Finn Johannsen – Trushmix 208

Posted: June 1st, 2023 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , | No Comments »

Benita – Time For A Change

Split Decision – Watchin‘ Out

Veda – What It’s All About

Benny Rose – It‘s Only You

Rita Joyce – Back Home Again “

Ben Vereen – By Your Side

Eleanore Mills – Same Routine

Peabo Bryson – Why Don‘t Make Up Your Mind

Brief Encounter – What About Love

Richard Caiton – Where Is The Love

The Four Tracks – Charade

Eddie Billups & The C.C.C.‘s – Shake Off That Dream

Lou Bond – Why Must Our Eyes Always Turned Backwards

The Natural Resources – If There Were No You

Jackie Wilson – I‘ve Learned About Life

Joanie Sommers – Don‘t Pity Me

Al Downing – I‘ll Be Holding On

Lee Moore – Bodywork

Bobby King – If You Don‘t Want Love

Jackie Moore – Can You Tell Me Why

Gateway – Can‘t Accept The Fact

Bill Brown & The Soul Inceptions – Dreamworld Fantasies

Charles Johnson – Never Had A Love So Good

Flashlight – I Can Be

The Futures – Party Time Man

The Tymes – Someway Somehow I‘m Keepin‘ You

Street People – Never Get Enough Of Your Love

Between The Two – Take A Little Time

Darrow Fletcher – (Love Is My) Secret Weapon

Don Thomas – Come On Train

Popsicles – These Are The Good Times

Eloise Laws – Love Factory

Universe City – Can You Get Down

Anthony White – Hey Baby

Invitations – We Don’t Allow

Sandy Mercer – You Are My Love

Lynn Cavanaugh – It Feels So Good

Chuck Cissel – Don‘t Tell Me You‘re Sorry

Wendell Watts – You Girl

Stevie Wonder – If You Really Love Me

Donny Gerrard – He‘s Always Somewhere Around

Joel Ramirez – I‘ll Call You Every Morning

Ruby Wilson – I Thought I Would Never Find Love

Millie Jackson – House For Sale

David Simmons – Will They Miss Me

Made In USA – Never Let You Go

Willie Tee – Walkin‘ Up A One Way Street

Billy Woods – Let Me Make You Happy

The Montclairs – Hey You! Don‘t Fight It!

Star Quake – Don‘t You Know I Love You

Dee Dee Bridgewater – Sweet Rain

The Detroit Spinners – I Just Want To Fall In Love

Gloria Scott – (A Case Of Too Much Lovemakin‘)

Azwon – Fair Weather Friend

David Ruffin – Questions

Ralph Graham – Changing Up My Life

Ray Dahrouge – Lifetime Guarantee Of Love

GD & The Big J – Movin On

Flipside – Music (Gets Me High)

N. F. Porter – If I Could Only Be Sure

Hokis Pokis – Nowhere

Powerful People – Can’t Shake My Love

The Fantastic Johnny C – Don‘t Depend On Me

Gavin Christopher – This Side Of Heaven

LaRombé – You‘re The Best

True Image – Keep Me Dancing

Sons Of Robin Stone – Got To Get You Back

Boogieman Orchestra – Lady Lady Lay

Limmie Funk LTD – Saturday‘s The Night

Mighty Whites – Given My Life

Anderson Brothers – I Can See Him Loving You

Vivian Reed – I Feel The Earth Move

Nate Calhoun – Fun Town

The Secrets – Save Me

Bobby Hutton – Lend A Hand

Jerry Butler – Ordinary Joe

Terry Callier – Gotta Get Closer To You


Rewind: Sassy J on “Songs In The Key In The Life”

Posted: April 4th, 2016 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

RewindSassyJSongsInTheKeyOfLife

In discussion with Sassy J on “Songs In The Key Of Life” by Stevie Wonder (1976).

I found „Songs In The Key Of Life“ in the record collection of my mother in the 70s and secretly transferred it to my own after listening to it. How did the album find you?

I grew up listening, dancing and singing to this album as a little girl. It was one of the rather few soul records amongst my parents Jazz collection. I made my babysitter put it on. I was singing along the lyrics using my skipping rope as a mic. Oh well… That’s why I picked this record for this . I think next to all the Jazz at home “Songs In The Key Of Life” built the firm roots of musical tree of life.

Were interested your parents’ Jazz collection as well, or did the album offered an alternative to what you were used to hearing around the house?

