
Big Crown Vaults Vol.4
Bacao Rhythm and Steel Band, the mysterious steel pan outfit hailing from Hamburg, Germany made significant noise in 2024 when French film Anatomy of a Fall won an Academy Award for best original screenplay. Bacaoâs cover of 50 Centâs âPIMPâ was featured so heavily in the film and plays such a huge role in the storyline that it became synonymous with its success.
Subsequently, they ushered in the first appearance of steel pans in the orchestra pit at the Academy Awards so they could play the tune as director Justine Triet walked on stage to accept the award. All of this brought a lot of new fans to Bacao and pushed the streaming numbers of âPIMPâ well past 40 million. For those in the know, this tune made its way into underground fame back in 2008 when it was first pressed on band leader Bjorn Wagnerâs own Mocambo imprint and was often mistaken for the original sample source from which 50 made his hit.
All accolades and international fame aside, âPIMPâ is literally just the tip of the Bacao iceberg. With four full-length albums and a tall stack of 7â singles that have become staples to DJs around the world, they have been prolific since signing with Big Crown in 2014.
Despite the constant releases and elaborate catalog, every recording session has borne more fruit than could fit on an album, leaving a handful of tunes in the recording vault. Here on Big Crown Vaults Vol. 4 we open up that vault and give all (well, most of) those tunes a proper pressing and release.
The album opens up with their cover of the Bob James uber-classic breakbeat âNautilusâ and they put a spin on the original that puts it directly in the must-have category for all hip hop and breakbeat enthusiasts. Keeping their foot on the gas, they give the BRSB treatment to the Khruangbin classic âMaria TambieÌnâ with their signature bottom-heavy drums taking the energy of the tune to a whole new place.
Infamous for digging deep in the crates when picking material to reinterpret, they next take on Royce the 5â9â's J Dilla produced âLetâs Growâ. Originally the B-side to the first pressing of âPIMPâ (and making an appearance on the very limited first 2LP pressing of their debut album 55) we put the âPIMP (Version)â on here where they give their original recording the proper dub treatment with melodica and tape echo galore.
They turn up the tempo and the funk covering the Jackson 5âs âGreat To Be Hereâ and again dive deep into obscurity with the Billy Jones dancefloor burner âLookout Baby (Here I Come)â. While part of the allure of a new Bacao Rhythm & Steel Band album is finding out what covers they are going to take on, it is equally intriguing to see what original tunes theyâve cooked up.
While BCR Vaults Vol. 4 only has one original, âKaiso Noirâ, itâs an uptempo crowd-pleaser that sounds like a mix between a b-boy break and a James Bond score.
This collection of songs spans from 2008 to 2023 and runs a variety of genres from hip hop to jazz to soul and pop through the Bacao lens. The band is already at work on their 5th full-length studio album and this compilation should be the perfect thing to hold fans over until it arrives.
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Big Crown Vaults Vol.4
Bacao Rhythm and Steel Band, the mysterious steel pan outfit hailing from Hamburg, Germany made significant noise in 2024 when French film Anatomy of a Fall won an Academy Award for best original screenplay. Bacaoâs cover of 50 Centâs âPIMPâ was featured so heavily in the film and plays such a huge role in the storyline that it became synonymous with its success.
Subsequently, they ushered in the first appearance of steel pans in the orchestra pit at the Academy Awards so they could play the tune as director Justine Triet walked on stage to accept the award. All of this brought a lot of new fans to Bacao and pushed the streaming numbers of âPIMPâ well past 40 million. For those in the know, this tune made its way into underground fame back in 2008 when it was first pressed on band leader Bjorn Wagnerâs own Mocambo imprint and was often mistaken for the original sample source from which 50 made his hit.
All accolades and international fame aside, âPIMPâ is literally just the tip of the Bacao iceberg. With four full-length albums and a tall stack of 7â singles that have become staples to DJs around the world, they have been prolific since signing with Big Crown in 2014.
Despite the constant releases and elaborate catalog, every recording session has borne more fruit than could fit on an album, leaving a handful of tunes in the recording vault. Here on Big Crown Vaults Vol. 4 we open up that vault and give all (well, most of) those tunes a proper pressing and release.
