"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
Here's something I voted for that I'm fairly sure will not make the cut, despite being verily the dawn of grime (dawning, strangely, at the very top of the charts)
YouTube not existing back then, and me not living in the UK, there's so many UKG videos I never saw during the 2step pop crossover years
Like this one (which did place in the Noughties Nuum Poll)
What an odd little video
And why did B15 change the title from "Girls Like This" (the chorus) to "Girls Like Us"?
No video for this though (and I suspect it's another tune that will not make the poll)
That "you smoke Paul" dialogue is from Abigail's Party, right?
If not "Bound 4", then definitely not this (around which Mark F constructed a whole proto-grime, punk-rave article for Hyperdub, in those days a website)
Will So Solid & friends be represented at all? Maybe for "Dilemma", almost certainly not for anything with MC-ing on... I think I voted for this though:
Sunday, April 28, 2013
superior Soulwax remix of this
Thursday, April 25, 2013
in a drummige-flashback, Our God Is Speed locates a precedent for "Amen" in a Duke Ellington track "Blue Pepper" that came out three years before "Amen, My Brother"
and then also unfurls "some classic, disrobed oldskool choppage" by Amazon II, the killer "Booyaa"
clean forgotten how many pearls were scattered in just two or three years by Gavin King aka Amazon II aka Aphrodite aka A-Zone aka a dozen other aliases and collaboration identities
and this one, the A-Zone remix of Urban Wax's "You Take Me Up", with amazingly shifty sidling beats and hypergasmatic divas and lazer riffs - a sister track to Foul Play's "Being With You"
but then there's this
a collaboration between King, Mickey Finn and another dude... a hardcore/jungle foundational classic, and a Top 30 hit too.
but later on (1997-ish) GK's stuff started to veer in this good-times-y, party-up jungle direction... it got a bit bouncy....
is this the big tune of that era I'm thinking of?
i think he also improved his gear and the sound went a bit glossy.... something of the grit disappeared
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Mark Fisher, excellent, on James Blake's Overgrown and "The Secret Sadness of the 21st Century", over at Electronic Beats (where Lisa Blanning, formerly of The Wire, now edits):
"The initial motivation for Blake’s early work no doubt came from Burial, whose combination of jittery two-step beats and R&B vocal samples pointed the way to a 21st century pop. It was as if Burial had produced the dub versions; now the task was to construct the originals, and that entailed replacing the samples with an actual vocalist. Listening back to Blake’s records in chronological sequence is like hearing a ghost gradually assume material form; or it’s like hearing the song form (re)coalescing out of digital ether."
Mark then moves on to talk about the depressive hedonism of recent chartpop and radio rap (mentioning Kanye and Drake... Kendrick Lamarr would also fit well in this balling-but-feeling-hollow-and-numb-inside company):
"In the 21st century, there’s an increasingly sad and desperate quality to pop culture hedonism.... When former R&B producers and performers embraced dance music, you might have expected an increase in euphoria, an influx of ecstasy. Yet the digitally-enhanced uplift in the records by producers such as Flo-Rida, Pitbull and will.i.am has a strangely unconvincing quality, like a poorly photoshopped image or a drug that we’ve hammered so much we’ve become immune to its effects. It’s hard not to hear these records’ demands that we enjoy ourselves as thin attempts to distract from a depression that they can only mask, never dissipate."
(Check out some choice assonance from later in Mark's piece -- "the disaffection languishes listlessly, incapable of even recognizing itself as sadness" - say it aloud!)
Mind you, the sadness in chartpop, I'm not sure it's that well secreted. It's often rather upfront, the explicit content of quite a few recent hits: Rihanna + Calvin Harris finding "love in a hopeless place", Rihanna's cheerless "Cheers", even "Shine Bright Like Diamonds" (which It's Her Factory's Robin convincingly shows to be a subdued, despondent ditty whose unresolved musical structure belie the ostensible "every man and woman is a superstar" poptimism of the lyric).
Talking of Calvin H, I still reckon the secret -- if not prototype, then affiliate - for what Mark calls the "quavery and tremulous" Blake vocal style is Harris's mistily enunciated, half-swallowed singing on "I'm Not Alone". (Which is no diss: I really like "I'm Not Alone").
(Interestingly many fans of "I'm Not Alone" take it as being about depressive hedonism, being all clubbed out and not being able to hack the lifestyle anymore. Loneliness on the dancefloor. I hadn't picked up on that myself, more the sort of vague undefined religiose-spiritual aspect)
Talking of deflation amid the E-lation, I really enjoy the bit in "Scream
& Shout" when the beat halts and will.i.am goes "cus I was feeling down / now i'm
feeling better", in this dejected, crestfallen voice. Then it's back to the party all night "on and on and on and on" grind.
