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Seth Marcel CD Mr Bradford Live From The Podium is a ground breaking 18
Track hip hop / rap spectacular
and Seth's fourth full length CD released. Underground hip hop
at its finest!
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Seth Marcel / Joe Budden - Problem mp3 Single Available For Immediate
Download for only $1.49.
Seth Marcel - Come On mp3 Single Available For Immediate
Download for only $1.49.
Seth Marcel - Road Less Traveled
- 21 Track mp3 direct digital download only $9.99.
Chosen as 2nd top release of all
2006 Central NY music by
Syracuse Post Standard Newspaper. Chosen Number 1 hip hop
/ rap release 2006 Central NY music by
Syracuse Post Standard Newspaper.
Seth Marcel aka Billie Dixon - Panties Wet
- 14 Track mp3 Direct Digital Download only $9.99
Seth Marcel - I Am Everything mp3 Single (2006) Available For
Immediate Download for only $1.49.
New full length CD from Seth Marcel
- Road Less Traveled available now (see below).
1
Seth talks about his new release - "So many people feel safe
doing the same thing. So, when you decide to think outside
the box, you become one of a few. And at times, it's hard
to find the rest of the people who think like you. You're
on a road less traveled."
Seth Marcel - Mr. Bradford
Live From The Podium
CD $11.99 (2008 ,79 min.)
Seth Marcel - Road Less Traveled
CD $11.99 (2006, 73 min.) Seth Marcel CD Road Less Traveled is a ground breaking 21
Track hip hop / rap spectacular
and Seth's third full length CD released. Chosen
as 2nd top release of all 2006 Central NY music by
Syracuse Post Standard Newspaper. Chosen Number 1 hip hop /
rap release 2006 Central NY music by
Syracuse Post Standard Newspaper.
Seth Marcel aka Billie Dixon - Panties Wet
- 14 Track mp3 Direct Digital Download only $9.99
Seth Marcel aka Billie Dixon - Panties Wet CD $9.99 (2002, 65 min.) Seth Marcel CD Panties Wet is a ground breaking 14 Track
hip hop / rap spectacular
and Seth's first full length CD ever released. Underground hip hop
at its finest!
1 Winner 2002 Syracuse Area Music Awards,
SAMMYS, best hip hop / rap recording.
Recorded and mixed by Sal Chisari of Red Brick Studios.
Deadwate - Dinnertime featuring Seth Marcel CD $9.99 (2003, 62 min.,
Red Brick Records)
more info
Winner 2004
Syracuse Area Music Awards,
SAMMYS Best Hip Hop / Rap Release.
Recorded and mixed by Sal Chisari of Red Brick Studios.
Joe Budden featuring Seth Marcel - Everybody 12 inch Maxi-Single
Promo (2003, Onpoint Recordings) Out of Print
Seth Marcel
featuring
Jadakiss - Hardcore Pt. 2 12 inch Maxi-Single
Promo (2003, Onpoint Recordings) Out of Print
Seth Marcel - I'm Necessary CD
(2002, Onpoint Recordings) Out of Print
4th Best Selling Central New York release for 2003.
Seth Marcel - I'm Hard To The Core 12 inch Maxi-Single Promo
(2002, Onpoint Recordings) Out of Print
Seth Marcel - I'm Necessary Limited
Edition DJ Promo CD
(2001, Onpoint Recordings) Out of Print
Seth Marcel aka Billie Dixon - Panties Wet CD $9.99 (2002, 65 min.,
Red Brick Records) / CD is sold out / out of print.
Please purchase direct digital download instead. Winner 2002 Syracuse Area Music Awards,
SAMMYS, best hip hop / rap recording.
Recorded and mixed by Sal Chisari of Red Brick Studios.
Wreck Files - Undaground Hip-Hop
ft. Seth Marcel
CD
$9.99 (2000, 54 min.,
Red Brick Records) more info
Mad Pack - The Last Dimension 6x ft.
Seth Marcel CD $9.99 (1997, 55 min.)
more info
Seth Marcel Biography
Arguably the most
recognizable M.C. to emerge from the upstate region, Seth Marcel has
managed to make his mark as an artistic force to be reckoned with.
