Giant PandaIn the animal kingdom, the giant panda is a symbol of resilience for
all animals on the brink of extinction. In the unforgiving world of
hip-hop,
Giant Panda is a symbol of remembering traditions without forgetting progression.
The story of Giant Panda starts on the playground of a Seattle elementary school where
Maanumental and
Newman
quickly bonded through their love of comic books and hip-hop tapes.
Years later, Newman would venture to L.A. where he would meet
Chikaramanga
while attending college. Soon the two would DJ together around campus
and record with a crew that formed around Chikaramanga’s production
skills. Newman would go back to Seattle on breaks and play tapes of the
songs for Maanumental, who in turn would play tapes of the tracks he
was making with his brother,
Sir Kado.
Pretty soon the two different crews started to collaborate, and pretty
soon Maanumental and Newman made the move to LA. After a stint with
another group, the core of Maanumental, Newman, Chikaramanga (along
with the help
DJ Superbrush 427
and Sir Kado) would break off and start their own group. And when it
was time for name, they went to an old name for a fake rock band they
were going to start: Giant Panda. What else would you call a group made
up of white, black, and Asian guys?
Their first release would be “88 Remix” (UKJ-001 Dec. 2003), a hard-hitting 12-inch recorded by
Thes One at the legendary
PUTS studio. Put out independently under the
Ukenjam
label, the single had a small run but was able to get airplay on mix
shows across the globe. It even received single of the month by
prestigious Hip-Hop Connection magazine from England. Giant Panda then
came out with their first release on
Tres Records,
“With It” (TR369-002 Sep. 2004). The 12 caught the attention of mix
show DJ’s from Japan, the US, Canada, UK, and as far as the Czech
Republic. It also received raves from print critics, most notably in
XXL magazine where Chairman Mao praised it in his “Chairman Choice”
column.
2005 will see the release of Giant Panda’s first full length, Fly
School Reunion (Tres Records). Already getting great reviews in URB (4
? stars), XXL, XLR8R, Scratch, Mass Appeal, Blast, HHC, NME and ton of
other international magazines, Fly School Reunion is already a hit with
college radio (#3 on CMJ hip-hop charts) With a classic approach to
making up-to-date Hip-Hop, Fly School Reunion promises an album to
please the purist and satisfy the listener waiting for something
refreshing.
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