Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Strange Breaks & Mr Thing, coming soon
Coming soon on BBE, check that mean steel drum cut...
"Five years on from the last instalment of Strange Breaks we're proud to present Strange Breaks III! UK Hip-Hop producer and acclaimed DJ Mr Thing has been busier than ever, filling dance floors around the world as well as adding rare 45s to his ever growing record collection."In between the dizzying DJ schedule, he has been compiling this new instalment ; a compilation that reflects brilliantly on his dedication to digging for those untouched and unrivalled samples and breaks as you hear him use in his DJ sets."
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Amalia and the Social Lovers newie
Out April 29 on 7"vinyl/digital on Cherries Records, very cool slice of modern boogie funk.
"For their 7th release, Cherries brings a different sound to your speakers, created by the return of ‘the first lady of modern funk’ AMALIA, in collaboration with a new group, straight out of the West Coast underground, SOCIAL LOVERS.
With this release, the Social Lovers sound takes you downstairs to the basement after-hours party, where people dance close into the wee hours of the night.
The A-Side, ‘So Right (feat. AMALIA)’ leads off with an enchanting arpeggiation, while the synth and drums connect with AMALIA’s spacey and soulful vocals to create a lush, warm pillow of funk to your ear drums. AMALIA waxes deep on a lover who is the perfect one, but soon becomes the wrong one, a melodic reminder that we are all looking for something real.
‘Call Me Up’, the B-Side brings Cherries closer to its Chicago roots with an instrumental, soulful house inspired tune, full of percussion and natural ebbs and flows of synth chords and strong melody. Social Lovers’ lush and polished production is showcased here with a brief taste of the smooth street soul sounds that the collective five thrives on, to keep you dancing in the basement ‘til the break of dawn."
Labels:
Amalia,
Cherries Records,
Social Lovers
Monday, April 28, 2014
Bossacucanova
Bossacucanova - Balança (Não Pode Parar) (2013) from Miolo Filmes on Vimeo.
Off the latest album from Bossacucanova, called Our Kind Of Bossa, stream, it here.
Free download of the above song here
Labels:
Bossacucanova
Tanya Stephens remixed
Two cool versions on the same tune, hat tip to Dylan C for the links...
Labels:
Dirty dubsters,
Tanya Stephens
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Lorde vs media
As Lorde wrote, it “bugs me how publications like complex will profile interesting artists in order to sell copies/get clicks and then shit on their records? it happens to me all the time- pitchfork and that ilk being like “can we interview you?” after totally taking the piss out of me in a review. have a stance on an artist and stick to it. don’t act like you respect them then throw them under the bus."
Azalea responded to the post via Twitter, writing, “I agree @lordemusic media LOVE to flop about, But when you’re completely spineless Im sure its hard to stick to even ur own opinion #GoGirl.”
Azalea responded to the post via Twitter, writing, “I agree @lordemusic media LOVE to flop about, But when you’re completely spineless Im sure its hard to stick to even ur own opinion #GoGirl.”
Complex Magazine's Associate Editor Insanul Ahmed responded, with "Why Lorde, Iggy Azalea, & Grimes Are Wrong About Criticism and Journalism."
Part of his response starts by playing on Lorde's age, which is perhaps trying to suggest she's young and naive. But anyone who follows her on social media knows otherwise. She's plenty media-savvy, which makes her attack on the media seem a bit odd. Ahmed goes on to say...
"... If Complex—or the media at large—operated the way Lorde wished, it would do away with journalistic integrity all together. Lorde—as well as Iggy—seem to confuse press as “respect” and criticism as being thrown “under the bus.” Truth is, not every media interaction will be mutually beneficial...."
Labels:
Complex magazine,
Iggy Azalea,
Insanul Ahmed,
Lorde
Conclave: Clockwork
Some very cool bleepy music from the Philippines that turned up in my email inbox. Very succinct bio - one liner that says... Song Info: "Inspired by vintage clock designs, beatboxing, and dusty vinyls."
Free download...
Conclave: Facebook // Twitter // Instagram
Labels:
Conclave
Friday, April 25, 2014
Ring The Alarm playlist, April 26
George Benson -World is a ghetto
Gary Bartz - Celestial blues
Blundetto - Nautilus - dub version
Rhythm and sound feat Cornell Campbell - King in my empire
Rhythm and sound feat Jennifer Lara - Queen in my empire
Nitin Sawmhey - Dead man - Fink dub
Dub asylum - Jumping jack skank
Estere - Culture clash (Free download)
Quantic - Duvido
Oddisee - Viva Brasil
Marva Whitney - Things have got to get better
Yvonne Fair - I found you
Lyn Collins - Rock me again and again and agaiun
Fred Wesley and the JBs - You can have Watergate but give me some bucks and I'll be straight
Society's bag - Let it crawl
Young Holt unlimited - Wah wah man
La Toya Jackson - If you feel the funk
Ebonee Webb - Something about you
Sola Rosa - Can we get it together
Mo kolours - Little brown dog
Fat Freddys Drop - Barney Miller
3 generations walking - Midnight bustling
Round four feat Tikiman - Find a way
Tony Allen - Ole - Mauritz von Oswald remix
Labels:
Basefm
Thursday, April 24, 2014
(We Don't Need This) Fascist Groove Thang
A mate of mine made an outstanding pun using the song title (We Don't Need This) Fascist Groove Thang on Twitter the other day, and I've been wanting it ever since. Found a copy of the album Penthouse and Pavement featuring it in Real Groovy today for the grand sum of $6. Worth every cent, and also features some other great tunes. It was the first single off their debut album, and the BBC banned it.
The cracking bass solo in the middle of the song is played by a kid who had owned a bass for a total of one week. Seriously.
Ware told us the story behind teenage bassist and guitarist John Wilson's contribution: "We wanted a bass solo in the middle eight. We thought it would be really cool to go with the electronics, but we didn't know any real musicians at all because we were basically just kids messing around with the tape recorder and synths.
At the time Glenn was working at the local theater in town in his spare time to make ends meet - because we weren't paying ourselves very much - at a place called The Crucible where the world snooker tournament was going on as well. He went into the greenroom. He said, 'Oh, I'll ask around because it's theatrical people, there's bound to be a musician in there somewhere.' He walked into the greenroom of the theater and said, 'Does anybody play bass?' Literally. This is not some apocryphal story. This is literally what happened.
And one of the stage hands [John Wilson] was this young guy who had just started, 17 years old. Black guy. Very shy, quiet was reading the newspaper. He put his hand up without looking up: 'I play a little bit of bass.' We asked him to come down because we just wanted to see if the idea would work. He said, 'Oh, I'll go and get my bass. I just bought one last week. I bought it for 20 quid, so it's not a very good bass.' It really doesn't matter. It's just the idea. We want to see if it will work.
So he came down and the first thing he played was the solo in the middle of 'Fascist Groove Thang' and we all went, excuse my language, 'Fu--ing hell!' Literally, in my entire life my jaw's never hit the floor. All of us, we were going, 'This is phenomenal!' And so I said, 'Would you like to see if you can play some bass on the rest of the tune?' And he went, 'Sure.'"
Ware continued: "After he finished the bass on the track, he said, 'Is that alright?' I said, 'I think it was alright.' 'Because,' he said, 'It's not really my main instrument.' I said, 'What's your main instrument?' 'Oh,' he said, 'I'm a rhythm guitarist.' And I said, 'Do you think you might want to go home and bring your guitar in, like, right now?' So he came back in and he sat down and plugged it in. And I said, 'I think we'd like something that sounds a little bit like Chic.'
