"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
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
Merrie Xmas and a Happy Nuum Year
a bit hauntological this - duetting with the ghost of his former self
merry Jahmas to the great Rebel MC
what a pretty pop star he made
starting to get more 'conscious', less clean shaven
the fully spiritualized beard - sticky with smoke
"it givin' me a pure meditation"
Thursday, December 19, 2019
that man Malcolm again!
every year, two or three times I'll hear a new rap song on the radio that samples the hollering-into-an-echo-chamber bit at the start of "Buffalo Gals'
it's one of the most widely sampled sounds in pop history - an actual talisman and touchstone in hip hop, which is pretty remarkable given that Malcolm McLaren he got no rhythm (at least according to Trevor Horn, who says he had to tap on Malcy's chest to keep him in time during the do-si-doh with ya pardner "rapping" on "Buffalo Gals")
here's a hardcore rave example I just stumbled on
there must be scores more, in many many genres
here's a favorite occurrence, i guess notionally also in jungle (an influence on this album)
i could cheat and go and look at whosampled, but i'd rather see what my memory dredges up - and what parishioners proffer...
postscript 3/8/2020
appears in this Sublime song
as recently covered (sans the Malcolm bit) by Lana Del Rey
one of the great surprises of moving to LA is discovering that I really like Sublime (when they first came out, I couldn't stand them - but that was when I was living in New York and as disconnected from radio as everyday listening as I've ever been - and there is just something about Sublime's singles, the gait of them, that fits the geography and the weather of Southern California).
it's one of the most widely sampled sounds in pop history - an actual talisman and touchstone in hip hop, which is pretty remarkable given that Malcolm McLaren he got no rhythm (at least according to Trevor Horn, who says he had to tap on Malcy's chest to keep him in time during the do-si-doh with ya pardner "rapping" on "Buffalo Gals")
here's a hardcore rave example I just stumbled on
there must be scores more, in many many genres
here's a favorite occurrence, i guess notionally also in jungle (an influence on this album)
i could cheat and go and look at whosampled, but i'd rather see what my memory dredges up - and what parishioners proffer...
postscript 3/8/2020
appears in this Sublime song
as recently covered (sans the Malcolm bit) by Lana Del Rey
one of the great surprises of moving to LA is discovering that I really like Sublime (when they first came out, I couldn't stand them - but that was when I was living in New York and as disconnected from radio as everyday listening as I've ever been - and there is just something about Sublime's singles, the gait of them, that fits the geography and the weather of Southern California).
Monday, December 16, 2019
the future is half a century old
i.e. young people dancing to electronic music
RIP Gershon Kingsley, who reached the ripe old age of 97
interesting, isn't it, that the Future would emerge first under the sign of easy listening - and even kitsch?
c.f. my "friendly futurists" thesis (Jean-Jacques Perrey et al)
the most successful hit version = Hot Butter
Didn't realise that Jean-Michel Jarre did a version
Makes sense cos "Equinoxe 4" always felt like a semi-rewrite - not literally, but the vibe 'n ' feel, albeit more sedate, less boppy-bouncy
another of the many 'Popcorn' covers
Inane in the Membrane
stop press: some suggestions from Ian S in comments
the DJ Vibes happy hardcore version
the Aphex Twin's 92 breakbeat version
Saturday, December 14, 2019
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
King George the Immense
George, as in Kelly, as in Sacred, as in Creator of the Greatest Jungle Tekno Song of All and Ever Time
Eyes rolling back in the head bizniz
"Call me a star watch me shine" - almost faint at that bit.
I'm sure he picked the name Sacred because he knew he was a vessel for the divine
Well, I did not know this, but fancy that - George Kelly was the promoter of Thunder & Joy - one of my favorite jungle clubs, right in the middle of London, mere steps away from Centrepoint -
"Thunder and joy" always struck me as vaguely Baptist or Pentecostal in vibe, or redolent of the "shocks of mighty" idea in rootsifarian reggae.
