May 292011
 

Uppdaterad 2012/01/14

(foto: Altemark)

Riktigt tråkiga nyheter. Känns tungt att skriva det här faktiskt. Hans sista skiva föll mig inte i smaken; nu blir det inget mer.

Men Gil Scott-Heron hade redan cementerat sin plats som en av den svarta musikens giganter. Jag har inte musikalisk kunskap nog att bedöma om han var någon virtuos, men han hade arbetat fram ett uttryck som var helt och hållet eget, och framförde sina utomordentligt ikoniska sånger med en bräcklighet och en urstyrka som gick in i lyssnarens benmärg.

Även yngre generationer tar till sig hans musik. 90-talisten RealNiggaTumblr, även känd som EASTSIDESTEVIE, skriver till oss från Harlem:

Man, just like a lot of younger heads i discovered him through Kanye West’s Late Registration. I hunted that sample down and it opened me up to his whole catalog. Not many musicians period could translate struggle and pain through song form. His first album especially got me through some bad times a couple years ago; really uplifting. Even as recent as last year you would go to his shows and see generations of people, younger ones such as myself there to see him live. It’s proof that his subject matter and material was timeless and will remain like that.

Lady Day & John Coltrane är en låt som ger solsken även i de mest fucked up av situationer. Whitey On The Moon sammanfattar det svarta och smutsiga amerikanska 60-talet med ojämförligt ursinne och patos. The Bottle är kanske musikhistoriens mest drabbande låt om alkoholism, samtidigt sinnessjukt funky. Playboy Tre återanvänder den på Living In The Bottle (från det ojämnt fantastiska tape som han inleder med att förklara att han gör det “for the have-nots / and keep an ice cold beer like I’m the Liquor Store Mascot” – samma självutlämnande smärta som Scott-Herons “look around on any corner, if you see some brother looking like a goner… it’s gonna be me“), och tillägnar den till sin farbror, “cuz Gil Scott was one of his favorite artists”.

Många tar nu farväl av honom som en av hiphopens gudfäder, men Scott-Heron rappade inte – vanan att tala över en DJ:s vinylurval kommer från Jamaica. Hela hans swagger återföddes dock som rap, mindre hos självgoda mysmjukisar som Common och Kanye West än hos självutnämnt ignoranta rappare som Sean Price, som när dödsfallet blev känt twittrade:

Not Gil Scott-Heron… I’m going to sleep and act like I aint hear that. I met him on a plane coming from London and we talked the whole flight and he dropped some jewels that I live by to this day.

För något år sedan läckte samme rappare Angel Dust, där han kör en inspirerad vers över Scott-Herons låt med samma namn (och pratar med hooken a la Dipset):

Quality of life is fucked up, it gotta be / upgraded, I hate it when niggaz come borrow cheese (…) I always do the math, was raised by number runners / you always stupid ass, was raised by Hummer stunners

Scott-Herons storhet bestod i att sätta denna vardagliga sälta i kontakt med ett överskridande poetiskt ljus. Han personifierade också en av modernismens viktigaste lärdomar; efter futurismen är “poesi” utan musik irrelevant… vilket rap och rock och reggae förstod, vilket också Kraftwerk förstod.

“Bring on the stolen rifles to knock down walls, bring on the elephant guns, bring out the helicopters to block out the sun”.

Jag har spenderat åratal med att läsa poesi, alltså genren i litteraturhistorien, och så här något år tionde, så är det bland alla klassiker bara William Blake och Walt Whitman jag kan minnas med någon respekt (fuck Rimbaud och Baudelaire och speciellt Ginsberg och såna nötter)… och jämte dem, jo det kanske är ett övervärderande så här strax efter hans död, men ja, och det är ett högst personligt värderande… Gil Scott-Heron.

Han återfann själva ordens, det bokstavsbaserade målandets styrka och förde den vidare till oss. Det är i det enkla och låga och det hårda man finner det verkligt överskridande.

Överskridandet av din ständiga nedstämdhet, av misären framför dina ögon, av samhällsmoralen, av dina ihopkrympta visioner, av den mänsklig rädslan.

