The Slits – In The Beginning There Was Rhythm (1980)
At the age of 15, Neneh Cherry was introduced to seminal feminist Post Punk group The Slits by her stepfather Don Cherry, and joined them for a brief period, providing backing vocals on several tracks, including this one. The Slits were integral to the early days of UK’s Punk scene, but they quickly became musically adventurous beyond that and incredibly funky as well, further aided by producer Dennis Bovell’s dub expertise. Edginess was rarely as charming, but The Slits had loads of attitude to boot. One can assume that Neneh Cherry took her clues from the experience.
Rip, Rig & Panic – Those Eskimo Women Speak Frankly (1981)
The next band Cherry joined was a Bristol collective that included two members of the legendary Pop Group. Their music was a feverish mix of Punk Funk, avantgarde elements and Jazz. As with The Slits, Don Cherry was a collaborator, but his stepdaughter was more to the core, switching to lead vocals and displaying the mixture of charismatic Soul and Rap stylings that would make her famous later on. But before that, Neneh Cherry briefly retired to become a young mother, and the band fell apart. In 1983 the band reformed with Neneh Cherry under the name Float Up CP, and released one album, then fell apart again. But if you find a band in those years with a constant line-up, it might have been dull anyway. Rip Rig & Panic sure were not.
Raw Sex, Pure Energy – Give Sheep A Chance (1982)
After collaborating with On-U Sound’s mighty New Age Steppers, Cherry teamed up with its bass guitarist George Oban and the drummer of 70s Fusion Jazz band Karma, Joe Blocker. They covered Edwin Starr’s Motown standard „Stop The War Now“ in reaction to the Falklands War, and „Give Sheep A Chance“ is its wonderful icy computerized dub version on the flip, sheep noises included. In the years leading up to the next entry, Neneh Cherry also became a pirate radio DJ, danced in a Big Audio Dynamite video, and duetted marvellously on The The’s „Slow Train To Dawn“.
Neneh Cherry – Buffalo Stance (1988)
Neneh Cherry, the pop star. Seven months pregnant with her second child but rampant with energy, she performed this ever infectious song on Top Of The Pops and stormed the top ten. „Buffalo Stance“ was referencing Malcolm McLaren’s Gals, stylist Ray Petri’s fashionable collective, and was in fact a cover version of a Stock, Aitken & Waterman produced single by her future husband Cameron McVey from two years earlier, where she already rapped about „Looking Good Diving With The Wild Bunch“ on the B-side. And the famed Bristol sound system was indeed involved with the accompanying „Raw Like Sushi“ solo debut album, as were McVey and Tim Simenon of Bomb The Bass fame at the controls. In 1988 Hip Hop and House still looked at each other and the UK club scene was vibrant, as documented by magazines like I-D, The Face and Blitz. Neneh Cherry was styled by Judy Blame and photographed by Jena-Baptiste Mondino rather iconically, but underlying were lyrics that dissed gigolos and moneymen and celebrated female self-esteem. So don’t you get fresh with her!
Neneh Cherry – Manchild (1988)
Neneh Cherry telling the boys some more news (albeit with a bit more sympathy), in a fantastic downtempo song co-written by Cameron McVey and Robert Del Naja AKA 3D of The Wild Bunch, and soon-to-be Massive Attack (fellow member of both Mushroom provided a booming remix). In the rather weird video she proudly sports her now born second child Tyson and a further refined fly girl outfit with a pair of cycle shorts that were de rigeur in 1989. Ok, men mostly wore the matching cycle tops. The „cause I believe in miracles, words in heavy doses“ ending still rules supreme.
Neneh Cherry – I’ve Got You Under My Skin (1990)
This a contribution to „Red, Hot & Blue“, an AIDS charity compilation on which several artists covered Cole Porter songs. AIDS was still spreading fast, and given the topic the title is very well picked, with Neneh Cherry rapping an introduction that makes it very clear that it is not only love creeping through the body, but also very lethal disease. The heavy and brooding downbeat groove already foreshadows Massive Attack’s „Blue Lines“ album, to which she would also contribute. The video by Mondino is appropriately dark, without any misplaced pretensions. „Share the love, don’t share the needle“, it ends.