George put out quite a few other Sacred tracks ("Call Da Cops" was good, nothing quite reaches the heights of "Do It Together" though) and he had a bunch of alter-egos:
Aliases:
In Groups:
One of these days I'll have to do the full auteur-y trawl through them.
GK also ran the Grand Larceny label (who had School of Hard Knocks among others) which spun off Paragon Recordings (which had Skyjoose - who later went dark-garage as Skycap of "Endorphins" renown).
A solid pedigree, a significant contribution, a well-nummy throughline ...
But from where I sit, just based on Thunder & Joy, and that one towering colossal record "Do It Together", you'd have to say that George Kelly was a world-historical figure
Where is he now?
Talking of throughlines...
That's why they call it a continuum, folks! pt 3949506
Mad remix of unknown provenance and status
Monday, December 9, 2019
knickerless parsons
When I embarked on my Hardcore Heroes series, which only got to #5 when it was intended to go deep into double figures, Satin Storm were on the list.
But the Hero status is mostly for this one so-so-peculiar tune that entranced me when I heard it on the pirates in '92 - wobbling like some strange manatee-on-rollerskates creature
One of the first where I really grokked the Frankenstein aesthetic of ardkore, the way tracks were crudely sutured together out of portions of pop and whatnot
Had it on one of those Kickin' comps for years and then picked up the vinyl in the 1995-onwards scrabble-to-trawl-up-recent-history frenzy of old skool buying. Along with a bunch of other Satin Storm 12's, then going cheap and cheerful
I do like the Satin Storm logo
What else did they do that gets anywhere close to the "nicholas parsons nicholas parsons" tune then?
Or did he do, as it seems to be really Travis Edwards
(BTW I do know the sample is not saying "Nicholas Parson" but it was a widespread belief or perhaps a humorous wish that it be so - see this discogs comment:
"I was lucky enough to get a 12' original coy of this in Brighton once. It had 'Nicholas Parsons' written on the sleeve...."
This earlier EP has some good tunes on it
They appear to have been a performing unit, playing at raves presumably - with a whole troupe of dancers, judging by the label info here. Ten "Satin Storm Dancers"!
Apparently Travis Edwards was also a rave dancer - he would come onstage, with his girlfriend, when Break The Limits did PA's
This one is quite interesting, a little "intelligent"
The earliest stuff is more or less bleep
The uuurv requires a proper inventory, but for now, tips welcomed.
Saturday, December 7, 2019
"give you a musical crisp biscuit you can't digest"
"Boneman X and DMS are causing stress
Give you a musical crisp biscuit you can't digest"
i shall return to a proper inventory of the genius of DMS (and Boneman X) at a later date
diamond rings
one of the first big batch of house tunes i picked up - in NYC, a time where a dance record store might have hip hop all up one wall and house all up the other
loved the distraught male vocals, and the duetting discarded lovers of the cold-hearted Donnie - "yeah man, she ain't even give me the chance to give her what i wanted to give her!!!!"
later sampled in this
Thursday, December 5, 2019
becoming-cartoon
young Sadmanbarty has a whole theory about these sprite-like goblin-voiced dancehall singers, to do with digital technology and identity-morphing and transhumanity - the schizo-Gothic proliferation of personae and mask-selves.
i always finds these tunes insanely compelling the first time i listen but for some reason (same goes for Vybz, for Popcaan, for Alkaline) i don't go back to them - whereas the autotuned Afrobeat or mumble rap is much more repeat-listenable... perhaps it's just because the dancehall stuff is so full on, always going for the listener's jugular, the personality-level volume-knob's always pitched to 11
also find the beats in today's dancehall often seem to have a curiously muffled quality, so glossed up and digi-sheened and hi-def huge in girth, it's like there's a blanket of dazzle smothering them
Monday, November 25, 2019
recreativity
sometimes i think could listen to this for ever
it is a higher order of creativity than this, isn't it - no getting around it
but then again is this
a higher order of creativity than this?
that's where it gets sticky
Tuesday, November 5, 2019
nostril + nostril
prefer the left one
This pair done a lot of good stuff under various joint names and separately (and with different collaborators too).
