Sunday, September 21, 2008

JOE BATAAN GIVEAWAY WINNERS
posted by O.W.



Things I've realized with this Bataan giveaway:

1) I've either sold copies of Deep Covers 2 to the maximum amount of readers or else, you folks are cheap... (Kidding!)

2) I need to make my trivia questions just a little easier.

3) Or I can just have been randomly write in but where's the fun in that?

In any case, winner of the non-signed copy: B. Holt
Winner (and sole competitor) in the trivia contest: H. Mestdach

For those playing at home, here were the answer to the trivia contest:
    1) What Latin producer of Alegre fame did Joe Bataan record with prior to signing with Fania?
    A: Al Santiago.
    2) How many original albums (not including compilations or reissued content) did Joe record for Fania (this is a trick question of sorts so think it through carefully)?
    A: Nine. Gypsy Woman, Subway Joe, Riot, Singin' Some Soul, Poor Boy, Mr. New York and the Eastside Kids, Sweet Soul, St. Latin's Day Massacre, Live From San Frantasia. The trick question was the last album, Live From San Frantasia which was recorded but never released.

    3) Some of Joe's most successful songs have been covers: "Gypsy Woman, "Shaft," "The Bottle." Name the original artists behind these other Joe Bataan songs:
    a. "It's a Good Feeling (Riot)"
    b. "I'm No Stranger"
    c. "Make Me Smile"
    A: Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Seven Souls, Chicago

    4) What Ismael Miranda boogaloo mash-up/cover of "Tighten Up" does Joe Bataan make a cameo on? Name the song and album.
    A: "Horsin' Up" from Presenta Ismael Miranda.

    5) What pseudonym did Joe take on when he recorded for Bobby Marin's Dynamite label?
    A: Mister Love and Company.

    6) Two different songs that Joe recorded earlier in his career ended up re-released on later albums in their intact (i.e. non-rerecorded) form. One was "Ordinary Guy" - the same version appears on both Riot and Singin' Some Soul. What is the other song and which two albums did it appear on?
    A: "Shaft." It appeared on a second run issue of Sweet Soul and was on all copies of St. Latin's Day Massacre.

    7) What classic from Joe's repertoire appears on his Salsoul album, but with a different name?
    A: "Ordinary Guy," under the title, "Muchacho Ordinario."

    8) What's different about the 7" version of "Woman Don't Want to Love Me" compared to the LP version from Afrofilipino (be specific)?
    A: The 7" version has as a keyboard arrangement missing from the LP version.

    9) What old school rap duo was supposed to appear on "Rap-O, Clap-O" instead of Joe rapping himself?
    A: Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde.
    10) What martial art are Joe's children all masters of?
    A: Karate.
Keep an eye open for our next giveaway!

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Monday, September 08, 2008

JOE BATAAN GIVEAWAY! (UPDATED)
posted by O.W.


Common feat. Bilal: Play Your Cards Right
From Smokin' Aces soundtrack (Lakeshore, 2007)

Joe Bataan: Under the Street Lamp
Available on Under the Streetlamps: The Joe Bataan Anthology 1967 - 1972 (Fania/Emusica, 2008)


Joe Bataan was just here in Los Angeles the last week or so (and I feel stupid for not posting up links to his performances) and we caught up twice during that time, including one meeting where he broke down the entire history behind "Rap-O, Clap-O". Fascinating stuff and I'll have to try to write that up sometime.

Anyways, the other time we met, he was asking me if I knew anything about this Common song that sampled one of his songs. Joe had gotten a check for the clearance but hadn't heard the actual use of the song yet. Not having really followed the sampling game that closely of late, I couldn't think of anything off the top so we sat down and googled it and sure enough, it was Common's "Play Your Cards Right" from last year's Smokin' Aces soundtrack. And once you hear it, it's plain as day that producer Kareem Riggins had looped up Joe's great "Under the Street Lamp" (from his Singin' Some Soul album originally). (Joe got a kick out of hearing his song sampled).