Ware continued: "After he finished the bass on the track, he said, 'Is that alright?' I said, 'I think it was alright.' 'Because,' he said, 'It's not really my main instrument.' I said, 'What's your main instrument?' 'Oh,' he said, 'I'm a rhythm guitarist.' And I said, 'Do you think you might want to go home and bring your guitar in, like, right now?' So he came back in and he sat down and plugged it in. And I said, 'I think we'd like something that sounds a little bit like Chic.'
I knew it would be good because this kid's got the funk, but it was on another level. I've since talked to Nile Rodgers about this and he says, 'Wow, that kid is just awesome.'" Source; Songfacts
Southern Freeez, featuring Emanuelle Araújo
This Record Store Day exclusive 7" probably won't pop up on our shores any time soon, but it's a mean taster for something new from Gilles Peterson..
"Taken from Gilles Peterson’s new album project Sonzeira, Southern Freeez, featuring Emanuelle Araújo on vocals, is an electronic bossa re-work of Freeez’s famous UK jazz-funk hit, due for exclusive release on 7” for Record Store Day Saturday 19th April.
The album Sonzeira – Brasil Bam Bam Bam features all new material produced by Gilles Peterson and is the product of him being a fan and a champion of Brazilian music in the club and on the radio for last 25 years; culminating in him bringing together the country’s finest artists all on one record for the very first time - under the artist collective Sonzeira."
Brasil Bam Bam Bam is released 19th May. First official single Brasil Pandeiro, a rework of the original 1940s track written by Assis Valente, out now. Listen here. Watch the album trailer below
UK readers can check this: "Gilles will host a launch party, 'Club Bam Bam Bam' on Thursday 15th May. Playing back to back with DJ Nuts all night long - a very rare billing especially in London. ‘Club Bam Bam Bam’ Parker Street, London, WC2B 5PW from 9pm-2am, with tickets available in advance from www.musicglue.com/brownswood-music
Labels:
Emanuelle Araújo,
Gilles Peterson,
Sonzeira,
Southern Freeez
Monday, April 21, 2014
Radio Ponsonby closing down
Radio Ponsonby announced on their Facebook page today they are shutting the station...
"Unfortunately, next Wednesday 30th April will be our last day on air. Despite 4 years and one month of making the best boutique Radio in Ponsonby, and the world, it is no longer viable to continue without the support of the advertising market.
Our thanks to all of you, our supporters and friends and a special thanks to all the DJ's, Hosts and hangers on that have made this a great little radio station."
The station originally started out above Chapel Bar by Luke Dallow and co, and moved to Ponsonby Central when that opened.
Labels:
Radio Ponsonby
Estere debut album, and it's free!
Wellingtonian songstress Estere recently wowed the crowds opening for Erykah Badu, and now she's dropped her debut self-produced album. Features guest spots from Tay Ninh and Mara TK from Electric Wire Hustle. Give it a listen.
Upcoming live dates for Estere: Sat 18 May - Erupt Festival, Taupo / Thurs 22 May - Tyler St Garage, Auckland
Labels:
Electric wire hustle,
Estere
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Record Store Day videos
From New Plymouth's Vinyl Countdown...
Spelling Mistakes live instore at Real Groovy in Auckland...
And spot the New Zealander queueing outside Amoeba San Francisco...
And Jack White make the world's fastest record.
Friday, April 18, 2014
Ring The Alarm playlist, April 19
Nina Simone - Seeline woman - MAW remix
Nightmares on wax - Ease Jimi
Fat Freddys Drop - Hope - Sonsine remix
Rhythm and sound feat Sugar Minott - Let Jah love come
Thievery Corp - 38-45
Jackie Mittoo - Voodoo moon
Esso Trinidad steel band - I want you back
Silvertones - Tamborito swing
Mala - Como como - Theo Parrish remix
James Brown - Get on the good foot
Bill Withers - You got the stuff
Gonzalez - Just let it lay
Parlet - Help from my friends
James Blood Ulmer - Litte red house
Mulatu and the Heliocentrics - Cha cha
Longsy D -This is ska - Greg Churchill edit
Laurel Atkin - Skinhead train
The Survivors - Rawhide
Adrian Younge and the Delfonics - Lover's melody
Dennis Edwards - Don't look any further - Bobby Busnach edit
Bobby Womack -You're welcome, stop on by - Beaten space edit
Dexys midnight runners - Geno
Labels:
Basefm
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Lorde wins Taite
Lorde and Little, winning stuff since last year/forever |
Lorde won the fifth annual Taite Music Prize this evening, collecting $10,000 and recording time at Red Bull Studio, plus a years worth of Red Bull. In her acceptance speech, via video from Las Vegas, she graciously offered to give up the prize money to the other finalists.
Lorde said "I think everyone is kind of sick of me winning stuff at the moment and other people are in more in need of the funds and exposure right now. So if you will accept it, the prize money and the studio time have been split between this year's nominees. If you don't want it, that's cool too."
The other finalists were Unknown Mortal Orchestra (who won the Taite Prize in 2012), Beastwars, Sheep Dog & Wolf, the Phoenix Foundation, David Dallas, @peace, and Jonathan Bree. They will get approx $1600 each. And a few Red Bull. If Lorde doesn't drink them all. [kidding]
Grant Smithies, one of this year's judging panel, said "Lorde's LP was a rare example of an underground pop record being so damn good, it went mainstream, not just here, but worldwide."
Lorde said "I think everyone is kind of sick of me winning stuff at the moment and other people are in more in need of the funds and exposure right now. So if you will accept it, the prize money and the studio time have been split between this year's nominees. If you don't want it, that's cool too."
It seems a long shot to try and argue Lorde's album was ever going to be underground, given it featured a global hit single, and got released in late September 2013, on the last possible day of eligibility for this year's Grammys. There is no question it was going to go mainstream. Only question was how big would it get. Maybe Smithies is referring to the sound of the record. It will be interesting to see the reaction to such a commercially successful artist winning an award based solely on originality and artistic achievement, not taking into account any commercial success or otherwise.
The prize giving took place at Galatos in Auckland, the location for Lorde's first ever live performance. Also awarded was the IMNZ Classic Indie Album prize, with a very moving and funny speech from Kerry Buchanan, celebrating AK79.
Buchanan noted that AK79 was part of the cultural change of 77-79 in NZ. It didn't happen apart from current events.
He talked about the importance of AK79 in capturing a moment in time, and how that spread. He gave an example - of working in a record shop and this guy wearing a bunch of scarves wandered up and shook his hand and started talking to him about AK79 - it was Silvio from The Sopranos, better known as Little Steven - guitarist with Bruce Springsteen, and host of a radio show called Little Steven's Underground Garage. Steven loved AK79.
The award was presented to Ripper Records boss Bryan Staff, the man responsible for the legendary compilation but he wasn't in the room at that moment, so Kerry blagged off with it. Fair enough. NZ Herald's Hugh Sundae caught up with Bryan later in the evening, watch that here.
He tells Hugh about the practical aspects of getting AK79 out - Bryan had all these demo tapes of Auckland punk bands who had been on his radio show, and a colleague suggested he put out a record, and Bryan thought, why don't I do that? Aren't there laws against that sort of thing?
So he went to off Ode Records and asked them if they could take the compilation tape and make a record and bill him. They did that, and he got the record, the inner sleeve, the outer sleeve, and the hardest part about getting the record out was Bryan had to sit there putting the sleeves together, getting numerous cardboard cuts for the next week it took to do the initial 250 copies.
The Record Warehouse bought the lot and gave him a cheque, and Bryan went back and ordered another 500, then that sold and he ordered 500 more from the man at Ode [probably Terence O'Neill Joyce], who said "How can you do this? I've struggled for years to get acceptance and you have this crap record that no one will play, yet it's selling." Bryan said "Wish me luck as you wave me goodbye!"