So you say you never heard the Inner City Blues, and what’s more you don’t understand at all, what the ghetto people mean when they say living behind walls… well, put on your best suit, white shirt and tie, and run downtown to stand in line for a job washing dishes… ’cause you may not qualify…

(…)

… and what happens when people feel they have nothing to lose?”

Nov 202010
 

Nej, tyvärr – Detroit-duon gästar inte den rättvist hyllade tv-serien, och några Director’s Cut-scener där Omar sitter och putsar hagelbrakare till tonerna av Lab Rat XL går inte att hitta.

Vi får nöja oss med en utmärkt brittisk musiktidning om ett konstprojekt – skapat av den halvt briljante, halvt skitnödige Kodwo Eshun plus kollegor – som utgår från den mytvärld som Drexciya så effektfullt har frammanat genom sina låttitlar och sina skivkonvolut.

(det finns redan ett nyare nummer av The Wire ute – det är OK då vi här på mellannätet bryr oss litet om den linjära världens kronlogiska tillfälligheter)

Konstnärerna i Otololiput-kollektivet är märkbart stolta över att ha fört över denna Detroitska krigsmaskin till konstvärlden, men varför? Styrkan i Eshuns More Brilliant Than The Sun var just förlitandet på musiken och dess värld i sig – att man inte behövde akademin för att tänka och berätta kring (eller rättare sagt inne i) techno, rap, funk, jazz – idéerna finns redan där. Att man nu vänder sig till konstvärldens rum och diskurser för att återplantera de Detroitska fröna känns fattigt.

Som tur är består The Wires Drexciya-special även av en genomgång av gruppens snåriga och svårslagna katalog. Och där droppas hetare och betydligt mer upplysande citat som uppmuntrar till ännu en electro-musikalisk djupdykning.

Stinton’s experience of getting into electronic music was typical of many of his Detroit peers at this time, but his dedication to the vision was anything but. ‘I got my first taste of Techno around 1980-81′, he said in an interview with John Osselaer. ‘I was a kid riding my bike with a small radio and ‘Alleys Of Your Mind’ by Juan Atkins came on. I stopped my bike to get a better listen. It was the sweetest sound I had ever heard at that time. I was hooked, and for the next eight years I would be programmed by some of the best electronic music on the planet by [local radio DJ] The Electrifying Mojo. When it was time I started hooking up with friends trying different styles until one night I could not sleep, cold sweat, tossing and turning and around 3 am September 18, 1989 I stood up and said Drexciya . It felt like a tidal wave rushing across my brain. All kinds of ideas were coming out. I could not stop it and I would not stop it. For the next three years we worked hard to perfect Drexciya before we would release it onto the world. Getting into production was not quick. It took a year of experimenting.’

“A desire to have that kind of dancefloor status, to keep that notion of kick drums and 303s and the notion of sequenced funk, at the same time as to create a sense of enigma and mystery… it’s an unprecendented project to maintain a dancefloor presence and to keep a kind of mystique, what McLuhan calls a participation mystique.”

Nov 072010
 

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sce1SSzuNzs&hl=en&fs=1&]

Jag vet inte vilken låt det här är och var den kommer från, och skiter uppriktigt talat i; behållningen är Jorge Bens adlibs, och Tim Maias outfit och danssteg (och det faktum att han mer än vanligt ser ut som en mix mellan Barry White och The Freak Brothers). A Groove Sensation.

Oct 122010
 

Kl. 22 på lördagen 30/10  intar BRYTBURKEN King Flippaz

Paradize (alltså källaren på Rex, Nobelvägen 107) igen…

Med en vinylback full av mullrade 808-kicks och kalla synthljud;

funken, hela funken, inget annat än funken…

Alltså perfekt musik för några billiga öl och flipperspel

(vill du höra konstskole-electro så stannar du hemma).

Sprid det goda ordet, medresenärer

(och på torsdagen 21/10 spelar Bruce Leenus där, vilket

ni inte heller borde missa)…

Oct 102010
 

Med envetenhet och en otrolig talang lyckades Tim Maia med tiden tränga sig fram axel mot axel med soulens giganter; Otis Redding, Marvin Gaye, Curtis Mayfield. Hans låtskrivande är lika dynamiskt och innovativt, hans röst lika smärtsamt dräpande och samtidigt honungsmässigt helande.

