Showing posts with label Natacha Atlas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Natacha Atlas. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 June 2023

You Gotta Fight The Power

Dreadzone celebrate their 30th anniversary this year. Initially a duo of Greg Roberts (Big Audio Dynamite) and Tim Bran (who I knew of from his work with Julian Cope as Branno Of Gwernsey), Greg has remained the constant through three decades, along with former BAD bassist Leo Williams, who joined early on. 

The Dreadzone collective has seen an impressive number of people over the years, some briefly, some for a longer journey: Earl Sixteen, Alison Goldfrapp, MC Spee as well as former BAD compadres Dan Donovan, Mick Jones and Don Letts. The current line up for the 30th anniversary live shows is Greg Roberts, Leo Williams, Earl Sixteen, Bazil aka James Bainbridge and Blake Roberts (Greg's son).
 
I saw Dreadzone at the Bristol Community Festival aka Ashton Court Festival in July 1995. Sadly, none of the dates on their recent "Part 1" tour were relatively nearby but I'd be tempted to see them if "Part 2" offers up some accessible locations.

A new album will be landing this year. In the meantime, here's an hour-long selection of Dreadzone tracks and remixes to whet your appetite.

Older and Dubwiser indeed.
 
1) Zion Youth (Dreadzone Mix): Dreadzone (1995)
2) Gangster (She Is Danger Remix By Lena Cullen & Maya Jane Coles): Dreadzone (2010)
3) Lookee Here (Dreadzone Remix): Transglobal Underground ft. Natacha Atlas & Heitham Al-Sayed (1994)
4) The Good The Bad And The Dread (The Bad) (Remix By Tim Bran): Dreadzone ft. Alison Goldfrapp (1993)
5) Video Games (Lana Dub Rey) (Dreadzone Remix): Lana Del Rey (2012)
6) Stupid Girl (Dreadzone Dub Version): Garbage (1996)
7) Africa (Single Version): Dreadzone (1993)
8) Brazen 'Weep' (Dreadzone's Instrumental Mix): Skunk Anansie (1997)
9) Fight The Power 95: Dreadzone (1995)

You Gotta Fight The Power (1:00:41) (KF) (Mega)

Monday, 2 January 2023

Deep In The Bosom Of The Gentle Night

Celebrating Maxwell Alexander Fraser aka Maxi Jazz, 14th June 1957 to 23rd December 2022.
 
Maxi Jazz is inextricably linked with Faithless, not least for the classic singles Insomnia and God Is A DJ. Today's selection goes a little wider and deeper, picking up his pre-Faithless solo material and his other releases with Soul Food Cafe and E-Type Boys, as well as collaborations with Tiësto, Akasha and 1 Giant Leap
 
The earliest Maxi Jazz appearance I have in my collection is a guest spot on the 12" version of Erzulie by Jah Wobble's Invaders Of The Heart from 1991. I haven't kept up with Faithless releases in the 21st Century so the most recent song is by Maxi Jazz & E-Type Boys from 2016. 
 
All in, there's a dozen songs spanning 25 years and giving a flavour of just how good a wordsmith and performer Maxi Jazz was. Rest easy, man.
 
1) Soundcheck Jam: Faithless (1996)
2) Insomnia (Monster Mix By Rollo & Sister Bliss): Faithless (1995)
3) Dance4Life (Radio Edit): Tiësto ft. Maxi Jazz (2006)
4) God Is A DJ (Yes He Is) (Remix By Rollo & Sister Bliss & Jason Howes): Faithless (1999)
5) My Culture (Album Version): 1 Giant Leap ft. Maxi Jazz & Robbie Williams (2002)
6) Erzulie (Extended Dependent Mix): Jah Wobble's Invaders Of The Heart ft. Natacha Atlas & Maxi Jazz (1991)
7) Bring My Family Back (Album Version By Rollo & Sister Bliss): Faithless (1998)
8) Oh No Ya Don't: DJ Maxi Jazz & Soul Food Cafe (1996)
9) What More Can I Say: Maxi Jazz (1992)
10) Maximum Karma (Sloop John Barillo Remix By Adam Blake): Akasha ft. Maxi Jazz (1999)
11) Seize Your Power: Maxi Jazz & E-Type Boys (2016)
12) Woozy: Faithless (2000)
 
