description
Sureshot Symphony Solution Theme
Chair On The Ceiling
Hate The Real
Half Man, Half Bionic
Four Twenty
Mr. Fortune & Fame
You Can't Keep Running Away From Love
Taste It
Tell Me What You See
Singing Memories
Easier Said Than Done
Skeletons
Soundbwoy Massacre
In The Name Of The Father
Chait On The Ceiling (Instrumental)
Hate The Real (Instrumental)
Half Man, Half Bionic (Instrumental)
Four Twenty (Instrumental)
Mr. Fortune & Fame (Instrumental)
You Can't Keep Running Away From Love (Instrumental)
Taste It (Instrumental)
Tell Me What You See (Instrumental)
Singing Memories (Instrumental)
Easier Said Than Done (Instrumental)
Skeletons (Instrumental)
Soundbwoy Massacre (Instrumental)
Easier Said Than Done (Instrumental)
As one half of the production duo Sharpshooters, DJ Sureshot helped bridge the gap between hip-hop and jazz in the early days of what would come to be known as acid jazz. The duo’s classic 1996 debut Choked Up was a mixture of live instruments and sample-heavy boom bap that helped put their hometown of Seattle on the hip-hop map. Sureshot’s crate-digging expertise later led him to release some popular break records and reissues, and in recent years he’s become active in the vibrant music scene of the city he now calls home, San Francisco. Taking the next step in his own musical evolution, DJ Sureshot is now proud to present his highly anticipated new project, the Symphony Symphony Solution. After an intro EP earlier this year, the debut SSS full-length Elegant Aggression is now set to hit stores.
Blending hard-hitting hip hop beats seemlessly with lush live jazz-rock instrumentation, the Sureshot Symphony Solution is an eclectic mix of musical styles with a heavy emphasis on experimentation. "The whole project is psychedelic-influenced," explains Surehot. "Whether it's a soul song, a rap song, or a Reggae track, it's all based on that late 60s, early 70s psychedelic sound." With vocalists ranging from underground hip-hop stalwart Ohmega Watts to neo-soul favorite Coultrain to Reggae crooner Noel Ellis to Northern Soul legend The Mighty Pope, Sureshot has crafted a project that defies typical genre boundaries. "I've been exposed to a lot of music over the years," he says. "I'm constantly learning, constantly evolving, constantly trying to take chances and push myself." While the music may be diverse, it's unified by Sureshot's boom-bap mentality. "All my music has a hard edge to it," he explains. "Even if it has the feel of an old library record or soundtrack, it still has that hard hip-hop beat behind it. That's why I called it Elegant Aggression."
Producer
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DJ Sureshot