He was also gracious enough to sign a copy of his anthology that I did the liner notes for and I'm going to give this away to one lucky (and informed) reader.
DETAILS AFTER THE JUMP


To be eligible, send an email to soulsides AT gmail.com with the subject line "Joe Bataan giveaway." You need to answer the following:
    1) What Latin producer of Alegre fame did Joe Bataan record with prior to signing with Fania?

    2) How many original albums (not including compilations or reissued content) did Joe record for Fania (this is a trick question of sorts so think it through carefully)?

    3) Some of Joe's most successful songs have been covers: "Gypsy Woman, "Shaft," "The Bottle." Name the original artists behind these other Joe Bataan songs:
    a. "It's a Good Feeling (Riot)"
    b. "I'm No Stranger"
    c. "Make Me Smile"

    4) What Ismael Miranda boogaloo mash-up/cover of "Tighten Up" does Joe Bataan make a cameo on? Name the song and album.

    5) What pseudonym did Joe take on when he recorded for Bobby Marin's Dynamite label?

    6) Two different songs that Joe recorded earlier in his career ended up re-released on later albums in their intact (i.e. non-rerecorded) form. One was "Ordinary Guy" - the same version appears on both Riot and Singin' Some Soul. What is the other song and which two albums did it appear on?

    7) What classic from Joe's repertoire appears on his Salsoul album, but with a different name?

    8) What's different about the 7" version of "Woman Don't Want to Love Me" compared to the LP version from Afrofilipino (be specific)?

    9) What old school rap duo was supposed to appear on "Rap-O, Clap-O" instead of Joe rapping himself?

    10) What martial art are Joe's children all masters of?
I'll select a winner at random from those with the most correct answers. Deadline: next Monday.

I also have a second (unsigned) copy of the anthology to give away, randomly, to those who buy Deep Covers 2 in the next week. (Physical CD orders only, digital downloads don't apply, sorry).


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Thursday, August 21, 2008

PICK SIX: NUEVO LATIN SABOR
posted by O.W.


Bronx River Parkway & Candela All Stars: Donde
Bronx River Parkway & Candela All Stars: San Sebastian 152
From San Sebastian 152 (Truth and Soul/Candela, 2008)


Johnny Pacheco: Boogaloo De Johnny (Quantic Remix)
Dave Cortez: Happy Soul With a Hook (DJ Format Remix)
From I Like It Like That (Fania, 2008)


Los Po-Boy-Citos: Wobble Cha
Los Po-Boy-Citos: Fat Mama/Mother-In-Law
From New Orleans Latin Soul (2008)


You have retro-soul on one hand but there's also an equally strong trend of what I'm going to call nuevo-Latin (just for the hell of it): soul/funk-influenced Afro-Cuban rhythms whipped together by a younger generation of musicians. The UK's Quantic is probably one of the best known of this cohort, but you could also include Grupo Fantasma and Chica Libre or Brownout (I'm sure there are many, many more). However, the one I've been keeping tabs on has been the Bronx River Parkway and Candela All Stars joint project. I first heard them probably around 2006 and then was reminded of them again in 2007 and the group - lead by the same people in the El Michels Affair/Truth and Soul - has finally completed its debut album, San Sebastian 152 which should be shipping any day now.

Bronx River Parkway combines players out of the Truth and Soul camp with a host of Puerto Rican musicians, many of them veterans from bands once lead by Roberta Roena and Cortijo. Most of this album was originally begun during a trip down to San Juan in 2006. The result is a great meeting point between the tight, funky arrangements that Truth and Soul is known for and the infectious Latin swing brought by their PR counterparts. You really hear that on the title song, especially in how beautifully the horn sections from both bands really give the song such a shine.

"Donde" I included because I was tickled by its nod to one of the great Latin soul/boogaloo joints of all time: "Freak Off" by Orchestra Harlow. It's not a cover per se, but clearly riffs of the Harlow classic.