Efter en dålig dag vill vissa höra 2pac, andra föredrar The Smiths, Johnny Cash eller Wu-Tang Clan. När allt känns skit sätter jag på Tim Maia. Han är den smärtupplösande erfarenhetsmusiken personifierad. Död sedan tolv år finns han fortfarande kvar, öppen inför vår situation, och vi för hans smärta och säregna levnadsstämning. Genom musiken går vi mot ljuset.

Är man inte uppväxt i Brasilien är det svårt att veta var man ska börja. Att hans bästa låtar är utspridda över åtta självbetitlade album och att de flesta best of-projekt inriktar sig på hans senare keyboard-baserade ballader hjälper inte. Dessutom spelade han in massor av knepiga plojlåtar som passar mindre bra in här.

Varsågod. Mina favoriter i en praktisk zip-fil. Uteslutande från 70-talet, den andra hälften av låtarna från när han snöade in på Cultura Racional och skapade den mest framgångsrika syntesen mellan funk och filosofi den här sidan Parliamnet-Funkadelic. Produktionen var så intensiv; känslan de lyckades lägga i en drivande hi-hat, en bakomliggande orgel, en mästerligt återhållsam elgitarr, en perfekt EQ-ad snare.

Jag har inte mixat ihop låtarna, och ordningen är enbart kronologisk. The Ambassador Of Brazilian Soul – för Tim Maia var en sammanlänkande kraft, mellan amerikansk och brasiliansk musik, mellan människor som i liknande situationer, mellan den enskildes smärta och en högre ordning; det är vad soul handlar om.

Från hans första soloskiva, inspelad 1970, plockar jag Eu Amo Você (tillsammans med Bob Dylans The Wedding Song tidernas starkaste kärlekslåt), Primavera, och Azul Da Cor Do Mar, hans kanske allra största mästerverk.

Året efter släpptes ännu ett självbetitlad album, med Você som en stor framgång. I filmen om Lula används den när den framtida presidenten för första gången dansar med sin framtida fru. Filmen i sig är lite väl smetig, men just den scenen är jävligt fin. Tim Maia låter som om han ska sprängas av kärlek och lycka.

1972 kom ett till självbetitlad album, kanske hans bästa. B-sidan är åtminstone helt otrolig (Onni, jag köpte ett extra exemplar till dig – hämta det nån gång liksom). Därifrån hämtar vi Lamento och Pelo Amor De Deus.

Ber man någon på en bar i Brasilien spela något av Tim så finns det en god chans att man får höra Gostava Tanto De Você , det dynamiska och själfulla popmästerverket från 1973 års fjärde självbetitlade album. Först trodde jag att det handlade om en förlorad kärlek, men sen läser jag att Edson Trindade komponerade låten som en hyllning till sin avlidna dotter. “On the wall in my room, still hangs your portrait… I don’t wanna see, so I can forget… I even thought about moving, to any place where the thought of you… doesn’t exist…  I liked you so much…

“Maia founded two record labels: Vitória Régia Discos and Seroma. Through the latter he released the albums Tim Maia Racional, Vols. 1 & 2, both with songs about the knowledge contained in the book Universo em Desencanto (Universe in Disenchantment), revolving around the cult of Rational Culture. At the time these records were not well-received. This was due to the fact that Seroma was a label set-up by Maia himself (he wanted all profits to go to the cult) and it lacked adequate distribution, as well as the fact that concerts were promoted as evenings of Rational Culture, and very rarely did he use his name to promote them. They are now regarded as classics and saw re-release in 2005.”

Visst är Cultura Racional någon slags sekt, men so what, de anhängare jag träffat i Brasilien var mer rationella, även fall de tror på ufon, än ex. pingströrelsen (som är enormt jävla populär där nere). En sekt, men av det godartade slaget. Tim Maia var #based innan Lil B uppfann ordet.

Volym 1 och 2 av Tim Maia Racional rymmer hans mest inspirerade musik. Cariocan Tim Maia ljudsatte sektens skrifter lika briljant som Chicago-födde Curtis Mayfield ljudsatte Superfly. Det musikaliska men även temamässiga släktskapet mellan ex. Bom Senso och Little Child Runnin’ Wild är påträngande. Båda visste att dirigera sina musiker till stordåd och balansera funk-öset med ett dynamiskt låtskrivande, en skör melodikänsla, ett reflexivt textförfattande.