1991: Erzulie EP: 6 
1992: The Maxi-Single: More Of What You Need EP: 9
1995: Insomnia EP: 2
1996: Irreverence: 1 
1996: Original Groovejuice: 8
1998: Sunday 8pm: 7
1999: Cinematique: The Remixes: 10
1999: Saturday 3am: 4
2000: The Beach OST: 12
2002: 1 Giant Leap: 5
2006: Dance4Life EP: 3
2016: Simple.. Not Easy: 11
 
Deep In The Bosom Of The Gentle Night (1:08:04) (Box) (Mega)


Sunday, 25 September 2022

Hokey Karaoke

Volume 1 of a CD-R of cover versions recorded for my friend Stuart on 19th August 2008.
 
I love a cover version and my forays into cassette compilations included many made up of people singing other people's songs. Many of the songs featured here have cropped up on previous mixtapes but I quite like the flow of this CD-R that I made for my friend's birthday a decade and a half ago. Always one for overdoing things, this was the first of three volumes that I gifted him at the time.

My Bloody Valentine start off with their version of the key song from the sixth James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service, originally recorded by Louis Armstrong in 1969. If you're expecting a typical MBV wall of noise, you'll be disappointed; unexpectedly, it's a faithful and rather lovely cover version.

A few cover versions go acoustic. Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly deliver an urgent Northern take on Gallic dance duo Justice. Devine & Statton aka Ian Devine (nee Pinchcombe) from Ludus and Alison Statton from Young Marble Giants and Weekend team up for a beautifully stripped down version of a New Order classic. I remember hearing this on the John Peel show back in 1989. Australian band Frente! were clearly paying attention. Deacon Blue aren't particular favourites of mine but anyone willing to have a stab at a Julian Cope song gets a thumbs up from me. 

Several versions take the song in interesting directions. Whilst not surpassing the originals, they've come up with a different approach that makes the song their own. Primal Scream are the first in line, with an amped up, dirty version of The Clash's Know Your Rights. Tunng go all folky with club classic Naked In The Rain by Blue Pearl, whilst Locust offer up an almost jazz lounge duet on Depeche Mode's Master And Servant. 
 
I'm also a big fan of Mark Eitzel's uptempo but downbeat run through Move On Up by Curtis Mayfield. Associates' bold debut in 1979, covering Boys Keep Swinging weeks after the original was released, is every bit as good as David Bowie. If I had to choose between the two, Anita Lane's unique take on Sexual Healing, ably assisted by Mick Harvey and Barry Adamson, surpasses Marvin Gaye's original.

Ciccone Youth aka Sonic Youth take things to the natural and extreme end with a version of Robert Palmer recorded in a karaoke booth. The video - recorded in the same booth for $25 - is a striking send up of the overblown original, Kim Gordon's deadpan singing and lacklustre dancing against a backdrop of images from the Vietnam War. I vaguely recall watching this on a late night TV show and the studio guests ripping the song and video to shreds, but they were woefully missing the point.

Speaking of overblown, sometimes the only way to do a cover is go even bigger and louder. Stairway To Heaven is one of those songs indelibly etched in the memory of my childhood listening to music on the radio and has been covered countless times over the last half-century. I remember being subjected to a version during a school assembly in the 1980s by a 'supergroup' made up of my Biology, Geography and P.E. teachers. It wasn't pretty.