Leon Michels at Truth and Soul was kind enough to offer up some copies of the new CD for Soul Sides readers. If you want a copy, email me (subject line: Bronx River Parkway) and I'll pick a couple of winners at random at the end of next week (make sure you include your address in your email).


Speaking of Quantic and while we're on the Latin tip already, I'd be remiss in not mentioning that Fania has just put out their "remixed" compilation which features a slew of their remix sides (formerly on 12") on one disc. Considering how quickly many of those singles sold-out, it's nice that they put them out on one disc. To be honest, while there's some stuff on here that I thought was really solid (such as the two tracks above), like most remix albums, there's a good deal of material that I personally just didn't care much for, especially the more house/techno-oriented remixes which aren't my musical bag.

Of the material I did like, the "Happy Soul With a Hook" edit by DJ Format was one of the first 12"s that Fania released and it's easy to see its appeal - super uptempo, funky and big with Xtina fans. This is the same song I wrote about in the Happy Soul Suite and Format reworks this particular version by playing with the drums and giving it some extra kick. I do, personally, miss the vocals from the original Latin Blues Band song but hey, I guess I could remix the remix.


Anyways, the Quantic remix of "Boogaloo De Johnny" was a very nice surprise - I guess I'm used to QSO's more uptempo styles, but this is more like that great remix of Nas' "Get Down" with its reggae sabor. Overall, I like that approach here - stripping the song down and building it up rather than putting too much on it. (I don't own any Pacheco boogaloo albums - anyone know what the original to this was off of or is it a cut n paste job of several songs?)


Lastly, we have a new group out of NOLA, the Los Bo-Boy-Citos, a six-man, second-line-meets-Latin-soul outfit. Their conceit is intriguing - take NOLA's funk/soul heritage (itself Cuban-influenced) and then throw in an East Harlem vibe and see what cooks up. At the risk of being an essentialist, I associate both New Orleans and Spanish Harlem sounds with more gritty, lo-fi flavor and this is a little too clean for my tastes; compare their take on "Fat Mama" with Tito Puente's original and you'll see what I mean. That said, 1) the latter song's combination with Allen Toussaint's "Mother In Law" is inspired, to say the least, plus 2) I'm slightly in awe of any band that knows about - let alone covers - such obscure-r fare such as "Danzon Boogaloo, arguably the very first "official" Latin boogaloo ever record, by Ricardo Ray, or Cool Benny's "Wobble Cha" (see below).

Also, in an unexpected way, their sound is actually much closer to what boogaloo sounded like in the jazz world during the late '60s era of Blue Note/Prestige artists like Lou Donaldson and "Boogaloo Joe" Jones. That boogaloo fad in jazz was never very connected to the jazz world (from what I've been able to research), Les McCann's Bucket O' Grease excepted, and in a serendipitous way, Los Po-Boy-Citos create that missing link between the jazz and Latin boogaloo styles.


Bonus: Cool Benny: Wobble Cha
From 7" (Virgo, 196?). Also on California Soul.


For a bonus, I thought I'd throw on the original "Wobble Cha" - one of those lesser-known West Coast Latin dance tunes. I first heard about it from the California Soul comp (and I might now actually own the 7" that it was mastered from) and DJ Little Danny from Office Naps (which is BACK!) also wrote about it in his Pt. 1 on "West Coast Latin jazz vibes" posts (by sheer coincidence, he just posted up his Pt. 2). "Wobble Cha" has "novelty" all over it which isn't a bad thing (and to be sure, there were a few Latin artists with wobble cuts but it was never as big as even the shing-a-ling, let alone boogaloo) - the song has a fun little swing to it and I'm a big fan of the mambo-era vibes flavor.


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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

WATTS 103RD WINNER
posted by O.W.


Ok, the Watts 103rd St. Giveway is officially over. We had six people (impressive!) with all correct answers (see below) and I randomly selected one of them: Andrew King. Congrats!
For those playing at home, here were the correct answers:
1) The Watts Band/Wright Sounds provided live musical backing for Bill Cosby in 1967, but at that point Cosby's musical career had already been in progress for two years. What band backed him on his very first musical release in 1965? (Helpful hint: the release in question is NOT Cosby's Silver Throat LP.)