He tells Hugh about the practical aspects of getting AK79 out - Bryan had all these demo tapes of Auckland punk bands who had been on his radio show, and a colleague suggested he put out a record, and Bryan thought, why don't I do that? Aren't there laws against that sort of thing?
So he went to off Ode Records and asked them if they could take the compilation tape and make a record and bill him. They did that, and he got the record, the inner sleeve, the outer sleeve, and the hardest part about getting the record out was Bryan had to sit there putting the sleeves together, getting numerous cardboard cuts for the next week it took to do the initial 250 copies.
The Record Warehouse bought the lot and gave him a cheque, and Bryan went back and ordered another 500, then that sold and he ordered 500 more from the man at Ode [probably Terence O'Neill Joyce], who said "How can you do this? I've struggled for years to get acceptance and you have this crap record that no one will play, yet it's selling." Bryan said "Wish me luck as you wave me goodbye!"
SJD (the 2013 Taite Prize winner) and his band played a short but utterly delightful set to close the night. SJD made a speech earlier in the evening, highlighting all the joys winning the prize had bought into his life, noting that he with only 17,000 more plays on Spotify, he can afford a new guitar pick. That's the dream, kids. Watch SJD's speech here.
Labels:
Dylan Taite,
Lorde,
Taite Prize
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Record Store Day in AK and beyond
Southbound Records at 69 Mt Eden Rd have over 100 local and international Record Store Day releases available, plus 50% off all secondhand vinyl.Live in-store performances from Delaney Davidson and Tami Nielson. There will also be free coffee and homemade baking on offer, plus free eco music bags with purchases. Here's a list of RSD exclusives they've got in stock so far...
Real Groovy on Queen St has a bunch of exclusive Record Store Day vinyl they are releasing, plus live performances from Phoenix Foundation (2pm) and Spelling Mistakes (4pm), and DJs all day. DJ/performance schedule is here.
Conch Records at 115A Ponsonby Rd will also be getting involved with RSD special releases and goodies. They have a live instore PA from She's So Rad and Tyra Hammond, and also a huge collection of rare secondhand dance/drum n bass/jungle vinyl going out on the shelves (pulled from the collection of Nick D), around 3000 records.
My Generation over in Browns Bay will be taking part, with RSD specials.
Marbecks Classical in Queens Arcade has 25% off all vinyl for RSD.
Down in Wellington, Slowboat Records has a live instores from Louis Baker, Julia Deans, and Dave Dobbyn, and RPM Music has the Mantarays live instore plus DJs all day, and Deathray Records are also taking part.
New Plymouth's Vinyl Countdown is getting involved, check their FB page for more info.
Further down country we have...
Napier - Just For The Record
Nelson – Everyman Records
Christchurch – Pennylane Records, and Galaxy Records get in on the act -Galaxy has X-Ray Charles live instore.
Dunedin – Relics Music has Kahu and Paul Cathro live instore at 5pm. 14% sales instore all day.
There may be other stores in these towns taking part, but I can't find any sign online. Advertise your ish!
Local vinyl also out for Record Store Day: VARIOUS: DUNEDIN DOUBLE - The Chills, Sneaky Feelings, The Stones, The Verlaines (Flying Nun) 2 x 12" EP
BORED GAMES - Who Killed Colonel Mustard (Flying Nun) 12" EP
AND this gem: SUBURBAN REPTILES Saturday Night Stay At Home 7". A limited gold vinyl edition will be available to the first 20 buyers in-store at Real Groovy with a bonus colour photo print signed by photographer Paul Hartigan of the band in action.
AND this gem: SUBURBAN REPTILES Saturday Night Stay At Home 7". A limited gold vinyl edition will be available to the first 20 buyers in-store at Real Groovy with a bonus colour photo print signed by photographer Paul Hartigan of the band in action.
Labels:
Conch Records,
Real Groovy,
Record Store Day,
Southbound
Ikebe Shakedown new album out now
Following up their self-titled debut album from 2011, Ikebe Shakedown's new album has just dropped.
The band told Wax Poetics that “Our first two releases were very focused on capturing Ikebe’s live sound. Stone by Stone is more focused on developing rich textures and layers that we could achieve in the studio including putting a lot more keyboards on the tracks. Still, we’ve always been committed to tracking everything to tape. Being at Daptone gave us the freedom to explore creatively while keeping us tied to the traditional recording techniques that make the House of Soul [studio] unique.”.
“We recorded our first releases, the EP Hard Steppin’ and some tracks off our self-titled LP with Tom Brenneck at Dunham Studios,” percussionist Dave Bourla recalls. “Off of that, a few of us started to play in the touring bands of Charles Bradley and Sharon Jones, while other guys were playing with Lee Fields [their guitarist Vince Jones was part of Lee Fields' band for recent Oz/NZ shows]. As a result, a bunch of us had gotten to know the tape engineer at Daptone, Wayne Gordon, whose talents we greatly respect. When he had a couple of days at the studio free, we jumped on the chance to record in a place that’s inspired all of us.”
Labels:
Ikebe Shakedown
York St Studios closing
York St Studios is closing down. The owner, Adrien De Croy (of Jelly Music, who own York St, and co-own Siren Records) apparently has plans to turn the space into apartments.
In mid February NZ Musician reported that York St had announced their closure on April 20 2014 in their Parnell location via their Facebook page...
"Dear Friends.
It is with the deepest of regret I inform you that the lovely building we have occupied for the last 20 years is in the process of being sold. York Street Recording studios will, from the 20th of April 2014, no longer be able to continue to operate from the current Parnell studio.
Through 22 years of making music we have seen good times and bad and ironically business is currently thriving. We are not sure about the next chapter in the York Street Recording Studios story but are looking at various options including re-locating to other premises, and will keep you posted.
We are fully booked until the 28th of February and will be taking bookings at the iconic York Street location for March and April up to the last day. This could be your last chance to get that fantastic sound we offer from York Street and to be part of New Zealand music history!!
This is sad news for us all but please share with your music friends."
York St Studios opened in 1992, and was set up and run initially by acclaimed NZ producer Malcolm Wellsford, engineer Martin Williams, and Killing Joke's Jaz Coleman, who produced Shihad's debut album at York St in 1993. Coleman returned to the studio in late 2013 to produce the next album from Shihad, which they finished mixing in late February 2014.
However, the current studio manager Jeremy McPike, recently registered a company called York St Recording Studio Ltd, so there appears to be a relocation/move in the winds, as suggested above. The new company was registered on 24 February this year. According to the Companies Office website, McPike is the sole director and one of two key shareholders.
However, the current studio manager Jeremy McPike, recently registered a company called York St Recording Studio Ltd, so there appears to be a relocation/move in the winds, as suggested above. The new company was registered on 24 February this year. According to the Companies Office website, McPike is the sole director and one of two key shareholders.
McPike told the Rockshop in January 2014 that when De Croy bought the studio in 2000 “The lease was up and the Studio was essentially bankrupt. Adrien bought York Street the business and the building to stop it being demolished by the developers. Adrien saved York Street”.
But he goes on to say “York Street has not cost any money but has essentially been a break-even business for 12-13 years”. They have diversified to other areas, such as being the regular venue for the NZ Herald's Sundae Sessions live shoot (which have now relocated to Roundhead).
York St is the current home a vintage 1974 EMI Neve 24-channel mixing console, one of only seven made. It was first used here in EMI’s Wellington studio from 1975 til that facility closed in 1987. The original cost was 34,000 pounds. It was first used at the legendary Abbey Road Studios in London for nine months, while they waited on a 36-channel version to be built. It was then shipped to Wellington [source].
