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North Sea Jazz Festival, Saturday 15 July, impressions..

Our impressions of our first day at the North Sea Jazz Festival, Rotterdam:
[Hieronymus Fox - HF; Frenchy - F]

Clinic with Branford Marsalis
[HF]
Surprising, was expecting something with music, a performance, whatever. Turned out to be a Q&A session. Interesting to hear a musician’s mindset and motivations: depth, simplicity and feeling about jazz.
[F]
Damn hot in that room. Loved the down-to-earthness, funny guy!

Sergio Mendes
[HF]
A compromise between his old (true) stuff and his recent release. Best way to introduce his music to a large crowd. More substance than show.
[F]
Agreed, too bad that most people are corpselike and not really swinging to the music. Only when they played Mas Que Nada did some of the corpses start moving around a bit

Neville Brothers
[HF]
Old and seasoned warriors, authentic performers
[F]
Well.. not really impressive, just ok..

Bilal
[HF]
Crappy sound, ego show, seemed like Bilal thought he was the ultimate performer, Soul God.. Potential wasn’t used very well.
[F]
Crappy sound, check! Great voice, okay ego, okay performer, but not God’s gift to Soul

Tower of Power
[HF]
Blown away! Brilliant. Better singer than last time I saw them, adding more to the band than being annoying. Great encore.
[F]
1st time ever, excellent! 28 years in the business, that’s my age, goddammit! Incredible!

Omar
[HF]
Crappy sound, sore legs, good music, same old, same old.. Great DJ in the Yukon room.
[F]
Got used to the crappy sound, even sorer back ;o)

Leela James
[HF]
Second time around, better than the HMH show, video screens added to the charm and power of the performance.
[F]
Agreed.. tired of typing ;o)

Frenchy’s Reloads: Young Disciples - ‘Road To Freedom’

General Description
Artist/Band: Young Disciples
Album Title: Road To Freedom
Year: 1991

Young Disciples - 'Road To Freedom'

Soulful Experience!
 
How I Got Into This Music
Here’s a blast from the past, man! Young Disciples rocked the scene quite some time ago during the Acid Jazz period, the retro-proto Soul from the UK. Can’t remember the exact moment but the intro on ‘Apparently Nothin’ was incredible! That voice! That groove! It’s another of those albums that Hieronymus Fox and I enjoyed waaaay back in ‘91.

Album credits at artistdirect.com

Tracks that got my attention:
Get Yourself Together
The band called the Disciples, another incredible intro with singer Carleen Anderson’s powerful voice. Laidback bass, a tiny bit of SoulIISoul piano and violins and a great flute.

Apparently Nothin’
Only real semi-hit in Holland, still a great message and nice dance groove.

Funky Yeh Funki (Mek It)
Great skit!

Talkin’ What I Feel
Nice rap performance by Masta Ace

All I Have (In Dub)
Not my favorite dub, but it’s got some great moments!

Move On
Pure energy! Miss Anderson’s vocals will tear up your sound system, heheh..

As We Come (To Be)
wow.. wow! WOW! Just love this track! (enough with the exclamation marks, willya?)
This is the perfect song to play while enjoying a lovely breakfast in bed with your loved one..

Step Right On (Dub)
Now this is what I call a great dub track! It’s the haunting keyboards, that great snare and hi-hat, hell the overall percussion on the background is mellowness to the max.. And the scratching.. zowie!

Freedom Suite: (I) Freedom/(II) Wanting/(III) To Be Free
You know like how bands wanna make this one song that’ll be their Masterwork, their defining moment in History, etc.? A lot of bands kinda don’t achieve such heights, but with Freedom Suite, I think that this band has succeeded.. Sixteen minutes long and not one boring second!!

First part - the ghostly choir work with Carleen Anderson’s vocals.. DAMN!
Although you don’t want me to live
I am existing,
and you keep resisting,
but I keep persisting

The second part - a rap done in the most fluent of ways, continuing the clear and heartfelt message of the first part with this great sample of which I never knew it’s origin, until Hieronymus Fox gave me a CD with rare grooves: it’s Aaron Neville with ‘Hercules’. Fifteen years later I finally get my reward, heheh..

Third and final part - great finale!