Eddie Cano Quartet

2) Warner Bros-era versions of both sides of Charles Wright's rare pre-Watts Band solo 45 on Philips are included on these reissues. Can you name the songs?

"Borrowed Time" + "Keep Saying"


3) At what intersection did the Haunted House once stand?


Hollywood and Vine

4) What Los Angeles radio personality was responsible (in part) for the first Watts 103rd St. Rhythm Band single? (Name the single too).


Magnificent Montague/"Spreadin' Honey"

5) What studio did Bill Cosby and Fred Smith discover the original Watts Band at?


Nashville West

6) The Wright Sounds collected one member from the O'Jays and one of Joe Tex's band - name those two members.


Melvin Dunlap and Gabriel Fleming (respectively)

7) What '70s pop star (of a famous duo) played with the Wright Sounds in its early years?


Daryl Dragon aka "Captain" of Captain and Tenille

8) UPDATED: What 1960s Buffalo band did several of the Wright Sounds' members play rhythm section for?


Dyke and the Blazers

9) What does the last Watts Band album share in common with albums by Blue Mitchell, Gene Harris, and Freddy Robinson?


Arranger Monk Higgins

10) Name three other artists who have covered "Express Yourself." (NWA does not count).


There were multiple ways this could have been answered. The most popular included: S.O.U.L., Idris Muhammed, and Byron Lee and the Dragonaires.

Note: no one could come up with a pic of the LP version of A Lil' Encouragement. Perhaps it really doesn't exist.


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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

THE CHARLES WRIGHT & WATTS 103RD STREET RHYTHM BAND GIVEAWAY
posted by O.W.


In case you missed the previous Watts Week posts:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4

As promised, I have a complete set of Wright/Watts CDs to give away. That includes all six Warner UK reissues of the original Watts albums (plus Wright's solo project on WB) PLUS the two Rhino Handmade compilations that I wrote liner notes for: Haunted House and Puckey Puckey. Ten discs total. As I said before, this is for true fans and the questions are created accordingly. Thanks to Andy Zax who came up with three of these.

To win the entire set, you have two options:
    The (Not So) Easy Way: send in a jpeg of yourself with a vinyl copy of Charles Wright's solo album, A Lil' Encouragement on ABC.

    If you can do this, you win automatically.

    The Other Way: Answer all of the following correctly. The winner will be selected at random out of those with correct answers. Don't step up if you can't tackle all of these.

    1) The Watts Band/Wright Sounds provided live musical backing for Bill Cosby in 1967, but at that point Cosby's musical career had already been in progress for two years. What band backed him on his very first musical release in 1965? (Helpful hint: the release in question is NOT Cosby's Silver Throat LP.)

    2) Warner Bros-era versions of both sides of Charles Wright's rare pre-Watts Band solo 45 on Philips are included on these reissues. Can you name the songs?

    3) At what intersection did the Haunted House once stand?

    4) What Los Angeles radio personality was responsible (in part) for the first Watts 103rd St. Rhythm Band single? (Name the single too).

    5) What studio did Bill Cosby and Fred Smith discover the original Watts Band at?

    6) The Wright Sounds collected one member from the O'Jays and one of Joe Tex's band - name those two members.

    7) What '70s pop star (of a famous duo) played with the Wright Sounds in its early years?

    8) UPDATED: What 1960s Buffalo band did several of the Wright Sounds' members play rhythm section for?

    9) What does the last Watts Band album share in common with albums by Blue Mitchell, Gene Harris, and Freddy Robinson?

    10) Name three other artists who have covered "Express Yourself." (NWA does not count).


    Whichever way you choose, email your responses to: soulsides AT gmail.com (and put "Watts contest" in the subject line).