According to York St's website "There were 7 of these fantastic sounding consoles made by the legends at Neve specifically for EMI studios around the world, one of which was in Wellington New Zealand. We were able to track down all of our consoles relatives. One is at U2’s studio in Dublin, one is at ICP studios in Brussels, Belgium, two have been put together as one large console and is in Steakhouse Studios in Hollywood CA, Two are currently being put together at the Great Linford Manor in England and number 7 is here with us at York Street in New Zealand
All of these consoles have been heavily modified over the years and ours is the only one left in its original condition. Our console (serial number A3095) is fitted with 24 inputs all with the very rare and sought after 1093 modules (5 band EQ) and has 16 returns. The console uses 1977 channel routing units and 3415 line amps."
All of these consoles have been heavily modified over the years and ours is the only one left in its original condition. Our console (serial number A3095) is fitted with 24 inputs all with the very rare and sought after 1093 modules (5 band EQ) and has 16 returns. The console uses 1977 channel routing units and 3415 line amps."
Labels:
Adrien De Croy,
Jaz Coleman,
Jeremy McPike,
Shihad,
York St
Monday, April 14, 2014
Apollo Brown: Cigarette burns [free EP]
Mello Music says " Two weeks from today Detroit producer Apollo Brown will be releasing his newest instrumental soundtrack Thirty Eight. The sound falls somewhere between the end of 70s heroin and the beginning of 80s crack, like day prostitution. The technicolor journey begins today with a three track collection of instrumentals from the project that Apollo has titled Cigarette Burns EP."
Labels:
Apollo Brown
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Mo Kolours - New video
Mo Kolours dropped his debut album last month, here's a video for a very cool song off it.
Album is on LP, CD and digital (pay what you like for digital at Bandcamp).
"There’s an exotic appeal to Mo Kolours and his music but there’s also something very British about this record. Mo Kolours follows in the footsteps of UK artists who have synthesised a variety of imported styles and added the indelible stamp of our rainy island, from The Specials and Cymande (who receive a tribute here in the form of Mike Black) to Massive Attack and Mala.
His humour reveals an idiosyncratic Britishness too, as when he shouts out forgotten budget rides such as the Datsun Sunny on Play It Loud (In Your Car) or titles his ominous environmental warning Natural Disasters Wish List."
Labels:
Mo Kolours
Friday, April 11, 2014
Ring The Alarm playlist, April 12
Jackie Stoudimire -Invisible wind -Shoes re-edit
Quantic - Dreaming mind pt 1
Sola Rosa - Can we get it together
Rocky Dawuni - Freefall - Jeremy Sole remix
Vin Gordon - Steady beat
Bitty Maclean - I'm the one who loves you
Prince Fari - Give love
Orange juice - Rip it dub - Dicky Trisco edit
B52s - Planet Claire
Henry Mancini - Baretta's theme
Johnny Hammond - Rocksteady
Jimmy McCraklin -The walk
Bo Diddley - Bo Diddley
Butta - O'kwawa se
Stephen Encina -Lypso illusion
Lion rock - Rude boy rock
Romanowski - Romjack steady
Derrick Morgan - I'm the ruler
Alton Ellis- Girl I've got a date
Brenton Wood - Oogum boogum
Sharon Jones and the Dapkings - Better things to do
Janet Jackson - Don't mess up a good thing
Zapp - More bounce to the ounce Pts I&II
Candi Station - When you wake up tomorrow
Hackney colliery band - All of the lights - Scrimshire remix
Nuyorican soul - Black gold of the sun - MAW remix feat Q-Tip
Yasiin Gaye - B stands for beef inst
Labels:
Basefm
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Wah Wah 45s x Record Store Day
"Wah Wah 45s are proud to present their debut Record Store Day special release!
In 2014 the label celebrates not only its 15th anniversary, but, with this record, its 50th seven-inch release, and it's something very unique indeed.
Two of the imprints best loved artists, East End brass juggernaut Hackney Colliery Band, and funky Canadian piano maestro Henri-Pierre Noel come together on seven inches of wax for the first time, remixed by label boss Scrimshire and superstar disco re-edit king The Reflex.
Scrimshire's re-working of HCB's version of Kanye West's All Of The Lights is a horn fuelled left-of-centre club bomb, whilst The Reflex's 'revision' of Henri's classic Diskette is a disco fuelled take that's sure to cause plenty of dance floor devastation too."
Labels:
Henri-Pierre Noel,
Record Store Day,
Scrimshire,
Wahwah45s
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Pantha du Prince/Bell Laboratory doco
Via Ableton: "I don’t see my role as someone who gives direction,” says Hendrik Weber, aka Pantha du Prince, in our new short documentary. “I filter the sound from each musician.”
Coming from a background making electronic music as a solo artist, it was the sound of church bells that first piqued Hendrik’s interest in working with acoustic musicians.
While recording the ancient bells from a variety of locations for his album, Black Noise, Hendrik envisioned a collaboration between himself (on electronics and laptop) and acoustic musicians.
The results can be seen in the short film below, and heard on Elements of Light, Hendrik’s collaborative album with The Bell Laboratory, a group of world-class percussionists. Assembling such a project required creative and technical thinking, bridging a gap between the raw expression of The Bell Laboratory and Hendrik’s effect-heavy role as a “filter”.
The results can be seen in the short film below, and heard on Elements of Light, Hendrik’s collaborative album with The Bell Laboratory, a group of world-class percussionists. Assembling such a project required creative and technical thinking, bridging a gap between the raw expression of The Bell Laboratory and Hendrik’s effect-heavy role as a “filter”.
In the midst of a series of sold-out performances around the world, we managed to capture Hendrik and the Bell Laboratory as they performed Terry Riley’s “In C”, a landmark work of minimalist experimental music. The performance takes place at London’s Barbican Centre where the musicians were joined on stage by The Joshua Light Show, a veteran liquid light show founded in the psychedelic ‘60s."
Labels:
Ableton,
Pantha du Prince
Tommy Adderley - Whole Lotta Shakin Going On
Tommy Adderley w Max Merritt and the Meteors serve up a wonderful, rocking version of Whole Lotta Shakin Going On, w/ I Just Don't Understand on the A side, which was a chart success for Tommy in the US (on the Chess label, no less!) and Canada in 1964. I Just Don't Understand had previously been a hit for Ann Margaret back in 1961. I recently scored this on vinyl, very happy with it.
It was released in NZ and Australia by Viking Records (VS156), who licenced it to Chess in the US - they released it on subsidiary label, Mar Mar (Mar Mar 314). The song also came out in Canada on Quality Records (1672X), and also Chess (M314), which led to a contract dispute over who had North American rights, with both labels stopping pressing it, which led to the single rapidly dropping off the Canadian charts.
In her biography of Adderley, published in 2003, author Christine Mintrom describes how the session came about, saying "Max Merritt and the Meteors were the house band at Viking Records in those days. Tommy suggested to Max they cash in on the Liverpool mania and do a Liverpool waltz. Tommy had a Brummie accent, but he could do 'Scouse' ... he was performing lots of Liverpudlian hits, taking on the whole persona, and wanted I Just Don't Understand done Freddie and the Dreamers-style, with a kazoo.
"Tommy, Max and the band put down the track in about an hour at the Viking Studios, in a studio 4.5m by 1.5m. Johnny Dick, the Meteors drummer, obliged with a kazoo solo. The single received a lot of airplay in New Zealand and was reasonably successful. Another version of this song was recorded live, On the Peter Posa Show.
"Viking had done a deal with Chess .. a package of three New Zealand records went to Chess for release in North America. [Chess released the Adderley record, along with Sweet and Tender romance/Giddy up a ding dong by Max Merritt and the Meteors, while Peter Posa's White Rabbit was on Interphon].