Here's just one early alias
Pascal Redpath is actually his real name, would you believe?
Before deciding whether to release a track or not, do you think James Hoyte thought to himself, "Is this Sponge-worthy?" *
* obscure and strained joke
Sunday, November 3, 2019
Westchester circles
borrows a lick from
also fragments from
"Circles" = one of the twin towers of Adam F discography
the other is this
the rest eludes my memory - what am I missing?
Saturday, November 2, 2019
lost entitites
one of my favorite ever pirate bits
not keen on this remix
flipside = one of those 'genre-of-one' killer tracks that point to a path not taken
doomravers
Forbidden Planet rerelease rationale:
After our first reissue of The Mover in 2014, Forbidden
Planet is back with two-part reissue of seminal material from the late 90s to
early 00s by Doomcore pioneer, Fifth Era. Fifth Era consisted of a group of
musicians from the UK and Czech Republic who pushed a slower, darker version of
Hardcore. Their transgressive style had an irrefutable impact on the
underground and we hope that this release goes a way to reintroduce Fifth Era's
unique sound to a new generation. Vinyl only.
To be released in early November.
Tuesday, October 29, 2019
Sunday, October 27, 2019
we like it i like it you like it too
Now this here is not the last d&b tune ever that I've liked...
But it's the last one I loved loved luvvdit2dabone
In the summer of 2002 "LK" was getting played nonstop on the pirates - well actually on the pirate, singular - since there was just the one playing drum + bass, amidst a whole heap of UKG and proto-grime pirates - at least that I could pick up in the part of West London where we were staying (I was over to do research for Rip It Up). I was surprised there was even one pirate, so far had the d+b slipped out of nuum's orbit by that point.
But that's where I heard it, on the one and only drumnbass pirate.
I associate this tune's skittering beat with my 2 year old running madly round and round the little coffee table in the rented ground floor Ladbroke Groove flat were staying in.
A family favorite it was. A little lightning bolt of sheer joy.
So it's "LK" and Dizzee's "I Luv U" (the instrumental version) and "Pulse X" that are my abiding musical memories of that summer.
Mostly I was holed up in the British Library going through old copies of Sounds and The Face, or trying to chase down the elusive Keith Levene and going round to Martin Fry's gaff and doing little expeditions to Bristol and Manchester and Sheffield, to soak up any surviving postpunky vibes and interview relevant parties. A curry with Richard H. Kirk. Steven Morris's house way out in the Cheshire countryside.
I think I only managed to go to one club that entire summer.
Although very fond of the Stamina MC "all I know is this tune / tear up nuff venue" chat on the single version, I ultimately prefer this instrumental version
Went and bought that garish yellow green sleeved CD single.
Made it my #2 fave single of 2002
Strangely though I have never until this moment heard the original song that it is - not based on, but largely composed out of, in terms of melodic, harmonic and textural substance.
lovely
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
DJ Marky - went down to Movement once or twice, pretty good. Vibe a bit V Records / Full Cycle, tuff but tasteful.
But I also saw him deejay in São Paulo - and he was slutely tearin
D&b was hot there at the end of the 1990s. Not with the general populace, but the cool kids. It was such a huge city and population that it could support all these different music micro-cultures, and some of them were incredibly Anglophile, obscurist Anglophile.
I was there for a music festival - talking about I'm not sure what (rave culture I expect )
4 Hero were there and did a music production workshop. They also, if I recall right, did some kind of not hugely fruitful live stage jam session with Azymuth, or members thereof. I think the whole concept was British music(ians) meets Brazilian music(ians). Better on paper.
In the music workshop, I asked Dego and Marc "What in your opinion are THE most must-to-avoid d&B structure-arrangement and/or production cliches? The ones that make you groan when you hear them in a track? That you'd never in a million years allow to bear the Reinforced label, let alone the 4 Hero one?"
