
Open Mike Eagle found comedy in contemporary American horrors on albums like 2014’s Dark Comedy and catharsis in exposing his past on 2020’s Anime, Trauma, and Divorce. Now, the incisive, hilarious, and idiosyncratic purveyor of art rap praised by The New York Times, Pitchfork, and The New Yorker manipulates time like Dr. Strange on his new album, Component System with the Auto Reverse.
Eagle’s eighth solo LP, CSWTAR is grounded in our dystopian present but structured with the magical randomness of cassette mixtapes he made recording college rap radio shows in the late ’90s. It was an era of supreme braggadocio and countless lyrical styles, the lines between boasts offering insight into Black American neighborhoods. Eagle made CSWTAR in this spirit. Unstuck in time, he spits his sharpest stream-of-consciousness darts while watching his younger self bop to the music that informed them. No two songs traverse the same ground, but Eagle splices in actual commercials and radio interviews from his old mixtapes to connect the dots, his keen sociopolitical analysis and obscure pop culture allusions serving as temporal poles. In the same breath, he airs grievances about current police corruption and alludes to long-retired Chicago Bulls players. Every
anachronism provides a new perspective on today.
Keeping with the purposeful surprise and structure, CSWTAR is scored by crashing doom-filled hard rock flips from Madlib, Diamond D’s thumping jazz-inflected boom-bap, twisted cartoon-sampled suites via Quelle Chris, and more progressive production. Eagle turns these disparate sounds into a cohesive whole, equally at home rhyming on minimalist electronic soundscapes and parodying an animated stereo store proprietor over thundering drums and grinding guitar. A master of his vocal range, he effortlessly moves in and out of conversational and intricate technical delivery, inflecting with abandon and assurance before pivoting to half-sung hooks. There are more time-bending spells in Eagle’s grimoire, but he’s never shown listeners so many so effectively. Though Eagle has worked in podcasts, comedy, and TV, he is first a member of the loosely-affiliated independent rap scene that includes the rappers featured on CSWTAR: Armand Hammer, R.A.P Ferreira, Aesop Rock, Serengeti, Diamond D, Video Dave, and Still Rift. Part solo album and spiritual mixtape, part green room cipher, and part showcase for Eagle’s Auto Reverse Records, CSWTAR recontextualizes his place among his peers. With every original metaphor and stylistic flourish, he asserts his place in the pantheon of great rappers from his hometown of Chicago (“79th
and Stony Island”) and among the avant-garde heavyweights in his adopted home of Los Angeles (“Crenshaw and Homeland”).
CSWTAR is also a response to the rest of Eagle’s catalog. He forsakes much of the whimsy and comedy of many previous albums for unflinching and unironic directness. A testament to the determination necessary to thrive in indie rap (“I’ll Fight You”) plays before his touching tribute to the late MF DOOM (“For DOOM”). He articulates the stir-crazed mania and malaise of the pandemic in “Peak Lockdown Raps,” while “I Retired Then I Changed My Mind” is a calculated analysis of career missteps and a lament for his canceled Comedy Central show, The New Negroes. As that wound closes, Eagle is recording albums like CSWTAR, producing acclaimed podcasts, and focusing on his next trick: survival.

Cavalier
Cavalier es una banda de indie rock originaria de Querétaro, México. La agrupación está conformada por 4 jóvenes: Miguel (Voz, guitarra), Joel (Batería), Martín (Bajo, teclados) y Cesar (Guitarrista) que buscan crear canciones para disfrutar la vida. Su música se caracteriza por la extensa fusión de géneros musicales como el rock, cumbia, bossa nova, jazz y toques tropicales.
Cavalier ha compartido escenario con grandes agrupaciones como : Caloncho, BETA, The Wookies, Rey Pila Holbox, Vanavara, etc.

Rhys Langston
Since 2014, rapper and multi-instrumentalist Rhys Langston has released 19 projects which have stretched beyond genre and even the musical medium itself. They have earned wide acclaim and covered vast conceptual ground, with lyrics and album concepts exploring comparative race and ethnicity, searing pop cultural criticism, and the digital humanities.
Notable works include 2020’s Language Arts Unit, which came with a 104 pg book that dissected rap and race in a long form lyric essay. Grapefruit Radio arrived two years later in similar fashion—with an 88 pg paperback of his visual art and absurdist prose, along with full album lyrics. Those earned him nods from The NY Times, The LA Times, Bandcamp, SPIN, STEREOGUM, DJ Booth, and others.
Wider range and idiosyncratic edge can be found on other projects, like 2021’s burst of punk rock invective Stalin Bollywood, 2019’s visual EP The T.C. Wash Suite and his production on outsider artist Andrew Mbaruk‘s Affect Theory and the Text-to-Speech Grandiloquence .
In 2023, Langston released the Pioneer 11 collaboration, To Operate This System, a melody-forward melange of hip-hop, alternative R&B, and electro-psych. In 2024, his collaborative streak continued with the Frankie Jax No Mad-assisted notes from the unemployment office, and then the Steel Tipped Dove-produced Polyglot on Chloroform.
He is preparing his next album for release in 2025, the 20th work in his collection.
He eagerly awaits your ears.