Neneh Cherry – Buddy X (1992)
Lifted from her second album „Homebrew“, Cherry again adresses men that like to play around, wrapping her criticism of male hypocrisy and infidelity with fetching Hip Hop pressure. The song still features prominently in club playlists due to its Class A Masters At Works remixes. At the height of their powers they apply their raw swing to a groove that most successfully merges Hip Hop and House sophistication, without ever distracting from the message. Deadly dubs, too.
Youssou N’Dour & Neneh Cherry – 7 Seconds (1994)
Neneh Cherry collaborates with the famous Senegalese singer for a moving celebration of humanity without prejudice. By then the combination of a downbeat and dramatic strings had almost become stereotypical, but the trilingual „7 Seconds“ still proves why it became so efficient in the first place. First, you need a good song. Second, you need good performers. Third, you will see that the tried and tested arrangement will even up the ante. The stylish monochromatic video was directed by Stéphane Sednaoui, and it works.
Neneh Cherry & The Thing – Dream Baby Dream (2012)
Neneh Cherry works with a Scandinavian Jazz trio that named itself after her stepfather. She was a longtime Scandinavian resident and Jazz has a healthy tradition there, it should not have come as a surprise. But after a long hiatus from recording music, it was. The resulting album consisted mainly of well chosen cover versions that seem to stand for Cherry’s whole life in music. They are interpreted quite freely, and Cherry still delivers. Take her version of Suicide’s No Wave classic „Dream Baby Dream“ for example. In my ears it rather sounds like her very early days than former pop star croons the standards for Christmas.
Neneh Cherry – Everything (2014)
The overdue comeback as solo performer, with an album of material that mourns the death of her mother in 2009. Four Tet is at the helm, and his sparse production focusses on rhythmic textures and subtle electronic arrangements, performed by Rocketnumbernine. The album decidedly neglects pop obligations and Neneh Cherry is evidently very motivated, and even if her songs here are very personal, they sure are engaging as well. The remixers on duty for „Everything“, Ricardo Villalobos and Max Loderbauer, must have agreed, as they already let the song seep into their trademark Micro House jam setup after only two and a half minutes.
RuPaul – Strüdel Model Masters At Work – The Ha Dance (Pumpin’ Dubb) The Ride Committee Feat. Roxy – Love To Do It (Sandy’s Favorite Mix) The Moonwalkers – 10000 Screamin’ Faggots (In The Life Extended Mix) Club 69 – Warm Leatherette (Quick Mix) Rageous Projecting Kevin Aviance – Cunty (Party Mix) G-Bravo Presents Miss Fernando – Serve (Original Dirty Club Mix) Junior Vasquez & The Spastic Babies – Nervaas (Nervaas Dub) Urban Discharge Feat. She – Drop A House (Deep Tribal Mix) Junior Vasquez -X ( Junior’s Dub) Fierce Ruling Diva – Atomix Rageous Projecting Franklin Fuentes – Tyler Moore Mary (Banji Bite Mix) Tronco Traxx – Runway (Grease Monkey Drag Queen Mix) Frank Ski – Tony’s Bitch Track (Original Dirty Version) Tronco Traxx – Walk 4 Me (Wanka Mix) Tronco Traxx – Walk 4 Me Q-Marc – It’s Time 2 Walk The Runway Whatever, Girl – Activator (You Need Some) (Jheri Curl Sucker Wearin’ High Heeled Boots Mix) The Ride Committee Feat. Roxy – Curtains For You Morel’s Grooves – Down To The Waistline (Honey) Boogie Balo – Chocolate & Peanut Butter (DJ Double Dee Hunts Point 7AM Coco Mix) DJ Vibe Feat. Franklin Fuentes – I’ll Take You (The Classic Twisted Mix) Kevin Aviance – Join In The Chant Delicious Inc. – Eau De Chanté (For Men) Uncanny Alliance – I’m Beautiful Dammitt (3rd Vox