Like many, seeing Aki Kaurismäki's 1989 road movie Leningrad Cowboys Go America was my first introduction to the titular Finnish band. Leningrad Cowboys continued to release records up to 2013 but they appear to have disbanded some time after. Their version of the Led Zeppelin song came from a collaborative album with The Alexandrov Red Army Ensemble aka The Alexandrov Ensemble aka The Red Army Choir, the official choir of the Russian armed forces. Tragically, on Christmas Day in 2016, 64 members of the Ensemble were killed when their plane crashed into the Black Sea.

The world has changed dramatically this year and collaborating with the official choir of the Russian armed forces is unlikely to be on anyone's wish list, now or any time in the foreseeable future. How different things were in 2008 when I compiled this collection.
 
1) We Have All The Time In The World: My Bloody Valentine sing Louis Armstrong (1993)
2) Know Your Rights (Full Length Version): Primal Scream sing The Clash (1994)
3) There's A Ghost In My House: The Fall sing R. Dean Taylor (1987)
4) Naked In The Rain (Rob Da Bank Session): Tunng sing Blue Pearl (2007)
5) D.A.N.C.E.: Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly sing Justice (2008)
6) Move On Up: Mark Eitzel sings Curtis Mayfield (2002)
7) Everybody's Gotta Learn Sometime: Beck sings The Korgis (2004)
8) Bizarre Love Triangle: Devine & Statton sing New Order (1989)
9) Addicted To Love: Ciccone Youth sing Robert Palmer (1988)
10) Making Plans For Nigel: Datassette sing XTC (2006)
11) Boys Keep Swinging: Associates sing David Bowie (1979)
12) Master And Servant: Locust sing Depeche Mode (1998)
13) It's A Man's Man's Man's World: Natacha Atlas sings James Brown (2003)
14) Some Velvet Morning: Slowdive sing Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood (1993)
15) If You're Lookin' For A Way Out (Album Version): Tindersticks sing Odyssey (1999)
16) Sexual Healing: Anita Lane ft. Mick Harvey & Barry Adamson sings Marvin Gaye (1993)
17) Trampolene: Deacon Blue sing Julian Cope (1989)
18) Stairway To Heaven: The Leningrad Cowboys & The Alexandrov Red Army Ensemble sing Led Zeppelin (1994)

Volume One (1:19:43) (GD) (M)

Friday, 24 June 2022

You Can Touch It But It Will Not Fade

Side 1 of a mixtape, compiled 11th January 1998.

Following on from yesterday's post, this selection remains in the 1990s and features eight remixes that I was unlikely to ever hear down the local indie disco, but which in their own way, kick ass. What better way then to usher in the weekend?
 
In order to squeeze all the tracks onto a side of a C90 cassette, I originally cut Cornershop's Jullandar Shere in half with an early fade. For today's selection, I've kept the remix by Richard Norris (The Grid) and Choque Hosein (Black Star Liner) in all it's full, joyous glory. 
 
Conversely, I think the edit of Ain't No Longer (The Lost Riff) is possibly unique to a Select magazine cover-mounted CD. The full length version was intended for FPS-2, a remix companion to Dodgy's third album Free Peace Sweet, which was never released. FPS-2 was eventually snuck out on 1999's Ace A's + Killer B's compilation as a limited edition bonus disc and reappeared earlier this year on the gargantuan 8CD box set The A&M Years. Ain't No Longer (The Lost Riff) was also one of four tracks on a promo 12" of FPS-2 released in 1996, but I'm not heard it so I'm unsure if it's the edit or full length version.

Fans of Six Degrees Of Kevin Bacon (which originated in 1994) will be disappointed to find that the titular Hollywood actor is not responsible for track 5's Audioweb remix. This Kevin Bacon is the former Comsat Angels bass player who teamed up with Floy Joy's touring keyboard player Jonathan Quarmby to form a successful production duo.

Without doing a disservice to Primal Scream, Fluke and Natacha Atlas, the final mention goes to Andy Bell, who delivers a remix (possibly his first?) of Ride that takes the original, Rolling Stones-indebted song to the moon and back. A precursor to his future music as GLOK, Andy Bell has also continued to record and release music with Ride and as a solo artist, including one of 2022's best albums so far, the majestic Flicker. I really must get an Andy Bell selection up here soon...
 