"Well-known New Zealand journalist and music writer John Berry observed the song's progress on the American Cash Box listings. He rang Tommy when it was hovering just under the Hot 100. Tommy was informed as the single got on to the Cash Box listings and got to a position in the 80s. It has variously been noted as getting to No 86, 83 or 81. Chess Records often did well on Cash Box.
"I Just Don't Understand was released simultaneously in Canada and went to No 2 there, when A Hard Day's Night was No 1. For some unexplained reason the single, which was released on Mar-Mar, a subsidiary of Chess in the States, was released on Quality, a Canadian label in that country [the Quality label above states they had licenced it 'By arrangement with Mar-Mar Records New Zealand', which clearly isn't true]. It sold over 150,000 copies.
"Unfortunately there there was a dispute over who owned the release rights in North America. This contractual dispute meant neither company would release any more copies of the single, and its chart success stopped, quickly, just as it had started."
Christine Mintrom notes however, that in the course of her research for the book, she had been unable to verify the Cash Box listing or the Canadian chart placing. She notes that someone made money off it, just not Tommy.
Mintrom writes : "Graham Dent, was managing Tommy then: "They made a hang of a lot of money out of it. Tommy never got a cent". ... Right up to the time he died, Tommy stirred Graham about this every time he saw him: "Never got those bloody royalties, Gray."
"When he related this story for his oral history tape [recorded in 1992 with Roger Watkins, a year before his death], Tommy sounded indignant; both that he got little money from this successful single, and that he had received no press coverage in 1964 for having a hit which was doing so well overseas. He said he tried to find out what happened, but "Only got lies and bullshit." And then Viking Records folded."
Source: "Tommy Adderley (1940 - 1993): The man and his contributions to pop, jazz and rock music in New Zealand", by Christine Mintrom, published by iUniverse Inc, 1993.
Mintrom notes that Adderley wanted to do I Just Don't Understand 'Freddie and the Dreamers-style' -interestingly, poparchives.com.au lists Freddie and the Dreamers as doing a cover of that same song also in 1964 - did Tommy hear that version before he did his own? Who knows. That Freddie and the Dreamers record may never have been released in NZ. Poparchives lists Adderley's version as charting in Melbourne. The Beatles had played it for a BBC radio session in mid-1963. Did Tommy hear that?
This page lists US and Canadian radio stations playing Adderley's song. The Canadian charts of that era available online show the Beatles with Hard Day's Night (mentioned above) at No 2 in Sept 1964, behind the Supremes, no listing for Tommy. This archive of Canadian singles charts suggests that around the time the song was getting radio play in Canada (Oct/Nov 64), it failed to impact the charts, although this archive for 1964 charts is incomplete.
Read more about Tommy Adderley's life in show business, over at Audioculture. He was instrumental in getting our liquor laws relaxed, thru running clubs in the early 70s. You think staying out clubbing til 4 am is radical - you couldn't go out and drink after 6pm (aka 'the six o'clock swill') in New Zealand prior to 1967, the year when 10pm closing became the new norm, after a public referendum.
Sunday, April 6, 2014
Wellington fire destroys storage facility, record collections gone
Danny Lemon's photos of just some of the rare records he lost in the fire. Photos: Danny Lemon |
The first news report I saw of this horrible fire in Wellington last Friday (April 4) was about Weta/LOTR cinematographer Alex Funke, who had lost his Oscars to the fire - they replace them, but he was saddened by the loss along with a lot of his camera gear. There was also mention of classic car owners who stored their cars there and took them out at weekends.
Funke told reporters he did not realise the units did not have sprinklers until today. "It's very upsetting, you put stuff in a storeroom and you say 'Well, it's safe, nobody's going to steal it, it's never going to burn down' - well obviously next time put it in a place with sprinklers." The building contained 750 storage units, one of five buildings used by Kiwi Self Storage Units in the suburb of Kilbirnie.
Lemon said on Facebook that "As many of you will know, I lost my entire collection of 8500 records, save for 3-400 I have at home, in the storage fire yesterday here in Wellington, NZ. Many thanks to everyone who has contacted me or posted messages relating to this event. Here is an interview I did this afternoon on NZs National Radio. My condolences to Splash, and also Topknot, who also suffered substantial losses in the fire. My worst nightmare has been realised ... "
Then I heard the heartbreaking news via Facebook that several Wellington DJs had lost their storage units to the blaze. Danny Lemon (of pioneering Welli sound system Roots Foundation, which included the likes of DJ Mu, now of Fat Freddys Drop), lost over 8000 records, cassette tapes and ephemera. DJ Topknot lost his records and Splash (ex Manaia Toa, BaseFM) lost his records, clothing, furniture, and many other belongings. My thoughts go out to them for their sad losses.
Many many people left messages of support for Danny on his Facebook page, and some even offered to give him some of their records.
Radio NZ: Danny Lemon on Kilburnie fire: "Wellington's DJ Lemon talks with Kirsten Johnstone about the loss of his extensive roots, reggae and house music record collection in the Kiwi Self-Storage fire in Kilbirnie."
Now comes the news reports that the Devastating Wellington blaze was 'intentionally lit'.
Radio NZ: Danny Lemon on Kilburnie fire: "Wellington's DJ Lemon talks with Kirsten Johnstone about the loss of his extensive roots, reggae and house music record collection in the Kiwi Self-Storage fire in Kilbirnie."
Now comes the news reports that the Devastating Wellington blaze was 'intentionally lit'.
excerpt: "Danny Lemon, a Wellington DJ and founding member of Roots Foundation, lost up to 8500 records in the fire. The largely reggae collection was 35 years in the making. If he tried to replace them all today, he estimated only five per cent would be available, but said given the time and money he would be able to replace most of it eventually.
The thought the fire may have been intentionally lit was "just malicious", he said.
He had cancelled his home insurance due to the appalling service from his insurance company about a year ago when a water pipe burst, flooding his apartment. About 500 records suffered water damage but the insurance company refused to send an assessor.
He was still trying to clarify if he had insurance through Kiwi Self Storage and hoped word it was likely arson did not complicate insurance matters further."
He was still trying to clarify if he had insurance through Kiwi Self Storage and hoped word it was likely arson did not complicate insurance matters further."
Author Chris Bourke (Blue Smoke) wrote a piece on the loss in the Kilburnie fire of the photographic archive of classical musician and photographer Tom Shanahan, a former member of the NZSO, who had planned to donate his collection of stills to the Turnbull Library. He also looks at how our media organisations treat their archival material.
ADDED April 16: Roots Foundation Fundraiser at San Francisco Bathhouse, Wellingoton, on 1st June with DJs Lemon, Koa, Goosebump, Cian, DLT, Rhys B, Dubhead, K-Tel, Duke Willis & Riki Gooch. $20 donation/entry
ADDED April 16: Roots Foundation Fundraiser at San Francisco Bathhouse, Wellingoton, on 1st June with DJs Lemon, Koa, Goosebump, Cian, DLT, Rhys B, Dubhead, K-Tel, Duke Willis & Riki Gooch. $20 donation/entry
MORE
Via Radio NZ: No sprinklers at gutted storage building
excerpt: "Kiwi Self Storage Units director Andrew Fraser said it was not the industry standard to have sprinklers at storage units, but the company would look at installing them at its other storage facilities.
The company has fully insured the building, but people need to have individual insurance to be covered."
Labels:
Alex Funke,
Danny Lemon
First Word Records x Record Store Day
First Word Records x Record Store Day = Tall Black Guy and kidkanevil as well as Mr Thing and Eric Lau. Woo! Soundtrack for the above clip features music from the release.