Efter det finns det inte mycket som jag kan spisa med samma entusiasm. Tim spelade in fler hits och fortsatte att sjunga gudomligt. Det känns orättvist att inte inkludera något från ex. Tim Maia Disco Club. 1978 hade, som skivtiteln antyder, discon vunnit mark även i Brasilien, men mycket av det som vi älskar med Tim Maia gick förlorat i det nya, välputsade formatet, även om vi konstaterar att han surfade elegant på tidens vågor; Acenda O Farol är briljant och dynamisk disco, Sossego är slipad, slick, malande klubbfunk.

I mars 1998, mitt i en konsert, går han av scenen efter smärtor i huvudet. Några dagar senare dog han på sjukhuset, kraftigt överviktig och efter ett hårt liv fullt av whiskey, weed och kokain. (“Jag röker inte, jag dricker inte, jag snortar inte – men ibland ljuger jag.”) Från att ha varit underdog-musikern personifierad, och sedan slagit igenom brett med boomen för svart musik Rio De Janeiro i mitten av 70-talet och framåt, hyllas han idag som en av Brasiliens största artister – som sångare, som låtskrivare, och som kontrakulturell ikon.

När Racionais MCs får frågan vilken artist de helst av allt skulle vilja spela in med dröjer inte svaret. De samplade även Tim Maia för sin nära nio minuter långa Homem Na Estrada, en av de mest djupgående och deprimerande rap-berättelser som spelats in. Låten dom samplade, ett bonusspår från Racional-sessionerna, får avsluta Tim Maia – The Ambassador Of Brazilian Soul.

Jan 052010
 

Stumbled upon (some classic soundbites, and yes, that’s Richard Pryor pulling the gun on Pretty Toney!) this song yesterday:

Willie Hutch – I Choose You

We heard that somewhere before, right? UGK sampled it for their comeback single Int’l Players Anthem (I Choose You), featuring Outkast. Even though it’s a good song, it was already played out by then, in my opinion, having been sampled with more heart on Mathematics’ Pimpology 101, featuring Buddah Bless, and before that on Project Pat’s Choose U. But I knew I’d heard that soulful backdrop somewhere even before that. Who was first with it? Mega Montana – and I have to say that he was more creative with it, too; instead of schooling the listeners how to trick women into prostitution and taking their money, his subject was pimping the pen.

Other songs of Willie Hutch’s been sampled before. You might recognize these two?

Willie Hutch – Hospital Prelude Of Love Theme

Willie Hutch – Brothers Gonna Work It Out

Nov 302009
 

Back in the Motown days, we used to wear tailored suits. That was the thing to do in Philly. Even in the Ghetto, you’d buy the best suits or have them tailor-made. We was broke as hell, but that was the thing. It was like the clean, pimp style. But seeing how fictitious that was, we welcomed a change. So when kids started wearing hole-y jeans and T-shirts, we’d grab a towel and wear it like a diaper. When it changed again and it had to be clean again, we bought $10,000 leather-winged outfits, spacemen costumes and a half a million dollar Mothership. If it had glitter, we had to make it glitter to the point that nobody had ever done it before.

Then that was getting old after we’d been on tour for ever, so we got the camouflage stuff. We pretty much started that on the One Nation Under a Groove album. We went into the army/navy surplus stores and stuff was like three dollars for a pair of pants. $3.50, $2.50 for shirts. We loaded everything outta there. In a good six months, that shit was up to $30 or $40. Now it’s a couple of hundred dollars to get a good army suit.

The history of Funkadelic begins where Hendrix left of: distorted guitars, orange-purple soundscapes, black cosmology, LSD-weltschmertz, burning american flags, bombed out city centers – but with one forward-looking, crucial difference; they added the Funk, the continuous groove, the steady heartbeat of the Mothership.

