June 3, 2010

Brand new Hip Hop History mix for the year 2000 from The Rub! Read all about it!

The_Rub_photo_credit_Ian_Meyer 01

If you’re following the Let’s mix blog, you know we’re big fans of Brooklyn DJ collective The Rub here at the office. In what is no doubt an unprecedented feat, The Rub’s DJ Ayres, Cosmo Baker and DJ Eleven have collected all the best tracks from hip hop’s great history and mixed them into one helluva tight mixtape for every year.

You’ll find them all the mixes on The Rub’s profile page – and we’ll continue pushing them weekly on the blog too. But since today saw the release of The Rub’s latest mix in the Hip Hop History series, the year 2000, we thought it was time to catch up with Ayres, Cosmo Baker and Eleven and talk to them about putting all this phenomenal music together.

Interview after the jump!

History Of Hip Hop Volume 22: 2000 (Mixed by Cosmo Baker) from The Rub at Letsmix.com

History Of Hip Hop Volume 22: 2000 (Mixed by Cosmo Baker) from The Rub at Letsmix.com.

Hey Rubbers! You’ve done an amazing job compiling and producing the Hip Hop History mixes. How did you come up with this, slightly crazy, idea?
Ayres: Thank you! If I remember correctly, I had the idea for a series of hip hop history mix CDs at first, but it just seemed crazy to try to dump that many CD:s on the market place. Most of the years would have been double or triple CD:s. But yeah, Eleven and Cosmo were both into the idea to do it and just give the mixes away on The Rub website and Brooklyn Radio. So we split it up between the three of us into years, like “I’ll take 1979, you do 1980, he does 1981…” and so on. It felt really ambitious but also once we got the bug, it was a project we had to do. And it is awesome now because it has found such a huge audience and people keep finding it and emailing about the mixes long after we first put them up.

How long did it the whole process take, from compiling the tracks, via laying out the order in the respective mixes to finishing the actual mixes?
Eleven: The mixes got longer the further we got into them. But they average around two hours. For each of those, there was three-four hours of tracking down and going through music, a couple hours of prepping to record, three-four hours of recording and touch up. So each show probably took at least ten hours. By the time we bring the project up to now, we’ll be 300+ hours in!

How many tracks are there in total on all the mixes, as of today?
Ayres: Nearly 900 songs. It was fun to work on this together because we got to share a lot of music with each other, like when I was missing something from my collection I could just hit up Cosmo and Eleven and they would usually have it. And it was a great excuse to rip all these records to MP3, so we kind of have every hip hop song we need now, in our digital collections.

Did you have a process for the track selection, like voting or something?
Cosmo Baker: We selected what years we wanted to do and then after that it was an individual choice.

Which, in your opinion, is the best year in hip hop history – and the best mix of the ones you did?
Cosmo: There’s no best year in the mix. Every year has its flavor, and all three of us bring our own interpretation of those years to our individual mixes. Like I was partial to the years 1986, 1990, 1996, 1999… So I think they’re the best mixes per se, but that’s discounting such a wide swath of music that it’s impossible to pin down. My two cents.

Eleven: That’s like asking what the best hip hop song in history is or the best hip hop album of all time or the best year in hip hop history. There’s no answering that. It’s totally subjective, so there’s no right answer. There were great records in every year.

Ayres: Mixwise, I still listen to Eleven and Cosmo’s mixes but I am less likely to listen to mine because I spent so much time on them, it’s kind of like staring in the mirror for two hours. But I was really happy with how 1994 came out, with the blends and stuff.

If you could add just one more track to all the mixes, which would it be?
Eleven: Every single record I had to cut was agony. There’s no way to go back and pick just one. There was too much great music left on the cutting room floor.

By Johnny Category and tags: Interview Tags: , , , , ,
May 13, 2010

Mixes of the day: The Rub’s Hip Hop History 1985-1987

The Rub Hi-Res 5596 Credit Ian Meyer

Time for another installment in The Rub’s mix series featuring the Greatest Hip Hop Ever Recorded. This time around, we’re bouncing to the music from 1985-87!

