Tuesday, 26 October 2010

RIP Gregory Isaacs

He was the Cool Ruler, the Lonely Lover, possessed of the sweetest voice to grace reggae and perhaps my favourite reggae artist of all time. A compilation of his mid to late seventies work has been one of my most played albums of the many, many thousands that I own. I have played his music at various restaurants I have managed over the years and have had an enormous amount of people - most of whom I would never consider to be fans of reggae, come and ask me about the artist.
He experienced the ups and downs of fame, though for all his personal trials he produced an incredible body of work that proved to be remarkably solid despite the overwhelming quantity he released.
His music has and will continue to be a soothing tone, a healing vibration, a lovers soundtrack, a poor man's vision of hope. He was the Cool Ruler. RIP!

Wednesday, 20 October 2010

Why Porn Soundtracks Blow


When it comes to the history of cinema there are scant few among us who cannot recall the era defining soundtracks to such great films as Saturday Night Fever, The Harder They Come, Pulp Fiction or Trainspotting. Because for the serious music lover, life can be archived by its soundtrack. Perhaps the first time you heard My Bloody Valentine or Public Enemy, you knew where you were, what you were doing, how it made you feel. It is there as we go through periods of huge change, as we grow and learn, as we laugh and cry. It's there for many the first time we kiss someone, the first time we have sex. 

Taking the Myth?


Myths have formed around the eclectic indie rockers Klaxons since their startling Mercury Prize-winning debut. Real Groove sets out to debunk the theories with guitarist Simon Taylor-Davis.

As far as the media consuming public are concerned, Klaxons are on their last chance bid to save their careers. The ill-fated second album was turned down by record label Polydor, with drug binges and over indulgent prog rock all part of their lost weekend in the French and Italian countryside with producer James Ford. Sent off to musical rehab, anyone would think the British quartet were punished by being paired up with producer Ross Robinson, the so-called Godfather of Nu Metal who has worked with acts such as Limp Bizkit, Korn and Slipknot.

Friday, 15 October 2010

Beyond Dubstep


Unless you've had you ears tucked away under the settee next to a stack of Noel Coward long players or exclusively tuned in to the confines of Radio 4 for the past ten years, then chances are you've heard of dubstep. Its popularity has been steadily rising for many years with its roots able to be traced back to everything bass-wise that has come before it; be it the dub heavy sound system culture that itself emigrated from Jamaica, the future forward strains of drum & bass that impacted on the entire world, the champagne and cocaine excesses of garage and 2 step, or the gritty urban reality of grime.

Wednesday, 6 October 2010

Clubland October

James Blake invites you to leaf your mind
First up this month is Red Rack'Em AKA Danny Berman and his debut album The Early Years. He's been hotting up labels like Undertones, Shift, Untracked and Home Taping Is Killing Music with his slo-mo house and boogie for the past couple of years. His full length cobbles together some of those tracks with some brand new ones and is essential for anyone with even a remote interest in milk-fed, rosy cheeked house music. James Blake's CMYK EP on R&S was a genre bending work of art and his new one is no different. He's incredibly young and unfathomably talented, making experimental, electronic masterpieces that are getting him compared to Joni Mitchell! Check out his latest Klavierwerke EP on R&S records and breathe it in.