The Jazz records that were playing and Jazz tunes my dad played on the piano was just the music that was mainly there. I remember being scared when Duke Ellington’s „Caravan“ would play, or that I loved to fall asleep to Sarah Vaughn’s voice. The funky clothing or jewelry and style of the musicians that stayed with us stuck with me. I also remember artists performing in our living room on house parties. So I was interested in those other aspects of Jazz at home. When I started getting into Hip-Hop later on, finding out about the samples & originals, I got more interested in their Jazz collection again – up to now. I am still pulling out things.

Some childhood memories are very formative and lasting. Was it important that you were introduced to the album at a young age?

I guess so. It reached out to the little girl in that living room. It triggered the attention of her ears and eventually made me choose it for this particular interview.

Why did you think the album had such on impact on you, and what kind of impact was that?

I liked it and I wanted to hear it over and over again, because it made me feel good. The sound, the , the melodies, the moods and of course his voice. Next to all the other music at home, this record surely made me fall in love with music. Music is the love of my life. I couldn’t live without it. That’s a hell of an impact!

I remember that even the format of the album was very special to my fledgling music enthusiast self. There was a lot of music spread over two discs, plus a bonus 7“ and a fat booklet. Even at a time when I did not spend too many thoughts on an album’s background that seemed extraordinary. Does the album justify this grand scope, could it not have been any other way?

Yes, the format added an extra attraction to it. I used to love to sit down, open it, take out the booklet and look at it while the record was playing out and out: the cover art, his signature and fingerprint, all the content of it. The older I got, the more I would discover. Singing along to the lyrics, finding out who was featured on there or who was listed in his thank you’s.

What are the highlights of „Songs In The Key Of Life“ for you? And is it mandatory to swallow it as a whole, or can you skip parts that do not hold up to others?

To me the highlight is the journey you go on, listening the whole record. The cover artwork and title reflect it: Mr. Wonder’s Songs In The Key Of Life. Genius. Timeless. So much to hear and discover. So rich.

Most critics heralded „Songs In The Key Of Life“ as a masterpiece ever since, fewer noted that it is patchy in parts. Not only in terms of songwriting, but also in terms of stylistic diversity. The latter I always found very unfair, as the diversity was always one of the aspects I found most fascinating about the album. Would you agree that this ambitious palette is a pro rather than a con?

I groove, feel, get inspired, sing, dance … to music. I don’t approach it that way. To me the record is genius. It is ONE. No drawers or palettes needed.

It is quite astonishing that Stevie Wonder was only 26 years old when he released „Songs In The Key Of Life“. Yet he signed to when he was 11, and before he started work on the album he even considered quitting the music business for good. So he had a long career going on already. Does this inform the music contained on „Songs In The Key Of Life“? Is this a statement bursting out he could not deliver before? How much artistic freedom is needed for an epic like this?

It is a beautiful thing in life to learn, grow and get better and more experienced in all you do.

I think the beauty in this album lies in the journey he made up to then. On “Songs In The Key Of Life” you can hear his experience, all of his brilliance and essence. It feels so complete, strikingly timeless. A flower, fruit, expression of the genius he is. I believe delivering a record, an epic like this, you need to be yourself to the fullest and complete artistic freedom is needed – else it wouldn’t be that complete. Read the rest of this entry »


Rewind: Didi Neidhart über “Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret”

Posted: April 12th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews Deutsch | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Im Gespräch mit Didi Neidhart über “Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret” von (1981).

Es gibt sicherlich etliche Wege um auf die Musik von Soft Cell zu stoßen. Wie war es bei Dir?