The easiest way to break down P-funk? Psychedelic Rock crossed with Funk. This gives Funkadelic their unique flavour, that is why they appeal to both dirtbag rockers and californian gangbangers, that is why their music has met success both amongst American college-nerds and party-goers in the Brazilian favelas. While the original funk was developed under the disciplinary regime of James Brown, the Detroit bastard child was generally to fucked on acid when they were in the studio to accomplish something substantial. Skippable experiments drenched in bad acid and bad hippie wisdom is one of the weaknesses of the p-funk-catalouge. They also had the bad habit of including ballads on their releases, an area which they unlike James Brown did not master. Clinton’s half-baked Frank Zappa-imitations (Jimmy’s Got A Little Bit Of Bitch In Him) are also misplaced, since Clinton’s own sense of humour transcends Zappa by lightyears. To bow down to an inferior is not a good look.

The bitches’ brew that Funkadelic initially served their followers had ingredients echoing both the immanent theology of the likes of Meister Eckhart and Thomas Müntzer and the darker side of that took over after The Summe Of Love. “The Kingdom Of Heaven Is Within” is howled repeatedly on the intro to their first LP. On America Eats It’s Young they even include a text from The Church Of The Process, a congregation founded by ex-Scientologists that worshipped both God and Satan and believed the world would end any minute now. A.S. Van Dorston writes in his brilliant The Afro-Alien Diaspora, that it “seems unlikely that George Clinton took the Process Church seriously for long. Everything he did showed that his songs were meant to benefit everyone in a positive way.” The iconoclastic imagery of Clinton was larger than one church, it was an all rebellious, playful mythology that was riding on the bad acid-vibes of Hendrix and fellow noise-bringers. Dorston continues that

there’s no mistake that the early music was hard. In stark contrast to their later cartoonish space-freak image, the band looked and sounded as earthy as the dirt on the cover art for Maggot Brain. Funkadelic were bad motherfuckers. They shared management and stages with the other ‘bad boys of Detroit’ – Ted Nugent & the Amboy Dukes, MC5, and The Stooges. Their management even cooked up a marriage between George and Iggy Pop as a publicity stunt. Iggy was probably relieved that it was never followed through. ‘He could have been my wife’, tittered Clinton. (…) Funkadelic’s unique relationship with white rock ‘n’ roll started when they had borrowed amps from Vanilla Fudge. They were so pleased with the high volume that they immediately got their own. Like Jimi Hendrix and Sly and the Family Stone, they reclaimed rock music as their own. (…) By 1970′s Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow, Funkadelic sounded as if they had absorbed some of MC5′s aggression and The Stooges’ decadent nihilism. They continued their critiques of capitalism and booty-liberation theology, but instead of the blues, Free Your Mind‘s title track showcased lysergic-drenched noise, with Bernie Worrell’s slavering, distorted three-note organ riff similar to Velvet Underground’s Sister Ray.

With time, the hard-work funk ethics of James Brown came more and more into play, and the psychedelic distortion and acid noise of the first albums took the back seat as the line between Funkadelic’s and Parliament’s identities blurred. The albums got more concentrated and funkier, and funkier, reaching a pinnacle with One Nation Under A Groove in 1978. As the album name suggests, the lyrics and concepts had moved closer to black nationalism (a course that took a later generation of black musicians a lot further. It is also interesting to note that the evangelic SF imagery is a central element not just in the Parliament’s completely masterful Mothership Connection, but also in the mythology of Nation Of Islam – and The Church Of Scientology).

As the eghties drew nearer, the P-Funk-army got more involved in the war against disco, which shows up in both confrontative song titles and in the music itself (it was getting polished). Funk was becoming more and more difficult to play. The times were changing. Cocaine replaced acid, and the quality of music declined. In the disco-era, what else could you do but sell your soul to the placebo syndrome and start smoking death instead of sweating away death under the powerful groove from A Fully Operational Mothership.