With heartfelt lyrics that touch the soul, as well as having a knack
to move the crowd, he is what some would call "the complete
package". Versatile but not wishy-washy, insightful but not preachy,
energetic but not overzealous! With old-school charisma and
futuristic flows Marcel is well on his way to becoming the new-age
B-Boy prototype!
Seth Marcel News and
Videos
07-27-2008 Seth Marcel's CD
"Mr. Bradford ... Live From The Podium" Review
by Mark Bialczak, Syracuse Post-Standard
The eight-minute cut that closes the new CD from Syracuse
rapper Seth Marcel sure sounds like a permanent parting
shot. Marcel ties together the pieces of his life and
times, and gives shout-outs to his many friends in the
hip-hop world who've helped him along the way. If this
is indeed good-bye, Marcel's final recorded word to the
world:
"Peace." Fitting from a rapper who's consistently
thought deeply before crafting
his songs.
"Mr. Bradford ... Live from the Podium" started out in
Marcel's active mind as a project he'd call "Twenty," an
album recorded in his home studio on the North Side of
Syracuse that pieces together what he's learned in his 20
years as a rapper. But the title changed when Marcel
-- he drops his last name, Bradford, in his artistic persona
-- came up with the idea for a song that espouses what he
thinks a politician should be saying in a speech. It's
a catchy song, what with the simple and brilliant message,
"Me plus you plus he plus she is we." That's just one
example of Marcel's thinking-person's hip-hop.
He greatly goes back to back with "Hope. Dream. Wish. Pray"
and "Third Sunday in June." The former is a message
for his four-year-old son, Seth Jr., telling how one must
deal with life's ups and downs. "It's the part that makes us
hateful and the part that makes us grateful," Marcel raps.
The latter tells of last year's reconciliation with his
father, Wally Bradford. "This is a clear-it-off-my-chest
song," he raps, and the way they clear the air and move on
with lives more connected is definitely autobiographical,
Marcel says.
Here's one wish that Marcel decides the world needs more of
what he gives us.
07-17-08 Seth Marcel to
unveil new CD on Saturday 07-19-08 at Sophistications in
Syracuse NY
by Mark Bialczak, Syracuse Post-Standard
I got together with Syracuse hip-hop veteran Seth Marcel
this afternoon to talk about his new CD, "Mr. Bradford ...
Live from the Podium." As we sat down in Biscotti's on North
Salina St. -- just across the block from the barber shop he
owns and operates, Seven Five Four -- he answered his cell.
It was the news that the CD will be off the presses and in
his hands by Saturday night.
He whewed a sigh of relief. That's because at 7 p.m.
Saturday, Seth Marcel Bradford will host a listening party
at Sophistications Cafe 441 S. Salina St., Syracuse.
Marcel sent me an advance copy earlier this week. It's a hot
one, 18 all-new, all-original songs that represent the 20
years he's been rapping here in his hometown, and at times
around the country, too.
It might be his last CD.
"At this stage of the game, I want to do it because I love
to do it," Marcel told me. "But I want to be relevant at the
same time."
He fears that at the age of 36, young people aren't
interested in his socially conscious messages. He also
worries that folks will stereotype him as just another
shallow rapper and won't give his music a chance.
Rest assured. Anybody with an open mind can learn from
what's going on inside Marcel's head. His literate writing
and catchy rhyming should never go out of style.
05-26-08 Seth Marcel
featuring Joe Budden - Everybody video released -
05-13-07 Deeper Side of
Hip-Hop
Explore It In 'SOUL,' A New CD From Seth Marcel
by Mark Bialczak, Syracuse Post-Standard
Yes, Syracuse rapper
Seth Marcel has put out a soulful hip-hop CD with his
latest. But don't you dare judge "SOUL." from the
surface alone.
That title stands for the real-deal message: "Sounds Of Universal Law
Must Unify, Signify, Identify, Change"
And the Syracuse native's work sets out to do all of the above. As
in his previous work, Marcel puts together his pieces for
the hip-hop fan who loves to delve deep into life's
meanings.
