Unlikely 2.0


   None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free. —Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


Join our mailing list!


Google Custom Search


Recent Articles:

Editor's Note
Three Poems by Steve Dalachinsky
Three Poems by Dan Raphael
Three Poems by Sara Sutler-Cohen
Three Poems by Changming Yuan
Three Poems by David LaBounty
Two Poems by Mickey C.
Two Poems by Beth Fleeson
Two Poems by Justin Hyde
Three Poems by Aryan Kaganof
Gabriel Ricard reviews CPR for Dummies and interviews the author, Mickey Z.
Right Before the Scatter: Fiction by P. H. Madore
Outside: Fiction by Kevin Lavey
Beguiled by Beef: Fiction by Dawn Corrigan
Wife's two-pronged therapy approach forestall's husband's Thanksgiving pussy jokes: Fiction by Martin Jones
Ludmila's Voyage: A Novella by Amanda Earl
Chapters Fourteen through Sixteen of sLAsH by Bill Berry
Joe Bageant on the 2008 Belizean elections
Beena Sarwar on the attack on the Islamabad Marriott
It's the Derivatives, Stupid!: Why Frannie, Freddie, and AIG All Had to Be Bailed Out by Ellen Brown Subverting Democracy Through Electoral Fraud by Stephen Lendman
The Wicked Witch Gets Her Wish: A Short Film by Cecelia Chapman and Jeff Crouch
A Live Video Recording of The Pony Gropers of 910 Noise
Kane X. Faucher reviews Sensoria by Matina Stamatakis
Nine Altered Photographs by Anna Maly
Five Collages by Shane Allison


Bookmarks:

Goodreads
del.icio.us



The First Combination Special Video Contest


Have you seen Wendy Taylor Carlisle's new page?


337 Screw

Sketta LeeAs a young man, Damien Lee Benoit named himself and his computer 337 Screw; 337 being his area code in Louisiana and his middle name upside down, "screw" being the slowed-down style of DJing popular in the American South. He and his friends took the name and laid down comedy tracks, which he mixed with urban and hip-hop beats.

After Damien established work in the USAF, he built a mixing studio and met rappers KDuBB, from Virginia, and Cee, from New Jersey. He renamed himself Sketta Lee and created solo albums for the three of them, as well as an album for the three of them together, under the revived band name 337 Screw. Sketta Lee now has a second album out, Getting What I Want, and KDuBB's second album is slated for the future. Check out their full range of work, and info on the earlier 337 Screw tracks, at www.337studios.com, and read the Unlikely interview with Sketta Lee by Avalon Frost. If you like their work, why not drop a donation of any size with the button below? This site takes no cut.

We present three tracks from Sketta Lee and 337 Screw. "What They Want" is a dynamic, anarchistic celebration of paranoia and self-assurance. "Can't Be Chopped" is a classic, rebellious hip-hop anthem, and "Keep Studying Freestyle" is a particularly funky study of, er, mostly it's a study of funkiness. Enjoy. —JP

The music of 337 Screw on Unlikely 2.0 for one year, then was removed for reasons of space and copyright. Please check out the 337 Studios web site.

E-mail this article

You will need an MP3 player to hear the music, such as the free Winamp.


Comments

No comments yet
*Name:
Email:
Notify me about new comments on this page
Hide my email
*Text:
 
Powered by Scriptsmill Comments Script