Sunday, August 27, 2006

These ads must be stopped now...

Ok, so this blog started with information about some great tunes being picked up in adverts. But last night I had the misfortune of seeing an advert for two childrens' toys which, rather than using the real deal, has some kind of bastardised and generally downright disrespectful versions of I think "You Can't Sit Down" (love the Phil Upchurch Combo classic) and then Johnny Otis' "Hand Jive".

So I ask, clearly someone in the ad world for this company knew of these great tunes but then decided to commit hideous crimes upon them. Was it to save on the royalties? Did they think their reworked playground soundalikes added to the originals? This evil must be stopped...

(just in case anyone picks this up from the company (yeah, right!), whose name I can't recall - make sure you have a sense of humour when reading this but PLEASE don't mess up perfectly good tunes!!!)

Five Corners Quintet

New to me (and courtesy of a gift from my wife who heard them on the radio) comes this splendid jazz band from Helsinki. Their website can be found here. They sell themselves as late 50s / early 60s straight ahead jazz influenced with a touch of latin. Certanly can't get them on the trades' description act - if you like, for example, Lee Morgan, Hank Mobley, Lou Donaldson, Art Blakey et al from that era then you'll probably find something here you like. I have the CD on for the first time as I write this and there are some great tunes - just up is "Case Study", with a finger snappin' female vocal scatting over the top of a laid back classic 60s jazz sound. In parts it reminds me of where The Style Council were partly coming from and aiming for with D C Lee's superb vocalising. Stand out tune so far? "Straight Up" - which could be Mongo Santamaria meets Hank Mobley

Nice...


Saturday, August 05, 2006

Music to iron (double cuff) shirts by...

As I stood there ironing my shirts (yep, some people still do AND we tuck them in!) as usual I stuck my PC audio on random and hit play and decided (between shirts) to note what came up and maybe blog them. Now my experience of this is often it starts well then either repeats itself or plays all the tunes I don't actually wnat to hear. However today wasn't too bad.

So here, with random notes thrown in, is what it chucked at me. Some of these I "digitised" from singles or albums, others I've downloaded from Napster, some from my CDs and a couple quite frankly I have no idea where they ame from:

N'Betweens - Security - not a bad version of a classic song with Etta James still being my preferred version over Thane Russell. As you may know this band contained a number of musicians who would later become Slade. More info here. I believe this can be picked up on a CD called "Genesis of Slade" and is probably available on freakbeay albums of various sorts. So not a bad start...

The Newcomers - The Exit - taken from Kent's "Let's Crossover Again" and, I assume, the same band which did the frankly superb "The Whole World's A Picture Show". What I guess is called "Sweet Soul" and probably early 70s? A bit weird in the middle but nice smooth vocals.

Les McCann - Boogaloo - oh yes! I had this on "The Soul of Jazz Vol 2" on a "Gitanes Jazz" series from many moons ago. Nice uptempo, well, boogaloo I guess

Ben E King - Don't Play That Song. Available on "Stand By Me - the very best of..." this has obvious echoes of "Syand By Me", but is far superior (perhaps because it's not so well known?). Another builder vocally...

Nicola Conte - Jet Sounds. From an LP / CD of the same name this is a great cocktail lounge jazz and latin beat from when, late 90s?

Bob Dylan - Love Minus Zero from "Bringing It All back Home". Bob in fine acoustic form. I actually like a lot of Dylan, but have so far resisted persistent requests to play him at a do. He ain't usually that dancey! However I am tempted by "Absolutely Sweet Marie" on the "Blond On Blonde" album as it has a nice RnB feel in parts - not had the guts yet mind!

Paul Weller - Leafy Mysteries - from "Illumination" and what I thought was a good start to an album which lost it's a way a bit as it went on. But I've not played it all the way through for a good while. This track I like though...

And then bizarrely next up was the unreleased version of "In The City" taken from disc 5 of "Direction, Reaction, Creation". I don't recall playing this before and it has a less "angry" feel to the single and album versions and is no less the worse for that.

On a soulful tip and taken from the Kent LP "Soul Agents" comes Jackie Ross "Keep Your Chin Up". This mid tempo stuff from Brunswick records often hits the spot for me - mellow and soulful

George Lemmons - Fascinating Girl. An old fave of mine from when I used to go to the 100 Club allnighters about 15 years ago. Again a builder and vocally adept. This was from the time I moved away from stompers and got into more soulful mid tempo gems, epitomised by what is perhaps still my fave soul tune Chuck Jackson "What's With This Loneliness" - pure soul heaven. This track is on Goldmine's "Detroit Floorfillers" I think

To raise me from my floaty soulful mood comes the Betterdays "Don't Want That" - full on harmonica and British bluesy beat. I think I digitised my vinyl version of English Freakbeat Vol 1 to get this

Then Mr Weller in his third guise of the evening with Style Council "A Stone's Throw Away". Musically not a great track from what is still a great LP ("Our Favourite Shop") but does bring to mind a period of 1984 / 85 when the whole country seemed to be a stone's throw away from something. Lyrically he makes the links with Chile, South Africa, Poland and South Yorkshire

From a few years earlier came the Specials and "Rudy, A Message To You". Clearly a lot faster and heavier than the Dandy Livingstone version. That whole first Specials LP had a mood and menace about it which resonates now - an undercurrent of urban violence, the rise of fascists on the street and the threat of getting slapped for wearing the wrong clothes in the wrong place (Do The Dog, Concrete Jungle, Nite Klub, Doesn't Make It Alright - I like the SLF version of that as well). I sometimes wonder how a young Mod ever made it through the early 80s!

Next up is the rather superb Nina Simone "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free" (previously referenced in my post about Napster downloads). Great track, great voice

Lifted from my Back Beat 45 comes Carl Carlton "Competition Ain't Nothng" - a club classic if ever there was one and available I think again on Goldmine "Twisted Wheel Forever"

The second Dylan track of the night (and random play not being too random, this comes from the same alblum) "It's All Over, Baby Blue"

In a mood change next up was Sharon Jones "Bump n Touch Pt 1" which I got from the Desco CD "Spike's Choice Vol 1" - essentially a collection of the A and B sides of the first maybe dozen new funk singles from the Desco label. I think this is now defunct (pardon the expression), but they also had Sugarman Three with some righteous hammond, Lee Fields and others - heavy...

Greyboy - Unwind Your Mind. Taken from the now deleted "Home Cookin'" album (but still available on "Best Of Cookin'" this represents the very best of the 90's San Francisco dancefloor jazz which mixed soul, jazz, latin, funk and hip hop beats - masterful and on Ubiquity. They also pumped some great reissued funk out on the Luv n Haight label.

No idea where I got the next tune - Bill Doggett "The Worm" - full on sax hollering and quite nicely complements the latter day sax from the previous track

Muleskinners - Missed Your Love. I got this on the CD version of English Freakbeat Vol 2 and was Ian Mclagan's first band I believe before ending up with the Small Faces. Off the same CD I preferred "Backdoor Man", but this is till good with harmonica and bluesy guitar thrown in

And that friends concluded my ironing and I have to say my audio player did me proud tonight. Any views?