Don't let all that intelligence fool you. Marcel writes intriguing
lyrics. But at the drop of a rhyme, he can fire the
ire and spit out the bile. There's plenty of cussin'.
What you won't find are the cheap and easy images of
violence and bad attitudes toward women that have drawn
national concern these days.
Take "So Fyne," a love song that digs deep. Marcel raps, ' You so
fine. I ain't talkin' 'bout regular fine. I'm
taklkin' about taking home to mama fine. Swipe credit
cards at the counter fine. F.Y.N.E. fine."
In "So Amazing," a pretty harmony chorus leads into some bragging
about his status as an MC... and in life. "You can see
the confidence in his face," he declares.
And don't miss "Letter To The Editor," where Marcel recites the ills in
his world in a piece that belongs on the editorial page.
For a cliff-hanger, there's "Chat Room," a quite graphic
story about regular folk who meet on the Internet and are in
for the surprise of their lives.
Seth Marcel's myspace page.
02-19-07 Seth Marcel
by Mark Bialczak, Syracuse Post-Standard
Style: Marcel is a rapper.
Band members: Marcel is the MC. Discography:"The Road Less Traveled" in
2006; "So Necessary" in 2002; and "Panties Wet" under the
name Billie Dixon in 2001. History in Syracuse: Syracuse native
Marcel was a member of 1990s local rap outfits Channel Three
and Mad Pack. In his solo career, he recorded for OnPoint,
the label owned by former Syracuse University and NBA
basketball star Derrick Coleman. He also recorded under the
name Billie Dixon. Go ahead and brag: "Truthfully, people,
they complain a lot. My music is for the complainers. For
people who say they're tired of this and that. ... My music
is the polar opposite of what the status quo is. There's a
booty shaker Marcel. A misogynistic Marcel. And also people
who get up and go to work 40 hours a week. That's who I am
because that's what I am. ... I found a way to craft the
music so far that it sounds like a hip-hop record but you
can feel the soul to it."
If you could be anybody else for one day, who
would it be? "I'd be Jesus Christ. Who wouldn't be?
Just so that I can answer a whole lot of questions. I'm sure
people have a lot of questions."
Seth Marcel has made a name for himself as a rapper in
CNY and beyond. Music Critic Mark Bialczak writes: Syracuse
rapper Seth Marcel speaks his mind on his third full-length
CD, "The Road Less Traveled" (422 Music). And it's a very
interesting place to visit. This 18-piece collection resonates with right-on rhymes
and wise lyrics. Marcel's a thinking person's rapper. "Butterfly Effect" may be his most riveting tale ever, an
epic life story of the couple Reese and Monique, a great,
big, sad song with a tragic ending these good folks don't
deserve. In other words, just like real life. And Marcel lays it on the line with "Cry Freedom,"
declaring that he may have been reincarnated from the slave
age for a purpose: "So my children got a place to call home
and relax safe," he raps. It's the freedom of speech,
expression, thoughts and ideas that he extols.
Seth Marcel at the
Syracuse Hot 107.9 Sport Compact and Truck Blast '06 Check out
pictures of Hometown Hero Seth Marcel performing at the
Sport Compact and Truck Blast.
10-31-2006 Seth Marcel Is
Featured on CUSE DVD Volume 1
Watch Seth do freestyle
starting at 4:08 in on video.
06-11-06 Syracuse
Rapper Tells Stories On CD
by Mark Bialczak, Syracuse Post-Standard
Syracuse rapper Seth Marcel
speaks his mind on his third full-length CD, "The Road Less
Traveled" (422 Music). And it's a very interesting place to
visit.
This 18-piece collection resonates with right-on rhymes and wise lyrics.
Marcel's a thinking person's rapper.
"Butterfly Effect" may be his most riveting tale ever, an epic life story
of the couple Reese and Monique, a great, big,
sad song with a tragic ending these good folks don't
deserve. In other words, just like real life.
