"i always feel like UK Hard House has been snubbed from being part of the "hardcore continuum"...... like listen to this and tell me it wasnt massively influenced by jamaican soundsystem culture"
Energy Flash
"My purpose was simple: to catch the feel, the pulse of rock, as I had lived through it. What I was after was guts, and flash, and energy, and speed" - NIK COHN - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "When the music was new and had no rules" -LUNA C
Sunday, December 22, 2024
in - out... in... out... Shake'n' Vac it all about
"i always feel like UK Hard House has been snubbed from being part of the "hardcore continuum"...... like listen to this and tell me it wasnt massively influenced by jamaican soundsystem culture"
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
We Were E
RIP the legendary Lennie De Ice
Real name Lenworth Green. A first name I've never seen before. The whole name sounds like a place.
I can't remember what I was watching - an old episode of Snub seen many years after its 1988 broadcast ? - but can remember my surprise on encounteringthe source of that almost distraught-with-XTC "we are e-e-e-e-e"
It was on the indie-alt TV show Snub because Factory licensed the rai track and put it out late 1987.
Mixed at the Dark Side Studio - quite early for that concept to be in circ.
Like the use of the wonderful phased vocal intro bit - "no time for no time for criticizing / music's hypnotizing" - from Raw Silk's "Do It To The Music" (postdisco classic, bought this at the time - heard the first time on Top of the Pops and was floored)
A reflicker here of the bliss-stricken "we are eeeeeee" sample
Smackman on the right geeking out
Getting intelligentish in a sort of Bodysnatchish way
Which is funny cos one of his alter egos was called Body Snatcher
I like the use of the word 'terrible' in this next title - the Ivan / sublime awe-ful majesty vibe of it undercut by the blokey bathos of 'well'
The best things he did apart from 'I.E' were as part of Dubb Hustlers
"Jungle Tremble" - cool, odd title that
One more time for the all-time classic - the original remastered (and on Hooj Choons for some reason)
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
the unrevived and the unrevivable
Shawn Reynaldo's latest newsletter starts by asking what are the defining sounds of the first half of 2020s and then talks about how the current scene is dominated by revivalism, before reaching its reall subject (wait for it):
Yet even as dancefloors have warmed to a wider range of tempos and drum patterns, they’ve also remained stubbornly in thrall to the past. Recycling has always been big in dance music, and the 2020s have put that tendency into overdrive. Aside from the aforementioned revivals, the past few years have also seen large-scale flirtations with electroclash, bloghouse, trip-hop, progressive house, Eurodance and numerous other ghosts of dance music’s past, many of them from the late ’90s and early ’2000s. In purely aesthetic terms, Y2K-era cosplay has dominated the decade to date, and that, in combination with the current affinity for breakbeats, should have theoretically cleared the way for one specific sound to come steaming back into the dance music conversation.
That sound? Nu-skool breaks, which oddly doesn’t seem to be one anyone’s radar...
The readable-by-nonsubscribers bit ends there, which is a good cut off point, because
a/ it's where I burst out laughing
b/ it's a nice cliffhanger (have to wait until the whole newsletter becomes readable to all to find out what his argument in favor of nu-skool breaks having its moment in the retro sun would be)
It did get me wondering though
1/ What would be Shawn's argument in favor of nu-skool breaks having untapped revival potential?
2/ Has everything else that could be revived already been revived, in fact? What are the other things that haven't been recycled yet? (Thinking specifically in dance music, but could be a wider span).
3/ What things are unrevivable? That no one will ever touch with a retro bargepole?
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I have to say, I find the idea of the Y2K as a rich seam for revivalists to be a bemusing idea - here's a real-time Year 2000 piece I wrote about the slim pickings (nu-skool breaks glancingly mentioned) organized around the concepts of The Next Medium-Sized Thing and "plausible deniability"
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
RIP J. Saul Kane
Well, it had to be this one I posted, didn't it?
That macabre sing-song sample - "did you ever think / when the hearse goes by / that some day you are going to die?"
Younger than me, by a half-decade... sobering, eh?
I reviewed Depth Charge - or is it Depthcharge? - a couple of times in a Melody Maker Singles column, and each time the release brightened that week's rather barren haul
from October 1989
DEPTHCHARGE
"Depthcharge"
(Vinyl Solution)
Inconsequential but captivatingly labyrinthine "dance" record that reminds me vaguely of Arthur Russell's bathyscopic odyssey "Let's Go Swimming". Over a bubbling cauldron of deep-sea dub bass, drifts a sargasso sea of sonic flotsam, sonar blips, smeared Kung fu samples, anemones and polyps. If Sun Ra thought he was from Atlantis rather than Saturn, was into Adrian Sherwood, and had an obsession with martial arts, he might make records like this. (That's a lot of "ifs", I s'pose, but there you go...)
Kind of Renegade Soundwave-y, without the grating Guy-Ritchie-movie voices....
Sort of anticipating trip hop, but not really...
And in some ways also anticipating Big Beat.
The other Depthcharge single I reviewed, from early 1990
Bit Wu-y in his predilections...