Conclusion
Still one of the best albums I’ve heard, so why isn’t it one of my Favorites? Well, dunno.. Just maybe because the total work isn’t that earth-shattering. Two or three tracks are fantastic grooves. Freedom Suite stands on its own: the emotions triggered by this track are of intense pride and sadness..
So maybe not a favorite coz I don’t play it that often or just because three or four great tracks don’t make a favorite? Still don’t know..
Just buy the friggin’ thing, have a listen and make up your own mind.

Rating: ★★★★★

Frenchy’s Favorites: The Brand New Heavies - “Heavy Rhyme Experience, Volume 1″

General Description
Artist/Band: The Brand New Heavies
Album Title: Heavy Rhyme Experience, Volume 1
Year: 1992

The Brand New Heavies - 'Heavy Rhyme Experience, Volume 1'

The original funksters on a hip-hop tip!
 
How I Got Into This Music
Ahh.. Just recovering from the fact that the album’s already more than 10 years old.. There, that’s better.. Where was I? Oh..
Anyway, The Brand New Heavies (BNH) is a band that reveres the old funk style of yesteryear and they play the funk smooth, groovy and sexaay.. With talented female vocalists like N’Dea Davenport and later on, Siedah Garrett, BNH created their own little niche within the whole British Acid jazz scene from the eighties and nineties (remember the Talking Loud record label?)
BNH’s fan base in the US consisted of a large number of rappers and rap music lovers, the funky music being exactly what performers would love to sample. So then came the idea to make an album which would be a collaboration between rappers and the real music from BNH, instead of sampled stuff.
History was made..

Tracks that got my attention:
(well, all of them actually, but still..)

Bonafied Funk feat. Main Source
Some tracks are like destined to be the ideal opening track for an album. This is one of them. Lazy bass, tight raps from the Main Source crew and a great chant chorus.

It’s Gettin’ Hectic feat. Gangstarr
I’m sure this collaboration inspired Guru to do his Jazzmatazz albums and DJ Premiere (extraordinary talent) started working with Branford Marsalis on the Buckshot LeFonque albums. You know you get quality when Gangstarr’s on the set!

Who Makes the Loot? feat. Grand Puba
Honeys spell “Grand Puba” when they wanna spell “relief”
Modest as ever, Puba hits the vibe perfectly! I know for sure that this track’d still work on a dance floor
Coming like a bull, so you better yell “Ole!”
heheh..

Wake Me When I’m Dead feat. Masta Ace
One of the best rap tracks ever performed and produced!
If this was an opera, I probably sing Figaro
Black kid from Brooklyn, but don’t call me nigger, no..

Never heard anything else from Masta Ace, but the speedy style that remains clear for the ear combined with the great bass loops and drums.. Damn!
According to the Jetsons, there’s no blacks in the future

Jump N’ Move feat. Jamalski
OH YEAH! Speed-ragga rapper Jamalski tearing up the mic on a groovy dancehall-funky hybrid track. You just have to slow down the pitch to get a clear listen to the lyrics as a whole. Man, this one would get a eighty year old granny to swing her new hips to dust..

Death Threat feat. Kool G. Rap
A East Coast/West Coast gangster style funk with the nastiest of macho lyrics ever! When I want to shut down the PC part of my brain, I play this track.
You don’t think you’re going under?
I got a bullet with your name, your address and your phone number

Nuff said!

State of Yo feat. The Black Sheep
Incredible track with great guitar work and of course, the mellow laid back raps of The Black Sheep. Remember Fatman Scoop’s hit “Be Faithful” (2003)? It included a direct sample of Black Sheep’s “This or That”.
Trivia should be my middle name..

Do Whatta I Gotta Do feat. Ed O.G.
Least favorite track, but still works fine..

Whatgabouthat feat. Tiger
Seventies cop TV show funk combined with rough and rugged West Indies style raps from Tiger: excellent!

Soul Flower feat. The Pharcyde
One of the best rap collectives of the nineties together with BNH make a great combo and an perfect track!

Conclusion
All-time favorite album, no doubt! Well, at least one of them, obviously.. There aren’t many albums you put in your player where you already know for sure that you’ll be enjoying at least eight tracks of it..
There never was a follow-up, that’s a shame. BNH are still doing their stuff, you should go and see them live, coz there’s a special magic that occurs when you see these guys on a stage. Perfect album!


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