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Potatohead People - Eat Your Heart Out  - New LP Record 2024 Bastard Jazz UK Silver Vinyl - Electronic / Downtempo / Hip Hop / Funk

Potatohead People - Eat Your Heart Out - New LP Record 2024 Bastard Jazz UK Silver Vinyl - Electronic / Downtempo / Hip Hop / Funk

Regular price $26.99 $0.00

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Vancouver’s premiere multi-faceted production duo Potatohead People (aka Nick Wisdom &AstroLogical) make their long awaited return to Bastard Jazz with their 4th album, ‘Eat Your Heart Out’. Jumping off on the polished production sensibilities that they have become heavily fetishized for over the last decade, the album finds the duo further stepping out from the shadow of the boards and stepping into the spotlight as vocalists, songwriters, and performers standing strong in their own respect. “Eat Your Heart Out” is an album about our most connected human emotion: love & the ways it comes into play in our lives. Loving something unattainable, our initial infatuation often confused with love, longing for something that is no more, finding new partners, missing our partners, being in two different places in a relationship, feeling the stability that love gives. It’s deeply woven into the musical motif of the album. The duo shows exponential growth as they reach into new sonic palates they haven’t touched in the past,. Even more exciting- the vast array of talent appearing on the album. Bonafide Hip-Hop legend Redman is in top form on the classic Rhodes driven Hip-Hop sound of “Last Nite” while the Potatohead-sung hook is hazy & infectious. Los Angeles beat scene legend Shafiq Husayn (Anderson Paak, Jill Scott, Bilal, Sa-Ra) rides the slow analog funk of “Angelwings” down Wilshire Blvd, and Norwegian Hip-Hop wunderkind Ivan Ave picks things up on the second verse. Van City’s latest steamy export Diamond Cafe delivers a stunning performance on the early 80s influenced digital sex-funk that is “Paradise”–coming in somewhere between Sade, El Debarge and PrefabSprout. Longtime Rap favorites Abstract Rude & T3 (of Slum Village) meet frequent collaborator Kapok for “Come Home”, a beautiful swirling joint with strings, spacey keys, and Potatohead’s signature hook lamenting a lost love.