Thursday, January 29, 2009

Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes - Wake Up Everybody

Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes - Wake Up Everybody

Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes, "Wake Up Everyday"
(YSI link) 320

Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes, "Keep On Lovin' You"
(YSI link) 320

Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes, "I'm Searching For A Love"
(YSI link) 320

Here's the logical follow-up to our Dimitri From Paris edits, a return to the original source material, Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes! Yeah! Here's a few tracks from their 1975 Philadelphia International LP, Wake Up Everybody, classic Philly Soul sound, Gamble & Huff produced songs. This is what it's all about: songs about love, happiness, freedom, the good things in life. There's very few things I would rather hear in the whole world, this is LIFE on vinyl.

The LP opens with a bang, the title track and my personal favorite "Wake Up Everybody." This is just seven minutes of slow burning soul, featuring beautiful lyrics calling us all to action to change the world. Perfect soundtrack for these post Bush, Obama days. The band provides a subtle groove underneath, letting Teddy Pendergrass preach on as only he can do for the full seven and a half minutes. "Keep On Lovin' You" keeps the good vibes and beautiful strings and horns music comin'. As I listen to it now, feel like this might be my favorite, such a classic love song, perfect for listening to with your loved one, lying in bed on a lazy Sunday afternoon without a care in the world. Finally, check out Sharon Paige's vocals on "I'm Searching For A Love," giving us the opposite side of the love coin. This one has a sort of Bacharach/David feel to it, probably because of the melancholy lyrics, backed up by some heartbreaking strings.

I'll just leave you with the refrain from "Wake Up Everybody," take them with you and think them over today: "The world won't get no better if we just let it be/The world won't get no better we gotta change it yeah, just you and me."

Friday, January 23, 2009

Dmitri From Paris - Southside Edits Vol. 1

Dimitri From Paris

Dimitri From Paris, "Madd Luck" (YSI link)

Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes, "Bad Luck" (YSI link)

Dimitri From Paris, "Feeling About 'Cha" (YSI link)

Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, "Tell The World How I Feel About 'Cha Baby"


We're jumping right back in the mix here, with two edits from the master, Dimitri From Paris. Dude is probably best known now for his Playboy Mansion mixes, which feature a much more mellow, cocktail jazz, smooth disco vibe. But, the man is also responsible for some perfect, seriously funky, raucous disco edits and tracks and his Southside Edits Volume 1 gives you the perfect window onto that side.

Both of these cuts are edits of Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes songs, classic Philly Soul numbers that will remind you of why music is the greatest thing on Earth and Philly's its greatest city. Both are also furiously paced ragers, they get going quickly and never let up.

"Madd Luck" is my choice of the two, Dimitri's edit of "Bad Luck." There's just nothing like hearing Mr. Teddy Pendergrass belting out those "Satisfied"'s and "Down down down"'s over those beautiful strings, cymbal splashes, horn blasts, doubletime beat and vamping keys. Man, this needs to be the soundtrack to your life, this is LIFE MUSIC! Perfect for those days when nothing is going right, as it's sure to lift your spirits or provide company to your misery. For those wondering, Dimitri has mostly fucked with the drums, adding a kick drum to the mix that ups the pace and does away with the more relaxed original. The bass is also less prominent, making it less funky and deliberate.

"Feeling About 'Cha" adds an extended drums intro and outro, but for the most keeps things the same as the original, "Tell The World How I Feel About 'Cha Baby." Again, most of the edit revolves around the drums, as Dimitry has added a much more forceful beat, upping the tempo for the dancefloor. This one's on some feel good, I love my girl, the world is a beautiful place shit. If you don't love that, you don't love America, kittens or apple pie. Download all of this stuff, it doesn't get better.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Chimes Of Freedom




Bob Dylan, "Chimes of Freedom" (live at Newport Festival 1964)

It's a beautiful day for America, as we inaugurated Barack Obama and we realized that George W. Bush can no longer destroy this country. Not much I can really add to this moment, just to say how wonderful a feeling it is to wake up into what feels like a genuinely new world. These past 8 years have been a nightmare, at times one that felt like it would never end. Well, it's over and you can hear the chimes of freedom. I love you all, let's get to work.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Korrupt VII



Get ready NYC. Korrupt VII. Throne Of Blood. Dances With White Girls, Mattie Safer of The Rapture and WiZ. Meanred Productions. Good People.The divine Lorraine Sangre hosting. 88 Palace, 88 E. Broadway. This one's so rad, all I need is declarative sentences. Be there.