And Marcel lays it on the line with "Cry Freedom," declaring that he may
have been reincarnated from the slave age for a purpose: "So
my children got a place to call home and relax safe," he
raps. It's the freedom of speech, expression, thoughts and
ideas that he extols.
04-07-06 Marcel
Performs Live With New Band Electric Relaxation Onajava Coffee and Soul Cafe Was Filled To The Rim
With A CNY Hot Crowd.
By Espreenet News
Service
Hip-Hop Phenom Seth Marcel laid
down a nearly flawless performance with backup band Electric
Relaxation. With only a couple of weeks of practice
together, Marcel and the band came together right before the
eyes of OnaJava's standing room only crowd. From the old to
the new, the performance took you for a ride with songs that
the crowd loved from Seth Marcel. The night was truly a
night for the CNY history books, because the bar has been
raised for anyone who steps on the stage at OnaJava.
01.26.06 Seth Marcel
featured in Syracuse New Times
Hip-Hop Hooray: Throbbing beats and thoughtful lyrics
highlight Seth Marcel's new CD The Road Less Traveled
By Julie Pinsonneault
On his new album The Road
Less Traveled, Seth Marcel states, "Born and raised in
Syracuse, but I attended a different S.U.: Street
University." Such gritty lyrics make Marcel one of the most
accomplished hip-hop artists representing the 3-1-5. While
he has worked with national artists including
Jadakiss
and Obie
Trice, for Marcel's latest release he herded in the
local talent and kept the home city heard.
Marcel's dedication to
storytelling recalls hip-hop's heyday when
Grandmaster Flash was laying it down. "Butterfly
Effect," for example, offers the karmic tale of two worlds
colliding with disastrous results. Marcel keeps the modern
bravado intact on other tracks, but the context doesn't
cancel out his creativity. Taking the Bob Dole approach,
Marcel explicitly flaunts his strengths in "3rd Person":
"He's got no equal, no superiors... He the shit even rhyming
in third person."
In an atypical move Marcel
previewed The Road Less Traveled on January 15, 2006
at Onajava Caf�. "Sometimes when you see a
performance," Marcel says, "people are moved by the music
and they don't really get a chance to digest what you're
talking about until they take the CD home and listen to it."
The coffeehouse's intimate
setting allowed Marcel to introduce each song, explain the
process behind the record and even deliver some shout-outs
to the CD's contributors, including his longtime friend
Michael "Jus Mic" Gaines, afternoon deejay for
WWHT-FM 107.9 (Hot 107.9). "Being from Syracuse,
something we've all learned is Syracuse is the home of
hate," Gaines said. "Because I'm from Syracuse, I'm not
supposed to support this man, but I do."
Judging from his liner notes,
Marcel loves the 'Cuse right back. The CD's roster of local
talent, represented by a number of interchanging producers,
provides a fresh approach to each song. The Tune Raiders (Darshell
"Shellz" Bell and Joe "Jigz" Whitaker) bring a wistful
new-school sound that embraces backup vocals, strings and
synth in addition to smooth rhythms. The Professionals (Davaugh
Floyd and Travis Renfroe) pump up the tempo and pep with
buoyant beats. And Marcel's cousin, Eddie James Dowdell,
adds some club flavor with a heavy bottom end and attention
to open spaces with a sparse technique.
The album's most appealing cut,
"Cry Freedom," features local flutist Stephen Wise and
spoken-word poet Julius Edwards. Blocky piano chords set up
the harmonic base, while Wise adds a high-end, reserved solo
line to fill in the gaps, letting loose at the end of the
track. Edwards' strong presence as the visionary and the
hook is enhanced by a vocal processor that makes his
rhetoric sound like a speech recorded on ancient equipment.
Marcel tops off the track with intelligent lyrics about the
past and current struggles of the black community.
Being a producer himself, Marcel
refused to settle for anything less than top-shelf
beatmakers. Marcel initially rejected some music from the
Tune Raiders, but that didn't deter Bell, who came right
back with new tracks; the Raiders' "Jewlz" and
"Recollection" eventually made the cut. According to Bell,
the hard work paid off: "I never heard anybody spit on our
track like that in my whole life. I think that could be a
breakthrough for us and take us to the top. I just want to
let it be known that I've worked with this guy before, and
that dream came true."
