Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Lost In Nuummas

At Christmas, my  17-year-old niece was playing tunes and this one grabbed my ear like a terrier snatching turkey shreds from under the table.  


I was like, "I know that groove"


I had an irresistible urge to inform her what the tune underneath the tune was - regale with tales of buying the 12-inch at the time... just how exciting the UKG-into-2step moment had been. 

But I resisted it. Who wants to be the boring old uncle droning on about things prehistoric? 

Funny thing is, this grime refix of Some Treat - which I'd never heard - is itself really old, from 2009. Back then only slightly older than my niece,  Chip(munk) is now in his mid-30s!

The kingdom of atemporality isn't it, music today? Chronology all jumbled, sequence flattened out.  Doesn't matter to the youngers, and why should it? They find what they need by lateral drift. 

Later, I remembered there was yet another intertextual layer, a deeper stratum of nuumological history beneath. 

Some Treat's "Lost In Vegas" (1998)  is itself a partial rewrite of Shut Up and Dance's 1990 tune "£10 To Get In"


The Suzanne Vega element - doubtless heisted indirectly, via the 1990 dance bootleg turned smash hit by DNA - is just one element of deliciousness that gets transferred from "£10 To Get In" to "Lost in Vegas" to "Going On Sho". 

There's also the "turn it down... cos it's too fuckin' loud". 

Now where's that bit from? 

It reappears in a couple of Luke Vibert bits - including a tune named "Turn"




And Shut Up and Dance self-sample the Vega lick for just a flicker in this tune 



But back to the meat in the middle of the Nuum Historical Sandwich

I don't remember this remix 


But I do remember the name Angel Farringdon 


Ruff 'n 'rollin' - lovely flickers of filtered breakbeats draped across the 4/4 pump 'n' flex

Flipside is tuff 'n' slinkier still



Delicious clattery swing to it. The horn fanfare! The peculiar thin whistling refrain. And that gluey rolling B-line. 

JBR - Johnny Biscuit Records! 

Who was Lil Smokey, then?

Angel Farringdon - that's  Helen T, aka Helen Taylor - who engineered and programmed Some Treat 

That was their one shot - this follow-up is tasteful and flava-free. Spindrift is a Helen T alias.




Angel Farringdon did a record with Russell Square, tee hee. Credited to The Railway People on the white label. 

But although there's another portentous horn part, just like in "Clean Riddem", it's not quite in the same league. 


I do like like the backwards-vocal - combined with the ceremonial-sounding horn, there's a bit of an "Eastern promise" vibe. The reverse drums bits. I suspect a past in drum + bass. 

This is identified as "Prototype" but appears to be the same tune. 


Angel Farringdon also did a record with Warren Street, tee hee hee.

Helen T's discography is much more extensive than Some Treat's. Multiple identities, a string of releases.  

El B was prevailed upon to darkdubrmx this one


There are some vaguely hardhouse, London underground acid, and breaksteppy things later in the discography


Back to the peak moment


What days they were... 


In my mind I always cluster "Lost In Vegas" and "No Fighting" / "Clean Riddem" with this glorious one-off by Napa-Tac, which samples heavily from SUAD's contemporary Rebel MC














It's like the two ends of the '90s - 1990 and 1999 - are in communication, forming a loop, a perfect circle - or rather an imperfect circle, as things cycle around without merely repeating and reiterating.

You know it's coming...  you know it

That's why they call it a continuum, folks!


Aha, here's what I wrote about "Lost In Vegas" back in '98 when rounding up the year's blisses

SOME TREAT -- Lost In Vegas (JBR)

A tribute to/remake of Shut Up And Dance's 1990 (or was it even 1989?) track "Ten Pounds To Get In," this samples the Suzanne Vega vocal-riff from "Tom's Diner" that SUAD must have got from DNA's unoffical-then-subsequently-sanctioned dance version of the S. Vega track. We're talking multiple levels of citation here, serious intertextuality. On a broader level it's a tribute to the hardcore continuum--getting on for ten years of London's multiracial rave scene, a culture of mixing it up, of hybridising hybrids and mutating mutations; the continual reinvention of flava and vibe. A tradition of futurism. Roots N' Future = the endlessly fresh now.


Now I think about it, that might be the very first time I used the term "hardcore continuum".




1 comment:

Anonymous said...

i remember seeing a shut up and dace pa at a club called the twilight zone in camborne in cornwall at an under 18s night and they insisted they sampled it first from the stage!