“Tainted Love” kam ja im Sommer 1981 raus und hat mich, als ich es im gehört habe, sofort fasziniert. Das stach irgendwie heraus. Ähnlich wie früher “I Feel Love” oder . Das machte im Hit-Radio plötzlich eine ganz neue Welt auf. Zwar gab es schon Bands, die ähnlich agierten und klangen, aber die waren zumindest in Österreich nur in Spezialsendungen wie “Musicbox” zu hören. Aber Soft Cell konnte ich sogar vor dem Weg in die Schule beim Frühstück aus dem Radio hören. Das ist ja auch etwas anderes, als wenn du dir selber Musik auflegst. Solche Pop-Momente kannst du nicht selber initiieren. “Tainted Love” war dann auch die erste Single, die ich mir wirklich mit so einem nicht mehr ganz so schwammigen Pop-Bewusstsein gekauft habe. Das war ein regelrechter Akt. Sonst hab ich entweder auf die LPs gewartet oder mir die Sachen einfach vom Radio aufgenommen. Dann kam “Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret”. Allein der Titel zog mich an. Der hatte so was Verruchtes, aber auch so einen Gossenglamour, der gut zu meinen sonstigen Vorlieben (Throbbing Gristle, D.A.F., Velvet Underground, Prince, , The Stooges) passte. Ausschlaggebend war dann die “Sounds”-Kritik von Kid P., wo über “Vaudeville-Tingel-Tangel”, “grelle Schminke und grosse Gefühle”, “kleine Hollywood-Dramen”, “keine saubere Teeny-Fun-Musik” geschrieben wurde. Interessanterweise gab es die LP dann in dem einzigen Laden in Salzburg, der eine kleine Abteilung mit “Punk”/”New Wave” hatte, nicht. Also ging ich in ein klassisches Plattengeschäft, wo ich die LP dann auch gleich fand. Was ja auch toll war. Komische Platten in komischen Läden kaufen ist das eine, komische Platten in sozusagen “normalen” Läden kaufen ist schon was anderes. Das hat durchaus was leicht Subversives. Gerade weil es um eine dezidierte Pop-Platte ging, die ich nun quasi heimlich in einem anderen Laden kaufte. Etwa so wie wenn das Päckchen, das auf dem Cover Marc Almond aus seiner Lederjacke zieht, abgeholt werden würde.

Warum hast Du Dir “Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret” ausgesucht? Was macht das Album für Dich so besonders?

So pathetisch das jetzt auch klingen mag: Ich habe damit endgültig das Land Pop betreten. Und zwar im Hier und Jetzt. Die Wege dorthin waren schon angelegt worden, aber so aktuell Girl-Groups, Phil Spector, Glam, die Walker Brothers, Frank Sinatra und Dean Martin für mich damals auch waren, so sehr tönten sie dennoch aus einer Pop-Vergangenheit. Und bei Soft Cell kam einfach ganz viel zusammen. Vieles, was noch in einer Art wabbrigem Vorbewussten schlummerte, wurde nun klarer und konnte auch benannt werden. Aber es gab auch viel Neues zu entdecken. Sachen, die erst später wichtiger wurden wie Almonds Queerness oder die Connections zur Industrial-Szene. Auch wenn das 1981/82 nicht wirklich im Focus meiner Begeisterung war. Da war es das Opulente plus dem Elektronischen, die durchgängige Tanzbarkeit (die ich nicht erwartet hatte) und dieses Geheimnisvolle. Popmusik mit einer gewissen sublimen Gefährlichkeit. Eher Shangri-Las plus Velvet Underground. Die Platte hat sich durch Jahre hindurch immer wieder fast von selber retroaktiviert und wuchert immer noch über sich selbst hinaus. Auch wenn ich mal länger Abstinenz gehalten habe, hat sich dennoch was getan. Mit Soft Cell hab ich mich dann auch endgütig den großen Pop-Dramen und den in Musik gegossenen Tragödien hingegeben. Was nicht immer auf Verständnis stoß. Aber war mir auch immer Roy Orbison lieber als Nick Cave. Ich hatte durch und mit Soft Cell einen Schatz gefunden, eine Art Geheimnis entdeckt. Die Beschäftigung mit Pop nahm ernsthaftere Züge an. Zudem wollte ich ja auch irgendwie kapieren von was Leute wie Diederichsen bei “Sounds” schrieben, wenn es um so was wunderbar Faszinierendes wie auch hin und wieder Einschüchterndes wie “Pop-Diskurs” ging. Gerade weil Soft Cell überall in den Hitparaden waren und aus fast jedem Radio tönten, also auch vom Mainstream gehört wurden, empfand ich mein clandestines Popgeheimwissen in Sachen Soft Cell schon als Hipness. Weniger im Sinne einer elitären Haltung – ich freute mich ja mit anderen, und dachte auch, jetzt wird es was in Sachen Pop und Revolution, wenn auch nur musikalisch – als eines elitären Wissens. Vielleicht ist das ja auch das immer noch Wichtige an “Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret”: Eine Platte die genau zwischen Teenage und Adoleszenz, zwischen einfach als Fan reinfallen und beginnendem reflexiven Popdenken auf einen zugekommen ist. Mit der es aber auch nie ein Erwachsenwerden geben wird. Wo das Aufgekratzte, nach dem Uplifting, nach der Party zwar reduziert, aber nie ad acta gelegt wird. Zudem waren Soft Cell die einzigen, die das ABBA-T-Shirt von Throbbing Gristles Chris Carter ernstgenommen haben.