That dream almost fizzled out
before it got started: Marcel was taking a break from the
rap game, then found himself writing away in a notebook
during his downtime. He also had to overcome a series of
hurdles that led him to later remark, "I must have said
something on this CD that the universe doesn't want out."
Among the many problems that surfaced: Marcel lost five
songs when his computer crashed, the first studio version
had to be redone because a compressor was left on during the
mix, the album inserts were cut two inches too short and the
disc manufacturer misspelled Marcel's name. Just hours
before the Onajava show, Marcel and his wife Theresa were
still stuffing CDs and artwork into cases.
Yet the listening party paid off
for Marcel, who moved 40 copies of his CD that night. "I
wanted to strictly deal with locals because when you do a CD
independently, you want the music to sell because it's good
music," he says. "You don't want the music to sell because
it's got someone else's name on it." The Road Less
Traveled is now available at http://www.sethmarcel.com
and
http://www.yrbook.com/soundshop/
07.31.2003
SETH MARCEL FEATURED IN THE
SYRACUSE TIMES
Beat Poet Hip-hopper Seth Marcel
intends to put his hometown on the rap map.
By Justin Park
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eminem opened the gates in Detroit, Nelly created a buzz about St.
Louis and Outkast reminded us that Southerners actually make music
other than country and bluegrass. Seth Marcel, Syracuse-born and
-bred, is trying to focus the country's eyes on the hip-hop scene in
upstate New York, despite the fact that musical acts of all types from
Rochester, Buffalo and Syracuse have always struggled to shine next to
the sunlike spotlight on New York City.
The problematic mentality is that if an act were any good, they'd move
to the Big Apple to get noticed. Any East Coast hip-hop fan will tell
you that upstate is where hardcore New York City rappers get sent to
prison, not where great rappers are born.
Groundbreakers like Eminem,
Nelly, and Atlanta's
Outkast were brazen
enough to represent their until-then-ignored native lands and to not
copycat other emcees. Marcel could follow suit simply because he pulls
no punches when letting people know what 'hood he's from and because
he refuses to fit into any hip-hop cliches. His sound is clearly East
Coast hardcore, similar to a rougher-edged
Rakim; while his flow and
his voice don't break new ground, the substance of his rhymes sets him
apart.
Emulating the simpler times of hip-hop when groups like
Public Enemy
were rapping about race, politics and other matters of substance
instead of guns, drugs and braggadocio, Marcel's songs tiptoe several
lines, making him difficult to pin down. Like De La Soul, his messages
are usually positive but not preachy. Like Public Enemy, he tries to
challenge listeners with normally unspoken topics. His rhymes,
however, don't read like an after-school special and he's hardly
afraid to boast: He just leaves out the gun talk and keeps the
four-letters to a minimum.
"Even the artists of today that actually rap with some substance don't
reach the depth of those {Public Enemy} songs," Marcel says. "If I can
make one song that makes me feel like I feel when I listen to {PE's}
'Welcome to the Terrordome,' I'll be happy."
These days his words reach a national audience as deejays from North
Carolina to New York City play his singles. Yet Syracuse has always
been the backdrop for the major turns in Marcel's life, from bookworm
to deejay to barber to emcee to married father of four.
Seth Marcel and JadaKiss
View more pictures of Seth Marcel with Usher, JD Williams, and
Jadakiss
here.
Rapper's Delight
SETH MARCEL FEATURED IN THE
SYRACUSE TIMES 08.07.2002
Two turntables and a
microphone. That's how it began. Seth Marcel and his
cousin Eddie James scratching records and spouting
rhymes in the back room on the city's East Side. A
pair of Technique 1200s. A few records. A few
rhymes. A laboratory that spawned a rising star in
the hip-hop galaxy.
"That's where it all
started for us," Marcel says. "That's where we
decided this is what we wanted to do with our
lives."