Floor Mix) A.D.A.M – Children Of The Night (Part 1) The Look Feat. Franklin Fuentes – March (Rave Tip Mix) Moi Rene – Cum 4 Me Bitch (Dub Vocal) Ralphi Rosario Pres. Xaviera Gold – You Used To Hold Me (The Trancesexual Dub) The Look – Glammer Girl (Bochinche Prelude Ballroom Mix Moog Reprise) Hex Hector Presents Pres. Ground Control – Absolutly Fabulous (The Full Runway Mix) Temple Of Vinyl – C’mon Miss Thang (Fierce Mix) Byrd Bardot – Bardot Swing (Ralphi Rosario’s Cha Cha Mix) Roxy & The Effects – The Art Of Sampling (Dub) The Ride Committee Feat. Roxy – Accident (Todd Edwards Dub) The Ride Committee Feat. Roxy – Get Huh RuPaul – A Shade Shady (DJ Pierre Club Mix) Jack And Jill – Go Miss Thing (Club Mix) Jack And Jill – Work It Girlfriend (Morning Mix) RuPaul – Back To Roots (Murk’s Curl Activator Mix) Fierce Men On Wax – Go Girl (Fierce Groove Mix) Uncanny Alliance – I Got My Education (Ken Lou Extended Mix) Karen Finley – Tales Of Taboo (80 Factory Mix) DJ Sneak – Fierce (Queen’s Anthem) Danny Extravaganza – Love The Life You Love (Le Palage Mix) Miss Tony – Release Yourself (Funky Fingers UK Master Mix) I.M.T. – I.M.T. Theme (Miss Girl Hopes 2 Become Mix) The Daou – Surrender Yourself (Factory Reprise) Size Queen Feat. Paul Alexander – Walk (Paul’s Groove) RuPaul – Supermodel (Couture Mix) Bette Midler – I’m Beautiful (Brinsley Evans Back To The Scene Of The Crime Mix)
Go Bitch Go! – Work This Pussy (Original Bitch Mix) DJ Sneak – Work It Sub-Culture Feat- Marcus – Dreams (Tribal Life Mix) Springboard – Be My Man (Club Mix) Todd Edwards – Winter Behavior Sound Design – Searchin’ Gypsymen – Bounce M.A.D.A. – The Good Stuff (Culture Mix) Mental Instrum – Bott-ee Rider (Open Wide!!) Gayland – Get By (The Instrumental) Georgie Porgie – Strawberry (Georgie’s Club Mix) Deep Style – …Down (Elementary Dub) L.J. – No Work O.D.C. – Model 9000 Aswad – Shine (Remix Dub) DJ Sneak – Come Together Nature Boy – Tobago The Cover Girls – Wishing On A Star (Magic Sessions Vocal Dub) Martha Wash – Carry On (Masters At Work Dub Mix) Uncanny Alliance – I Got My Education (Underground Dub) Louie “Balo” Guzman – Don’t Shut Me Out The Miners – Calling You (Giancarlino Stress Mix) Mood II Swing Productions – I Need Your Luv (Right Now) (Balo’s Banji Mix) Full Swing – Choices (Choices Vocal Mix) Marina Van-Rooy – Sly One Lectroluv – If We Try (Hard Dub Edit) Pal Joey – Rat Race Celo-Sound – Every Day Every Nite Hardrive Feat. L.G. – Sindae (Kenlou Dub) Black Rascals – Sympathy (Club Dub) Three Generations Feat. Chevell – Get It Off Romanthony – Falling From Grace Interceptor – Together (The S-Man’s Miami Mix) Daniela Mercury – O Canto Da Cidade (Murk Boys Miami Mix) Mission Control – Outta Limits
Romanthony – Hold On DJ Spinna – Ladbroke Groove Metro Area – Atmosphrique Tiny Trendies – The Sky Is Not Crying Freaks – 2 Please U Gemini – We Are The Future Andrés – Reality Armand Van Helden Feat. Roland Clark – Flowerz Nick Holder – Summer Daze Derrick L. Carter – Dreaming Again Isolée – Beau Mot Plage Dino + Terry – Moon Dub Sound Stream – Good Soul Norma Jean Bell – Friday Nite Ghost – Bodyguard Eddie “Flashin” Fowlkes – Oh Lord Blumfeld – Status Quo Vadis LoSoul – Brother In Love Octave One – Burujha Nick Holder – Fill Your Dreams Moodymann – Shades Of Jae Terry Callier – I Don’t Want To See Myself (Without You) Masters At Work Feat. India – To Be In Love Kimara Lovelace – When Can Our Love Begin Rick Wade – Show-U-Love Mutabaruka – Dis Poem ’99 Pépé Bradock & The Grand Brûlé’s Choir – Deep Burnt Kerri Chandler – Digital Love Affair Herbert Meets Them Rednail Kidz – I Think Of You Jamico Feat. Jackie Cohen – This Luv Is Real
A mix with some 90s house records I hold very dear.
