
For Immediate Release – Disco D to break street date on upcoming album, sell hand-burned hand-signed copies on his website immediately
In an unprecedented industry move, newly multi-platinum urban producer Disco D will be breaking street date by bootlegging his own upcoming album Return to Olive St. – Best of the Old Ish Vol. 1. Starting immediately, fans can log on to the newly launched Disco Depot section of the Disco D site by going to http://discodepot.discod.com and order now. Each ‘bootleg’ copy will be hand-signed by Disco D with a personalized message, for the super low price of $9.99.
When asked about the decision, D simply said, “I’m broke! These major labels take so damn long to pay. I’ll never move out of the basement at this rate. Something HAS to be done NOW. This is the last step before I turn to more drastic measures,”
On Return to Olive St – Best of the Old Ish Vol. 1 Disco D compiles 16 of his best-known underground solo Ghettotech tracks and recently discovered but never released gems. Since debuting on the Detroit rave DJ scene in 1996 at the tender age of 16 and releasing his first vinyl EP the day before his high school graduation, D has been making heads turn around the world. Return to Olive St. is a fascinating musical look at tracks that helped develop both an underground subculture of music and a hit-making producer with credits including 50 Cent, Nina Sky, Sara Stokes and new Def Jam artist Tiearra Marie.
Named after the street in Ypsilanti, MI where Disco D built his chops via near-legendary house party sets, Return to Olive St. – Best of the Old Ish Vol. 1 is the quintessential primer to what D’s musical mind was working on before he shifted his production focus to a more mainstream look. The 16-song set includes the Detroit mixshow classics Where They At (1998) and You Need Another Drink (1999); raw mixtape records Work That (2001) and I’m A Ho 2K1 (2001); and vinyl-only instrumental cuts like Incomprehensible Representation of Self (1999), Subterranean Mode (1999) and Back 2 Basics (2001). Also included are D’s first forays into combining Ghettotech with rappers – teaming with Detroit’s Paradime on Detroit Zoo (2000); Helluva and Lola Damone on Keys To The Whip (2003); and Helluva again on Peon (2003). Dug out of the vault are the previously unheard Bass On Pluto (2002), Electro-Orchid (2002), and Hahn Solo (2002).
Don’t wait any longer. Point your browser to Disco Depot and cop your personalized copy!