    *A note on shipping: U.S./Canadian winners get free shipping; anyone overseas has to cover shipping. Sorry but this on my dime and I can't cover int'l postage.
Good luck! I'll give folks a week to get answers in and select a winner after that.


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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

FALLIN' OFF THE REELS VOL. 2 GIVEAWAY
posted by O.W.


DJ Akalepse: Fallin' Off the Reel Sampler Mix

Tracks from Fallin' Off the Reel Vol. 2 (Truth and Soul, 2007)


On the one hand, I think it's great that labels like Truth & Soul and Daptone are making it a point to put new soul vinyl out in circulation. As a DJ and collector, that obviously appeals to my sensibilities but I also realize that a lot of fans don't necessarily have turntables at home so when something like, say, that great Timothy McNealy version of "I'm So Glad You're Mine" comes along, I'm glad to give it some shine but I also realize that many may not end up purchasing it because it's in a format they can't access.

That's why I'm glad that Truth & Soul has been very smart in making sure to compile most of their releases into semi-yearly albums available on both CD and vinyl as a way to making sure that if you were forced to miss the boat the first time, you'd still have a chance to catch up later.

Fallin' Off the Reel Vol. 2 is, in my opinion, even stronger that its preceding volume, thanks how prolific the label has been in the last two years or so since the series inaugural release. Here's the complete tracklist and I've bolded the songs that, by themselves, could have been justification enough to get this:


01. BRONX RIVER PARKWAY- La Valla
02. BRONX RIVER PARKWAY - Nora Se Va

03. TYRONE ASHLEY'S FUNKY MUSIC MACHINE - Just A Little While Longer
04. TYRONE ASHLEY'S FUNKY MUSIC MACHINE - I Can't Help Myself
05. BLACK VELVET- Is I Me You Really Love
06. BLACK VELVET - An Earthquakes Coming
07. QUINCY BRIGHT- Phil My Don
08. RAEKWON & EL MICHELS AFFAIR - PJ's
09. EL MICHELS AFFAIR - A Little Sloppy (Bonus Beat)
10. EL MICHELS AFFAIR - This One's For My Baby
11. QUINCY BRIGHT- Big Black Hole
12. LEE FIELDS & THE EXPRESSIONS- My World
13. LEE FIELDS & THE EXPRESSIONS - Love Comes and Goes
14. BRONX RIVER PARKWAY - Aqua Con Sal
15. BRONX RIVER PARKWAY- Me Toca
16. TIMOTHY MCNEALY- What's Going On
17. TIMOTHY MCNEALY- I'm So Glad You're Mine

18. THE FABULOUS THREE- Odyssey Revisted* previously unreleased

It's not that I don't like the other stuff but, for example, I'm a massive fan of the Bronx River Parkway stuff - it's always good to hear new Latin soul/funk being worked with and BRP, like Brownout and others, are doing a great job of playing with such a venerable and excellent tradition.

Likewise, Lee Fields is one of the great success stories in the retrosoul movement's ability to support artists from a different generation who may not have gotten the propers they deserved then but are getting that second chance now (see also: Sharon Jones). And the Timothy McNealy reissues are blissfully good.

That plus a slick little El Michaels Affair instrumental that sounds as good as anything on their Sounding Out the City album.










Soul-Sides.com has a few copies of the album to give away - we have 2 copies left on CD.

To get one, I'll package it with any Soul Sides-related CD (digital orders not eligible).

In addition, T&S has offered up 2 CDs and 2 LPs for free.
To try for one, solve this puzzle. I've taken snippets from four well-known sample sources.
If you can name the artists - just the artists will suffice - for all four, send your guesses to: soulsides AT gmail.com. Please include your mailing address and indicate if you want the CD or LP.

Good luck! I'll select four winners at random by next Monday.

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Wednesday, November 21, 2007

ARETHA WINNERS
posted by O.W.


Congrats to the five winners of the Aretha Unreleased giveaway:
D. Taruc
G. Perelson
D. Reichel
H. Nguyen
P. Scanniello



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Thursday, October 18, 2007

Aretha Franklin: From The Vaults
posted by O.W.