Mr Fingers – On My Way (Pinky Blue Mix) Lovechild – Sweet Ambience (Deep Dub) Chez Damier & Stacey Pullen – Forever Monna Inner Soul feat. E. Scott – I’m In Need 4 U Sound Waves – I Wanna Feel The Music (Smooth Mix) Sensory Elements – Explain It Jazz-N-Groove – Do Ya (Marcs Lunch Pale Mix) Equation – I’ll Say A Prayer 4 U Debbie Gibson – One Step Ahead (Masters At Work Mix) Yohan Square – Love Of Life (Genesis Mix) Mark Rogers – Twilight For Some (Hurleys Twilight Mix) Subculture – The Voyage Joanna Law – Love Is Not Enough (Mix D’Ambience)
Ich möchte heute die Rubrik dazu nutzen, um auf ein eher weniger beachtetes Opfer der Musikwirtschaftskrise hinzuweisen: den housigen Undergroundmix für normalerweise nicht housige Artists. In Zeiten, in denen Remixbudgets von Majorlabels die Beträge für die Praktikantenbetreuung nicht mehr übersteigen dürfen, A&R-Leute mit noch wesentlich mehr Verspätung ein Ohr von außen an die Mauern der Clubs halten, oder sich allgemein eingeredet wird, der Auftragsproduzent des Originaltracks könne die Dance-Version bestimmt auch gut machen, können sie nicht mehr wohl gedeihen, die seltsamen Blüten, die entstehen, wenn Bürostrategen, die nicht tanzen, auf Produzenten treffen, die nur bedingt in Chartsnotierungen denken. Die Blütezeit dieser Untergattung der House-Historie ist von den spätern 80ern bis Mitte der 90er datierbar, als krude Illusionen von Tanzflächenkredibilität gepaart mit prallen Marketingkampfkassen auf die Crème de la Crème der Clubkultur trafen, oder auch nur auf die Auftragsallzwecktypen, die sich für keinen Auftragsallzweck zu schade waren. Letztere gab es in der Clubkultur schon seit immerdar. Konzentrieren wir uns also lieber auf die Ersteren. Und vernachlässigen wir auch die Grundvorrausetzung dieser schiefen Konstellationen, nämlich dass sowohl Auftraggeber als auch Interpret das Endergebnis völlig gleichgültig ist, bis hin zur kompletten Verleugnung desselben bzw. peinlicher Zurschaustellung von nicht einmal Einviertelfachwissen, wenn die Dance-Version unerwarteterweise die Originalversion in Verkaufszahlen übertrumpft. Demgegenüber liefern die housigen Undergroundmixer zumeist genau das, was den nicht housigen Artists nur allzu offensichtlich fehlt. Die selbstverständliche Anbindung an Geschrei und Arme in der Luft, Schweiß, Sex und Tränen der Augenblicks-Ekstase und des Wochenendglücks. Und den Beweis, dass die jeweilige Zauberformel mit jedem Interpreten und Song funktioniert, solange man sich die Werktreue für die Radioversion aufhebt, und in den Dub- und Instrumentalversionen den dicken Hund von der Leine lässt. Es gibt sehr sehr viele Platten, wo dieses Prinzip hervorragend funktioniert, und dann Menschen auf der Tanzfläche zu Interpreten ausflippen, über die sie im Tagesgeschehen nicht einmal nachdenken würden. Indiskutables Popgeträller wird zu rhythmisch zerhackten Samples ohne stimmlichen Wiedererkennungswert, und Masters At Work machen aus Debbie Gibson, MK aus Bette Midler, DJ Pierre aus Donny Osmond, Shep Pettibone aus Paul McCartney, oder David Morales aus U2 unantastbare Clubikonen, für die Dauer des Tracks zumindest. One Little Indian hatte z. B. 1991 die merkwürdige Idee, ihre hauseigenen Indie-Superstars, die