We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

Arrival EP

by The Arbiters

/
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Tired Horses 05:01

about

_______________________________________________

Helmed by DJ/music supervisor Thomas Golubic´ (Six Feet Under, Breaking Bad, The Walking Dead) in conjunction with music supervisor/producer Josh Marcy and film score composer Dave Porter, the Los Angeles-based mash-up production collective brings the underground aboveground with their seamless brand of intelligent bastard pop.

With a sound and style equal parts art project, waxploitation, and boogiedown, The Arbiters first hit in 2006 with their debut EP, They Are Biters. It struck a chord not only with crate diggers and clubgoers, but also with the folks over at Los Angeles tastemaker radio station KCRW, where repeated airplay vaulted The Arbiters to become one of the station’s most-requested and played artists that year, alongside Gnarls Barkley, Beck, and The Raconteurs.

Four years later, the crew is back to transforming both the extremely familiar and the deliciously obscure on The Arrival EP. “Ain’t No Shooter Shining” marries the warmth of Bill Withers with the charisma of Lil Wayne, laid-back Jamaican-style. “Exciters Go Back To Cali” features a hip-hop travelogue as told by Biggie and Mos Def, laid over a ‘70s Panamanian funk beat. “Hip Hop Is A Free Banquet” merges dramatic ‘60s gangster film score with a frenetic indie electro vibe. “Folks Love Going To The Same Old Go Go” flips the Motown script with a perfectly placed interlude by Peter, Bjorn & John, and Ludacris on the mic. “Virgin Voices” stitches together genre-hopping acapellas with the indie electronica of Phoenix. And “Tired Horses,” based on the bizarre Dylan song, is a strangely hypnotic concoction that found its jazzy backbone via Swedish band Koop.

Not content to let their smash-hop rest on its auditory laurels, The Arbiters merge sight with sound by creating smartly humorous, yet complex video montages, not just pushing the mash-up envelope, but also further paying homage to their favorite artists in the process.

Check out the video for “Virgin Voices” here:
www.vimeo.com/11507871

_______________________________________________

credits

released October 10, 2010

license

tags

about

The Arbiters Los Angeles

contact / help

Contact The Arbiters

Streaming and
Download help

Report this album or account