Wherever you are and whatever you're doing, have a rocktastic weekend, everyone. More tomorrow.

1) Jailbird (The Toxic Trio Stay Free Mix By Kris Needs & Bent Recknagel): Primal Scream (1994)
2) Familus Horribilus (Mega Wob 1) (Remix By Jah Wobble): Pop Will Eat Itself (1993)
3) Jullandar Shere (Jeh Jeh Mix By Richard Norris & Choque Hosein): Cornershop (1996)
4) Absurd (Headrillaz Vox): Fluke (1997)
5) Faker (I, Mental Mix By Manna aka Kevin Bacon & Jonathan Quarmby): Audioweb (1997)
6) Ain't No Longer (The Lost Riff) (Remix By Jerome De Pietro) (Edit): Dodgy (1997)
7) I Don't Know Where It Comes From (Apollo 11 Mix By Andy Bell): Ride ft. The Christchurch Cathedral School Choir (1994)
8) Yalla Chant (The Lesson Four Edit By Youth): Natacha Atlas (1995)
 
1993: Familus Horribilus / RSVP EP: 2 
1994: I Don't Know Where It Comes From EP: 7
1994: Jailbird EP: 1 
1995: Yalla Chant EP: 8
1996: Jullandar Shere EP: 3
1997: Absurd EP: 4
1997: Faker EP: 5
1997: Vrooom! Motorcycle Loveliness (Select magazine promo CD): 6

Side One (50:36) (KF) (Mega)

Monday, 5 July 2021

What Is There Left To Say

The Outer (Radio Edit): Natacha Atlas ft. Jason Singh (2021)

Natacha Atlas has collborated with Samy Bishai, Jason Singh, Yazz Ahmed & Alcyona Mick on a new project, The Inner & The Outer. At six tracks (including a radio edit of The Outer) and a running time of just over 34 minutes, I'm not sure these days if this makes it an EP, an album or if it really matters either way. 

Since I first heard Transglobal Underground, the essential Fuse & Fuse II compilations on Nation Records and her appearances on (now) classics like Bomba by Jah Wobble's Invaders Of The Heart, I have been moved by Atlas' unmistakable voice and genre-melding music.

The Outer (Album Version): Natacha Atlas ft. Jason Singh (2021)

Buy The Inner & The Outer on Bandcamp 

Saturday, 26 June 2021

United State Of Dub

13 tracks, 12" mixes, more dub, less vocal, 'nuff said.
 
1)  Hope (Cameless Rub-A-Dub): Loop Guru ft. Zahrema Di Starace & Natacha Atlas (1993)
2) Touch Me (Two Lone Swordsmen Dub) (Remix By Andrew Weatherall & Keith Tenniswood): Sweetie (2002)
3) Open Up Your Head (Trancefield Dub Mix By Leftfield): If? (1991)
4) Buddy X (Masters At Work Dub No. 1): Neneh Cherry (1993)
5) United State Of Love (Soma Dub Remix By Slam): Supereal (1992)
6) Gandhi (Dicky Trisco's Heavenly Dub): Le Corps Mince De Françoise (2010)
7) Dr. Lee PhD (Dub Mix By Mario Caldato Jr.): Beastie Boys ft. Lee 'Scratch' Perry & Money Mark (1998)
8) Silver Surfer (Dub) (Remix By François Kevorkian & Goh Hotoda): Lizzie Tear (1988)
9) One Of Our Submarines (Salz Dubmix): Thomas Dolby (2003)
10) Karmacoma (Bumper Ball Dub) (Remix By Mad Professor): Massive Attack (1994)
11) Adventures In Failure (Dub): MC 900 Ft. Jesus (1991)
12) Stupid Girl (Dreadzone Dub Version): Garbage (1996)
13) Shelter (Slow Phase) (Dub): Spooky ft. Julie Daske (2007)