The whole aesthetic of the video is about as denatured and alienated as you can get
The
initial motivation for Blake’s early work no doubt came from Burial,
whose combination of jittery two-step beats and R&B vocal samples
pointed the way to a 21st century pop. It was as if Burial had produced
the dub versions; now the task was to construct the originals, and that
entailed replacing the samples with an actual vocalist.
Listening back to Blake’s records in chronological sequence is like
hearing a ghost gradually assume material form; or it’s like hearing the
song form (re)coalescing out of digital ether.
- See more at: http://www.electronicbeats.net/2013/04/18/mark-fisher-recommends-james-blakes-overgrown/#sthash.KbVWHJow.dpuf
The
initial motivation for Blake’s early work no doubt came from Burial,
whose combination of jittery two-step beats and R&B vocal samples
pointed the way to a 21st century pop. It was as if Burial had produced
the dub versions; now the task was to construct the originals, and that
entailed replacing the samples with an actual vocalist.
Listening back to Blake’s records in chronological sequence is like
hearing a ghost gradually assume material form; or it’s like hearing the
song form (re)coalescing out of digital ether.
- See more at: http://www.electronicbeats.net/2013/04/18/mark-fisher-recommends-james-blakes-overgrown/#sthash.KbVWHJow.dpuf
their posture on that record sleeve makes me think of these glowering fellers
whom Phil Knight of The Phil Zone is blogging -- or "blooking" - about compellingly at the moment at Strangled
Goldie was a Stranglers fan of course
check for the squeaky hardcore voices on this (representing the Aliens)
looking forward to Phil's exegesis on the 'Glers' fifth studio album!
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Cossack race memory?
no, it's international - or at least Pan-European
First Bohemian Hard Bass Assault!
"long live the idiot"
Pan-Slavic, definitely
you can really hear the donk in that one
no, it is international
hyperstatic reformulations of the already-done of course (gabba - hardstyle - jumpstyle - donk - )
but more fun that some of the more tepidly tasteful hyperstasis on offer
(talking of rave flashbacks) compare this Iggy Azalea tune
with this 16 year old Marc Acardipane track (when the demon-horde synth kicks in)
the whooshing, ascending riff-noise -- often just more a whine or siren-peal than an actual riff --is one of the idiomatic features of the trap/ratchet/etc sound, it's a relatively new sound in rap production
can't think of any good examples off the top of my head, but hear it a lot
B-Boys On E, rappers getting "pillish" -- again, sense of history repeating.... time becomes recursive
"This shuffling/minimal tech/house sound [what he elsewhere calls“landfill tech house”!] is clearly blowing up on the
London underground right now, the energy is unmistakeable, it’s just
really baffling when you hear it if you’ve heard house in the last 20
years because the comparison between the sound and the way the audience
talk about the sound doesn’t add up. Which is to say: they talk like
it’s a brand new thing but it sounds like generic techy house."
And as he says in the main published interview at RBMA, "why London’s working class/multi-cultural/pirate/urban crowd started
raving to quite similar techy house and why fugitive post-dubsteppers
started making it is a double mystery.... It kinda all feels upside down: the culture and the crowd feels very
‘nuum, but the music to my ears at least could be in any Euro tech house
superclub."
(The dancing really doesn't look all that, does it? ... I mean, I couldn't do it, obviously, but...)
Back in the offcuts at his blog, Martin quotes from a London underground house documentary, juxtaposing the words of a younger, more hyped-up and seemingly historically unaware jock with those of an experienced, been around the block deejay, Pioneer :
Pioneer: “The sound now, that people are after, is house again. Whereas it
went through the UK funky phase and some of it sounded a bit… grimey. It
had it's distinctive sounds, don't get me wrong, and it had it's other
sound, which was a bit gimmicky - some of the MC tunes that people
didn't like - but those people that left that UK funky side started to
search for a deeper sound and started realising 'oh there's house." So
for them it's kinda new, but for someone who's been in it for years…
it's just a cycle. It's kinda gone back to where it was in the '90s.
We're back here again, the house/garage sound.”
As Martin notes, this current "back to house" shift is an echo of the never-quite-took-off Circle / dubbage thing he was tentatively presenting as a potential next big wave a few years back
Which was an echo of "urban house", Timmi Magic's anti-grime, get rid of the MCs, bring in the live percussionist move of the early 2000s...
At a certain point these pendulunuum shifts (from MCs/edge-of-antigroove/gritty to no-MCs/smooth 'n' steady grooves/ deluxe) themselves get to be predictable, fixed...
Hence the Groundhog Day scenario Martin contemplates here:
"Culturally this stuff is a new wave; musically it’s so beholden to house
right now it’s hard to say it’s “new.” Maybe the latter will come with
time... [but] maybe this won't and indeed doesn’t want to, it just
wants to rave and party all night long: fair play. But the irony being
is that if they do go down the route of sonic change towards signifiers
that fit more closely what we recognise as “London underground” by
putting kicks and snares in interesting places... they might find themselves
back at UK funky again, already!"