Showing posts with label Eric Mire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eric Mire. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

What I'm Watching: Melissa Czarnik "Stay High" feat. Patrice Downey



Last week Milwaukee's Melissa Czarnik reached a fundraising goal that will allow her to head out to France to record her next album. To celebrate, she released the Dylan Thomas produced Stay High, which features Patrice Downey. The video is directed by long time collaborator Eric Mire and Melissa herself. Enjoy. And good luck and congrats Melissa!

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Thursday, February 03, 2011

What I'm Watching ... Melissa Czarnik "Love Train"


Melissa Czarnik "Love Train" from Hyperdrive Motivator Productions on Vimeo.


Melissa Czarnik returns with "Love Train" produced by Eric Mire, in this self directed video. "Love Train" is one of my favorite tracks on Czarnik's Raspberry Jesus, which was released last year. I definitely dig the old school black and white feel of the video. Enjoy.

www.melissaczarnik.com

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Monday, November 08, 2010

What I'm Watching ... Melissa Czarnik "Hand Me the Mic"



From producer to director, Eric Mire jumps behind the lens in the new Melissa Czarnik video, "Hand Me the Mic." It's a pretty fresh video for a pretty fresh track. The Czarnik / Mire duo continue to create great music, with some dope visuals to match. Check it out.

www.melissaczarnik.com

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Monday, January 04, 2010

"Saturday" @EricMire Band feat. @MelissaCzarnik

Check out the new video from the Milwaukee based Eric Mire Band featuring Melissa Czarnik. The video was directed by my favorite MKE filmaker, Darren Cole. Enjoy.



www.cdbaby.com/cd/ericmire2
www.cdbaby.com/cd/melissaczarnik

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Monday, December 21, 2009

Happy Happy Joy JOY ... @EricMire and @MelissaCzarnik "Oh Come All Ye Faithful" [LIVE]


I caught this joint in an email from Melissa Czarnik (one of the coolest people I've ever met that I never met in person). Czarnik performed "Oh Come All Ye Faithful" with the Eric Mire Band down at WMSE 91.7 FM (Milwaukee) as part of a 12 song Christmas album sponsored by ThirdCoast Digest and WMSE.
"Poet/emcee Melissa Czarnik often performs live with the Eric Mire Band, a jazz-hip hop group, to blend Czarnik’s heartfelt and punchy lyrics with the bands funky and soulful rhythms. They were partners in our holiday song project, and the result is “O Come All Ye Faithful” as it’s never been heard before. The band comprises guitarist Eric Mire on guitar, Chip Baily (drums), Brad Bloom (sax), Don Bradshaw (Latin percussion) and Maurice Cotton (keys/vocals)."




You can view more videos from the project here:
thirdcoastdigest.com/2009/12/12-songs-holiday-project

Melissa Czarnik, "Strawberry Cadillac" - www.cdbaby.com/melissaczarnik ($7.99)
Eric Mire Band, "Spooky Love" - www.cdbaby.com/ericmire2 ($7.99)
Eric Mire, "eric mire" - www.cdbaby.com/ericmire ($7.99)


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Saturday, September 05, 2009

Download ... Melissa Czarnik "Local Live"


Free download of Melissa Czarnik's latest release "Local Live". The project is a collection of four songs she performed live on 91.7 WMSE-FM with the Eric Mire Band. Download and enjoy some good music.


Local Live (Click to Download)

Friday, April 24, 2009

Q&A with Melissa Czarnik


Three years ago we launched The Mad Bloggers as a way to vent about the way we saw thing in the world. Then we began to morph and push music. Twenty-four days ago, we re-launched The Mad Bloggers, with a bit of our old sarcastic edge coupled with a desire to share real music and talented artists.

It’s because of commercial radio, MTV, BET and other commercial outlets that our site and other sites like ours can exist. I turned off the radio a few months ago because every time it was on, there was some new instructional dance garbage passing itself off as real music. Because of our discontent with mainstream music, we constantly comb the Internet for good, unheard of and mostly underground music. We then share it here with you.

Melissa Czarnik is one of those finds. She is one of the first heads that we spotlighted on our revamped blog in early April. I was immediately impressed with the emcee out of Milwaukee. To me, she has content and a lyrical delivery to back it up. Her music has something a lot of music on the radio is missing – passion. I’m happy to support real music. Melissa has an album out, Strawberry Cadillac, which is available on iTunes. Get that! Only $9.99.

