Sunday, January 09, 2011

Screaming Blam-matic


Following on from this ongoing Deepgrooves historical dig (coming tomorrow  - Urban Disturbance's lost 2nd album, Three the Hard Way and how NOT to clear a sample), Simon Grigg has a fascinating post over at his blog on the Screaming Blam-matic Roadshow, a tour he was involved organising in 1981 with the Screaming Meemees, Blam Blam Blam and the Newmatics.  Saw it described as "The other epic 1981 tour" on Twitter by Sacha D. Nice.

"... the idea to take the three Propeller bands on the road together was mine, Paul Rose and Dave Merritt’s (the original Screaming Meemees manager) in March or April 1981.

Paul, who was also The Newmatics manager, and my partner in the label, and I put it to Tim Mahon, the Blam Blam Blam bassist (and defacto manager) in their shared flat in Brighton Road.
Tim came up with the name on the spot.

It was broadly accepted as a concept but remained just that until the Blams took it to the next level. It was their idea to tie the concept to the New Zealand Students Arts Council and utilize the network first set up in the 1970s by Bruce Kirkland (later US manager of the legendary Stiff Records and a mentor of the equally legendary Trevor Reekie). Don, as I recall, made the approach...

...Initially nobody clicked that the tour seemed to coincide, in fact in places precisely both in time and location, with the event that was to tear New Zealand to pieces in 1981 – the justifiably infamous Springbok Tour..."

For the rest of the story, including a bunch of previously unpublished Blam Blam Blam shots by Jenny Pullar, head over here.

Dancing for the Cabana Code


New album from the man who gave us Me No Pop I, and was a member of Kid Creole and the Coconuts, amongst others. Delightful title too - Dancing for the Cabana Code in the Land of Boo-Hoo.

"Coati Mundi was a founding member of the Grammy-nominated Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band, best known for their #1 Billboard Dance hit “Cherchez La Femme” as well as “Sunshower,” a favorite of hip hop producers, sampled by A Tribe Called Quest, M.I.A., Ghostface Killah, De La Soul, and Doug E. Fresh."(Source)

You can download a free tune from RCRDLBL. Or listen below...

Projector Mix - Principal dub



A tune written and recorded by Hallelujah Picassos with Mike Hodgson (aka the Projector) at his studio, which he called Pitch Black (of course this later became the moniker for his musical project with Paddy Free, formed in 97). This tune came out on Mike's first Projector Mix album on Deep Grooves in 1992, and also appeared on the Deep Grooves compilation Instrumental Killers. The Picassos also recorded and released two other tunes with Mike - Sister Stacy, and Marshall Law Dub, both on the album Hateman In Love. Mike has told me there's an unreleased second Projector Mix album floating round in his archives somewhere, which I'd love to hear.

The tune below is off the Nemesis Dub Systems debut album A Multitrack Situation - called The Began, the Projector Mix. More on NDS soon. 

Saturday, January 08, 2011

Neat rows of bottle caps

Great interview by Graham Reid in today's NZ Herald, with promoter Michael Chugg. He's got stories for days...

"Concert promoter Michael Chugg - the man behind forthcoming shows by Santana and the Doobie Brothers, plus the Laneway and Grassroots festivals among others - tells good stories. By the dozen.

It's the 1977 Fleetwood Mac tour and he's sitting alone at a medieval banquet table backstage, which is covered in whole cooked pigs, sides of beef, lamb, chickens and turkeys ... The band - nine months after the release of their 40 million-selling album Rumours - are on stage with cocaine in beer bottle caps laid out in neat rows on a card table.

"Yeah, the excess of the excess period," laughs the man who indulged along with everyone.
"An amazing tour. The night they played [in Auckland] we had the biggest cream pie and water fight I've ever been involved in."

Read the story in full here.
Chugg has recently published his autobiography, "Hey, you in the black t-shirt".

Ring The Alarm playlist, BaseFM, Sat Jan 8

Pepperpots - Real tru love
Cubalooba - Cubalooba
New age steppers - My love
Lee Perry and Adrian Sherwood  - Kingston tower
Barrington Levy - Fuss nor fight
Cornell Campbell and the Jays - Hell inna de yard
Top cat - Request the style
Ray Bryant - Up above the rock
Seductive souls - Dazz - Tom Moulton mix
Spyder D - Big apple rappin
Junkyard band - The word/sardines
Umod - Mash up
Cutty Ranks - The stopper - Richard Dorfmeister remix
Jefferson Belt - Skylurking
Lord Echo - Thinking of you
New Loungehead feat Sulata  - Cloth
Ariya astrobeat arkestra - African kings
The Soul Fantastics - Aint no sunshine
Mayer Hawthorne - The ills (coming to NZ for Splore, Feb 11-12, plus Welly show Feb 14)
Natural self - Laws of motion
Shriekback - All lined up - disco mix
Colman Bros - Another brother remix
Bill Withers - Green grass
Public Enemy - Can't do nuttin for ya man - full rub mix

Friday, January 07, 2011

Cosmo

Cosmo Baker's Top Ten Mix - January 2011. Hat tip to Jason for the link. Downloadable too.

