Category Archives: music

Lee Perry alert

Disco Devil by Perry

“Disco Devil revisited 2007 ” is a soon-to-be released new track and album by Lee Perry and Adrian Sherwood. It’s a radical but very relaxed re-interpretation of “Disco Devil” (the title of the twelve inch dub of “I Chase the Devil”) . Featuring the usual nonsense verse lyrics by Perry (“my wife is my knife”) and some wonderful Spanish horns, it shows Sherwood and Perry in excellent form. Out soon on On-U Sound Records. Key phrase is “Lucky Number.”

Tip of the hat to Freshly Squeezed, every Saturday from 16.00 to 18.00 PM.

For those of you who can’t wait to listen to this track, go to Steve Barker’s “On the Wire”, click on the Audio text link, it’s the third track.

Happy birthday Pharoah and World Dance Music classic #8

Pharoah turns 67 today.

Thembi (1971) – Pharoah Sanders
(with on the cover I believe, Lonnie Liston Smith)

Pharoah Sanders (born October 13, 1940) is an American jazz saxophonist. Ornette Coleman once described him as “probably the best tenor player in the world.” Most of Sanders’ best-selling work was made in the late 1960s and early 1970s for Impulse Records, including the 30-minute wave-on-wave of free jazz “The Creator has a Master Plan” from the album Karma. Sanders’s works influenced a new generation when his music was a major influence on the British acid jazz scene from the late 1980s and 1990s. Most recently his work was compiled on You’ve Got to Have Freedom, which features my favorite and the most danceable and accessible track of Sanders: the 1980 You’ve Got to Have Freedom, which is number 8 in my World Dance Music Classic series.

[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdTgH1u7cmM]

World Dance Music Classic #8

Previous World Dance Music Classics

Italian white noise and avant-garde exploitation

“In 1951, the first electronic music studio was conceived from scratch at the WDR Radio of Cologne (Germany) to enable the composition of electronic music sounds. Briefly, the concept of studios evolved up to the 1955 design of the Phonology studio in Milan by Luciano Berio and Bruno Maderna. With nine oscillators, various filters and other sophisticated equipment , the presence of a technician/musician (Marino Zuccheri), the studio was the best equipped in the world at that time.” via usoproject

You may also know Bruno Maderna from his work on Death Laid an Egg.

Good night, sleep tight.

La morte ha fatto l’uovo (1968) – Giulio Questi

David Toop is coming to Brussels next Wednesday

David Toop (born 1949) is one of the more adventurous and intelligent music critics of the late 20th century. He is coming to the Argos center (Werfstraat 13 rue du Chantier) in Brussels next Wednesday at 20:30. I hope I can make it. I’ve never heard him lecture. Here is an excerpt from his intro at Argos.arts.

“Seeing comes before words. The child sees and recognizes before it can speak.” These are the first two sentences of John Berger’s Ways of Seeing. Berger defines sight as the primary human sense and introduces the idea that we find our place in the world through seeing. What this premise ignores is the fact that sound comes before seeing, and the child listens before it looks. In this lecture David Toop will investigate the position of sound in the realm of the senses, the relationship between hearing and seeing, between silence and not seeing. What did Marcel Duchamp mean when he proclaimed “one can look at seeing; one can’t hear hearing”? Are we living in a visual age, as the cliché goes, or rather in an aural world? What can words and images tell us about sonic absences and hauntings? What are the challenges sound artists, who work in the domain of visual arts, are confronted with?” —argosarts.org

Here is Toop interviewing Bjork @ Youtube.

Jacques Tati for the ear

Today is Jacques Tati day. He was born 100 years ago.

Instead of watching his films, treat yourself to his music:

Extraits Des Bandes Originales Des Films De Jacques Tati [Amazon.com] [FR] [DE] [UK]

Extraits Des Bandes Originales Des Films De Jacques Tati is an anthology of tracks from several Jacques Tati films: Jour de fête (1949), Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot (1953), Mon Oncle and Play Time (1967). With music by Jean Yatove, Alain Romans, Franck Barcellini, Francis Lemarque and James Campbell.

World dance music classics #7

Today, on the occasion of Grandmaster Flash‘s 49th birthday:

[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6e9G-ump3Y]

The Message (1982) – Grandmaster Flash

“The Message” is an old school hip hop song by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five released in 1982. The song’s lyrics were some of the first in the genre of rap to talk about the struggles and the frustrations of living in the ghetto. The song’s chorus of “Don’t push me ‘cuz I’m close to the edge” has become one of the most well known choruses in rap music history.

See previous entries in this series.

Friendship on this day in history

[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nj31VMDWbk]

Larry Levan plays his last weekend at the Paradise Garage in 1987.

Finding the Paradise Garage Classics 1976-1987 playlist in 1996, when I first gained access to the internet was the impetus for starting Jahsonic.com. The song you hear Larry playing is by the first male disco diva: Sylvester. The song in question “You are my Friend” is surely the most beautiful ode to friendship ever confined to vinyl. 

If you would like to investigate Larry’s music further, I recommend the trilogy Club Classics & House Foundations (1995). Buy from Amazon here, here and here.