The pioneering work of the funk-tribes had however been accomplished. With Uncle Jam Wants You they passed the legacy onto the next generation. Not long after, Uncle Jam’s Army of pioneering hip hop-DJs was formed in Los Angeles, with Egyptian Lover sent out on a mission to once again reclaim the pyramids. On his solo release Computer Games from 1982 Clinton passes the torch to Afrika Bambaataa with the chant “like Planet Rock, we just don’t stop“: Planet Rock was released the same year, and a new world of music was born. Another generation took over. Once again black music was taken out of the clubs, into the urban landscape. Once again the sound in the parks was rough and raw, not smooth and polished. A rich foundation had been layed for the future of funk, and hiphop-producers gathered the ammunition needed for the oncoming battle. The apocalyptic Bring-The-Noise-eclecticism of Funkadelic was essential in The Bomb Squad‘s revolutionary Wall Of Sound-technique, while the beautifully bouncing booty-bass and slick arrangemnets of Parliament lives on in the productions of Dr. Dre, DJ Quik, Organized Noize, and many others.

Ever since the mothership of Parliament-Funkadelic went under the radar in the disguise of The P-Funk All-Stars, Clinton hasn’t been the same, and releases bearing his name have mostly been thrown together without class. Atomic Dog was, of course, the shit, but besides that he has rarely shined like in the seventies. Two moments are worth the mention, though.

Just out of jail, and with both Dr. Dre and George Clinton on his side, U Cant C Me is as relentless and triumphant as we ever saw Tupac Shakur. This is one of his hottest tracks, much owing to Clinton’s idiosyncratic adlibs and Dre’s gloriously perfected p-funk (the beat is so large that it doesn’t matter that its skeleton is identical to Snoop Doggy Dogg’s Who Am I). When the Clinton spaces the funk out on Synthesizer from Outkast’s critically-hugged-to-death Stankonia it’s another beautiful moment. But in recent years, solid contributions have been missing, and you would suspect that Mr. Clinton have been paying more attention to the crack-pipe than to the microphone. A friend even had the nerve to inform me of his demise some years ago, a piece of bad news that a quick googling could refute; in fact, he had a new album out. And he put in his input on that Wu-Tang Clan-album.

How does he do it? Perhaps George Clinton is a perpeteum mobile, an alien, cyborg machine that “just don’t stop“, defying physics and AA meetings. In a way the essence of Funk: bodies defying the laws of gravity, shaking, getting it on, grooving for hours and hours and years and years. It’s mind-blowing to see sixty-year-olds like James Brown blasting the same shit on stage as forty years ago. Funk aint slack. You gotta sweat if you wanna have fun. If you want your spot in the sun, you gotta be on some hot shit. On the other hand, if you got funk, you got style.

Jul 212009
 

This Flogsta Danshall compilation from last year is quite a good introdution to the skweee genre (wikipedia says that the name “was coined by Daniel Savio, one of the originators of the emerging sound. The name refers to the use of vintage synthesizers in the production process, were the aim is to “squeeze out” as interesting sounds as possible“).

The tracks are mostly pretty experimental, with a few more stable electronic funk tracks to keep things interesting (even though they’re also pretty out there). Using the immanent lo-fi aesthetics of the genre to punch out IDM and glitch-like material feels too easy, and not very interesting to listen to. Of those tracks, Eero Johannes’ Finnrexin, from his brilliant self-titled Planet Mu release, gets a pass thanks to its beautiful electronica vibes. Other than that – add some much-needed funk to the recipe or get out of the kitchen!

It is better to take the said dirty south and booty-influences of the genre seriously, crank up the bass, and skweeeze out some ass shaking, titty bouncing, sweat inducing, dance floor bangers. Well, they’re not quite there. Not yet. But with tracks like Drums’ Giants, Randy Barracuda’s Shock The Plankton and Metske’s Street they have written a new chapter in the book of electronic funk. For that I salute them.

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You can catch the Flogsta Danshall crew going live against the Harmönia collective at the Norberg festival this summer!

May 282009
 

Saw Sweetback the other day, and I swear to God in heaven that some of the opening sequences qualify for being the grooviest shit ever put on reel. If you got funk, you got style, obviously. It drags on and on in the end though; half an hour could have been left on the editing room floor without me complaining.

The balancing act between radical politics and advanced pimpology is marvelously executed, the characters are some of the heaviest dude you’ll ever see, and the soundtrack is a haunting, off-key, rambling swamp funk monster – that later got caught in Madlib‘s SP 1200 on Come On Feet.

Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song is worth checking out, both for entertainment value and the historical interest – but you might want to add some drink or smoke to the mix to take you through the slower parts.

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