Cosmo Baker's Top Ten Mix - January 2011 by cosmobaker

"Welcome to the Cosmo Baker Top Ten List Version 2.0! In the past I've always had a monthly list of ten records that I wanted to "chart" and share with my folks. These kind of run the line from older stuff that I've discovered to brand new stuff that I feel needs to get some shine. It's usually a mix of different sounds that encapsulate where I'm coming from as a DJ. I profile a lot of music on my site, but these ten records are the "official" joints pretty much."

Tracklist:
1 - Teena Marie "Square Biz" (Secret Dub Mix)
2 - Ghostface Killah "Superstar" feat. Busta Rhymes
3 - Oliver "All Night"
4 - Son Of Bazerk "Turn Me Loose"
5 - Sugar Bear "Don't Scandalize Mine"
6 - Chic "I Feel Your Love Comin' On" (Dimitri From Paris Remix)
7 - Pretty Poison "Catch Me I'm Falling"
8 - Ilija Rudman "Against The Wall" (Killer Whale Remix)
9 - The Get Down Crew "Chante Vs. James Brown"
10 - Armand Van Helden & Steve Aoki "BRRRAT! (Eli Escobar Remix)
BONUS  11 - Daft Punk "Derezzed" (Cosmo Baker Dance Edit) 

Blowfly documentary

Blowfly appeared at the 2010 BDO and have heard reports from folk who saw him that he was the best thing all day. This is an interview with the film maker Johnathan Furmanski (director of Pixies doco loudQUIETloud) about his documentary on this legendary filthmonger.

"Blowfly gained a measure of underground celebrity into the early hip hop era, even charting with the 1980 album Blowfly’s Party, before fading into obscurity.

So filmmaker/photographer Jonathan Furmanski didn’t expect to find much when he aimlessly typed “Blowfly” into Google one day a few years back. That search – and the discovery that Blowfly, by then nearing 70, had never stopped recording and touring – led to The Weird World of Blowfly, which traces Reid’s career and his often fraught and frustrating attempts to keep it up.

Debuted at last year’s South by Southwest festival, it’s a suitably obscene yet intimate and surprising portrait of a singular performer, featuring testimonials from fans like Ice-T and German punk band Die Arzte and interviews with Reid’s ex-wife and semi-estranged children, who still seem somewhat befuddled as to where “Blowfly” ends and “Clarence” begins. Furmanski, who is now raising funds on Kickstarter to finance distribution (click on the widget below the article to contribute or learn more), chatted with MFW from his New York home about chronicling the original dirty rapper."

Read it here.  Trailer below (watch for his Clash cover).  Furmanski is raising funds via Kickstarter, help him out if you feel so inclined.


Blowfly Film Trailer from blowflyfilm on Vimeo.

Colourblind - The Auckland Dance Scene in 1993 (excerpt)

Colourblind - The Auckland Dance Scene in 1993 was an article written by Andrew Schmidt for Metro magazine, published Feb 1994 titled 'Rad attitude'. He posted the full story on his excellent blog, Mysterex a few years back. At the time he wrote it, Schmidt was new to Auckland, and didn't know anything of the music scene he was tasked to write about, which, as he suggests in his intro, was probably a good thing, giving a fresh take on it. Read the full story here. [Edit - Schmidt deleted his blog in March 2011, so I have posted the full story on my blog]

"... Tapping the same market, but the musical vein, is Auckland dance music label Deepgrooves which recently set up a Sydney branch to break its roster of acts in Australia.

Label boss Kane Massey is one of a number of young Aucklanders revitalising local music by dipping into the city’s well of brown talent. He joins longtime black music fan Murray Cammick’s Southside Records, home to Maori chart act Moana And The Moahunters; newcomer Tangata Records which includes Emma Paki and Gifted And Brown among its acts; and Pagan Records which has dance mistress Merenia on board. Even Flying Nun Records, one of the last New Zealand bastions of three chord pop and white guitar noise rock, has the very danceable Headless Chickens.

Deepgrooves releases cover the whole dance music spectrum from the High Street hip hop of Urban Disturbance and old school rap of The Hard Way through the acid jazz of Cause Celebre regulars Freebass to the jaunty reggae of the Mighty Asterix and Jules Issa.