The album opens up with their cover of the Bob James uber-classic breakbeat âNautilusâ and they put a spin on the original that puts it directly in the must-have category for all hip hop and breakbeat enthusiasts. Keeping their foot on the gas, they give the BRSB treatment to the Khruangbin classic âMaria TambieÌnâ with their signature bottom-heavy drums taking the energy of the tune to a whole new place.
Infamous for digging deep in the crates when picking material to reinterpret, they next take on Royce the 5â9â's J Dilla produced âLetâs Growâ. Originally the B-side to the first pressing of âPIMPâ (and making an appearance on the very limited first 2LP pressing of their debut album 55) we put the âPIMP (Version)â on here where they give their original recording the proper dub treatment with melodica and tape echo galore.
They turn up the tempo and the funk covering the Jackson 5âs âGreat To Be Hereâ and again dive deep into obscurity with the Billy Jones dancefloor burner âLookout Baby (Here I Come)â. While part of the allure of a new Bacao Rhythm & Steel Band album is finding out what covers they are going to take on, it is equally intriguing to see what original tunes theyâve cooked up.
While BCR Vaults Vol. 4 only has one original, âKaiso Noirâ, itâs an uptempo crowd-pleaser that sounds like a mix between a b-boy break and a James Bond score.
This collection of songs spans from 2008 to 2023 and runs a variety of genres from hip hop to jazz to soul and pop through the Bacao lens. The band is already at work on their 5th full-length studio album and this compilation should be the perfect thing to hold fans over until it arrives.
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Bacao Rhythm and Steel Band, the mysterious steel pan outfit hailing from Hamburg, Germany made significant noise in 2024 when French film Anatomy of a Fall won an Academy Award for best original screenplay. Bacaoâs cover of 50 Centâs âPIMPâ was featured so heavily in the film and plays such a huge role in the storyline that it became synonymous with its success.
Subsequently, they ushered in the first appearance of steel pans in the orchestra pit at the Academy Awards so they could play the tune as director Justine Triet walked on stage to accept the award. All of this brought a lot of new fans to Bacao and pushed the streaming numbers of âPIMPâ well past 40 million. For those in the know, this tune made its way into underground fame back in 2008 when it was first pressed on band leader Bjorn Wagnerâs own Mocambo imprint and was often mistaken for the original sample source from which 50 made his hit.
All accolades and international fame aside, âPIMPâ is literally just the tip of the Bacao iceberg. With four full-length albums and a tall stack of 7â singles that have become staples to DJs around the world, they have been prolific since signing with Big Crown in 2014.
Despite the constant releases and elaborate catalog, every recording session has borne more fruit than could fit on an album, leaving a handful of tunes in the recording vault. Here on Big Crown Vaults Vol. 4 we open up that vault and give all (well, most of) those tunes a proper pressing and release.
The album opens up with their cover of the Bob James uber-classic breakbeat âNautilusâ and they put a spin on the original that puts it directly in the must-have category for all hip hop and breakbeat enthusiasts. Keeping their foot on the gas, they give the BRSB treatment to the Khruangbin classic âMaria TambieÌnâ with their signature bottom-heavy drums taking the energy of the tune to a whole new place.
Infamous for digging deep in the crates when picking material to reinterpret, they next take on Royce the 5â9â's J Dilla produced âLetâs Growâ. Originally the B-side to the first pressing of âPIMPâ (and making an appearance on the very limited first 2LP pressing of their debut album 55) we put the âPIMP (Version)â on here where they give their original recording the proper dub treatment with melodica and tape echo galore.
They turn up the tempo and the funk covering the Jackson 5âs âGreat To Be Hereâ and again dive deep into obscurity with the Billy Jones dancefloor burner âLookout Baby (Here I Come)â. While part of the allure of a new Bacao Rhythm & Steel Band album is finding out what covers they are going to take on, it is equally intriguing to see what original tunes theyâve cooked up.
While BCR Vaults Vol. 4 only has one original, âKaiso Noirâ, itâs an uptempo crowd-pleaser that sounds like a mix between a b-boy break and a James Bond score.
This collection of songs spans from 2008 to 2023 and runs a variety of genres from hip hop to jazz to soul and pop through the Bacao lens. The band is already at work on their 5th full-length studio album and this compilation should be the perfect thing to hold fans over until it arrives.











