N.A.S.A.

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  • "North American South America"
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  • Bio: N.A.S.A., and their worldwide debut The Spirit of Apllo, is an ongoing creative collaboration between two lifelong music aficionados, Squeak E. Clean and DJ Zegon, and their ... (more)
  • Bio: N.A.S.A., and their worldwide debut The Spirit of Apllo, is an ongoing creative collaboration between two lifelong music aficionados, Squeak E. Clean and DJ Zegon, and their friends, friends of friends and musical heroes.

    While N.A.S.A. stands for North America/South America and contains a number of superstar artists from both coasts of the U.S., it is about as far from a tension-building geographical showdown as a record can get. Rather, The Spirit of Apollo was born with the righteous goal of bringing people together through music and art, and that is exactly what masterminds Sam Spiegel (Squeak E. Clean) and Ze Gonzales (DJ Zegon) have done.

    Unexpected collaborations abound on the seventeen track release. Tom Waits growls over Kool Keith, Karen O taunts while Ol’ Dirty Bastard gives shoutouts to Wu Tang and N.A.S.A from the grave, and David Byrne, Chuck D and others expound on the evils of “Money.” In spite of the range of performers, the pairings seem organic, inspired and make perfect sense on the first listen, never coming off as ironic or impulsive. Spiegel explains that the tracks themselves dictated who would be approached to lend a voice, revealing the larger vision behind the project: “we never said, ‘let’s make a track for this person.’ We’d usually make something we liked, and then as we were starting to write the song, it would tend to go in a direction that we’d be like, ‘this sounds like George Clinton,’ or ‘this sounds like Method Man.’ We would start to feel the song out, and feel the artist through the song as we did it. Basically, we’d sit around as we were making these tracks and say the nuttiest combination of names, like our dream of who we could get on the song. It’s crazy, a lot of times they actually happened.”

    That passion and appreciation for music is the driving force behind The Spirit of Apollo. Conceived in a crowded party in Sao Paulo and nurtured by a shared love of vintage Brazilian soul and funk records, N.A.S.A. was born when Spiegel and Gonzales got together in a studio and hit “record.” “WE met at DVNO's studio party,” Spiegel reminisces. “The next day we were flipping a Toni Tornado sample at my studio which later became the song ‘Hip Hop’ with Fatlip, KRS One, and Slim Kid Tre.” Five years later, after thousands of miles traveled, many favors called in, countless hours spent in recording studios, bartered, traded and out of pocket, N.A.S.A. landed at Anti Records, a label that is home to other likeminded visionaries such as Zack de la Rocha, Nick Cave and N.A.S.A.-guest vocalist Tom Waits.

    Characteristically, N.A.S.A. is more than just a record. The enthusiasm and connections of Sam Spiegel and Ze Gonzales cannot be contained by a single album, so the project naturally expanded into other mediums. A full-length documentary film is nearing completion, including interviews with many of the artists who contributed to The Spirit of Apollo and behind-the-scenes footage from the studio sessions. Highlights include fun at Sizzla’s compound in Jamaica, Method Man showing off his magic tricks and the altered consciousness of the George Clinton recording session. In addition, other N.A.S.A. friends have lent their visual talents, and animated music videos for several of The Spirit of Apollo’s tracks have been created by some of today’s most highly-regarded street artists such as Shepard Fairey, Sage Vaughn, Barry McGee, Marcel Dzama and others. A remix record is already in the works, and Squeak E. Clean and DJ Zegon will put their turntable skills to good use as N.A.S.A. goes live with Brazilian percussionists, visual effects, art installations and special guests.

    The N.A.S.A. project is permeated by Brazilian funk, which provides the roots of the songs and binds them together into a cohesive whole, but from there, the imagination behind The Spirit of Apollo ranges far and wide. “Whachadoin?” featuring M.I.A, Santogold, the electro-rap ingenuity of Spank Rock and Nick Zinner from the Yeah Yeah Yeahs is spontaneous and playful, and is perhaps the first song to get funky with a dial tone. “The Mayor,” featuring Ghostface Killah, Scarface, indie-darlings the Cool Kids and Hollywood scene-maker DJ AM has a laidback Superfly vibe, while “Electric Flowers,” with Cardigans singer Nina Persson and Wu Tang Clan’s RZA, has a downbeat chilled-out feel. “Strange Enough” pairs Karen O of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs with Fatlip and Ol’ Dirty Bastard, on the last song ODB recorded before his untimely death in 2004. On “N.A.S.A. Music” Method Man gives a shout out to Spiegel’s recording studio, Crack Alley, while E40 chews on his vowels and together, the two wrap up The Spirit of Apollo into a single chorus: “from New York to the Bay yo / Sao Paulo to LA yo / nobody move until we say so / they wanna know who got that N.A.S.A. music.”

