Here’s a promo video for our monthly event Freaky Tiki Bass featuring one of my tunes. Big up to my friends Andre Ross and the Rude Behavior crew each and every time!
SXSW 2013 kickoff!

Elk Beats Radio guest mix

Huge thanx to EshOne for having me on his show last week. If you don’t know, EshOne hosts an awesome radio show on SubFM. The program in it’s entirety is now available to download or stream at elkbeats.com (click on the Elk Radio tab at the top of the page).
All original production and remixes on this one…
Here’s the track list:
Sebby Frescoe – Señoritas Riddim
Grupo Macao – El Retorno de la Chida (Sebby Frescoe bootleg)
Sebby Frescoe – Tamborsito Riddim (version)
Nava Show – La Guacharaquera (Sebby Frescoe bootleg) Jamalski version
? – Cumbia Tere (Sebby Frescoe bootleg)
Sebby Frescoe & Kyzer SaySo – Carnie Folk
Sebby Frescoe & Max Novak – Attitude
Sebby Frescoe – El Medio Estilo
Sebby Frescoe – Lets Go
Blackstar – Respiration (Sebby Frescoe remix)
Jai Riddim – Space Thug (Sebby Frescoe remix)
Sebby Frescoe – The Filth Element
Sebby Frescoe – Gutter Talk
Sebby Frescoe & Kyzer SaySo – No Time for Grouses
Sebby Frescoe – Abeyta Riddim
Sebby Frescoe – Abeyta Riddim (Max Novak’s Nightly version)
Sebby Frescoe – Delta
Sebby Frescoe – Retro Active
Sebby Frescoe – Poppy Fields
Sebby Frescoe – Afghanistan
Dos Mil Trece!
I’ve got some stuff planned for the year ahead, it’s looking pretty good so far.
A new EP arrives shortly on Kansas City based label Snatchy Trax. This one for the Dubsteppas, release details coming really soon… Another EP should follow soon with the antlered SoCal heard, watch out for a stampede! There’s a really interesting project in the works with some good local friends. Minds coming together and “collectively” making some amazing stuff… It’s gonna be a good look for the New Mexico sound system culture, stay tuned!
I’ll be in Austin again this year for SXSW. The Rogue Dubs/ Bass Invaders showcase will be on Monday night this year; heads up for the early week crew. I’m looking forward to seeing some great friends again this year.
Thanks for all the support and inspiration. Gonna be updating this page more often so don’t go too far.
Black Star – Respiration (Sebby Frescoe Moombass edit)
Link
Here’s an edit I’ve made using one of my favorite songs by the hip hop duo Black Star. I tried staying true to the original feel of the tune while speeding up the tempo and fortifying the low end. This one’s been entered into a remix competition via Legitmix, a new avenue for sample heavy music. Bump it and show some support, entries considered based on number of views/plays. Cheers!
The Chile Verde Mixtape
Recently I found time to record a mix that’s been bouncing around in my head for quite a while. The idea was to present a wide variety of music made and influenced by Latin America using bass as common ground between cultures and styles. Digging into my collection to rediscover forgotten gems and searching the endless stream of completely new tunes got me really into this project and even more excited about Latin music. I had a lot of fun with this one and I hope you do to!
Tracklist:
Los Mirlos – Sonido Amazonico
Los Destellos – Caminito Serrano
Andres Landeros – El Nacimiento de la Cumbia
Sonido Desconocido – VW Cumbia
Nortec Collective – El Fracaso
Sabo & Cassidy – Esa Loca Cumbia
Sebby Frescoe – Señoritas Riddim
Sonora – India Matea
Filastine – Shanty Tones
Nava Show – La Guacharaquera (Sebby Frescoe bootleg)
El Principe – Sonido del Principe
El Hijo de la Cumbia – Bombon Asesino Version
Daleduro – Bombon Asesino
Eshone – Sofistas
Mala – Cuba Electronic
Ibrahim Ferrer – Ay, Candela
Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto – Un Fuego De Sangre Pura
(2Melo Fuego de Cumbia refix)
DjR & 2 Deep – Otra Noche (Dj Melo remix)
Armando Hernandez y los Corraleros de Majagual – Sin Alma y Sin Cora
(Thornato remix)
Heartbreak – Chaavi
Don Valdez – En la Disco
Sebby Frescoe – Tamborsito Riddim
Billy The Gent – La Mania (Sabo’s Corto Edit)
Atropolis – Huepa’ Je
Maga Bo ft. Rosångela Macedo & Marcelo Yuka – No Balanço da Canoa
Defacto – Rodche Defects
Sub Conscious Sound takes shape
Sub Conscious Sound is a collaboration with my good friend and musical partner Mittens. We make and play sound system music. The weight carried by sub-sonic frequencies and the physical feeling of low-end resonance are the driving forces behind this project.
Check out the first couple tunes we’ve made here:
More tunes and DJ mixes can be found in the near future here:
A chat with Andre Ross
At the end of 2010, NPR’s Ann Powers wrapped up the year with a story aptly titled “The Year in Music: Dubstep’s Identity Crisis”. Written from an etic perspective, the story examined the stylistic and, to a certain extent, sub-cultural contention that exists between two distinct renditions of the genre. On one hand, we have the damp, atmospheric sound deserving of a namesake that brings to mind Jamaican masters like King Tubby and Lee “Scratch” Perry. On the other hand, we have the tactless, frat boy arousing gibberish that injects images of sadistic liaisons with power tools inside a crippled baggage claim on the dark side of LAX.
Now, forgive me for sounding like some PBR drinking, skinny jean squeezing hipster fuck-tard, but many electronic music fans were way ahead of Ann Powers on this one. From early on, interest in dubstep spread like MRSA at a rural Kentucky middle school. At first, this seemed like a good thing. Dubstep carries musical traits that seemed to cross sub-cultures—hell, for a while there it seemed poised to serve as a musical ambassador to connect the masses to other forms of underground electronic dance music. But all good things must come to an end when desperate record labels and branding experts realize there’s an accessible market. Now we’ve got misbegotten fashion victims like Skrillex winning Grammys by recording their vintage converse thrashing about in a washing machine.