Sugarcubes, mit einem ganzen Remixalbum in der Clubszene zu vertäuen. Darauf waren, einige Mixe stinkenfaul, einige am Thema noch mehr vorbei als überhaupt befürchtet, einige uninteressant, einige interessant und einige waren echte Prachtexponate. Klarer Sieger des Wettbewerbs war für mich Tony Humphries, der seine schon anderswo demonstrierte Fähigkeit, großzügig eine Schicht New Jersey-Zauber über artfremde Musik zu legen, hier noch weit übertraf. Und er schaffte es, obwohl er sowohl alle kaprioligen Gesangsmanierismen der Sängerin unangetastet ließ, als auch dem knurrigen Sängerhünen seinen Lauf ließ. Im wunderbaren Klanguniversum von Humphries zu seiner besten Schaffensphase hat das alles seinen Platz, und wird zudem noch von allerlei feinsten Geistesblitzen erhellt. Für Humphries mag das nur eine Episode geblieben sein, aber Björk kehrte nie wieder zu Schrammelpop zurück, und für alle anderen war es ein gleißendes Himmelslicht im zwielichtigen Dunst von Körpern und Substanzen.
„This wasn’t supposed to happen, I was happy by myself, accidentally, you seduced me, I’m in love again“.
The Sugarcubes – Leash Called Love / Hit (One Little Indian, 1991)
Seit House Mitte der 90er Jahre die Großraumclubs eroberte, befindet sich House mit Gesang in einer erheblichen Schaffenskrise. Wo vorher Hymnen mit schönen Melodien mit Armgeruder im Club mitgesungen wurden, herrscht nun Überforderung hinsichtlich der Diva plus Kirchenchor-Standards und Unterforderung hinsichtlich der Tatsache, dass in dieser Konstellation nicht mehr eingängige Songs in der Tradition von Soul und Disco benötigt werden, sondern nur noch einschüchternde Breitwandspiritualität. Und wenn mich später heute noch ein Blitz aus dem Himmel treffen mag, der Gospel ist schuld. Dabei gibt es eigentlich genug Beispiele, wie man das Thema für alle Seiten gewinnbringend angeht ohne sich in imperativen Grußformeln auf Filterdiscobasis für die Handtaschenklientel zu erschöpfen oder gleich die ganz große Messe abzuhalten. Lovesongs zum Beispiel, die einfach so schön und wahrhaftig sind, dass der Himmel nicht erst beschrieen werden muss damit er sich öffnen möge. Bei dieser Platte von 1992 macht er das jedenfalls ganz von selbst. Ursprünglich von Mood II Swing zur ihrer besten Schaffensperiode ausgetüftelt, machen Masters At Work in ihrem Remix aus dem Song eine herzerweichende Erklärung an die bittersüße Hilflosigkeit, die nur die ganz große Liebe auszulösen vermag. Elegant schwingt er dahin, dieser Track, von wenig mehr zusammenhalten als einem genialen Klavierakkord und diesem überzeugenden Hilferuf von Silvano, der mich aus etwas rätselhaften Gründen immer an eine Garage-Version von Chris Isaaks “Wicked Game“ erinnert. Aber rätselhafte Assoziationen sollte man niemals verleugnen.
This is a 70’s reggae track by Jackie Mittoo. It’s almost Minimal, very basic.
True. It’s got some Techno appeal, it’s just rhythm. That’s what I like about this Dub stuff, there are so many things you can recognize that were used later on in electronic music like House and Techno. Dub was so important for that.
So these ancient production techniques are still valid? There seems to be a direct line from Jamaica to today’s productions.