They seemed tickled by that. Hint of a smile broke on their otherwise impassive and laconic faces.
Can't remember what they said though. They mimed out, vocally, a few well-corny drops and intro lick cliches, I think.
Saturday, October 26, 2019
PiLheads in the garridge?
i wonder if this was inspired by "Swan Lake" aka "Death Disco" by PiL?
seems unlikely with your nuum, but you never really know
quite a few of them have a secret postpunk connection
e.g. Dem 2 would you believe, one of them had a postpunk past
either that or a 2-Tone one
ah but talking about the ska / rocksteady traces in nuum
this, this here could quite possibly be a sideways inspiration for "Death Disco"
and hey i did not know that Madness did a version, and in more or less the same time-period as PiL
that's weird that cos in the 2-Tone chapter in Rip It Up - which follows directly after the PiL / Metal Box chapter, i start by contrasting "Gangsters" and "Death Disco", the Specials mono debut LP and the stereodubspacious Metal Box...
That version of "Swan Lake" by, hahahaha, Swan-E - a cover which is funnily enough titled "Gangster" - weird chains of echoes here - that was on the Cage Underground label.
The same little short-lived label that put out the marvellous Napa-Tac trak
"L-o-o-o-ndon Massive!"
Wednesday, October 23, 2019
echoes of Jah
is sampled in this
but i'm sure that either the Twinkle Brothers original lick or its Rebel MC relick is sampled in another hardcore / jungle tekno tune - late 92 / early 93? a real mad sounding tune.
anyone know?
10/24/2019 update
yesterday, via twitter - within seconds - the omniscient Ian S comes with the answer
tuuune
Monday, October 21, 2019
Friday, October 18, 2019
walk walk walk skank skank skank
bonus walk skank
update 10/23
Ian S spots another link in the chain
niiiice
reminds me a little of this 2step tune that is full of joy
Monday, October 14, 2019
Saturday, October 12, 2019
lover's rock (slight re-return)
Kofi's first group - and Caron Wheeler's too
on the actual Lover's Rock label
One of the later Brown Sugar singles, there's another group on the flipside, doing this song - which I half thought would be some kind of oblique inspiration to PiL's "Albatross", but it turns out to be a cover of the (early, Peter Green era) Fleetwood Mac hit!
And same side of the 7 inch also features this nice Brown Sugar version of Deniece Williams's "Free"
Any excuse to play this gorgeous Kofi tune again - and the excuse is the fact-tidbit that in addition to vocalling she also played the bass on it
Tuesday, October 8, 2019
Sunday, October 6, 2019
echoes of deaf journalists
"Simon, don't give them any good reviews, until they've paid their ads..."
no really, that's the first line of the song - rather taking me aback!
i assume aimed at someone who wrote for Black Echoes back in the day
possibly [darts to Wiki] reggae writer and photographer Simon Buckland?
