Or take a virtual tour of the Map Center, which hosts events such as the recent Barry Lawrence Ruderman Conference on Cartography : Indigenous mapping. Visit the physical collection at the David Rumsey Map Center at the Stanford University Library. Read the Blog to learn more about collection highlights, such as Urbano Monte's manuscript world map from 1587. Here you can explore maps through a variety of viewers. Welcome to the David Rumsey Map Collection. At just 23, Dave has already built the foundations of an impressive body of work - at the rate he’s working at, watching him fill out the chapters to come is going to be a gift that keeps on giving.View High Resolution Interactive Globe View All Interactive Globes ‘We’re All Alone In This Together’ is an album that’ll be excavated for years to come, but remains just as impactful on first listen. Setting such a high bar on your debut can be a poisoned chalice but Dave weathers the storm with his astute penmanship, impeccable musical taste and cool, collected delivery. “You can ask James Blake, I ain’t seen the colour in anything,” he raps, cleverly referencing his collaborator’s 2016 album. Later, the gorgeous ‘Both Sides Of A Smile’ - where an argument between two lovers bleed out - is underpinned by James Blake’s chirruping vocal and soulful piano chords which only adds to the heartbreak. ‘Twenty To One’ finds Dave trying out his singing chops as he intriguingly leaps between melody and spoken word in a fantastically unique fashion. The Latin-flavoured bop of ‘System’ features a sticky hook from Wizkid which is eventually soothed by swelling strings. “They’re deporting our people and it makes me sick / ‘cause they was broken by the country that they came to fix,” he raps.įrom allowing the godfathers of his genre to shine to politics, love and heartbreak, it’s an album of tremendous scope, both in subject and musical reference points. ‘Three Rivers’ is an ode to immigrants, a trilogy of stories stacking up to paint a rich picture of the UK’s problematic dealings from Windrush to refugees fleeing from war-torn countries. Each are given a moment to trace their story from hard beginnings to the status they’ve climbed to. Fredo and Ghetts cut through with their razor-sharp delivery before Giggs steps into frame with that unmistakable baritone. The fun starts around ‘In The Fire’, a seven-minute mic exchange between the greats of grime atop a Kanye-style chipmunked gospel beat. “Somethin’ special when he messaged me and told me that I saved his life.” A scattershot drum-pattern breaks up the soaring strings as a ghostly vocal hangs over the instrumental. “In twenty-three years, I done so much wrong / but in that moment, I just felt like I made it right” he raps on opener ‘We’re All Alone” as he recalls the transaction with ‘a kid’ who sought his counsel from the brink. On track one Dave excavates the connections he’s made to his fans through music. While ‘Psychodrama’ used the framing of a therapy session to look inwards, ‘We’re All Alone In This Together’ looks outwards. He proved across the 11 tracks that he was the real deal who can operate in the album format - a fine storyteller who can strip the most difficult of subjects back to its core race, domestic abuse, his brother’s prison sentence, nothing seemed to stump him. All eyes have been on Dave since debut ‘Psychodrama’ arrived off the back of a run of high-flying singles.
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