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Showing posts with label gang starr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gang starr. Show all posts

Saturday, 25 May 2024

V.A. Saturday

In 1991 U.S. label 4th And Broadway, a subsidiary of Island Records with a focus on American dance music, pulled together a various artists compilation that tried to capitalise on the then recent upsurge in rap artists inspired by and sampling jazz. There was something in the air in the USA and the UK in the late 80s/ early 90s, jazz being mined for sounds, for styles and for substance- Spike Lee's Do The Right Thing may have been part of this, the DAISY Age hip hop groups (De la Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, The Jungle Brothers), the London based Acid Jazz label with acts like Galliano and Young Disciples. 

The album was released as The Rebirth Of Cool, the title a play on Miles Davis' 1957 album Birth Of The Cool, and featured fourteen jazz inspired, jazz sampling or jazz adjacent songs. I loved it, bought it in the summer of '91 and played it endlessly, sometimes going into the north west's boutique shops and wondering if I could get away with something a little jazz flavoured- a button up Gabicci style cardigan maybe. The graphics of jazz were beginning to find their way into flyers and the acid jazz sound would feed into what would become trip hop. The album was a mix of U.S. and U.K. acts, opening with Gang Starr's Jazz Thing, the foundation stone of the album really. Gang Starr were a great hip hop duo, GURU and DJ Premier's stripped down sound, two turntables and a microphone, GURU's easy lyrical flow and the short songs, a sound I loved for several of their albums. Jazz Thing (first released in 1990) works as a primer, sampled jazz drums and basslines, and rhymes that celebrate the jazz music of the 1930s, 40s, 50s and 60s- Bessie Smith, Theolonius Monk, Max Roach, John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, Sonny Rollins, Betty Carter- before concluding, 'the 90s will be the decade of a jazz thing'. 

Jazz Thing

Side 1 then unfolds with tracks from X- Clan, MC Mell'O', Soho, Dream Warriors, Izit and Galliano. Side 2 starts with Young Disciples, doyens of the London Acid Jazz label and scene- their song Apparently Nothin' was a hit in '91 and launched Carleen Anderson as a solo artist. On The Rebirth Of Cool they were represented by Step Right On, dusty early 90s funk with a jazzy feel and some Jimmy Smith style organ, James Brown and Roy Ayres samples and rap courtesy of London group Outlaw Posse. 

Step Right On

Side 2 has further jazz/ hip hop grooves from A Tribe Called Quest, Skatemaster Tate, Laquan, Caveman and Young MC and one from Stetsasonic, Talkin' All That Jazz, a track dating back to 1988. All That Jazz was a response to critics of hip hop who claimed that sampling was lazy, an act that showed those who did it lacked true musical talent. Stetsasonic bite back, led by producer Prince Paul, and over a sax and looped jazz drums and bass, fire off rhymes in all directions, placing hip hop and rap in the tradition of jazz, funk and soul.

Talkin' All That Jazz

The Rebirth Of Cool came back with further volumes The Rebirth Of Cool Too and then on, up to at least Volume 7. I bailed after the first, the law of diminishing returns setting in fairly quickly- and there were so many other things were going on in 1991 and into 1992. 

Friday, 20 September 2019

Maybe This Can Last Forever


I found this the other day via a Facebook group a friend added me to, a four track release from the middle of last year from a label called Giegling, based in the German town of Weimar (a place with some pertinent 20th century political history but not necessarily renowned for house and minimal dub techno). The e.p. was/is vinyl only and apart from their appearance on streaming media the four tracks contained within the grooves of the 12" don't seem to be available on any download sites. Some copies of the vinyl are advertised for sale at Discogs, starting at £66.67 and heading all the way up to €250 so I don't expect to getting my mitts on a copy any time soon. 

Maybe by Kettenkarussell is sublime- lush washes of synth and deep house drums, rising and swelling before the snare rattles in at around a minute and then the vocal, a repeated phrase borrowed from Love Like This by Faith Evans, and perfectly nails that point between happiness and sadness, darkness and dawn, coming at you in waves. Heady, spine tingling stuff.