Transitions in art feed off retaliation. Just as Romantic artists applied a painterly impasto and emotional themes to combat the linear coherence of their Neo Classical counterparts, many bass music producers are dropping the tempo and abandoning the wobble, creating a broad range of post-dubstep grooves that splash vivid bursts of color upon the electronic music soundscape.
Sebby Frescoe’s no stranger to the subtleties of bass music. Much of his early work channels the abysmal, delay-heavy alchemy that, for at least a little while, was a critical genome among outstanding dubstep cuts. Today the guy’s… well, he’s all over the place. Some of his tracks stylistically mirror elements of UK-Funky, a relatively recent subset of bass music that incorporates luscious elements of electro, techno and garage. Sometimes his work generates a distinctly Latin flavor, evident in his series of gyrating cumbia bootlegs. If one thing’s clear about Sebby Frescoe, it’s that his musical interests are limitless. So, without further ado, let’s kick off the first installment of The Soundboy Interviews.
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Let’s start with the mandatory opening questions: Where are you from? What are your influences?
So I grew up in Santa Fe. My whole family were pretty much artists. My father’s a painter, my grandfather’s a painter, my mom works with textiles and stuff. All my uncles were poets and musicians and writers, so there was always paintings on the walls and good books around. I guess it was always about painting. Music was always there, but I went to school for painting. I guess the music started kinda later when I started DJing. A friend of mine gave me a bunch of his old house records, so I stated learning how to beat match with those. Then I moved more into like the jungle sound. When I moved to Santa Cruz, I was exposed to more bass music. So that’s when I started making music, around 2002.
What made you transition into producing?
It was really because I just wanted to make my own stuff to play out, you know. I kinda got sick of playing other people’s tunes. It took me a little while before I could make a tune [good enough] that I could mix with something. But, you know, I got there.
What kind of music did you start producing and what are you doing now?
When I started it was dubstep. That’s back when dubstep was a lot more like dub music. It had a lot more space, more bass. It was way more about the low-end—the sub-bass—not as much mid-range. Tons of delay and reverb. Old dub music was a huge influence, along with newer stuff from Skream and Kode 9 and Distance—you know, what those guys were doing.
I started experimenting with different tempos, slowing it down to 130, making a skippidy beat. Now I’ve gone even further, making 100 BPM stuff. I’ve been using a lot of Latin stuff, like cumbia, which actually comes from Columbia and is actually one of the most listened-to music in the Americas. It’s pretty cool once you get into it.
So we’re all aware of dubstep’s alleged identity crisis. What do you make of that?
I definitely see that’s there’s two parts to [dubstep] right now. There is the more commerical side, which I don’t really associate with dub music. You have guys like Skrillex and Datsik making some really cool music, but I think a lot of it comes back to the younger kids not really knowing what dub is. They don’t know about the sound system culture and the roots of it. I think it’s about not understanding the history of the music. When I listen to music, I always want to know where it comes from, what the person who made it was listening to. You go back to that, then all of a sudden you’re learning about all kinds of other music and things you had no idea about.
What are you working on now?
I have a new EP coming up. More 130 bpm bass stuff. It’s coming out on Snatchy Tracks, which is the sister label to Rouge Dub (Kansas City, M.O.) who released my first EP. I’ve been working with M.C. Jamalski on some stuff. We have an EP we’re starting to put together. He’s a really fun guy to work with—sick M.C. Then there’s all sorts of random collaborations and remixes. You know, stuff like that.
Any advice for people getting into music production?
I would say don’t discount the old shit. Go back and listen to old music. There’s a lot of really good shit.
Any final thoughts?
I just love to make music. I think it’s something that we all need and a lot of people don’t get enough of. It’s essential to being alive. For me that’s all it about.
http://andreross.info
Estilo Cumbiero

Cumbia music has always been there. Throughout Latin America it has thrived in the barrios and discotecas of almost every Spanish-speaking country. Cumbia is music of the people and reflects the deep-rooted cultural traditions and histories of Latin America. Cumbia manifests in countless forms and evolving musical styles. It has been adopted by producers and musicians around the world and continues to gain popularity on dance floors everywhere.
In the spirit of a continued evolution of style I’ve begun a series featuring versions and edits of some popular cumbia throughout Latin America.These bootleg versions fuse cumbia and bass music producing quite a unique and interesting combination. Listen/ download the tunes here:
Señoritas Riddim Rewind
Last month was the initial installment of Albuquerque’s first tropical latin bass and moombahton event, Burqueton. We did it up with our southwest family for this one! In honor of this event my friends over at The Mixster were kind enough to feature one of my tunes on their site. If you missed out on grabbing your copy don’t panic, it’s still readily available for download in all its bass laden glory.
Enjoy!