Friday, January 09, 2009

Tropicalia - A Brazilian Revolution In Sound

Tropicalia - A Revolution In Sound

Gilberto Gil, "Bat Macumba"
(YSI link)

Jorge Ben, "Take It Easy My Brother Charlie" (YSI link)

Tom Ze, "Jimmy Renda-se" (YSI link)

G-d, it's been way too long since we had an update here. I'm really sorry, but I've been knee-deep in the grad school application process and have needed to reserve every brilliant thought and witty prose for my personal. We're coming to the finish line with that, so it seemed like a good time to jump back in here.

We may have been gone for a bit, but that doesn't mean our mission or radness has diminished. With the new year, I hope to bring the best disco and house tunes, while also expanding the parameters to include some more weirdo tunes that I think can connect into the whole dance music lineage. We're starting off with something a little new here, some tropicalia tunes from 1960s Brazil. I've been obsessed with this music for years now, ever since I first heard some stuff from guys like Caetano Veloso and Tom Ze. It was such a different sound, mixing samba, rock and roll, some folk, psychedelic, but not in a forced, showoff-y way. It sounded like this totally natural synthesis on some acidtripopculturexperimentalove vibe that sounded like nothing else. It flourished for a brief moment in the late 1960s, becoming more than just music, but also a cultural awakening, the Brazilian version of the freakout going on everywhere at that time. This did not go over well with the military goverment, which deported Veloso and Gilberto Gil and crushing the scene almost as soon as it got started.

The raddest of all labels, Soul Jazz, thankfully decided to come to the rescue and bring some of the genre's best music together on one CD. You get all of the heavyweights here: Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Os Mutantes and Gal Costa. You get all of the greatest hits from these acts, making this the perfect place to start as a beginner. I've tried to give you a flavor for the music in all its multifaceted glory while also highlighting some of the lesser known names like Jorge Ben and Ze.

Opening track "Bat Macumba" will make you feel LIFE, LOVE and ALIVE, a completely infectious number with percussion, guitar and Gil's repetitive vocals that sounds like a bunch of musicians in a jam session who come up with a great groove and lock in together. Put this one on every morning when you wake up or when you are on packed subway car or bus and I promise things will seem a lot better. Jorge Ben's "Take It Easy Charles" was completely new, a great surprise. The best description is that it reminded me of a Brazilian Burt Bacharach number, beautiful, bright, horns and lovely vocals all over a samba-y rhythm. Long-time readers know that I do not throw around Bacharach comparisons since he is one of the greatest composers of the past 100 years, so clearly I love this one. I had to add a little Tom Ze to showcase the more freak side of the genre, as dude has stayed on the avant garde side ever since these early days. In "Jimmy, Renda-se," Ze has put together something a lot less rhythmic than anything else on the album with numerous changes of pace. The real highlight are the vocals, as Ze loves repetitive phrases and words and he only adds to this effect by having backup singers repeat many of the lines too. It has a much more experiemental feel than anything else, something that Ze would continue these past few decades.

I highly recommend anyone interested in checking out more of this music pick up this compilation ASAP. It covers all of the players who formed the movement, provides a great history lesson, gives you a lot of bang for your buck and will help you figure out which paths you wish to follow in terms of specific artists. Trust me, this is seriously fertile ground that gave us a lot of great music in a short period of time.

Things are still going to be a little spotty for the next week or two here at Pound for Pound, but should pick up once the apps are sent out. Thanks for continuing to check in, your patience will be reward I promise. 200mine! Yeah!