Labels:
First Word Records,
Record Store Day
Friday, April 4, 2014
Ring The Alarm playlist, April 5
Cherelle - Saturday love - extended version
St Etienne - Only love can break your heart
Tackhead - I'm afraid of Americans - Adrian Sherwood mix
Scritti Politti - Asylums in Jerusalem
Gene Dudley Group - Hilo bay halfway - Gene Dudley disco dub
Chaka Khan - Any old Sunday
Johnny Bristol - I sho like groovin with ya
Sister Love - Give me your love
David Joseph - You can't hide your love from me - Greg Wilson edit
Lloyd Williams - Reggae feet
King Tubby - Tubby get smart
Horace Andy - Aint no sunshine
Yabby You - Heads a roll dub
Dennis Brown - Blessed are the men - extended
Kode 9 and the Spaceape feat Cha Cha - The cure
Lee Scratch Perry - Like the way you should -Mala Digital Mystikz remix
Myagi - I got beat up by a 303
Hairy Diamond - Giving up
Cymande - Bra
Brenton Wood - Oogum boogum
Morgan Clarke with benny's Five - Haka boogie
Keil Isles - Monkey stomp
Nick Waterhouse - This is a game
John Gibbs - Steel funk
Sola Rosa feat Noah Slee - Can we get it together
Trio Valore - Crazy
George Clinton -RnB skeletons in the closet
Ardijah - Watching U
Stephen Encinas - Lypso illusion
Tito Puente - Take five
Labels:
Basefm
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Vtcn Radio debut
VTCN RADIO (pronounced Vatican Radio) say they are "a Parisian duo of experimental electronic music inspired by the romantic music, Can, and Kubrick movies." This is their debut single, glitchy, pretty electronica.
Labels:
Vtcn Radio
Trio Valore = crazy
Trio Valore released the widely acclaimed album "Return of the Iron Monkey" in 2008. Now after a musical sabbatical, the guys are back having gained a new member, Manchester based keyboard ace Justin Shearn (Sam Gray).
The band reformed after they've been asked to play at Record Kicks 10th Anniversary at 100 club in London last November and since then the Trio went from strength to strength playing shows throughout 2013 and beginning of 2014. After such a great response it was only a matter of time before some new music was recorded. #LiarsAndCheaters is the result."
Single out on digital/7" vinyl on April 20.
Single out on digital/7" vinyl on April 20.
Labels:
Record Kicks,
Trio Valore
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Record Store Day at Real Groovy
"Another year has spun around since the last Record Store Day and Real Groovy is gearing up to celebrate in style again this Easter – yes, Record Store Day 2014 falls on Saturday April 19th – with in-store live music, guest DJs, exclusive local and international vinyl releases and lots of other activities.
Highlights include three Record Store Day exclusive vinyl releases on the Real Groovy Records label [La De Das / Scavengers / Spelling Mistakes, all on coloured vinyl], plus an exclusive Suburban Reptiles 7” re-issue and new material from The Phoenix Foundation on 7”.
We are delighted to say there will be live performances by The Spelling Mistakes and The Phoenix Foundation, with a guest DJ line-up of personalities spinning their favourite tunes throughout the day."
Labels:
Real Groovy,
Record Store Day
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Ngaire hangs at Cause Celebre
Kiwi singer Ngaire burst onto the music scene in 1990 with her cover of To Sir With Love, on Southside Records, a soul/funk label started by Murray Cammick (then Rip It Up editor) and Simon Lynch (ex-Ardijah). That song sat at number one on the singles chart for 5 weeks straight in late 1990, going gold.
This video is for the follow up single, released early 1991, and staying in the charts for 10 weeks, peaking at number 18. But who is that greasy rocker sitting at the bar, smoking?
Labels:
Cause Celebre,
Ngaire,
Simon Grigg,
Southside
Monday, March 31, 2014
Hallelujah Picassos live this Thurs, Akld
Hallelujah Picassos have been invited to play with our mates Labretta Suede and the Motel 6, back in NZ briefly from their New York base, one Akld show only - next they are off to tour Spain! Come check out some swinging rock n roll good times next Thursday.
Kings Arms, 8pm Thursday April 3, $20 presales at UTR.
It's gonna be good to jump onstage again, as we've been locked away indoors recording a few new songs, recently. Sounding pretty amazing too, if I do say so. Am doing a Dub Asylum remix of one of the songs also. First taster will be coming to your ears soon!
That video above is one I recently uploaded, taken from our spot at BFM's Private Function party, on August 20 1994, with an intro by Joel Tobeck.
This was filmed by TV3's music show Frenzy, thanks to Ross Cunningham for the video. Sound taken straight from the mixing desk, David Hornblow at the controls. Trivia: The Picassos also had a practice room in the same group of buildings, which had been a potato warehouse.
Labels:
Hallelujah Picassos,
Labretta Suede
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Eelman Records - Welli soul roots
Way before Fat Freddys Drop started ruling the capital, Wellington had been firmly embracing reggae and soul. Go back to the early to mid 1980s and you find a collective of Wellington cats who loved playing together in various combinations, in much the same way the current crop of musos in that city endlessly cross-pollinate.
The Pelicans (led by Bill Lake) were one of these acts, released on indie label Eelman Records.Other acts on the label include The Hulamen, The Economic Wizards, The Tombolas, Andrew Clyde Clouston, The Living Daylights and John Niland. The Hulamen's tune Working For A Living is a long lost Kiwi soul/reggae classic - have a listen, I digitised this off my vinyl copy. You can definitely trace a line from this to Fat Freddys and the Black Seeds.
Eelman Records discography.
Labels:
Bill Lake,
Eelman Records,
Fat Freddys Drop,
Hulamen,
Pelicans
Friday, March 28, 2014
Ring The Alarm playlist, March 29
MAW - MAW expensive (tribute to Fela)
Lonnie Smith - Straight to the point
Breakestra - Family rap
Mayer Hawthorne - Wine glass woman
Bettye Swann - Chained and bound
Lee Dorsey and the Meters - What you want
Nick Waterhouse - Aint there something money can't buy
Robb - Fourbyfour
Machito and his Afro-Cubans - Knock on wood
Ray Lugo and the boogaloo destroyers - El ritmo de nueva york
Henri-Pierre Noel - A fifth of Beethoven - the Reflex revision
Andrew Ashong - Love the way
Kraftwerk - Telephone call - remix
Fat Freddys Drop - Mother mother - Theo Parrish translation
Esther Phillips - Home is where the hatred is
Graham central station - Tell me what it is
JBs - 40th anniversary mix
The Emotions - I like it
Mickey and them - UFO
Henry Mancini - Shot in the dark
Lee Thompson ska orchestra - Mission impossible
Damian Marley, Stephen Marley -The mission
Lovejoys - Long lost lover
Horace Andy - Prophesy dubwise
Labels:
Basefm
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Crate diggers: Qbert
via FuseTV, Q-Bert talks records, influences (Miles Davis, Picasso, and Devo), and picture discs. Very cool, humble guy. Go watch it now.
"Before hip hop I was heavily influenced by Devo," he says, telling a story of being exposed to the New Wave luminaries during an elementary school presentation. "Later I found out they were heavily influenced by Kraftwerk."
Labels:
Crate diggers,
QBert
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
New Team Dynamite vid
Cool new video from Team Dynamite, part of the Young Gifted and Broke collective. Off their album Shepherd's Delight, which dropped as a free digital download last year, and recently got an official CD release. Filmed, directed & edited by Eddy Fifield.
Labels:
Atpeace,
Homebrew,
Team Dynamite,
Young Gifted and Broke
Kiwi electro, 1984 flashback
IQU were a studio outfit who released a very cool EP in 1984, on Jayrem Records. The three track ep, is driven by the funky bass of Ryan Monga,with his wife Bettyanne (both of the South Auckland club band Ardijah) holding down the vocals.