As he speaks, Marcel is
taking a break from recording at Unique Studios in
New York City, where he's putting the icing on
I'm Necessary, his debut album for former
Syracuse University basketball god Derrick Coleman's
new label Onpoint Recordings. Marcel began his
career as a deejay scratching at frat parties and
places like the Underground in SU's Schine Student
Center and the Southwest Community Center. His music
life has since evolved from Mind Theory, a rap
tandem forged with James, to Marcel's
Sammy-nominated alter ego Billie Dixon, to Seth
Marcel, already perhaps the biggest hip-hop act to
emerge from the Salt City.
It's something of a
large leap for an artist who until recently was
known as much for his emcee abilities as his skill
as a barber. Although Marcel has performed in the
area for years it wasn't until he was signed to
Onpoint by Coleman, who met Marcel and James through
the SU party circuit, that things began to snowball.
The promotional single
"Hardcore," originally recorded with
partner-in-rhyme Aki and produced by James, was
released earlier this year; a remixed version with
Ruff Ryders and The Lox veteran
Jadakiss has since been spun extensively on
local and national radio stations. "The original
version of 'Hardcore' was doing well, creating buzz
on its own, and then doing the remix with 'kiss was
kind of like putting nitrous oxide in the tank,"
Marcel says. "It put me in a different realm
musically and established me as an independent who
can hang with a major."
Despite the gritty
head-bobbing beats of "Hardcore," Marcel claims
influences ranging from
Stevie Wonder,
Cyndi Lauper,
Herbie Hancock,
Duran Duran, Prince,
Jay-Z and
2Pac /
Tupac Shakur. "I got multiple colors to paint
pictures with," Marcel says. "If you only listen to
hip-hop you only hear music in a hip-hop bubble. If
you listen to a variety of music, it helps you
develop and experiment with your craft."
Marcel says that musical
gumbo has a strong influence on the material on his
forthcoming album, which ranges from
self-glorification to self-awareness, social issues,
and party and bump'n'grind tracks. Marcel also wrote
"I Can't Wait to Meet You," a heartfelt song for his
7-month-old daughter Xy'el.
"I know what the public
expects and it would be very easy to play behind
what people hear on the radio, but I wouldn't be
true to myself or my art if I did that," Marcel
says. "I'm trying to take it back to making an
album. It's supposed to be insightful. It's supposed
to be a journey."
The journey has yet to
be finished or really even begun. Marcel says 40
tracks are being laid down for consideration on the
upcoming album, which was primarily written by
Marcel and produced by James.
For the time being, the
Jadakiss remix and performances at events like the
May 29, 2002 WWHT-FM 107.9 Hot 107.9 Summer Jam with
headliners
Fabolous and
Shaggy have elevated the buzz in anticipation of
I'm Necessary's release later this year.
Marcel is scheduled to perform this week at
Billboard magazine's hip-hop conference in
Florida and is in discussions to open for a major
act on a national tour in the near future. Saturday
will be one of the last local performances before
Marcel is thrust onto the national scene; it should
be a homecoming for a homeboy done good and likely
to do far better.
"There's no place like
home," Marcel says. "I didn't really appreciate it
until I was sleeping in one hotel in one state one
day and another hotel in a different state the next
day. My home is and always will be the {area code}
315."
Hip-Hop Hooray
SETH MARCEL FEATURED IN THE
SYRACUSE TIMES01.23.2002
Seth Marcel, Syracuse Area Music Awards,
Sammys nominee for Best Soul / R'n'B
Instrumentalist / Vocalist, is the first
artist to land a deal on OnPoint Records in
Manhattan, NY , the label started by former
Syracuse University basketball star and
current Philadelphia 76'er power forward
Derrick Coleman.
Marcel
befriended Coleman during the cager's days
on the Syracuse University SU Hill, making
mix tapes for DC to listen to during road
trips, and the pair have kept in touch over
the years. When Coleman, who apparently has
aspirations of becoming the Berry Gordy of
the NBA, expressed an interest in starting a
label, Marcel sent him a tape, which led to
his signing and subsequent release of "I'm
Hard To The Core."
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