it's a bit of a heavy-handed satire
and (whisper it) although not "a load of old rubbish", not one of the Prof's finest moments
Friday, October 4, 2019
rub a dub
hardcore 'n' rave revenants
postscript 10/7/2019
later re-revenant revisitations
semantically connected (ardkore)
postscript Oct 7
Spiro in comments points out another rub-a-dubby ardkore tune
semantically connected (80s dancehall)
Sunday, September 29, 2019
can't beat the system go with the flow
constituents
October 1 update:
Ian in Comments points out another sample-source (for the "now you know" bit)
the remix
rewind (remaster)
misconceived
Friday, September 20, 2019
exploding diva-bliss
luv luv luv this particular vibe - bliss-2-dark - ecstasy edging into the panic-rush
late 1992 - 1993 - early 1994 are the temporal coordinates
[late addition via Sadmanbarty Dissensus thread on technological abstractions of the human voice)
happy hardcore continues the divas but the sense of shattering - a dangerous excess - has left the music, leaving just fastbounce
meanwhile the ambient jungle carries on deploying divas - beautifully, but it's more exquisitely done, in the classy style of all that Masters of Work type house
perhaps cos it's no longer pitched-up, but timestretched so it sounds more like proper singing, properly human
whereas the stuff that E-lectrifies, transfixes, is the "closer to fireworks than soul" stuff
these would be cusp works on the edge between diva-distress and nu-smooth
Wednesday, September 18, 2019
get on up like a faxmachine
a Pink Floyd reference and a James Brown reference in a single song
chugging Euroteknohaus that i'd never heard until this moment
yet i'm not honestly sure i've heard this classic before either, somehow
or this either
love the artist's real name - Aad de Mooy
Sunday, September 15, 2019
Monday, September 9, 2019
Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Saturday, August 24, 2019
this is my tune
Dug out this Lovers Rock comp made ages ago by my dj pal Paul Kennedy and was reminded how lovely this song is by The Cool Notes
and also by how uncannily it sounds like Saint Etienne (or rather I should say, how uncannily Saint Etienne sound like it - in some of their earlier modes at any rate, Foxbase Alpha time particularly)
almost to the point where I'm wondering if Cracknell and the boys covered it
Love that synth solo - so delicate and filigreed it almost sounds like guitar (and in fact is twined around a guitar solo, doubling the effect)
Dub is nice too
The lyric to "My Tune" would have fit well with the songs-about-songs, meta-music interblog challenge of 2015 - the singer / group's evident pride in her / their creation... self-reflexively celebrating the seduction-by-hook of the consumer's ear and the fan's inevitable purchase of the delectable product .... a record that enacts its own promise (shame it wasn't a hit)
The title "My Tune" could also lend itself to a quite different lyric, written from the consumer / fan perspective - about that feeling you can have with pop songs (or any kind of songs - dance anthems, etc), that this song was made just for you, that is belongs to you - so snugly does it dovetail with your desire, so uncannily attuned it is to your particular audio-erogenous zones
(Well, The Cool Notes tune does contain that idea in the line "I wrote it for the people, I wrote it for you" - but here the addressee is the massive, it's "you" second-person plural i think - as in the earlier line "I write the tunes that you dance to in the blues". The word "blues" itself being uncommon parlance suggests the idea of social ownership of the song)
But yeah when a song on the radio possesses you, takes over your life, it is like falling in love - that same feeling of extreme fortune and blessing, that heaven-sent matching
I feel like there is already a song, or possibly many songs, out there that are about just this feeling - a need miraculously met, the pop song as a personalised transmission....
it's rather like the way certain stars when performing onstage can seem to meet each fan's gaze .... or how very charismatic persons, in the interview situation or the glad-handing meet-and-greet situation, reputedly can make you feel like you're the only person in the room, that you have ALL of their attention
but this-is-MY-tune also makes me think of the more disordered, hallucinatory regions of fan feeling and fan-thought (as documented in the Vermorels's Starlust) where the star seems to be speaking directly to the fan, sending them secret messages, coded clues... the eyes in the poster on the bedroom wall piercing deep into you
While we're loving the lover's rock, here's another dreamsong about the dance of desire
postscript 8/25
Ian S in comments points out this rave versioning of Janet Kay
Fernando Ramirez Ruiz nominates Indeep's "Last Night a DJ Saved My Life" as belonging to song-as-salvation self-reflexivity syndrome
Thursday, August 22, 2019
mystery bliss 1 & 2
thieves the gaseous-bliss diva from "Sound of Eden", makes even gassier-blissier use of it
stumbled on this by chance and realised it's one of a big batch of mystery trax - result! - that i never got around to turning into videoclips so's the massive could help identify them
here's one the massive helped me with before
blisstastic
what do you think, shall I finally do the remaining 25 tunes for the trackheads to ID?