Yeah, I listen to Dub. I don’t listen to a lot, but I like some of it. But I like to use the state of mind of Dub in my music. It’s more a musician thing. I like to use the techniques of it. I’m getting more into the music, too. It’s amazing, the way they were mixing the bass and the drums in the 70’s. Really crazy.
They also put some emphasis on just doing tracks, not songs.
It really is the basis of what came afterwards, from Hip Hop to House to Techno. Drum and Bass also, of course. They all took elements from Dub, that’s really interesting.
> Yukihiro Takahashi – Walking To The Beat (Pick Up Records)
The next one is by Yellow Magic Orchestra’s Yukihiro Takahashi. A Synthpop track.
It is interesting. It has this kind of proto-House feeling. What I really liked was this crazy soprano sax solo at the end. It is almost like Free Jazz, for 30 or 40 seconds, and then it stops. That was quite bold.
I think he actually wanted to do some kind of pop hit though. The singer on this record is the one from the 80’s pop group Icehouse for example. But for a pop hit it is probably too weird.
I think the harmonies are built up quite traditionally, but this solo part really surprised me. It is almost like New York ‘s Post Punk era. Trying some new crazy stuff.
Maybe you should use some sax solo in a House track.
Well, I used to play sax in the past.
Really?
Yeah, for a long time. But I kind of really got tired of the sound and I don’t think I’m going to use it. But you never know. I started playing Alto Saxophone when I was 13 years old. I had tried piano a few years ago, but I wasn’t so much into it. I don’t remember why I chose saxophone, but I remember I wanted to do a wind instrument. With the saxophone, I learned to play jazz and I absolutely loved it! I began rehearsing with a few bands, mostly Jazz or Funk groups. When I discovered DJing, I was instantly hooked and I started playing less and less saxophone, until I quit around 2001. DJing, collecting and discovering music became more important for me. I dabbled into production around 1996, but got a home studio setup two years later. I remember that my main reason for producing was that I found that certain records were lacking something or were arranged in a way that I thought was not so effective. I was thinking “Hmm, the producer should have put this part first” or “the chord there doesn’t sound nice although the beat is dope”. After a while I just thought I should make my own tracks.
I remember that a lot of the early Deep House tracks used the same sax sound. Really flat and synthetic. They seldom used a real saxophone, always this cheap sound effect.
This is from an old French movie soundtrack, „Le Casse“. I picked this for the string arrangement, because it puts a lot of emphasis on build-up, thus linking to the way Disco producers arranged strings for climactic dancefloor moments.
To be honest, I muss confess I don’t know Morricone’s works so well. I don’t think I have been a really big fan, partially because I don’t know it so well. My first impression of this track, which I didn’t know, was that it’s a formal composition. In my head I make a distinction between pop music, which has almost very definite rules, and people following it like Abba. It’s not formulaic, but there are very basic chord progressions that are based on Blues and Jazz that you can do in pop music and that have their own logic and their own progression. Many pop songs are actually the same song. “Good Times” by Chic is one kind of groove and twenty other songs sound exactly like it. It could be “Rapture” by Blondie or something. That’s pop music writing. And then you have soundtrack music writing and it has a different logic. It doesn’t have to follow a certain progression like in pop music, which has a reason and an impulse that keeps on pushing the song forward. When I heard this I thought it is a very good example of soundtrack music writing where you don’t really have to explain the logic of the chord progression, it just sets a mood. It makes an ambience. I think this is probably from 1967 to 71.
Good guess, it’s from 1971.
Because from 1972 on you start getting the big multi-track stuff, like Philly Disco and the more sophisticated pop, and this still sounds relatively simple. My first impression was it’s like a slightly cheaper copy of Burt Bacharach’s “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head”, but with more drama. It has some very formal devices, like it’s basically a minor key. But at some points he plays the same theme but he opens it up with a major key.
Lately all this beautifully orchestrated obscure library music back is popping up again and people scan back catalogues for songs groovy enough to suit a Disco context.
