B-Cide's Defiant MonSter and Scottie Barnett's [Stereo Current]

Today on Stereo Current, we dive into the raw, unfiltered world of B-Cide’s latest project, MonSter, a concept album that redefines survival in the independent hip-hop circuit. Released today through Utica Grind Records, the album chronicles the Utica native’s journey with multiple sclerosis, transforming clinical struggle into a sovereign manifesto. We explore how B-Cide balances vulnerability with competitive fire, specifically looking at his strategic release of expanded physical editions. Then, we shift gears to the Scottish highlands for Scottie Barnett’s 'Motion to Motion.' The Mari Jack Mix offers a masterclass in lo-fi boom bap and 90s-inflected RnB that ditches mainstream gloss for visceral, tape-deck warmth. We also touch on the haunting new textures from TVAM following the release of the album Ruins earlier this week. Throughout the episode, Sloane Rivera and Julian Vance dissect the bridge between personal adversity and artistic triumph, examining how these artists utilize analog sensibilities and community-driven rollouts to maintain creative control in a shifting industry landscape. It’s a briefing on the sounds currently shifting the downtown frequency.

[00:00] Announcer: From Neural Newscast, this is Stereocurrent, sound, culture, and the systems that shape them.
[00:10] Sloane Rivera: The downtown air feels a bit heavier this morning. March 1st, 2026. It's the kind of weight you feel when the music stops being an ornament and starts being a survival kit.
[00:27] Sloane Rivera: I am Sloan Rivera.
[00:30] Julian Vance: And I'm Julian Vance.
[00:31] Julian Vance: You're listening to Stereo Current.
[00:33] Julian Vance: We're sifting through the noise to find the signals that actually matter.
[00:37] Julian Vance: Today, Sloan, we're looking at records that don't just ask for your attention.
[00:41] Julian Vance: They demand a reckoning.
[00:43] Sloane Rivera: Right, Julian.
[00:44] Sloane Rivera: We're talking about creative sovereignty.
[00:47] Sloane Rivera: Whether it's a veteran rapper from Utica turning a diagnosis into a throne
[00:51] Sloane Rivera: or a Scottish producer dredging up 90s soul from a lo-fi tape deck,
[00:56] Sloane Rivera: Today is about the artists who own their narrative, masters and all.
[01:01] Julian Vance: It's a Sunday for the Defiant. Let's get into it.
[01:04] Sloane Rivera: Um, let's start with Utica Grind Records.
[01:07] Sloane Rivera: Today, Bob B-side Cardillo released what I'd call the defining statement of his 20-plus-year career.
[01:15] Sloane Rivera: The album is titled, Monster. Note the capital M and S.
[01:21] Sloane Rivera: JamSphere is calling it a relentless, unfiltered testament.
[01:26] Sloane Rivera: And honestly, Julian, that feels like an understatement.
[01:29] Julian Vance: It's a heavy spin, Sloan.
[01:31] Julian Vance: B-side has been a fixture since 2003, but this isn't about industry longevity.
[01:37] Julian Vance: It's about his 2011 diagnosis of multiple sclerosis.
[01:41] Julian Vance: He's now fully wheelchair-bound, and he's used that reality as the framework for a 15-track
[01:47] Julian Vance: concept album.
[01:48] Julian Vance: or 19 if you're smart enough to grab the physical copy.
[01:51] Sloane Rivera: The way he weaponizes medical terminology is fascinating.
[01:55] Sloane Rivera: Tracks such as a claustrophonic use the percussive click and clang
[02:00] Sloane Rivera: of an MRI machine as a rhythmic foundation.
[02:03] Sloane Rivera: It's anxiety rendered in surround sound.
[02:05] Sloane Rivera: He's not looking for pity. He's crowning himself the wheelchair king.
[02:09] Julian Vance: I love the grit in gravity suit.
[02:12] Julian Vance: He describes the fatigue and ataxia, not as abstract concepts, but as a crushing suit weighing on every limb.
[02:19] Julian Vance: And yet the groove is so sovereign.
[02:22] Julian Vance: It has this mid-tempo swagger that tells you he hasn't lost a step of his mental sharpness,
[02:28] Julian Vance: even if the body is negotiating movement in slow motion.
[02:31] Sloane Rivera: And Julian, look at the rollout. This isn't a passive release.
[02:35] Sloane Rivera: He's been on TikTok Live for over 150 consecutive days building this community.
[02:40] Sloane Rivera: He owns his masters, his publishing, and clearly he owns the room.
[02:45] Sloane Rivera: He even held back four tracks from streaming to reward the collectors.
[02:49] Sloane Rivera: CD, vinyl, cassette, even USB.
[02:52] Julian Vance: That's the downtown ethos right there.
[02:54] Julian Vance: Direct to fan. No middlemen.
