Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Brass Monkey - You Keep Me Hangin' On

Below is a post I did in February of '08 where I decided to come out of the closet and start posting Reggae - which I personally refer to as "Jamaican soul." For my first post of Jamaican soul I decided to contrast two covers of the Supremes classic "You Keep Me Hangin' On," one by Mike Dorane and the other by the master Ken Boothe. The Suprems original was already one of my favorite songs of all time, so the fact that I was sitting on three versions of the same tune, all of them revelatory in their own unique way, just seemed to say that this was a song that could do no wrong.

This weekend I was going through the latest of The Complete Motown Singles reissue series and found yet another, really sick rendition of the song by a group called Brass Monkey. I thought I couldn't love this song anymore - thought there was nothing more to pull out of it arrangement-wise. Not even close.

The Brass Monkey treatment of "You Keep Me Hangin' On" is weirdly modern, from the mix to the guitar tones, to the stop-start drumm figure. And goddamnit, the ugly sound that comes out of his throat at the 2:40 mark is a sign of desperation. I hope he's okay.

Brass Monkey - "You Keep Me Hangin' On" [From The Complete Motown Singls, Vol. 11a]








Older post:




About three years ago, a friend turned me onto the Trojan Records Originals box set, a collection of early reggae recordings, some of which later became hits when other groups covered them (Like "Red, Red Wine"), but all of which were the first productions of the songs. We were particularly fascinated with a track called "Please Don't Make Me Cry" by Winston Groovy and its brilliantly goofy arrangement that featured a use of synthesizers about three decades ahead of its time.

As I borrowed and began to absorb the box set, I quickly got obsessed with these recordings. The productions are often shockingly quirky, with really bizarre and angular hooks, the warmest drum sounds of all time, and an addicting distortion in the mixes. There are deeply soulful performances featuring some of the greatest soul singers I've ever heard. Genius actually, and I don't use that word lightly. I think that some of these guys, like Alton Ellis, Ken Boothe, Delroy Wilson and Dennis Brown are easily on par with the great American soul singers like Sam Cooke, Al Green and Smokey Robinson... only weirder. Unfortunately, while those American artists received recognition in their lifetime and a lasting legacy, many of their Jamaican counterparts were mostly unknown outside of their native country (sometimes even in their native country) during their paltry "careers" and are today largely forgotten.

I've always had a bad association in my mind with the word "reggae" that probably stems back to college and the abuse of Rasta paraphanalia in dorm-hippie culture. Bob Marley is the name brand for the genre, and his most famous records left me cold (I've since come around to the greatness that is early Wailers). And I'm not sure if I can really get with music being made today under the reggae label. But after getting hooked on the Trojan Originals box set, I began a dig for more material of similar style and quality, and it's an obsession that is still going strong. I now have probably between 50 and 75 cuts that I personally consider essential.

I think that the emotional quality of this early Jamaican soul music (which is how I've decided to refer to it) just fits my life and temperament better now than the darkness and theatricality of the groups I used to get off on, like Fugazi, Radiohead or PJ Harvey. There is definitely a melancholy current flowing beneath the surface of these tunes, a kind of resigned sadness that is part of most third-world culture. But there is just as much joy and warmth, which is just something I find more interesting these days. Not a fake, peppy joy, but an earned joy, that was yanked from down deep. Plus, it's just rhythmic Christmas for me, with pockets so sick that all I can do sometimes is just laugh at how good they are.

It's weird. These days, besides electronic music, I listen to Jamaican soul music probably more than anything else, but I've barely blogged about any of my discoveries. I guess part of me just wanted to keep it to myself or didn't know if other people would hear and appreciate the same things I was hearing (my girlfriend, for example, couldn't care LESS). But today, I'll start adding a pinch of it into the mix of this blog.

Since I already made the Detroit/Jamaica comparison, I think a good place to begin would be with two cover versions of the track "You Keep Me Hangin' On," which was a huge hit in the 60s for Motown group The Supremes.

The first version, "Set Me Free," is by Ken Boothe, who occupies about as much space on my mp3 player as any other artist of any genre.





Ken Boothe - "Set Me Free" [From Studio One Soul]










I first heard this track in a restaurant outside of Cincinati. My band was there to play a show and when we got to the venue, it was closed - the promoter had flaked. Luckily someone pointed us to a local burrito joint. The place nearly saved our souls. Besides serving burritos the size of watermelons, the jukebox was stocked with tons of old soul and reggae. When this track came up on the system, I think I had an out-of-body experience from the combination of good 'rito and good jams.

I love how Boothe doesn't even bother to use the original title. I also love the whacky Ennio Morricone meets Shuggie Ottis instrumental tag on the intro. Eventually, the track descends into extremely crude dub in its second half, but it doesn't matter. Boothe did his damage. Listen to how Boothe's singing constantly plays with going flat. It's kind of his signature move. He stops just this side of letting it get ugly every time.

As much as I adore Boothe's rendering, I think I might love this Mike Dorane version even more. It's more low-key, but the way he arranges the chorus is brilliant, singing a falsetto harmony of the traditional melody instead of the melody itself. He's basically banking on the fact that the listener already knows the tune, and that that implication is strong enough in the listener's mind to supply the hook while he provides embellishment. It's a bold move, and totally works.