Monday, August 19, 2019
"ardcore? are you sure?"
ad for Music Power Records, Haringey!
and the full ad break from Pulse FM June 28th 1992 (half way through Adrian H & MJ)
via Deep Inside the Oldskool, which has the whole Adrian H & MJ set
also
via this cache of pirate tapes (c/o Mikus Musik)
a Pulse FM show by Chris Simon who co-ran Music Power Records
even more Pulse-ating power
Sunday, August 18, 2019
rufige
sometimes think this is the greatest hardcore track of all time - dark, blissy, dubby, delirious
knew one of its sources was this excellent Sweet Exorcist album track
did not know another was this
also seems unlikely there is an EP that's better than that Rufige 4-tracker
mind you the Metalheads EP with "Terminator", "Knowledge", "Sinister" and "Kemistry" is pretty fucking stunning
the best three in a row in all of H-core? Darkrider EP, Terminator EP, Angel
the only ones close are Foul Play (Vol. 2, Finest Illusion, Vol.3) and Omni (Mystic Stepper, Renegade Snares, Vol. 4)
knew one of its sources was this excellent Sweet Exorcist album track
did not know another was this
also seems unlikely there is an EP that's better than that Rufige 4-tracker
mind you the Metalheads EP with "Terminator", "Knowledge", "Sinister" and "Kemistry" is pretty fucking stunning
the best three in a row in all of H-core? Darkrider EP, Terminator EP, Angel
the only ones close are Foul Play (Vol. 2, Finest Illusion, Vol.3) and Omni (Mystic Stepper, Renegade Snares, Vol. 4)
Tuesday, August 13, 2019
slaves
trope reached earlier (1991) than the famous and supreme example (1995)
other notable nuum slaves
bit of Grace there via the musique concrete-y psycho-acapella track on the Slave to the Rhythm album
have i ever heard this super long 12 inch version of 'Slave to the Rhythm'? I'm really not sure
any more notable "slaves" in the rave-dance-disco-house realm?
postscript 8/14
Ian S in Comments points out these examples:
he mentions a "slave" thematic to this but I can't hear it
Thursday, August 8, 2019
mashing up history
check the slogan on the label of this version of the original Jem 77 tune -
"Proper Bloodclaart Pirate Radio Bizness"
this other recent Rave 2 the Grave tune is better than the Jem 77/Cubic 22 one I think
of course there were tracks that were effectively mash-ups - aka rip-offs - happening in real-time back in the old skool days. i can't think of any examples off the top, but there were quite a few that were composites of existing killer tunes.
This Mickeybeam75 chappie is slinging this kind of thing up there, along with a lot of high-quality uploads of original-era tunes
this one - not a mash up but a new-old tune - is quite devastating, beats and bass-wise. really like it
Here's the whole Wetman EP on Vivid
Funny title
This is an earlier EP by Wetman
Monday, July 29, 2019
Pearsall mix of salvage junglizm 94-95 - never released at the time tunes now vinylized
tearing mix from Man like Randall H
Mix rationale:
"One of the things that has delighted me in recent years has been the amazing revival of jungle music from producers new and old; along with this explosion of fresh jungle there has also been a very exciting trend towards ancient dubplates from the golden era finally getting proper releases. So for this, the ninth edition of my Get It series of mixes of recent(ish) vinyl releases, I am very excited to pull together 15 tracks that were until recently only on dubplate or on extremely limited and rare pressings. This mix covers everything from mellow rollers to aquatic tearouts LTJ Bukem-style to full-fledged ragga mayhem and dark steppers. Enjoy!
Check out the other Get It mixes: soundcloud.com/sonicrampage/sets/get-it-15-track-all-vinyl
Check out more old skool jungle: soundcloud.com/sonicrampage/sets/jungle-is-massive-pearsalls
Mixed in Berlin, July 2019
100% Vinyl"
Update 8/5 - Pearsall's blog post on unreleased dubplates and the reissue labels specialising in them
"Sometimes dubplates functioned as a means for producers to road test new productions – getting a trusted dj like Grooverider or Randall to play it out and report back on the crowd’s reaction. At other times dubplates were unique versions of tracks that were literally created as secret weapons for big name dj’s, for example a special remix that only that one dj might have.