Like I said, we’ve featured her music in the past but wanted to take an opportunity to do a Q&A and hear from the woman behind the music. Check out what she had to say.

The Mad Bloggers: How do you describe what you do? Like, would you consider yourself an emcee, poet, etc?

Melissa Czarnik: I consider myself a poet/emcee. I read a lot of poetry. I work at a destination poetry bookstore, Woodland Pattern Book Center, which brings in poets from across the nation and so I’m constantly surrounded by inspiring wordsmiths. I also grew up on hip-hop. Some of my favorites are Talib Kweli and right now I’m bumping that Diamond District like crazy. I mix the two together sort of naturally. I think the one thing that defines me, as poet/emcee, is that I don’t pay any attention to the rules of hip-hop (per say). That whole verse, chorus, verse, chorus thing ain’t really my thing. If I want to have a 24 bar poem that leads into a 16 bar verse that exits back into a 24 bar poem then that’s what I’ll do.

TMB: I know you're pushing the Spooky Love project right now for Eric Mire but what's the next project coming up for just you? How much time do you spend per week dedicated to music?

MC: I am working on my next album right now. I’m setting a deadline for late 2009, but I don’t want to rush it if it’s not ready but that’s what I’m aiming for. In terms of time spent working on music, I feel like all my free time goes towards working on music. Because when I’m reading, I’m furthering my vocabulary and my knowledge, which eventually ends up in my rhymes. When I’m listening to music, I’m constantly analyzing, “OK, what did I like about this, what can I borrow from to make my music better.” And in terms of writing, I’m always writing. Now whether it ends up in a song or not is one thing but like I always say a “line of rhyme a day, keeps the haters at bay!”

TMB: Shows, events that are upcoming and exciting?

MC: Actually yes! I have very exciting news, The Eric Mire Band, a jazzy, hip-hop, folk group that backs me up at my live show is releasing their first group album, “Spooky Love” on May 9th. I’m featured on a couple of the tracks so I’m extra hype on that. And Eric Mire, who is also my producer and guitar player, is coming with me to Europe at the end of May for about 10 days to try and do some international promotion and performing.

TMB: You're a female ... how does that play in hip-hop for you? (Woman in mainstream music often had to come off more sexual than talented for example) Do you see it as an issue in presenting who you are?

MC: I see it as an issue for women in general, more than just for me. I mean women in music often use their bodies to sell themselves. The problem starts with mainstream record labels putting a pretty face before talent. The next thing you know you got little girls growing up thinking all I got to do is look sexy, play dumb and I’ll get ahead in life. I think that’s why I look up to women like Ani Difranco, india.arie, and Lauryn Hill. Cause these are women who are talented, intelligent, and naturally sexy. I mean Lauryn Hill could rock a mini-skirt and some combat boots and be sexy as all hell, and yet kill whatever Pras or Clef were spittin next to her. Which actually brings me to your first question about being a female in hip-hop. I feel that I constantly have to watch my back cause it’s a male dominated game. I want to be strong, taken seriously, but at the same time I don’t want to hide my sexiness. I also want to make sure people like me for my talent and not for my body. So at one show I might be rocking a dress and the next show I’m in dickies, timbs, and a hoodie. But, I usually always got some sneakers on or some boots, cause you never know when you’re gonna have to take off running!

TMB: If there was one thing you could change about that state of hip-hop right now, what would it be?

MC: I would like to change the fact that most of the hip-hop you hear on the radio today is garbage, degrading, and mindless. I would like to make it so that in order to get on the radio, young emcees had to aspire to be uplifting and have heart.


Check it out:
Rue Lafeyette is one of my favorite joints. It’s a love song about Paris (not Hilton). It’s inspired by a trip Melissa took to Paris in 2004.



More on Melissa Czarnik, www.myspace.com/melissaczarnik

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Check out Eric Mire

Dope intro by Melissa Czarnik (What I'm Listening to, A Second Listen), vocals by Eric Mire and watch out for that sax at the end! Yes, that's a band on the track (The Eric Mire Band is out of Milwaukee). Something caught me when I heard it. It's kind of spoken word like. Listen to Loose Ends (Click to Listen), a poetic track off Eric Mire's upcoming release "Spooky Love" out May 5, 2009. More info: www.myspace.com/ericmire