Aretha Franklin: I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You) (Demo) (snippet) + Mr. Big
Both from Rare And Unreleased Recordings From The Golden Reign Of The Queen Of Soul (Rhino/Atlantic, 2007)

Bonus: Aretha Franklin: I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)
From I Never Loved a Man The Way I Love You (Atlantic, 1967)


Aretha never seems to be far from my mind. I'm in the middle of a big web-project about her music that I'll post a link to once I get the chance but in the meantime, the kind folks at Rhino offered to sponsor a giveaway of new copies of this anthology of rare and previously unreleased songs by her.

It's a rather extraordinary CD given that - at this point in time - who knew there was still unreleased material to hear from Aretha? She's only one of the biggest acts in pop music of the last 50 years so you wouldn't think there'd be a ton of stuff left unmined but some of the songs on here are truly mind-blowing as acts of recovery.

Big among those are three demo songs that were sent to Atlantic's Jerry Wexler that eventually lead her to the label and among these, it's an amazing artifact of history to hear the original version of "I Never Loved a Man," given that it was this song that effectively launched Aretha's massive career (despite her copious recordings for Columbia in the early 1960s). I included the actual, eventual studio version of the same song to offer a compare/contrast moment (ha - which version flipped it better?) Seriously though, to be able to hear the demo is a revelation in many ways, especially in hearing what the Muscle Shoals rhythm section and Jerry Wexler add to the song but also what Aretha had to bring to it all along.

"Mr. Big" is an outtake track that never made the Aretha Now album - a slow, slightly funky cut that I can only assume was meant to be a follow-up song on Jean Knight's classic "Mr. Big Stuff." Would have loved to see this song actually make it out but hey, better late than...

Listen to other tracks off the album.

For the giveaway: send an email to: soulsides@gmail.com. Subject = "aretha giveway".
Please include your mailing address in the email.

No trivia questions this time - I'll just select five winners from the total number of entries.




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Monday, September 24, 2007

Gilles Peterson: Still Digging America
posted by O.W.


Lorez Alexandria: I'm Wishin'
From Didn't We (Pzazz, 1968)

R.A.M.P.: The Old One, Two
From 12" (previously unreleased) (Ubiquity, 2007)

Both from: Gilles Peterson Digs America 2 (Luv N' Haight, 2007)

Bonus: Lorez Alexandria: Talk About Cozy
From Didn't We (Pzazz, 1968)


The inaugural volume of the Digs America series was one of our favorite comps of 2005 and now Gilles is back again with another romp through the rarities of musical Americana. To call his tastes "eclectic" is quite the understatement...Peterson has some obvious likes - vocal jazz dominates this volume, even more than last time - but he'll throw all kinds of curves, from the teeny, wispy voice of R&B singer Carrie Cleveland on the Bay Area ballad, "Make Love to Me" to the brassy jazz noodlings of Gap Mangione on "Boys With Toys" to rip-roaring femme funk of Detroit's Dee Edwards and her "Why Can't There Be Love" (btw, I really need that single). It's all good, good stuff.

I'll say this much too: he always knows how to pick his first songs to lead the comp. The last volume kicked off with Darondo's "Didn't I" (mmmmmmmmmm) and this one leads with Lorez Alexandria's sultry "I'm Wishin'." Why can't whole albums sound like this and not just one, errant track (see below though)? So smoky I'm catching lung cancer off the vibes.

With the R.A.M.P. (Roy Ayers Music Project) track, this is a previously unreleased song from the vaults that Ubiquity recently put out on 12" (and it's sold out already!) I'll be honest...I initially wasn't really feeling this, mostly because I was expecting "Daylight" vs. a more disco-fied track but when I got Gilles' comp in and was listening to it, I found myself drawn into the mezmerizing loop of the tune and realized: hey, this is actually much better than I initially gave it credit for. Try it, you might like it too.