Hard as it is to imagine today, back in the 90’s there was so much mystery around this music – you would go to a rave or a club night and hear track after track after track that were simply not available to buy, and might not be available for months or even years. In this situation, if you heard something that blew your mind and wanted to hear it again, often your only option was to go see that dj again and hope they played it, or buy the tape pack from the event.
Dubplate culture was one of the key elements behind the incredible speed at which rave music evolved from through the 1990’s... The dj’s and producers were constantly trying to upstage each other, and dubplates allowed new music to be played to ravers within days or even hours of being finished – no need to wait for labels or pressing plants or distributors or shops. Finish the track, get the DAT to a dj, they take it to Music House and have it cut, and it can go on the decks at a gig that night.
One of the side effects of this dubplate culture was, however, the fact that a lot of amazing tunes simply never came out. They were stuck on dubplate for many reasons – couldn’t fit into release schedules, artists and labels couldn’t reach a financial agreement, or the label owner(s) decided that the sound had simply moved on. Sometimes it was as simple as the original DAT being lost and no copies existing!
So for jungle fanatics, the years since 94/95 have been marked by the knowledge that there was a huge secondary catalogue of music that was only available to the public via low-quality recordings from raves and pirate radio...."
Tracklisting:
01. Dave Charlesworth - Guinness Track (ADR)
02. Simon 'Bassline' Smith - Oh Yeah (Deep Jungle)
03. J Majik - Telepathic (Deep Jungle)
04. The Invisible Man - Drifting (Drumtrip)
05. Equinox - Badman Style (Scientific Wax Retro)
06. Bizzy B & DJ DLux - Classic (Existence Is Resistance)
07. Bay B Kane - Cupid (Spandangle Selection)
08. DJ Nut Nut - You Can Do It (Deep Jungle / 8205 Recordings)
09. DJ Stretch - W (Dubplate Mix) (AKO Arcade)
10. Tom & Jerry - Bring Ya Dub VIP (AKO Arcade)
11. Bones & Natty - Thunder (Foxy Jangle)
12. Q Project - Champion Sound (Unofficial '95 Bootleg Mix) (Sublogic)
13. DJ Crystl - The Dark Crystl VIP (Hardcore Junglism)
14. DJ Renegade - What's Happening? (8205 Recordings)
15. Dillinja - You (Dom & Roland Productions)
Friday, July 26, 2019
Tuesday, July 23, 2019
Wednesday, July 17, 2019
the beauty of Beverley
Six things I have in common with Beverley Craven
1/ Born in the summer of 1963
(July for her; June for me)
2/ A connection with Ceylon / Sri Lanka
(Her dad worked there and it's where she was born; my dad spent his childhood there, I grew up hearing many tales about Kandy and Colombo, still have quite a few Sinhalese relatives scattered around the globe)
3/ We both grew up in Berkhamsted and went to school there
(I was at the local boys-only public school; she would have been 2 years above my younger brother Tim at Ashlyns, the state school; before that she went to Bridgewater middle school, just up the road from our house, at 113 Bridgewater Rd, so I have almost certainly walked past her, or seen her walking past.. ) (She also once worked at luxury health resort Champneys, right next to door where my friend Dudlyke lived) (She still lives in that Hertfordshire / Buckinghamshire border zone).
4/ Both have a connection with the Yorkshire Dales
5/ Both cancer survivors
6/ Finally (and this is why this post is on EnergyFlashblog) we both intersect with rave culture.
In Beverley's case, the connection is not of her choosing - indeed it's possible, if unlikely, that she's unaware of it.
