If you don’t know who Muffy you will soon. Take a listen to Muffy’s latest track produced by Bangledesh. The beat is ridiculous. It switches from Chi-Town house music to B-More Club bounce. This track is dope, no pun intended.
Download Here: “I’m In Love With A Dope Boy”

It’s rude to tell you how you have been screwed. But we wouldn’t be who we are if we didn’t.
Before Nov. 4th, when you’ll make the most “important” decision of your life choosing the lesser of two evils, please watch “American Blackout.” Click here to view the full film.
Please give Ms. Cynthia McKinney a listen. You can go with people who talk about change, or someone who lives by actions. The choice is yours.
www.votetruth08.com
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5965670944815984616
The Godfather of Nerdcore Rap is at it again, bringing his parsecs of knowledge to your cochlea with his newest album, Final Boss. Featuring guest spots from Glen Phillips (Toad the Wet Sprocket), Jonathan Coulton and Wil Wheaton, Final Boss is unabashedly geek-tastic. MC Frontalot holds forth on topics ranging from cryptozoology (“Scare Goat”) to improper use of punctuation (“Tongue-Clucking Grammarian”) to a new dance based on a grand-dame (“Wallflowers”). The album takes its title from Front’s track of the same name, featured in the video game “On the Rainslick Precipice of Darkness” from the makers of the popular webcomic, Penny Arcade.
MC Frontalot’s new album “Final Boss” drops Nov. 4th.
Click here to download the first single “Wallflowers.”
MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt/Main presents the most comprehensive retrospective to date of the works of Takashi Murakami. In May 2008, Time Magazine cited Murakami as one of the 100 most influential people in the world. As with the case of the major Sturtevant exhibition in 2004, the entire museum will be devoted to showcasing Murakami’s oeuvre. For the duration of the exhibition, only works by this artist will be on view, with the MMK transforming itself, as the title suggests, into a © MURAKAMI Museum.
© MURAKAMI was organized by The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA), whose chief curator Paul Schimmel curated and supervised the exhibition. After Los Angeles, the exhibition traveled to the Brooklyn Museum, New York. MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt/Main is the first platform for the © MURAKAMI exhibition in Europe. Here, the show has been organized by Udo Kittelmann and Mario Kramer in close collaboration with the artist. The last stop on the tour will be the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.
For the MMK show, more than 130 works by the artist in various media – painting, sculpture, installation, and video – are divided up into several chapters and then spread out across all three levels of the MMK. The exhibition was site-specifically designed by Takashi Murakami with the specifics of the MMK’s architecture in Frankfurt in mind, and is complemented by works specially produced for this situation. The exhibition is not arranged in chronological order but is tuned to the rhythm and choreography of the given setting and the artistic requirements of the works involved. Nonetheless, the presentation does enable visitors to follow Murakami’s artistic development.