Recommended Albums #119

MC Hawking: A Brief History of Rhyme: MC Hawking’s Greatest Hits (2004)

This blog celebrates wide ranging musical endeavors, from the sublime to the ridiculous. And we’ve given plenty of attention to the sublime lately, so…

Nerdcore rapper and web developer Ken Lawrence a.k.a. MC Hawking rose to internet prominence in the early 2000’s with mp3’s, released through his website, that employed a gangsta-rappified persona of physicist Stephen Hawking.

His songs proved so popular Lawrence was signed to a record deal and A Brief History of Rhyme: MC Hawking’s Greatest Hits was the result.

Creationists and MIT rival scientists serve as the arch villains here rather than cops and rival rappers. But Lawrence synthesizes the worlds of gangsta rap and hard science as effectively as he synthesizes the voice of Hawking–achieved by use of the text-to-speech program Willow Talk.

Backed by the beats of DJ Doomsday (also Lawrence, using samples, midi compositions and loops available royalty-free) MC Hawking imparts a fair amount of actual scientific theory within spot-on rap parodies.

“Big Bizang” takes on the Big Bang. “E=MC Hawking” deals with the theory of relativity. “Entropy” explains thermodynamics. And “Fuck the Creationists” weighs in on the Creation vs Evolution debate.

If this extremely well-executed collision of two disparate worlds could be described in a word, that word–fittingly–would be “genius”.

Lawrence returned a decade later with “Fear of a Black Hole”, which was performed at the 2016 Starmus Festival with Brian May, Richard Dawkins and the real Stephen Hawking in attendance.

It seems Hawking’s energy can never be destroyed.

Listen to: “The Hawkman Cometh”

Listen to: “Big Bizang”

Listen to: “Entropy”

Listen to: “Bitchslap”

Listen to: “Fuck the Creationists”

Listen to: “All My Shootings Be Drivebys”

Listen to: “What We Need More of is Science”

Video of the Week: Kenia Os–Días Tristes (Live from Vevo Studios)

See also: Recommended Albums #113 | Every Moment Has A Song

Songs You May Have Missed #852

Manu Chao: “Tu Te Vas” (2024)

Listening to 2024’s Viva Tu is a bit dizzying: Spanish, French and English, all within the first three songs of Manu Chao’s 2024 release. A half-dozen languages across an album that mixes the personal and the political, the intimate and the anthemic.

Remarkably, it was the singer’s first studio album in 17 years, but his unique formula remained intact, much to the appreciation of fans he’d kept waiting for new material.

See also: Songs You May Have Missed #760 | Every Moment Has A Song

Songs You May Have Missed #851

Connie Converse: “House” (2026)

We elsewhere told the tale of singular folk songwriter Connie Converse, her inspired music, disappointing career and mysterious disappearance.

To the 2026 reissue of her How Sad, How Lovely album was added this bonus, previously unreleased track.

It’s one more example of her lyrical gift, and a heartfelt reminder of all the things “home” can mean.

See also: Recommended Albums #110 | Every Moment Has A Song

Video of the Week: The Justin Hayward Problem The Moody Blues Couldn’t Survive

Video of the Week: (I’ve Been) Searchin’ So Long – Leonid & Friends (Chicago cover)

See also: Video of the Week: A Smokin’ Cover of the Ides of March by Leonid & Friends | Every Moment Has A Song

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