Dass ich eigene Lost Weekend-Erfahrungen in “Clubland” in Songs wie “Bedsitter” wieder fand, war aber auch super.

Read the rest of this entry »

Playing Favourites: Till von Sein

Posted: February 11th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

> Backroom Productions – Definition Of A Track ( New York Underground Records) 1988

A rare tune from 1987. Indeed nothing but a track.

I knew this from the vinyl edition of the DJ-Kicks by Terranova. At that time it fit right in with what they were trying to represent with that compilation. I used to play this track regularly back then, it was very good for warming up.

So you actually know this for quite some time then.

Yeah, of course! I was not into Terranova that much, but the compilation had some brilliant tracks on it. East Flatbush Project and such.

This has some kind of Hip Hop vibe to it, too. But it does not exactly sound like 1988.

No, and I didn’t know that (laughs).

Would you still play it?

Definitely. I don’t know when and for what occasion but it is a class track.

It somehow reminds me of the bonus beats they used to have on the flipside of old House records.

Yeah, but bonus beats have gone out of fashion a bit, apart from Hip Hop. Argy had some for that Sydenham track “Ebian” on Ibadan last year. But I think it is not really relevant anymore for the current generation of House producers.

The percussive elements really distinguish the sound of that era from today’s productions. Lots of handclaps, or here it’s rimshots.

My problem is that I don’t really like all these percussion sounds from drum machines. I prefer sampled real instruments. This is probably some classic Roland drum machine, like a 606. I would take the bassdrum and hi-hats from somewhere else. The toms of these old machines are always cool, but the bongo sounds for example are not for me. I wouldn’t use that for my productions. I couldn’t do these 100 % authentic references. I think it’s supercool to listen to in a record for example, but I couldn’t do that.

You got qualms about doing something like that?

No (laughs)! I’m just working on a new track for which I sampled an old Amen-break. I don’t care, if I like it I use it. This kind of break is in 90 % of all Drum and Bass tracks and nobody cares, so I don’t care either.

> Phortune – Unity (Jack Trax) 1988

This is an old track by , from his Acid House days. But it is different to most tracks he produced back then. It is pretty deep.

It’s great. Awesome vibe for 1988, I could listen to this all day. It doesn’t tranquilize my feet, it’s not boring, it’s perfectly right. And I would grin from ear to ear if I would hear this in a club.

Some of its sounds have aged really well.

I really like this. I think it’s a pity that there are not so many tracks with great basslines at the moment. There are a lot of simple, functional basslines without much of a melody. Of course it’s effective and some current tracks need some of these dominating, functional elements, but a track like this for example needs a bit more, and I miss that. It’s also simple, but it has more and different harmonies. I like that, it gets me hooked. I would love to buy this on Beatport (laughs)!

Yes, that could be difficult. Read the rest of this entry »


Druffmix 29 – Alles Für Die Cuts Pt. 2

Posted: February 6th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Welcome to another edition. The Druffalo Hit Squad is dedicating this one to the old school chapter of the International Disco Flamboyance Preservation Society. Never Surrender!

Charly Brown – The Twilight Zone
DJ Spinna – Ladbroke
Deep Sensation – Can’t Give You Up
Stan Francisco – Lover 2 Lover
Les Claudettes – Alexandrie Alexandra
– Universe Of Love
Disco Elements – Muzik Takes Me Higher
Solar House – Peace Of Mind
Ratcliffe – Grape Soda
Jasper Street Company – Music
Rhythm Section Feat. Donald O – Do You Know
Victor Simonelli Presents 21st Century Rockers – Ease Into The Dance
Stevie Wonder – All I Do (Remix)
Chubby Chunks – Testament One
Terrence Parker – The More I Want
Stacy Kidd – Lost Angels
The Meat Men- All Locked Up
Dino + Terry – Moon Dub
Armand Van Helden Feat. Duane Harden – You Don’t Know Me
Deep Sensation – Togetherness
Deep Sensation – Soul Heaven
Dazzle – You Dazzle Me ( Edit)
Black Science Orchestra – Where Were You
Kerri Chandler – Dizko Satisfaction
– In The Mix
Brothers Of Soul – Disco Era