"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
Friday, May 13, 2022
smoovgroov
here's a playlist I made of smoovgrooving '70s music (starts funk and souljazz, veers off into a rockier but still boogiefunkin' direction - what I call nifty groovers).
the list is almost infinitely expandable and I'll be adding to it on and off
The impulse came to me after hearing this tune played by a band on a little hill park near Santa Monica beach, catching the name "Grover Washington" and later managing to work out what the tune the group was covering was.
This one, also included, is more than smooov, it is an argument for, nay proof of, a Divine Plan for Creation
I feel there should be a book or at least an article written about Ramp's "Daylight" (maybe there is)
I remember hearing the original sample-source for the first time, having only known the Size version. It was in the middle of the '90s, while wandering around Camden Market - suddenly there's the vocal and the lick that I recognise and love, wafting across from a record stall. So surprised and delighted was I that I strode up the chap behind the counter and burbled "there's a jungle track that samples this!". The look of disgust on the jazzbo's face!
I can sort of see his point actually comparing the two - much as I love the Roni take, it leaves so many gorgeous glistening components behind in its ransacking raid on the rare groove archive (not that the jazz snob would have known that, having never gone within a million miles of jungle I'm sure)
But I'd be hard pressed to choose between the two
Jungle as a gateway drug to '70s souljazz (the tracks between tunes traceable here)
1 comment:
and before Roni Size it was sampled by A Tribe Called Quest on Bonita Applebum, leaving even less from the original.
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