3 The Hard Way are a young street smart hip hop crew from Avondale. As their first release tells it, they’re “straight from the old school” of rap.

TTHW’s members have spent time in early Auckland rappers Total Effect, BB3 and Chaingang, but it’s 3 The Hard Way now and the sounds and name fit just so. They’re West Auckland homeboys, they grew up there, and that experience is in the music — the early chaotic days listening to older brothers’ reggae, George Clinton hard funk and early rap, cobbling together equipment from old Technics stereos, learning their sounds from DJ friends Nick Roy and John Petueli.

“The words are about what we’ve been through,” says rapper Boy C (Chris Maiai). “About how hard it was to get into the music. ‘When we first started we didn’t know anyone,” adds DJ Mike Mix (Mike Patton).

First up from 3 The Hard Way is “Hip Hop Holiday”, a song based around a sample of 1OCC’s “Dreadlock Holiday”. The sounds are hard, thanks to some assured DJing from Mike Mix and DJ Damage (Lance Manuel), but not so hard that a chart hit is out of the question. That’s fine with the band, they haven’t compromised the music they want to make, and they want as many people to hear the music as possible. Next up is a hip hop version of Jimmy Cliff’s “Many Rivers To Cross”, to be followed by a song for their kids — Boy C and DJ Damage both have young sons.

It’s taken 3 The Hard Way a while to get into the studio, so now they’re not wasting any time. New Zealand On Air has proved that its ears aren’t too far from the street and has stumped up two recording grants and a video grant. And what 3 The Hard Way learn about recording, playing live and putting out records will stay in West Auckland. Part of the plan is to record and encourage other local outfits still struggling away in garages, moulding their sounds.

Talking to these three it’s easy to know why dance music is the street buzz of the moment. Like the best new movements it’s grown out of an underground scene and is propelled by young people jacked up on the sounds, but singing and rapping about their environments to an audience that can relate directly to those concerns and experiences. To borrow a phrase from black soul label Motown, it’s the sound of young brown Auckland, and it’s a new voice that’s seldom been heard here. With the swelling young Maori and Polynesian population rising in the city, there’ll be plenty of ears keen to hear songs that reflect their worlds..."

The story goes on to look at the scene in High St at night, and talks with Simon Grigg about that scene. Fascinating read.

2R2s - Take you home dub



Another tune from 2R2S (Riot Riddim Sound System)  - Take you home dub, taken from the Deepgrooves compilation Instrumental Killers, from 1994, I believe. The CD has no date listed on it, handy that.

I  had previously thought this was a dub version of a song that was intended for inclusion on the ill-fated 2R2S EP that was in production at the time, but a recent conversation with Roland from 2R2S suggests I had it all wrong.

Roland says this song was not a dub version at all but an instrumental they'd recorded with the intention of writing lyrics for one of their crew, Paulette Edwards (ex Strawpeople), to sing over it. They had been performing a version of it live with Paulette using the lyrics and melody of a song by Lisa Lisa and the Cult Jam, I Wonder If I Take You Home (video).

The plan was to write some original lyrics for her to sing, but Roland says they found it difficult getting studio time, as Deepgrooves engineers Mark Tierney and Chris Sinclair were basically working for free, donating their time, so they (2R2S) had to wait until the engineers had some spare time between paying gigs.

Also, Roland told me this instrumental was included on the compilation without their knowledge or permission.

Other acts on this compilation included Sound Foundation, Unitone Hifi, NDS (Nemesis Dub Systems), Nag, Urban Disturbance, Projector, and Babel (Andy "Submariner" Morton and Kieran Cooney). Babel released an EP on Deepgrooves in 1994, called A is for Atom (more info here). Most of the tunes on this compilation had been on other Deepgrooves releases.


Coming up next... the Picassos get dubbed by Mike Hodgson (pre-Pitch Black)

Thursday, January 06, 2011

Riot Riddum part 2



Riot Riddum Sound System (2R2S) was my old mates Bobbylon and Roland from Hallelujah Picassos and a few assorted folk. Riot Riddum Sound System started out as a side project for them with both DJing and taking turns on the mike, Roland in his gruff style,  and Bobbylon with his melodious 'singjay' style. I posted their first release earlier.

Everybody To Deir Own is a way more aggressive tune than Home girl, switching between Bobbylon's smooth crooning and Roland's shouting. It's a great tune, and featured on the second Deepgrooves compilation in 1992, Deep in the Pacific of bass, the follow up to the earlier Deepgrooves comp from the previous year.