I've never seen this video before - it looks like one of those fascinating videos that state TV used to make in-studio before the arrival of NZ On Air-funded music videos in 1991.
The most popular song off the EP was the title tune, Witchcraft, which used to get a lot of airplay on Radio 95BFM, back in the day, due to a few band members having DJ connections to the station, if I recall correctly.
Band members listed on the cover; Betty Monga, Paul Agar - vocals; Jon Lowther - keyboards; David Meech -Guitar; Ryan Monga - Bass; Robert Mayo - Drums; Percussion - Jay Foulkes. Engineered by Mike Farmer, produced by Paul Crowther and ICQ. Recorded at Echo Park Studio, winter 84. Digitally mastered. ICQ Organisation: J Lowther, R Mayo, A Lamont.
Labels:
Ardijah,
Bettyanne Monga,
IQU,
Rob Mayo
Busy Signal
Labels:
Busy Signal
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
3 white dudes who don't give a....
"Andre Legacy, Beardo, and Dirt Nasty, are 3 white dudes who don't give a fuck about shit. Due to economic regalia's, they resorted to robbing and kidnapping and even assault with a deadly weapon on anybody who doubts them. Legacy, freshoutta jail said "Lets make a fuckin' 90's gangster rap album. I'm tired of all this emo pop rap." So they did. Using only 80's vintage keyboards and drum machines, they made an old school hip hop masterpenis. And if you doubt them, they will find you. And possibly cut you."
Preview the album on iTunes. Contains offensive language.
Labels:
The White Boys
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Mo Kolours debut out now!
The very cool debut album from Mo Kolours has just dropped, on LP, CD and digital (pay what you like for digital at Bandcamp).
"There’s an exotic appeal to Mo Kolours and his music but there’s also something very British about this record. Mo Kolours follows in the footsteps of UK artists who have synthesised a variety of imported styles and added the indelible stamp of our rainy island, from The Specials and Cymande (who receive a tribute here in the form of Mike Black) to Massive Attack and Mala.
His humour reveals an idiosyncratic Britishness too, as when he shouts out forgotten budget rides such as the Datsun Sunny on Play It Loud (In Your Car) or titles his ominous environmental warning Natural Disasters Wish List."
One Handed Music add "If you're new to Mo Kolours you might want to check his three previous EPs. They are all on Bandcamp or on this handy Spotify playlist I made. Shout to The Beta Band.
Londoners will want to come to the album launch next week, featuring Mo live, a mighty merch table, and DJ support from Al Dobson Jr., Jeen Bassa, Reginald Ommas Mamode IV, Tenderlonious and me, Alex Chase.
Look out also for a Resident Advisor podcast dropping in the next day or two which features multiple exclusives from Mo & his crew."
One Handed Music add "If you're new to Mo Kolours you might want to check his three previous EPs. They are all on Bandcamp or on this handy Spotify playlist I made. Shout to The Beta Band.
Londoners will want to come to the album launch next week, featuring Mo live, a mighty merch table, and DJ support from Al Dobson Jr., Jeen Bassa, Reginald Ommas Mamode IV, Tenderlonious and me, Alex Chase.
Look out also for a Resident Advisor podcast dropping in the next day or two which features multiple exclusives from Mo & his crew."
Labels:
Mo Kolours
Questlove loves lists
Questlove. Photo: Wired. |
"OK, you’ve got 20 million songs in your pocket. Now what? With endless choice comes a serious challenge: cutting through all that noise to find the next song that will change your life. In this era, the real rock star are the curators—the people, tools, and algorithms that bring you the music you’ll love. With the help of special guest DJ Questlove, we’ve assembled the ultimate guide to discovering the ultimate tracks (including Questo’s personal favorites).Your perfect playlist awaits."
Wired also interviewed Questlove, got some cool stories out of him, watch below...
On record shopping...
On record shopping...
On Technology killing (and creating) the DJ star...
Questlove talks about going out to DJ gigs with a 2 TB hard drive full of music, and sometimes he comes across a DJ who has opened for him who asks him what a song was, going "that was incredible, where did you get that from?" and Questlove says okay, I'm not selfish - you got 45 minutes give me your hard drive (and lets that kid have his music collection), and he says "I feel that the new version of that is each one, teach one - spread it around, so that it lasts forever..."
Nick Waterhouse - new album
I wrote a little about this great album from Mister Waterhouse a month back, it's out now and it's a rocking good time. Listen below.
Turntable Lab's Michu Meszaros says "While Nick Waterhouse may get bound up with funk and soul revivalists like Sharon Jones, he's got his own thing going on. The Los Angeles based singer has pretty much nailed the early rock n' roll sound.
Turntable Lab's Michu Meszaros says "While Nick Waterhouse may get bound up with funk and soul revivalists like Sharon Jones, he's got his own thing going on. The Los Angeles based singer has pretty much nailed the early rock n' roll sound.
There's plenty of deft guitar licks, precision honed rhythms and jump up piano work to go around. You get the sense that Waterhouse came to life in the 1950s and has pretty much stayed that way ever since. Along with his original material he covers songs from jazz singer Mose Allison, drummer Isaac "Red" Holt and garage-rocker Ty Segall.
He sharpens up Allison's delivery on "Let It Come Down" and adds some dark sensibility to Segall's "It #3." Holly takes us back to another time, when rock n' roll was still finding its way."
Labels:
Innovative Leisure,
Nick Waterhouse
Friday, March 21, 2014
Ring The Alarm playlist, March 22
Big Mama Thornton - Hound dog
Staple singers - Sitting on the dock of the bay
Dixie cups - Two way poc a way
James Brown - Funky drummer
Mighty Hannibal - Somebody in the world for you
Mark Ronson - No one knows
Dub funk association - Enter the chuzzler
Michael Prohpet - Been talking
Junior Dan - Look out for the devil;
Jah Wobble - Get Carter
Ranking Joe - Don't follow Babylon - BAF meets Waiwan remix
Overproof sound system -The model
Keith Lawrence - B-bwoy skank
Revolutionaries - Kunta Kinte - DJ Kentaro remix
Opensouls -Falling in (Playing free, at Nixon Park, Kingsland this arvo)
Vibes alive - Mantra
Afrodisiac sound system - Fela spider rap
Ian Dury and the blockheads -Reasons to be cheerful pt 3
Larry Graham - Sooner or later (instrumental)
Nick Waterhouse - It no. 3
Hannah Williams and the tastemakers - I'm a good woman
Kashmere stage band - Aint no sunshine - JRocc remix
Q-Tip - Manwomanboogie
VV Brown - Crying blood - Andrew Weatherall remix
Machinedrum - Stirrin
Rebel MC - Comin on strong
Born Jamericans - Boom shak a-tack
Upsetters - Popcorn
Labels:
Basefm
Thursday, March 20, 2014
New Mastersounds new album
" Légère Recordings presents "Therapy", the ninth studio album by The New Mastersounds, the now multi-national funk band originally from Leeds/England. With a new perspective in sound and vision, Eddie Roberts (Guitar), Simon Allen (Drums), Joe Tatton (Keyboards) and Pete Shand (Bass) recorded 12 fresh tracks in Denver/Colorado USA, aiming for a forward thinking sound mixing vintage funk with raw soul, smart jazz and original disco.
Labels:
Legere Recordings,
New Mastersounds
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Sunday, March 16, 2014
Lord Echo, live in Akld!
From Lord Echo: "Here's a little treat in celebration of the Silo Session [Wynyard Quarter] show in Auckland on March 29th and the Japanese shows in Tokyo, Niigata and Kyoto on April 4/5/6. It's a live version of Street Knowledge that was performed in late 2012 at The Matterhorn in Wellington and you can download it for free! The band is killer."