For previous years and mixes, see the blog post here and here.

Hip-Hop History Volume 7: 1985 (Mixed by Cosmo Baker) from The Rub at Letsmix.com

Hip-Hop History Volume 7: 1985 (Mixed by Cosmo Baker) from The Rub at Letsmix.com.


Hip-Hop History Volume 8: 1986 (mixed by Cosmo Baker) from The Rub at Letsmix.com

Hip-Hop History Volume 8: 1986 (mixed by Cosmo Baker) from The Rub at Letsmix.com.

Hip-Hop History Volume 9: 1987 (mixed by Cosmo Baker) from The Rub at Letsmix.com

Hip-Hop History Volume 9: 1987 (mixed by Cosmo Baker) from The Rub at Letsmix.com.


Photo Ian Meyer.

By Johnny Category and tags: Mix of the day Tags: , , , ,
April 22, 2010

Mixes of the day: The Rub’s Hip Hop History 1982-1984

The Rub Hi-Res 5527 Credit Ian Meyer

The Rub, Ayres, Cosmo Baker and Eleven, are some of the most versatile hip hop DJ:s to come out of New York since the early 00’s. If it was our call their Hip Hop History mixes, summing up the best tracks from every year in hip hop from 1979 to 1999, should earn them a place in a future Hip Hop Hall of Fame – it’s that dope. What’s even doper is that all the mixes are available here on Let’s mix!

Every week, we revisit a few of the great years in hip hop. Today, the time has come for 1982-1984. Get down!

Hip-Hop History Volume 4: 1982 (mixed by DJ Eleven) from The Rub at Letsmix.com

Hip-Hop History Volume 4: 1982 (mixed by DJ Eleven) from The Rub at Letsmix.com.


Hip-Hop History Volume 5: 1983 (mixed by DJ Eleven) from The Rub at Letsmix.com

Hip-Hop History Volume 5: 1983 (mixed by DJ Eleven) from The Rub at Letsmix.com.

Hip-Hop History Volume 6: 1984 (mixed by DJ Eleven) from The Rub at Letsmix.com

Hip-Hop History Volume 6: 1984 (mixed by DJ Eleven) from The Rub at Letsmix.com.

By Johnny Category and tags: Mix of the day Tags: , , , ,
April 12, 2010

Mixes of the day: The Rub’s Hip Hop History 1979-1981

The Rub Hi-Res 5596 Credit Ian Meyer

Brooklyn DJ trio Ayres, Cosmo Baker and Eleven, collectively known as The Rub, have been throwing parties, putting out music and world-touring together for more than a decade. Apart from their steady stream of excellent remixes and mashups, the BK blokes are also some of the most versatile hip hop DJ:s to come out of New York since the early 00’s.

The Rub’s It’s the motherfucking remix CD series is a modern classic – along, of course with their magnificient Hip Hop History mixes, summing up the best tracks from every year in hip hop from 1979 to 1999. All the Hip Hop History mixes are online on The Rub’s Let’s mix page, and over the coming weeks we’ll be revisiting them a few at a time.

Also, keep an eye on the blog next week – an interview where Ayres, Cosmo and Eleven elaborate on all the hours they spent selecting and mixing this cultural deed is coming up!

Hip-Hop History Volume 1: 1979 (mixed by DJ Ayres) from The Rub at Letsmix.com

Hip-Hop History Volume 1: 1979 (mixed by DJ Ayres) from The Rub at Letsmix.com.


Hip-Hop History Volume 2: 1980 (Mixed by DJ Ayres) from The Rub at Letsmix.com

Hip-Hop History Volume 2: 1980 (Mixed by DJ Ayres) from The Rub at Letsmix.com.

Hip-Hop History Volume 3: 1981 from The Rub at Letsmix.com

Hip-Hop History Volume 3: 1981 from The Rub at Letsmix.com.

Photo Ian Meyer

By Johnny Category and tags: Mix of the day Tags: , , , ,