Posts Tagged ‘Albums’

Wherein my funky ass self twists, dips, and gets soulful.

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

It has been a long time since I scribbled about my listening habits but that is from a lack of time and motivation. Even with the recent pricing changes at eMusic I am still swimming about in countless albums thanks my discovering Amie Street and their liberal use of credit sales to part my hard earned money from my person. That said, I am in a Funk/Soul period at the moment and am diving headlong into album that are either vintage or neo in their arrangements and execution. Below are four that are burning my ears off at the moment.

Lee Fields & The Expressions - My World
Tyrone Ashley's Funky Music Machine - Let Me Be Your Man
Menahan Street Band - Make The Road By Walking
El Michels Affair - Sounding Out The City

The Lee Fields album, My World, reminded me of Darondo’s Let My People Go, smoke laden and gritty in its emotionally raw masculinity. Love Comes And Goes is by far my favorite cut with shivering strings and shimmering guitar chords backed by brassy horn stabs, a jumpy bass line and a rock solid back beat. The chorus pulls me in and often I’m belting it out unabashedly regardless the company or place.

Let Me Be Your Man by Tyrone Ashley’s Funky Music Machine blew me flat with the opening chords of Come On Home. the album is deep, raw, sweet with a splash of skank to keep things in line. The cover of I Can’t Help Myself has this fantastic unpolished feel to the production that, while probably indicates the age and stress on the master copy, imparts a real sense of immediacy to the recording. The album has a taunt story behind it of loss, fire, and eventual rescue that makes it all more precious of a listen.

I have been riding Sounding Out The City for the better part of this year, savoring every bass jump, horn stab, and snap of the snare. Tracks like Behind The Blue Curtains become a private soundtrack for the minutia of my life, adding a little swing and soul to the most mundane of tasks. Slide Show sees the group taking the simplest of interplays between a jumpy bassline and an arpeggiated chord on the guitar and twists it into irresistible head-nodding hook. I just picked up their new release today and am really looking forward to spinning it up, especially after the countless listenings this album has offered.

The spin down of horns on Menahan Street Band’s Home Again! is sweetly offset by the acoustic guitar and offers a fantastic take on a upbeat Soul instrumental. Brass features prominently on Make The Road By Walking and the arrangements weave nasally saxophones and brittle trumpets into a surprisingly thick stew of sound. The group also very refreshingly draws from a variety of inspirations, in particularly a kinetic kind of Reggae anchors Montego Sunset but it still maintains a gritty industrial feel too it.

Albums I could not get out off my playlists in 2007.

Monday, December 17th, 2007

2007 Albums

Aesop Rock – None Shall Pass
African Virtuoses – The Classic Guinean Guitar Group
Apparat – Walls
Beruit – The Flying Club Cup
Burial – Untrue
Dalek – Abandoned Language
Fanfare Ciocarlia – Kings and Queens
Glenn Jones – Against Which the Sea Continually Beats
Richard Swift – Dressed Up For The Letdown
Spanish Harlem Orchestra – United We Swing
Stars of the Lid – and Their Refinement of the Decline
Tinariwen – Aman Iman: Water Is Life
Waldeck – Ballroom Stories

Top of the Playlist

Friday, December 7th, 2007

It has been a long while since I have written anything about what I’ve been listening and while this probably should be posted over at Candied Pop my absence there leaves me feeling like I should warm up here first.

Anyways, some backstory: with my new job I am finding that I have the chance to listen for hours on end with no peanut gallery to tell me to turn it down, off, or put something “new” on (read that last as play something that Clear Channel might). I’m finding myself becoming complete and total junkie having opened a second eMusic account for 100 tracks me to 190 in a 30 day period–for the math inclined it works out to be around 20 albums on average–but working 12+ hours a day means I can pretty much work through the list every two days. So while I may not have much time to write posts I have plenty of time for listening to music.

Virunga - Feet on FireVirunga – Feet on Fire (1991)
Lately, I have been finding myself listening more and more to artists from Africa particularly artists working in a sound of classic Afropop. This album is smooth which does much to mask the insane 12/8 time signatures that they deftly weave in many of the songs. Listening to this album makes me wish that we had dance bands like this touring around New England as their steamy tropical sound would do much to take the bite out of the winter months.

Orchestra Baobob - A Night at Club BaobobOrchestra Baobob – A Night at Club Baobob (2006)
This album is spectacular and intoxicating. The beats hold a loping cumbia feel with a huge brass sections and a bright sawtooth edged guitar that winds around the songs. Add to that vocals that often remind me of a raw early Rai sound and you have an album that at once feels exotic but compels your feet to tap as best as you can to the crazed poly-rhythms. Ignore your friends who might refer to this album as “cigar chomping Cuban commie music” as they know little of geography, politics, or damn fine music.

Eric Agyeman - Highlife SafariEric Agyeman – Highlife Safari (1994)
This is one of Gabriella’s favorite albums and when it comes on she does her charming little squat-thrust dance keeping time to the music better than I could ever hope to. She is on to something as this album is eminently danceable with its nimble bass lines, shuffling percussion, spiraling guitar lines, and shout and response vocals. Nothing passes the day better than dancing about the living with her while this album blasts from the stereo.

Souad Massi - Deb (Heart Broken)Souad Massi – Deb (Heart Broken) (2003)
Moving north on the continent by way of France is Souad Massi who, especially on this album, embodies the notion of World Fusion. On Deb (Heart Broken) you can hear Rai, Folk music of Europe (Spain and France), weepy cinematic string passages warm up the sound, and occasionally sprinklings of tabla to round out the percussion. This album is far more romantic and moody sounding than her 2005 effort and that likely is because of the heavy Rai and Flamenco influences. Toss this on after sunset and curl up with someone you love.

Herbert - Bodily FunctionsHerbert – Bodily Functions (2001)
I fell deeply and madly in love with 2006′s Score, as Management says, because it tickles my inner Chelsea boy. Since then I have been on a quest to get all of Herbert’s albums and this one has me just as inflamed with passion but for different reasons. While Score was a huge post-Broadway send up this one is darker and smokier carrying a sort of sophistication in its seeming ennui. This one is for when the clock rolls past midnight and you find yourself left alone with your thoughts, some warm, others pained, but each tinged with a helpless sense of romance.

Burial - UntrueBurial – Untrue (2007)
A couple of days I rolled past Ludlow in the hours before sunrise. The lights along the highway were extinguished and the valley was wrap in starless black with only the ruddy glow of sodium halide lights from the factories below to dot the landscape. Occasionally the sky would light up with blue columns of flame exploding from impossibly skinny stacks. Untrue is the soundtrack to that landscape. It is dark, moody, mechanical, cold, and distant yet in all that it retains a transcendent beauty. The machine like precision of the beats and the disembodied vocals that are layered and looped for texture make for an alien yet familiar sound. A sound that is at once primal, feeding our need for an incessant driving beat, and dystopian with the shell casings skittering across concrete and swelling synth pads that fill your head beyond capacity. Easily one of my favorite releases this year.