can still see that he really feels the music, loves hearing it and can’t get enough of playing it.
Sure, but it’s hard to think he could put a foot wrong. Really, he could have just stood at the stage for two hours humming to himself and this would have been a triumph. As it was, he played some mighty fine soul and funk as well as the occasional flourish of jazz and reggae groove.
By the end of the show we’d seen it all. A suspiciously good singer, “plucked out of the audience”, duetting with his idol; a barrage of hits, good and not so good (but still irresistible), often jazzed up. And the presentation of a lifetime achievement award for sales in excess of 1 million in Australia before a roof-raising Superstition.
This is a mix we put together right after witnessing the magic of ‘Stevie Wonder’ live @ Acer Arena, Sydney, October 22 2008, its a mix with some of the Funk, Foul & Disco gems of he has put out over the year. It should be perfect for an Australia Day BBQ in the sun,
“ARE you with me? Are we together?” cried Stevie Wonder at the top of a reggae-tinged Master Blaster, asking perhaps the most superfluous question in the history of questions. If love was in need of love in 1976 – as the man born Stevland Hardaway Judkins put it on his classic album Songs In The Key Of Life – there was certainly no shortage of it last night.
Wonder gave love, dedicating the whole show to the Four Tops singer Levi Stubbs, who died this week, before a jubilant rendition of the soul band’s classic I Can’t Help Myself. (It ended with Wonder crying visible tears.)
And boy, did he receive love. Before his daughter, Aisha Morris, had even led him all the way to his piano and banks of keyboards, the sold-out arena screamed with adulation.
Wonder at first just ambled towards the centre of the stage, beat-boxing to himself. Then he pulled out a harmonica, jammed along with his band to a Miles Davis jazz classic and pretty much earned every last scream.
His band was deliciously tight – a crack 14-piece unit including multiple horns, guitars and percussionists – and their leader almost shone with the star power and charisma you expected. You can still see that he really feels the music, loves hearing it and can’t get enough of playing it.
Sure, but it’s hard to think he could put a foot wrong. Really, he could have just stood at the stage for two hours humming to himself and this would have been a triumph. As it was, he played some mighty fine soul and funk as well as the occasional flourish of jazz and reggae groove.
By the end of the show we’d seen it all. A suspiciously good singer, “plucked out of the audience”, duetting with his idol; a barrage of hits, good and not so good (but still irresistible), often jazzed up. And the presentation of a lifetime achievement award for sales in excess of 1 million in Australia before a roof-raising Superstition.