    Spiegel sees it as more of an extension of the rest of his life. "No rules. That's the M.O."

    N.A.S.A. The Spirit of Apollo tracklist:

    Intro
    People Tree (feat. David Byrne, Chali 2na, Gift Of Gab and Z-Trip)
    N.A.S.A. Music (feat. E40, Method Man and DJ Swamp)
    Way Down (feat. RZA, Barbie Hatch and John Frusciante)
    Hip Hop (feat. KRS-One, Fatlip and Slim Kid Tre)
    Four Rooms, Earth View
    Money (feat. David Byrne, Chuck D, Seu Jorge, Ras Congo and Z-Trip)
    Strange Enough (feat. Karen O, Ol' Dirty Bastard and Fatlip)
    A Volta (feat. Sizzla, Lovefoxx and Amanda Blank)
    Spacious Thoughts (feat. Tom Waits and Kool Keith)
    Electric Flowers (feat. Nina Persson and RZA)
    There's A Party (feat. George Clinton and Chali 2na)
    O Pato (feat. Kool Kojak)
    Whachadoin? (feat. M.I.A., Santogold, Spank Rock and Nick Zinner)
    The Mayor (feat. Ghostface Killah, Scarface, Cool Kids and DJ AM)
    Samba Soul (feat. Del Tha Funkee Homosapien and DJ Qbert)
    Outro




    Sam Spiegel is a composer, producer, DJ and remixer who launched his music career after heading west from his hometown of New York and began DJ'ing clubs and events around Los Angeles. Not long after, his annual signature party SUDs gathered celebrities and cool kids at unconventional venues in Los Angeles, including a laundromat and a car wash. Sam has spun everywhere – from award shows and clubs to premieres and parties and fashion shows in Japan, Brazil, Morocco, Canada, Australia, England and all over the US.

Spiegel frequently collaborates with his brother, filmmaker Spike Jonze. Notably, he scored and compiled the soundtrack for the Jonze-directed cult classic “Yeah Right!” (the top-selling skateboard movie of all time), and the two worked together with Karen O from the Yeah Yeah Yeahs on an Adidas commercial that won the Gold Lion for Best Music at the 2005 Cannes International Advertising Festival and Silver for Original Music at the 2006 Clio Awards.

    While Spiegel has produced and remixed tracks for Maroon 5, Iggy Pop, Kylie Minogue, the Eels, Ben Lee, the Cardigans and many more, 2006 marked the first Squeak E. Clean fully-produced album. Show Your Bones, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs sophomore record, was named "Album of the Year" by the likes of Rolling Stone, NME, and Spin, and was nominated for a Grammy for best alternative album. Most recently, Spiegel contributed songs to the highly-anticipated documentary film Beautiful Losers, which documents many of the artists who have contributed artwork to the N.A.S.A project, including Shepard Fairey, Barry McGee and Mark Gonzalez. He also scored “EA Skate 2” for Electronic Arts.

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    A professional skateboarder who has evolved into one of the most sought after, cutting-edge DJs in South America, Ze Gonzales (aka DJ Zegon) has carved out his own musical niche that marries traditional Brazilian beats with underground hip hop, creating a sound and vibe that places Zegon in a class all his own.

    By the late 80’s Zegon was making his name as a DJ in both Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, playing records by the likes of Cash Money, Schooly D and Public Enemy at a time when most Brazilians were clubbing to heavy metal and limp-wristed pop, but it wasn’t until the early 90’s that Zegon committed himself fully to music. In 1994, Zegon met Marcelo D2 from the up-and-coming rap-rock hybrid group Planet Hemp, and one week later, Ze was introduced to the rest of the band – onstage and without rehearsal -- at his first show with them. “It’s funny how Planet Hemp became so mainstream," Ze reflects. "After that first show we opened up for the Beastie Boys and Cypress Hill and got signed to Sony." In 1998, after being banned in several cities for their outspoken lyrics railing against corruption in the government and police force and, of course, the rules against marijuana, the group was arrested and imprisoned for inciting a riot in the capital city of Brasilia. After a week in jail, the band was freed to find their popularity skyrocketing. Within two months, more than one million Planet Hemp CDs had been sold in Brazil, leading to tours in Europe, Japan and the United States.

    Recently, Ze spent two years in Los Angeles working with longtime friend - and fellow Brazilian -- Mario C, producer and engineer extraordinaire behind such artists as Beastie Boys, Tone Loc, Young MC and Bjork.
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Money (The Count Of Monte Cristal 'Dungeon' Remix)

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Money 12" single