"Promise Me", her big hit - No. 3 in May 1990 - is a pretty-enough, rather old-fashioned ballad. The sampling wizards of Orca skip the sappy chorus and home in on a pearly wisp of melody and sunburst singing in the verse (heard first at 1.01 in "4 AM")
"It's four o' clock in the morning and it's starting to get light" - absolutely top detournement of a love ballad lyric to describe a rhapsodic rave moment, there.
As is another line that Orca (forgive me) reporpoise: "you look like you're in another world"
In "Promise Me", the "look like you're in another world" is about the male lover - who's distracted, distant, emotionally unavailable to the yearning girl singing the song
In "4 AM", "in another world" is the sea of shining eyes and the dancefloor dreamspace, from which we are to be too-soon expelled, into the gray light of the morning... back to ordinary life and the inevitable comedown...
On Lucky Spin records, "4 AM" was a huge tune in 1993.... I picked it up some years ago, by which time twas tad pricey.
(For a while, I thought the the artist was called Pure White. Seems that was name of a Lucky Spin sub-label).
The not-quite-as-good remixes
This one is ruff and junglistic, but I still prefer the original
Nothing else I've heard by Orca comes close to "4 AM", despite promising titles e.g. the two Dances with Dolphins EPs... "Pure Bliss" ,"Underwater Science", "Sky Hook". It's good, solid stuff, in that happy-dark zone, getting ruffer, then getting wafty (titles like "Intalect", ooer), then getting technical
However one of Orca - Darren Beale - had various other aliases (Koda... also Psykus, with his Orca-mate Kristian Towsend... quite a few others). One of these aliases was Acro, as in the great "Superpod" which continues the cetacean obsession with its name (pod being a tribe of dolphins) and use of dolphin sounds.
Fab rmx, getting well tech-itchy in a Photekky way but not losing the bliss
slow on the uptake today, just twigged that Acro = Orca backwards!
i shall have to do a proper trawl through the whole alias-cluster uuuurv at some point.
Back to Bev...
Craven cites among her influences Kate Bush and Judie Tzuke, but I don't hear much Bush, apart from the piano, whereas I do hear a lot of Tzuke - especially "Promise Me", which has a similar scenario and yearny, needy, feminine-fluttery quality to Tzuke's one hit "Stay With Me Til Dawn"
Look at this period-piece promo, which (possibly an artifact of the lighting and/or the aging of the video format) makes her look like a painting that come to life.
Overbite-tastic!
"Stay With Me Till Dawn" got repurposed itself, at the dawn of the Nineties, by Ultramarine, on the gorgeous "Honey", which turns around the "need you tonight" bit of the pre-chorus
Well what do you know, from just last year, Beverlee and Judee (and Julee) team up for a single
two singles
actually a whole album / tour
also a joint performance of "Promise Me" on the telly
Home Counties soul
Another Bev chartsong, albeit only just barely a hit really
There are other AOR lady / Brit female singer-songwriters who have been rave-ransacked of course, notably the lovely "Sleeping Satellite" by Tasmin Archer.
I guess that style of AOR is an alternative source for yearning, soaring vocals, from the more usual soul / R&B/ house diva stockpile.
I wonder why there was never a rave version of "Constant Craving"
Well fancy that
addendum 7/18
Pointed out by anonymous commenter, another dance treatment of the "it's four o'clock in the morning and it's starting to get light" Bev-sample - rather nice too
Meant to say also that in my mind I always bracket Orca's "4 AM" alongside this wonderful tune "Blow Out Pt II" aka "You've Had It, You've Had It All, Boy"
Must "do" Bass Selective properly one of these days...
And also alongside this tune by DJ Massive
"4AM", "Blow Out Pt. 11", "Ruff in the Comfort Zone" - a little cluster of junglistic but luvdup diva bliss anthems that walk that underground / pop line and stick together in my memory
addendum 7/19
Ian S in Comments points out that Bay B Kane sampled Ms Tzuke also - from "Ladies Night", off the same album as "Stay With Me Till Dawn"
Here is an in-depth breakdown of the making of the Bay B Kane track from God Is No Longer A DJ