Sadly, I couldn't even find a decent photo of Mike Durane on the internet.

Mike Dorane - "You Keep Me Hanging On" [From Trojan Soulful Reggae Box Set]






Sunday, June 21, 2009

La Roux


La Roux singer Elly Jackson conveys something that I hear in so few contemporary singers: the basic pleasure of singing itself. In the few singles La Roux has released so far there is always a moment or two when Jackson lets some kind of howl or "ooh" loose and you thank god that some jackass producer never threw a pitch corrector on it. Her flatness and sharpness is always on target.

I prefer the super gutted Skream remix of "In For the Kill" to the original, not only because of how much exposure it gives Jackson's singing but because the song has the kind of melody that needs the track to stand out of its way. Kate Bush is right.

La Roux "In for the Kill (Skream remix)"








"Quicksand" is crazy good, and crazy astute at bringing its influences back from the dead fully intact.


La Roux_Quicksand from _del on Vimeo.


Monday, June 15, 2009

Noah Harris and the Nagant Quartet - Three Nights in Chicago




Noah Harris is a songwriter from Champaign, IL that I met probably seven years ago. My band was on an epically bad tour (which we named The Trail of Tears Tour after the fact because it had been so poorly booked). We shared a bill with Noah at a coffee shop in Wisconsin and I watched the room go still as he chased the demons out with his voice, acoustic guitar and strong fingers. Days later he put us up when we came through Champaign. He made us breakfast and it made us happier to be around him. He can do that.

We kept in touch and then years later he asked me to produce a record for his group Elanors, a collaboration with his wife Adriel. I’m not sure how it happened, because it happened gradually and slyly, but I ended up getting so obsessed with Noah’s music that I forgot it wasn’t mine. And there was a while when I cared more about Noah’s music than my own. That was a happy time. That collaboration went deep, maybe too deep. We made a band to tour the record (Movements), and even did a pretty swanky small East Coast tour, but nothing much came of the record or the band and eventually Noah went off in another direction.

Honestly, I was sore about the way things turned out, but I kept tabs on his music from a distance. After all, the friendship started in worship. At first it was difficult to separate the hard feelings from my feelings about the new songs. But time and music won out.

He’s billing himself as Noah Harris and the Nagant Quartet at the moment and I’m pretty sure he’s finishing a record with solo voice, piano and string quartet. He released a promo single earlier this year, called “Your Side,” and it’s crushingly good. If you live in the Chicago area, catch one of his three nights at the Chopin theater coming up. Everybody knows about the physicality of seeing live music. Not everybody knows about the healing benefits of being in the room with orchestral instruments and the unnamable calm that comes from bathing in those vibrations.

More Noah and ticket info: here.

Noah Harris - "Your Side"

I recorded this in my living room one night in the middle of the Movements sessions, after dinner. It was a brand new song then that Noah was just working out. You can hear the crickets getting in on it.

Noah Harris - "The Song About the Sea"

Saturday, June 6, 2009

BULBZ streams

My EP, BULBZ, is available here. Stream away.



Daniel - "Love Lockdown (Like Ripples") [Kanye West/Radiohead]








Daniel - "Does Not Compute" [Prince]







Daniel - "Cruise With Me" [Smokey Robinson]







Tuesday, June 2, 2009

BULBZ

BULBZ is a three-song covers EP I made. It's released today on Moodgadget. It's kind of a teaser for my full-length, which will be released later in the summer. I covered Smokey Robinson, Kanye West, Radiohead and Prince.

You can choose your own price and download the EP here.


BULBZ is a brief vision of Top 40 in a parallel universe of blown speakers and circuit-bent taste - tuneful, danceable and soulfully sung by Daniel, formerly of Detroit-based Judah Johnson [Flameshovel].

BULBZ began as an experiment, an excuse for Daniel to teach himself the popular recording software Logic. It didn't take long for him to figure out ways to abuse its array of soft synths and powerful sound processors. The result is a three-song covers EP that is both the most electronic and accessible thing Daniel has ever done as well as the first time he has ever released any non-original music. "It's stupid that I've never put out any covers before," he says. "There are songs I've loved over the years that feel closer to my heart than my own."

"Cruise With Me," is a synth-soaked rendition of Smokey Robinson's "Cruisin'" that begins over a stark 909 drum beat and ends in a cascading waterfall of Clark-inspired distortion. "Love Lockdown (Like Ripples)" is Daniel's fantasy of a reconciled Kanye West and Thom Yorke and mashes West's "Love Lockdown" with echoes of Radiohead's "Reckoner," two tracks that felt game-changing to Daniel when they were first released. "Does Not Compute" is the most faithful rendition of the three, staying close to the source of Prince's "Something in the Water" (1999) while amping its atonal keyboards and crushed drum programming up to the levels that have made it a favorite in Daniel's live sets.

Daniel will release his debut solo full-length, Lazrus, on Moodgadget later this summer.

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