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Showing posts with label daryl pandy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daryl pandy. Show all posts

Saturday, 23 May 2026

Oblique Saturdays

A series for Saturdays in 2026 inspired by Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt's set of cards, Oblique Strategies (Over One Hundred Worthwhile Dilemmas). Eno and Schmidt created them to be used to unblock creative impasses and approach problems from unexpected angles. Each week I'll turn over an Oblique Strategy card and post a song or songs inspired by the suggestion. 

Last week's Oblique Strategy suggestion was Don't break the silence.

My responses to this were A Life Of Silence by Scott Fraser and Timothy J. Fairplay plus Simon and Garfunkel, Bill Drummond's No Music Day and Mark Peters. The Bagging Area collective were prompted to suggest Enjoy The Silence by Depeche Mode (this had several suggestions), Elliott Smith, Delirium, Bjork's It's Oh So Quiet, Durutti Column, Crass' Sound Of Free Speech, Kate, Julian Cope, The Silence, Ranking Dread, John Cage, The Delgados, Deep Purple and Kula Shaker, and Fugazi. That list is a radio show/ mix tape in itself. Thank you to Jez, Beerfeuledlad, Chris, C, Rol, Japsikeliz, Ernie, hsd, JC and Walter. 



This week's Oblique Strategy is this- Humanise something free of error.

It didn't spark much in me at first, few initial responses which is what often happens when I choose a card. I can see how in the recording studio a band/ artist could apply that suggestion- mess it up, put the human element in, put  mistake back in that you took out earlier. 

Then I thought about house music and those early 80s records (and many made sicne) where the music is totally flawless in terms of being computer assisted. Programmed drums, sequenced basslines, Midi, synths and keys playing perfect electronic notes. And then an unmistakably human vocal on top that took the robotic/ programmed element and humanised it, something like this endlessly brilliant slice of 1986 Chicago house....

Love Can't Turn Around

Farley Jackmaster Funk and Daryl Pandy, Daryl being the very human vocalist.

I also then thought of this song by Kurt Vile, Bassackwards, a nine minute long opus from 2018 where the music is free of error- acoustic guitars, harp and drums all locked in, loose but controlled psychedelic folk-rock with little bursts of perfectly deployed backwards guitar and feedback and on top Kurt's vocal, very human and real, a long sigh in the face of existential dread. 

Bassackwards

The video is peak 70s beach nostalgia. 


I typed Humanise something free of error into Google and found a book by that title by Sarah Piegay Espenon, a visual research project about climate change and man- made weather modification. I imagine she took the title from Eno and Schmidt's Oblique Strategies. One of the reviews says that the book is 'an oblique response to... issues of power and left opened visual associations along the thin line between peaceful and hostile usage of geoengineering' (read it here and see some of the photos) which sounds like it very well fit in with some of the things Crass were concerned about in the late 70s and early 80s. 

Feel free to leave your own Oblique suggestions in the comment box. 

Saturday, 28 December 2019

Random Selections From The Shelves


On Boxing Day night sitting in the room with all the records in it we played the game where someone pulls a record at random from the shelves and we play it. First to go was my daughter, who had already said she didn't like what my brother- in- law were listening to when she came in- 'it's not music, it's just noises' (Richard Norris' Abstractions Vol. 2). She was given the first go and pulled out St Etienne's 1994 12" single Pale Movie.

Pale Movie is off Tiger Bay, the sleeve with a tiger on both front and back. I photographed the tiger above at Port Lympne safari park in Kent a few years ago. I don't think keeping tigers in cages is a good idea (apart from the obvious conservation arguments) but the tigers at Lympne had a lot of room and seeing one close up and hearing it roar was pretty exciting. I digress. We played the single version of Pale Movie from the choice of four mixes on the single. Pale Movie is classic mid- 90s St Etienne, equal parts Eurobeat, Spanish guitar and Sarah singing lyrics about a boy and girl ('he is so dark and moody/she is the sunshine girl'). Pete, Bob and Sarah went to Nerja in Spain to shoot the video.



I went back to the 12" afterwards to re- listen to the other three mixes, all of which were worth giving a spin. Mark 'Spike' Stent, the man who mixed the song (and Hug My Soul from Tiger Bay as well), did the Stentorian Dub, a straightforward but effective clubby remix- plenty to enjoy in it with its bleepy synths and chunky drums.

Pale Movie (Stentorian Dub)

The longest remix was ten minutes from Kris Needs in his Secret Knowledge guise. It starts with an extended intro which builds into the first of several peaks. The Secret Knowledge Trouser Assassin mix goes pretty trancey with pummelling drums and Sarah's vocals dropped in along with the kitchen sink. Kris Needs was a master of this kind of thing in the mid 90s.

Pale Movie (Secret Knowledge Trouser Assassin Mix)

Finally a remix by Underworld (credited solely to Rick Smith), the Lemonentry Mix, one that clocks in at just over four minutes, very short for Underworld at the time. Rick worked on Tiger Bay too, mixing and programming Like A Motorway, Cool Kids Of Death and Urban Clearway. The Underworld remix of Cool Kids Of Death is one I'll come back to when I do a follow up to the Underworld remixes post from a week or two ago. The Lemonentry Mix is a slowed down, dubby affair, darker and moodier than the rest, with Sara's vocal intact.

Pale Movie (Lemonentry Mix)

Just to show how random the following selections from the shelves were my niece followed St Etienne with Gnod and a song from their Just Say No To The Psycho Right Wing Capitalist Fascist Industrial Death Machine album. We played the opening song, Bodies For Money, a glorious piece of feedback guitar led noise, every instrument recorded with the needle tipping into the red and Gnod raging against late period capitalism.



Mrs Swiss then pulled out a six track maxi- single The House Sound Of Chicago and as Gnod's noise dissolved we had Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk's 1986 song Love Can't Turn Around, featuring the sublime vocals of Daryl Pandy, a song that was the first US house track to hit the UK charts. It still sounds huge, crashing pianos, 808s and 303s. Magical.

Love Can't Turn Around

Fun for all the family as I'm sure you can see.



Friday, 2 July 2010

Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk ft. Daryl Pandy 'Love Can't Turn Around'


Rewind a few years before Bassheads' Merseyside take on house music and we get this prime piece of classic house. How quickly did original house music become known as classic? Can't have been more than a few years, which I guess shows how quickly the dance music scene moved on and mutated. Wonder whether Daryl Pandy had a tough time at school with that name? I'm not sure many school registers would be taken with a straight face with Funk, Farley coming halfway down the page either. Great record anyway.

09 Love Can't Turn Around.wma