[02:56] Julian Vance: He's collaborating with people such as G-Beans and guitarist Chris Cox to flesh out this battle of wills.
[03:03] Julian Vance: It's beautiful and brutal.
[03:05] Sloane Rivera: It's high-definition survival.
[03:07] Sloane Rivera: If you want to see what hip-hop looks like when the armor is stripped away, Monster is your map.
[03:13] Julian Vance: Moving from the grit of Utica to something with a bit more of a bruised warmth, as our
[03:18] Julian Vance: friends at A&R Factory put it.
[03:20] Julian Vance: Scotty Barnett, a Scottish producer and composer, just dropped the Mary Jack mix of his track
[03:26] Julian Vance: Motion to Motion yesterday.
[03:29] Sloane Rivera: Barnett is doing something interesting with nostalgia, isn't he, Julian?
[03:33] Sloane Rivera: It's lo-fi boom-bap, meeting 90s R&B.
[03:35] Sloane Rivera: But it feels as though it was dragged through a time machine rather than just polished in a studio.
[03:41] Sloane Rivera: It has that sticky, sweet lyricism that feels intimately rough around the edges.
[03:46] Julian Vance: Exactly.
[03:47] Julian Vance: He's drawing from the wells of Motown and Stacks, but he's doing it with this modern spark.
[03:52] Julian Vance: He's joined by Victoria Sola, and her vocal arrangements give the track this intuitive, razor-sharp melodic sense.
[04:00] Julian Vance: It's a conversation between eras.
[04:02] Sloane Rivera: It's a total rejection of that mainstream R&B gloss that's been saturating the airwaves lately.
[04:08] Sloane Rivera: It feels as if it were a lost relic lifted from a 90s tape deck.
[04:12] Sloane Rivera: There's a visceral potential in that sound.
[04:15] Sloane Rivera: It's soulful, it's nostalgic, but it fires up the present tense.
[04:19] Julian Vance: That's surprising, Sloan, how Scotty is internalizing the greats without ever dipping into imitation.
[04:25] Julian Vance: It's about the feeling, letting the imperfections breathe.
[04:29] Julian Vance: That's where the soul lives.
[04:30] Sloane Rivera: Available on Spotify and all major crop forms as of this weekend.
[04:35] Sloane Rivera: It's the perfect transition from the intensity of B-side to something that lets you slip backward into your own thoughts.
[04:42] Julian Vance: And if you need a little more of that indie rock texture to round out your Sunday, we have to mention TVAAM.
[04:49] Julian Vance: Their new album Ruins dropped this past Friday, February 27th.
[04:53] Sloane Rivera: I've been spending powder blue on loop.
[04:56] Sloane Rivera: It's got that atmospheric weight we've come to expect,
[04:59] Sloane Rivera: but there's a new level of maturity in the composition.
[05:02] Sloane Rivera: It feels very much in line with the scene news we've been tracking.
[05:06] Sloane Rivera: Music that's a bit more somber, a bit more reflective of the times.
[05:09] Julian Vance: It fits the vibe of the week perfectly.
[05:11] Julian Vance: Ruins is an appropriate title for where we are.
[05:15] Julian Vance: It's about finding the beauty in the debris, much as B-side is doing in Utica.
[05:20] Sloane Rivera: The scene is leaning into the raw and the real right now.
[05:23] Sloane Rivera: Whether it's the physical limitations of the body or the limitations of a lo-fi recording,
[05:29] Sloane Rivera: these artists are proving that the most interesting things happen at the boundaries.
[05:33] Julian Vance: They're not just making music, they're building forts.
[05:36] Julian Vance: And we're just glad we get to visit.
[05:38] Sloane Rivera: That's our look at the downtown frequency for this March 1st. I am Sloan Rivera.
[05:43] Julian Vance: I'm Julian Vance. You've been listening to Stereocurrent. Catch more at Stereocurrent.neuralnewscast.com.
[05:51] Julian Vance: Keep the needles clean and the vision sharp.
[05:53] Sloane Rivera: Stereocurrent is a Neural Newscast production. Neural Newscast is AI-assisted, human-reviewed.
[06:01] Sloane Rivera: View our AI transparency policy at neuralnewscast.com. See you in the crates tomorrow.
[06:06] Announcer: This has been Stereocurrent on Neural Newscast. Sound, culture, and the systems that shape them.
[06:12] Announcer: Neural Newscast uses artificial intelligence in content creation, with human editorial review prior to publication.
[06:19] Announcer: While we strive for factual, unbiased reporting,
[06:22] Announcer: AI-assisted content may occasionally contain errors.
[06:25] Announcer: Verify critical information with trusted sources.
[06:28] Announcer: Learn more at neuralnewscast.com.

B-Cide's Defiant MonSter and Scottie Barnett's [Stereo Current]
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