For a bonus, I threw on an extra cut from the Alexandria LP (which has, by the one, one of the coolest covers I've seen for a vocal jazz album). It's not at the level of marvel that "I'm Wishin'" inspires but Lorez still sounds great on this; makes me yearn for the days of hanging out in jazz lounges that never happened. Cozy indeed.



GIVEAWAY!!!

Ubiquity Records has three copies of the Gilles Peterson CD to give away to Soul Sides readers. You know the deal...I ask a question, you send the correct answer to me. I pick winners out of the correct answers.

1) Please make your subject line: "Gilles Peterson giveaway"
2) Please answer the following question: On Volume 1 of Digs America, two of the songs featured were from local Bay Area labels. Name the artists, songs and labels that they originally appeared on.

Good luck! Folks have until week's end to get their answers in.


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Sunday, September 02, 2007

Sammy Campbell/Tyrone Ashley: Alter Egos
posted by O.W.


Tyrone Ashley: Come On Home + Sing a Song Sister
From Funky Music Machine (Truth and Soul, 2007)


This is that promised follow-up to the Truth & Soul post I made last week. Today, we're highlighting the latest release from T&S, Tyrone Ashely's Funky Music Machine, a compilation which brings to light not just some of Ashley's rare single sides but also never-heard-before tracks from lost tapes.

The liner notes for the album tell a fascinating tale of how Ashley was the creation of New Jersey soul journeyman Sammy Campbell. A member of the doo wop group, the Del Larks, Campbell fashioned Ashley as a way to explore other musical opportunities after knocking his head in vain to mint a hint. LIkewise, the group, the Funky Music Machine was an additional creation meant to more fully explore this alter ego and it helped Campbell land a deal with Philly's Phil-L.A.-of Soul label in the late '60s where he found some modest success with a single here and there but most of his material for the imprint ended up buried and forgotten until Truth & Soul came calling.

One of those songs, "Come On Home" definitely nods to Campbell's roots in both doo wop and gospel. This is what some folks might call "old timey" - an early '60s R&B vibe that wouldn't have been out of place in a Memphis club from the era (the "pain in my heart" line feels like a direct nod - or bite - of Otis Redding's song by the same name). I'm really feeling this even though it's an earlier aesthetic than I typically get into. The harmonies are good and I like the slow sway of the rhythm and the rich, gospel overtones.

"Sing a Song Sister" is a funky instrumental track that I would guess came from the turn of the decade since it reminds me of any number of similar styled tunes from the likes of Kool and the Gang or JBs - the prototypical funk bands of the era. This is a slick little number though imagine if it had some harder drums behind it. (Reeeeeemix!).

Leon Michels was generous enough to donate a few CDs to Soul Sides for giveaways. To qualify, answer this question:
    What barbershop did the Del Larks and fellow Plainfield, NJ band, the Parliaments (yeah, as in P-Funk, Parliament) get their start at?
Send your answer to: here. Winners will be chosen from all the correct answers.



Contest is now closed. I'll announce winners soon.

The correct answer was "Black Soap Palace." I need to get a judge's ruling on everyone who wrote in to say it was the Silk Palace.

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Monday, August 13, 2007

Budos Band: Sting, Sting, Sting
posted by O.W.


The Budos Band: Chicago Falcon + Budos Rising (snippets)
From Budos Band II (Daptone, 2007)


Most associate Daptone Records with Sharon Jones and the Dapkings and certainly, that is the label's crown jewel but it's worth remembering that the label is home to other artists as well, including The Budos Band, one of the more impressive funk instrumental groups out there. Time was when most funk bands were replaying hip-hop licks - and there was certainly a time and place for that (still is, if you look at the success of the El Michels Affair/Wu-Tang collabos) - but over the years, many groups have learned the musical chops of more than just the JBs and Meters-style of funk. If Antibalas is the nuevo-Afrobeat group then the Budos Band is clearly updating Ethiopian beat to our times -think compositions of eclectic, exotic arrangements and melodies mixed with funky rhythms that even Mulatu wouldn't have seen coming.