After that the tracks that make up the rest of the e.p. are a little more abstract, revealing themselves over time, subtle and nuanced and less immediate than Maybe but just as capable of worming their way into the brain. Schlange by Ateq is breakbeat led, minimal techno, understated Teutonic machine funk. Tecsol by Edward is squiggly, loopy acid that breaks down into something quite serene after three minutes thirty-five and then heads off again for six more minutes of synth- mangling adventure. Moment Of Youth by Map.ache is glitchy, minimal techno, built around insistent drums, a twinkling riff and a Gang Starr sample.

Sunday, 25 June 2017

Various Artists


Back in 1991 this Various Artists compilation was stuck on my turntable for what seemed like months. The acid jazz scene had been born and in the USA jazz flavoured hip hop was briefly the cutting edge, partly led by Spike Lee's Mo' Better Blues film in 1990. This all fed into the emerging trip hop scene too I think. The Rebirth Of Cool was a fourteen track compilation opened by Gang Starr's Jazz Thing, with a swinging beat and pulsing bassline from DJ Premier and Guru's effortless rhymes recounting the history of jazz and its place importance now/then.

Jazz Thing

There are many fine moments among the rest of the songs and artists- X Clan's Raise The Flag, MC Mello, Dream Warriors, Stetsasonic's brilliant Talkin' All That Jazz, Galliano and Young Disciples from London's Acid Jazz label and Young MC. Between 1991 and 1998 4th And Broadway put out a further seven volumes and it lost its way a bit. I bailed out after Volume 2 but this one, the first, was a definite winner.

Thursday, 28 May 2015

Now What You Hear Is Not A Test


In 1991 CJ Mackintosh remixed Gang Starr's Take A Rest, starting with the 'Now what you hear is not a test' sample and then housifying it from there. This didn't go down too well with the goosedown jacket fraternity but hip-house had its place and I still like this remix, even if it is a tad dated. Guru and DJ Premier made their music sound so effortless.

Thursday, 18 July 2013

It's A Long Way To Go When You Don't Know Where You're Going


It's funny- having not listened to any hip-hop for years, not deliberately anyway, I've been undergoing a bit of a phase. Some select tracks have found their way onto the portable mp3 player that makes my commute more fun. Gang Starr have two songs on it at the moment but having listened to them this week they could end up with a lot more. I loved at least three of their albums back in the day- Step In The Arena, Daily Operation and Hard To Earn. Gang Starr often managed a perfect blend of Guru's easy flowing lyrics and DJ Premier's beats and sounds, a stripped back, minimal, economic sound. This one is a really good example...



And from Hard To Earn...

A Long Way To Go

The Edwin La Dell lithograph up top, Woburn Urns, is about as un-hip hop as it gets. Juxtapositions- I shit 'em (as Reg Presley never said).

Sunday, 29 July 2012

No Time To Play


During the summer of 1993 (which was *shakes head* nineteen years ago) one of the most played records in my room was Guru's Jazzmatazz. The Jazzmatazz album was a different beast from Gang Starr (who I also loved) replacing two turntables and a microphone with live instruments, loads of guests, loved up vibe. This song is the sound of summer, perfect now that summer has finally arrived in north-west England (or it did, last couple of days have eased off a bit on the sunshine and heat), spot on for a Sunday morning too. Dusty drumbeat, vinyl crackle, Ronny Jordan's sprightly guitar, Guru's laid back rhyme and DC Lee exhorting us to not waste any time, do it now, get out there, seize the day 'cos life is short y'know, all that kind of stuff. Never no time to play.

I loved Jazzmatazz Volume 1. I bought Volume 2 and played it maybe once. Until I googled it just now I'm not sure I even knew there were a Volume 3 and a Volume 4. Guru died last April.

No Time To Play