\
LORD ECHO (live) | ELECTRIC WIRE HUSTLE (sound system)
with DJs ISAAC AESILI | MARA TK | TAAY NINH
Saturday 29th March @ Silo Park
Family Friendly Event | FREE ENTRY
www.silopark.co.nz
With a penchant for heavy rhythms moving through a fresh fusion of soul-reggae, afro-disco, latin-boogie and more, Lord Echo has been blowing stereos and minds internationally with the release of his 2nd LP‘Curiosities’. Mike Fab (The Black Seeds) is the man behind Lord Echo, and will be leading the live band with himself on guitar and mixing desk. He will be joined on stage by extremely talented vocalists Ria Hall(Fly My Pretties) & Leila Adu (as featured on the track 'Molten Lava'), Mara TK and Taay Ninh (Electric Wire Hustle) on guitar & keys, Issac Aesili (Funkommunity) on trumpet and Lucien Johnson (Shogun Orchestra) on sax.
Electric Wire Hustle will also be performing their sound system set, which should feature a mix of their own material and tunes to get the dancefloor started. Rounding out the musical line up the day will also feature DJ sets from Isaac Aesili and Lord Echo. Come down for a brew, a browse of the Silo Markets and a boogie in the sunshine on the last Saturday of summer.
Labels:
Electric wire hustle,
Isaac Aesili,
Lord Echo,
Ria Hall
Friday, March 14, 2014
Ring The Alarm playlist, Basefm, March 15
Betty Harris - Trouble with my lover
Tony Owens - Gotta get my baby back home
Shalamar - Right in the socket
League unlimited orchestra - Love action
James White and the Blacks - Contort yourself - August Darnell remix
Nick Waterhouse - This is a game
Sharon Jones and the Dapkings - get up and get out
Jackson 5 - It' s great to be here - Kenny Dope remix
Chaka Khan - Life is a dance
Daddy Ous - Hard like a rock - Groove Corp remix
Morwell unlimited meets King Tubby - Morpheus special - Kid loco remix
DJ Vadim - Watch that sound - JStar remix (DJ Vadim at Ponsonby Social Club 20 & 21 March, free!)
Fat Freddy's Drop - Hope -3 Generations Walking remix
Rae and Christian - Ready to roll
Antibalas feat Mayra Vega - Che che cole makossa
Lightning head - Bokoor sound special
Los Silvertones - Tamborito swing
Tyrone Taylor - Move up Blackman
Adrian Sherwood and Lee Scratch Perry - Kingston tower
Little John - Fade away
Prince Fari - Hello love brother
Lord Echo - The creator has a master plan
Takuya Kuroda - Rising son
New mastersounds - Treasure
Sly and the Family Stone - Same thing makes you laugh, makes you cry (Happy 70th birthday, Sly Stone!)
Janet Jackson - Don't mess up this good thing
James Brown - Shoot your shot
Labels:
Basefm
Let's boogaloo!
Let's BOOGALOO vol.6: Deep funk, Northern Soul and Dancefloor Jazz en El Barrio just come out recently, and there;'s some serious heat on it. Compiled by Dean Rudland, the track listing is well saucy - try Machito's take on Knock on wood. Out now on Record Kicks on CD/LP/digital. Listen...
Record Kicks say "After 4 years in the making finally a new chapter of RK's premier collection Let's BOOGALOO sees the light. This time legendary compiler Dean Rudland, who is responsible of dozens of wicked compilations on BGP, Kent and Blue Note, digs deep into mythical NYC latin boogaloo producer Bobby Marin's catalogue to bring you an explosive collection of (northern) soul, deep funk and latin jazz tunes from Spanish Harlem aka El Barrio.
As Rudland reckons "Bobby is part of a crowd that have sometimes been overlooked because they weren't central to the Fania Records story, but the music they produced told a truer story of what was going on on the streets of New York than the internationalist world view that was propagated by that label's owner Jerry Massuci".
Record Kicks say "After 4 years in the making finally a new chapter of RK's premier collection Let's BOOGALOO sees the light. This time legendary compiler Dean Rudland, who is responsible of dozens of wicked compilations on BGP, Kent and Blue Note, digs deep into mythical NYC latin boogaloo producer Bobby Marin's catalogue to bring you an explosive collection of (northern) soul, deep funk and latin jazz tunes from Spanish Harlem aka El Barrio.
Bobby Marin has been one of the main contributors and a leading figure behind the latin Boogaloo movement in the mid 60s in New York producing and working close together with stars such us Joe Cuba, Eddie Palmieri, Machito, Riccardo Marrero, not to mention his own combo the legendary Latin Blues Band, recently sampled by DJ Premier as the hook to Christina Aguilera's 'Ain't No Other Man'. "
As Rudland reckons "Bobby is part of a crowd that have sometimes been overlooked because they weren't central to the Fania Records story, but the music they produced told a truer story of what was going on on the streets of New York than the internationalist world view that was propagated by that label's owner Jerry Massuci".
Labels:
Dean Rudland,
Lets boogaloo,
Record Kicks
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Slacker, live at BFM, 1994
Auckland acid jazz band Slacker perform live to air from the Radio 95bFM reception area for the Sunday Jazz Show, back in 1994. Engineer: Jules Barnett.
Zenith
From Expansions Collective, who say "London based beatsmith Zen¡th may be a new name to many, but believe us when we say the boy has talent. We actually stumbled across his music by chance on one of our many late night Soundcloud trawls: ffuture was the first track that hit our speakers and we were immediately hooked.
"Capable of everything from downtempo jazz-infused beats to dancefloor ready synths workouts: Zen¡th is a young producer who is set to make a name for himself in 2014 and beyond. His full length Expansions debut “Midnight Club” is out now."
Oddball, angular jazzy beats and hiphop samples. Dip in.
Oddball, angular jazzy beats and hiphop samples. Dip in.
Labels:
Expansions collective,
Zenith
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Len Lye: Tusalava soundtracked
Animated image from Tusalava |
"In association with 'Len Lye: Agiagiā', Mangere Arts Centre -Ngā Tohu o Uenuku is hosting a musical event, whereby new soundtrack compositions by Pacifika composers are presented with screenings of 'Tusalava'.
‘Tusalava’ is a 10 minute film made by Len Lye in 1929. Len Lye made 7,000 drawings which he photographed to create this stop animation. These drawings were influenced by Modernism but also by Māori, Aboriginal and Sāmoan art.
The original soundtrack for Tusalava was written for two pianos by Australian Jack Ellit but it has since been lost. The following composers have been commissioned to each create a soundtrack for ‘Tusalava’: Matatumua Opeloge Ah Sam, Matthew Faiumu Salapu aka Anonymouz and Poulima Salima.
Click to get your FREE tickets now, you need to book (first in first served) http://www.eventfinder.co.nz/2014/new-compositions-tusalava/auckland/mangere
Mo Kolours: Little Brown Dog
I mentioned the debut album from Mo Kolours a few weeks back - it drops March 24. Here's the latest taster from it... mad steel drums too. Dig it a lot.
"With two weeks until the release of Mo Kolours' debut album, we bring you what might be our favourite song from the record: Little Brown Dog.
Mo takes this traditional American song somewhere wholly new, with steel-drums backing a sing-along tribute to his favourite canine. Typical? No. Incredibly catchy? You decide."
Labels:
Mo Kolours
Ak record fair this saturday
The Record Collectors Fair returns to Freemans Bay Hall this saturday, 9.30am to 2pm. Entry is $5 per person (cash only). Children up to 12 are free if accompanied by an adult.
Labels:
Record fair,
Vinyl comeback
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