This entire new album (check out the group's first as well) is incredibly listenable, meaning it's the sort of music you can throw on in any situation and just let it ride. I especially like "Budos Rising," which is a masterpiece of different styles all colliding together in sublime unison.

Thanks to the kind folks at Daptones, we have a few copies of the new CD to give away. To win, tell me the names and instruments of the group's horn section. Send your answer here. I'll randomly select two-three winners after August 17th.


Speaking of which, congrats to the winner of the Marc Broussard LP giveaway - Deb.
Congrats to the Mark Ronson CD giveaways - Phil, Ken, Tim, Justin and KB.

Do I have more goodies? Oh yeah.

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Friday, August 10, 2007

Titans Rock
posted by O.W.



Mezzanine Owls: Lightbulb
From Slingshot Echoes (2006)

This is a somewhat autobiographical post, off the typical Soul Sides track but indulge me for a sec...

As I've gotten older, I've grown increasingly curious about what my high school classmates are up to. (I graduated class of 1990). One reason for this is that I attended a very affluent, very competitive public high school (San Marino, if you must ask) in Southern California and one byproduct of both its affluence and competitiveness is that most of my classmates were aspiring professionals. I might be painting with a very broad brush but I've always gotten the impression that most of my classmates ended up as mid-level professionals - one big mass of corporate attorneys, dentists, ophthalmologists and junior VPs.

As a result, it's been far, far harder to locate classmates who went into artistic/creative work. I'm hardly a bohemian as a professor and music writer but from what I can tell, that's rather "black sheep" for my alma mater. In any case, in the last few years, I've taken to randomly Google-ing classmates to see if I could find anyone who was NOT a corporate attorney, dentist, ophthalmologist or junior VP.

It is, to be sure, a very short list. Of course, I didn't methodically go through 250 names (the size of my graduating class) since I barely remember even a third of that but for the most part, I only turned up a teeny handful of creative types, including Phat Phuong (awesome name), a digital artist who works for Pixar and more recently, I discovered that the drummer from my junior high school marching band (Huntington Foxes, holla!) is now the drummer for the Mezzanine Owls - a group of some renown in the L.A. indie rock scene. (That's their photo above. Pauline is on the far right).

I checked out their music - it's definitely more along the lines of something Music For Robots or Stereogum would plug (and that's meant in a complimentary way).

I wasn't close friends with Pauline growing up, though in hindsight, I did always think it was cool that she, as both female and Chinese American, was into the drums so it's really nice to see that she stuck with it and was lauded, in some place I read, as the best female drummer since Sleater-Kinney's Janet Weiss retired (sniff). And hey, it could be that she's actually an ophthalmologist by day and just rocks Silverlake clubs at night but as one of the first practicing musicians I've found from SMHS' "mighty class of '90" - I'll take it.


Speaking of high school...like a lot of Asian American kids growing up in the suburbs of L.A. in the 1980s, I listened to a lot of modern rock (before I discovered hip-hop) and as any of my flock will tell you, New Order's "Bizarre Love Triangle" was the anthem for Asian Americans in that generation. I still can't completely explain why though my friends Todd and Hua both have had their theories, likely connected to AZN anomie in suburbia or something like that. So it's with a heavy heart that I learned that Tony Wilson, founder of Factory Records which was the original home to New Order/Joy Division, just passed today, at only 57.

The movie, 24 Hour Party People was a semi-fictionalized bio-pic of his life and times (a thoroughly enjoyable film, especially if you know the music). Here's a favorite scene from it, which seems appropriately titled: Tony Wilson meets God. RIP!


And on a similar note: I had meant to mention this earlier, though folks had posted in the comments section...but guitarist Eddie Fisher, a favorite of this site, passed away last month. I had the privilege of meeting his son in San Francisco when he dropped off a copy of Fisher's amazing Next 100 Years CD reissue and his father will be sorely missed. RIP as well.

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