Yeah, that’s interesting, and I think there is a good reason for that. There is such a thing as real music, in the sense that there were people who did music for films, like Ennio Morricone, or Giorgio Moroder, with a more naïve use of the rules, or the very sophisticated Henry Mancini, or Alec Constandinos, or Vangelis, or Jean-Michel Jarre. All these people were obviously classically trained and they followed the rules. It doesn’t really matter if it’s a Bossa Nova, 60’s GoGo or a Disco beat, the rules of the music don’t change. I think that is why everybody is going back now to find real music. When people like Masters At Work appeared in the 90’s, people who didn’t know anything about the basic rules of music started making music. That’s why it sounds so awful, haha. A lot of the DJ produced music doesn’t have its own intrinsic logic and sense. And chords, progression and melodies have that intrinsic logic. That’s what’s been missing. So everyone of this generation who wants to find out what is really musical has to go back to the 60’s and 70’s, and there you find it everywhere actually.
> Carter Burwell – Blood Simple
This is from the soundtrack of the Coen Brothers debut film “Blood Simple”.
It’s from the 80’s I suppose.
Yes, it’s from 1987. It’s a mood piece with a synthetic feel to it.
I found the orchestration is simpler, but it’s similar to the previous song. Again, it’s not a pop song with intrinsic deep logic. Like Bach’s “Air On The G-String”, that is also some kind of pop music because it has a very definite logic. This one has a formal piano theme that sounds a bit like Erik Satie. Simple chord, simple melody, a little bit like Mozart’s “Eine kleine Nachtmusik”. It is not original, it is a formal piece, it follows a form that other people have created.
You could maybe alter its logic by just putting a beat under it, and by not adding much you would have a really moody dance track.
Yeah, actually this is the thing. To be honest, and many people are going to hate me for saying this, I’m not a big fan of Portishead. It’s very easy to make a mood piece. Anybody can do it. All you have to do is take a minor key and play some stuff over it, doesn’t really matter what. I think Portishead never even use a major key (laughs).
They don’t have to, really.
Yes. I think anybody writing good music should move between major and minor keys, that’s part of the magic. Since we now accept that some people make mood music, you can have a whole album of just melancholy. Personally, that doesn’t move me at all and I don’t find it very interesting. I think a lot of people in this generation think that this is a valid way to do music, for me it’s not enough. Salsoul records only have two or three keys but they do it so well, there are so many nuances.
I think the problem is that many people think they can only sound deep by using minor keys.
Yes, you’re right. That’s very true. If it’s not melancholy and it’s not moody then it’s not deep. Which is not true. That’s very profound what you just said. Read the rest of this entry »
I recorded this as a guest mix for the website of my dear friend Michael Joyce aka Truly-Madly, who was then a true aficionado of all things deep. He became a famous DJ much later than me, but once he did (and he is probably more famous than I ever was by now) he seemed to have deleted the mix from his website to cover up traces of my influence throughout his career. Story of my life.
Ok, kidding. Love ya, Trudy!
Picture is my old friend Jan Carter Boche (left) and me leaving one of our favourite kebap shops in our hometown Kiel. We never did eat anything anything there, but they had cheap and cold beer. I loved that “Escape” shirt, bought in London sometime in the early 90s. I instantly wore it to the next fish and chips shop right after I purchased it, and the elderly woman behind the counter asked me if her food was so bad that I wanted to run away. Not THAT bad.
Sensory Elements Vol 1 – Explain It Infra-Red – Love Honey Funtopia Feat. Jimi Polo – Do You Wanna Know? Beautiful People – I Got The Rhythm (Club Mix) Underground Inc. – Magie Noire (Rick Lenoir Mix) Ronald Burrell – Quiet Song Jovonn – It’s Gonna Be Right (Be Smoove Dub) Debbie Gibson – One Step Ahead (Masters At Work Mix) Ecstasy Boys – Seven Steps To Heaven Language – Tranquility Bass Liquid Variety – The Best Part Of The Trip (The Best Part) Boo Williams – Home Town Chicago Glenn Underground – May Datroit Tribute – Rain (Dub) Stardust – Love Will Find A Way (Sweet Embrace Mix) Aphrodisiac – Just Before The Dawn (Exclusive Remould)
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