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Silent Poets

Silent Poets

Silent Poets has been played on NTS over 20 times, featured on 21 episodes and was first played on 8 October 2013.

Silent Poets made approximately six albums between 1994 and 1999, not counting the remix projects that sometimes seemed to garner more attention than the original releases.

Our rap-featuring playlist notwithstanding, Michiharu Shimoda (programming, keyboard, sampler, turntable) and Takahiro Haruno (programming, sax, keyboard) were far from what you and I understand to be hip-hop producers. But I guess you could say they approached the matter more serious than others outside of hip-hop who every now and then guest-feature rappers. I derive that from the fact that they worked with the very godfathers of rap, the Last Poets, as early as 1994, when hip-hop's young generation was as self-absorbed as ever.

Like their countryman DJ Krush, the Silent Poets turned more abstract over the '90s, as indicated by their guests on "Prisons" (off 1999's "To Come…"), New York underground crew the Anomolies. But where Krush has wandered off into realms of abstractness beyond anything remotely catchy, the Poets, on their journey from dub to downbeat and back, managed to keep up the groovy appearances, at least in parts.

While that is all I have to report on the Silent Poets, you're not to be lost in translation altogether. The Silent Poets speak the universal language of music, whether amongst themselves on the instrumental "Mass" (off 1996's "Firm Roots") or supported by guests such as Last Poets Jalaluddin Mansur Nuriddin and Sulieman El-Hadi on "Inquizative, Derivative" (off 1994's "Words and Silence").

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Silent Poets

Silent Poets has been played on NTS over 20 times, featured on 21 episodes and was first played on 8 October 2013.

Silent Poets made approximately six albums between 1994 and 1999, not counting the remix projects that sometimes seemed to garner more attention than the original releases.

Our rap-featuring playlist notwithstanding, Michiharu Shimoda (programming, keyboard, sampler, turntable) and Takahiro Haruno (programming, sax, keyboard) were far from what you and I understand to be hip-hop producers. But I guess you could say they approached the matter more serious than others outside of hip-hop who every now and then guest-feature rappers. I derive that from the fact that they worked with the very godfathers of rap, the Last Poets, as early as 1994, when hip-hop's young generation was as self-absorbed as ever.

Like their countryman DJ Krush, the Silent Poets turned more abstract over the '90s, as indicated by their guests on "Prisons" (off 1999's "To Come…"), New York underground crew the Anomolies. But where Krush has wandered off into realms of abstractness beyond anything remotely catchy, the Poets, on their journey from dub to downbeat and back, managed to keep up the groovy appearances, at least in parts.

While that is all I have to report on the Silent Poets, you're not to be lost in translation altogether. The Silent Poets speak the universal language of music, whether amongst themselves on the instrumental "Mass" (off 1996's "Firm Roots") or supported by guests such as Last Poets Jalaluddin Mansur Nuriddin and Sulieman El-Hadi on "Inquizative, Derivative" (off 1994's "Words and Silence").

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

(There's Always) Meaning In The Tone
Silent Poets
Bellissima Records1993
Shalom
Silent Poets
Bellissima Records1994
Moment Scale (Remix)
Silent Poets
Bellissima Records1993
Talk Is Toy (Skylab Remix Inst)
Silent Poets (Skylab mix)
Idyllic Records1996
Stowing Away (Natural Calamity Remix)
Silent Poets (Natural Calamity mix)
Idyllic Records1996
Someday
Silent Poets feat. Anomolies (Extended Spirit mix)
Atlantic2001
Stowing Air (Fila Brazillia Remix)
Silent Poets (Fila Brazillia mix)
Idyllic Records1996
Traveling Down
Silent Poets
99 Records1996
A Fork In The Road
Silent Poets
Idyllic Records1999
Get Ready
Silent Poets feat. Ursula Rucker
Idyllic Records1997