Showing posts with label sound system. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sound system. Show all posts

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Music: "Heaven, via Shanghai", exploring the soundsystem culture rocking China's biggest city

-Thump magazine

It was pretty obvious to anyone arriving at the club who Biggaton was. Standing outside in the smoking area was a Rastafarian guy, dreadlocks tied into a massive red green and yellow hat, dressed entirely in white. Later that evening, he jumped down from the DJ booth, strode into the middle of the dancefloor and grabbed a small Chinese girl from the audience. "Baby, tell me where you're from," he said, in his thick Jamaican accent. "Hangzhou," she responded.
"I don't know Hangzhou, but me, I'm from Jamaica, and there, the galdem see me and they say, 'oh Biggaton! Why you all in white, are you an angel?' and I say 'no baby, I'm no angel, but I can take you to heaven!'"
Biggaton—a dancehall star from Mandeville, Jamaica—put on a great show, but in reality I'd come that night to see Skinny Brown, the DJ who'd brought him over from the Caribbean. For the last five years Skinny has been running a night called Popasuda. It's the kind of night where you'll hear songs made in a basement in India played back to back with tracks from Ethiopia, with afrobeats from Nigeria, Azonto from Ghana, and Brazillian baille funk all thrown into the mix. 
Oh, and it takes place in a sweaty warehouse in Shanghai.
Dada, Popasuda's home, is tucked away between nondescript buildings at the intersection of Xing Fu Lu—which translates from Mandarin as the "road of happiness." Situated down an alley, Dada is a graffiti-covered space, with a small chain link fence hanging down from one wall upon which a revolving Popasuda logo is projected. It sways every time someone dances into it.
"What I love about Popasuda," said Skinny Brown when we sat down to talk a few days before his show with Biggaton, "is that I have the Cameroonians in one corner, the Senegalese and the Jamaicans in another, the South Africans, the Brazilians, the Germans and the British all scattered around. Then when you play a track and they know it they come running up to the decks."
Shanghai, despite being fundamentally international, is a city in which stratification can take place incredibly quickly. On any given night you might stumble into a club that feels wholly the preserve of French expats, or others playing Mando-pop where the only foreign faces are the Russian "models" paid 300 RMB to dance on the tables with high rollers. Popasuda, on the other hand, brings as mixed a crowd as you're likely to see anywhere in the world. I've seen the head of one of Shanghai's trendiest art spaces—Shanghainese through and through—his button-down shirt wrapped around his waist, his vest soaked through with sweat clinging to his paunch, swaying, while behind him a group of Indian exchange students lose their shit over a piece of Urdu ephemera.
Skinny Brown is the embodiment of this audience. Raised in Toronto, he speaks six languages—Japanese, Hindi, Portuguese, Mandarin, English and Urdu. He drifted through college and ended up DJing in Tokyo and living in Yokohama. Having left Japan after his visa expired, Skinny found himself soaking up the sound of baille funk in Rio. From Brazil it was on to Pakistan where he spent time with a cousin in Karachi. His excursion to Shanghai came about by accident. "I had one of those 72 hour visas, for transit," he told me "but I guess that was ten years ago..."
A decade on and he's trying something different. "I want to build a soundsystem here, with dubplates, and clashes. The real thing." When I asked him if he felt that Shanghai was a reggae city, he shook his head. "No, not really, but it's coming up." His current method is beginning with a dubplate intro to his set, and then throwing dancehall in later. "It's easy to cross over into dancehall, future dancehall and trappy stuff at 160bpm. A lot of it is driven by that, that BPM and the need to find something that is slightly different."

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Music: "Scratch" Perry has a new musical itch

According to Pitchfork, Jamaican musical sensation, Lee “Scratch” Perry, who has worked and inspired artists such as Bob Marley,  Paul McCartney , The Clash, Beastie Boys, and plenty others, has announced that he will be releasing a new studio album this year.
Must Be Free will be released on September 23rd, it is following up his 2014 Back on the Controls, and features a smattering of incredible musicians and producers. Subatomic Sound System, who is featured in the short documentary series for Intel’s Great Big Story Series, Groovematist, and Phlobi are just a few of the artist who helped Perry create this astounding 13-song collection.
The album will feature plenty of the sound that Perry is infamous for, but he has chosen to add a modern flair to his work due to all the emerging technology. The need to incorporate the modern world was too alluring for Perry not to use.
With the help of social media and the emerging online world, Lee “Scratch” Perry will be able to showcase his genius to the world even better than he used to. Hopefully this will mean a full tour to help support the new album and show the people what this man’s genius looks like on a live stage.
Must Be Free Official Tracklist:
01. Psycho Dread
02. Rat Race
03. House of Sin
04. Isabel
05. Jungle Tongue
06. No Evil
07. No Sorrow
08. On Nigeria
09. Strip Off
10. Too Much Is Too Much
11. Therapist
12. Must Be Free
13. House of Sin (Remix)

Friday, September 4, 2015

Dancehall the Documentary, Riddim Me Dis

As drum machines and computers began to generally displace bands in the 80s, the toaster, or DJ in local parlance became increasingly front and centre and, a consequence, the development of backing tracks, or riddims, over which he could spit rhymes unimpeded, became the toaster paramount expression.
This riddim craze was dominate the genre for at least 20 years, and yielded some of the very best known tracks, the majority still guaranteed party movers to this day. The following list represents a minuscule portion of what's out there.
Sleng Teng
The "granddaddy of the computerized riddims, and the name of the monster hit ("Unda mI Sleng Teng") by Wayne Smith that popularized it. Smith found the computerized sound in Noel Davey's keyboard, and together he and Davey arranged the riddim, slowed it down, matched it to Smith's key, and rehearsed on it with lyrics inspired by Barrington Levy's "Under Mi Sensi" and Yellowman's "Under me fat ting", before taking it to Jammy's studio in late 1984. The riddim itself is apparently an attempt to recreate Eddie Cochran's 1959 rockabilly song "Somethin' Else." It is a pattern found in the Casio MT-40 home keyboard.
After the riddim was brought to the studio and Jammy heard it, he then slowed it further and placed piano and a clap on it.Jammy recorded a number of other artists on the original backing track including Tenor Saw (with "Pumpkin Belly"), and Johnny Osbourne (with "Buddy Bye"). The tunes were first unleashed at a now legendary soundclash between Jammy's own sound system and Black Scorpio at Waltham Park Road on February 23, 1985.
Some of Jammy's productions based on the rhythm were released on the albums Sleng Teng Extravaganza and Sleng Teng Extravaganza 95.

Playground
With its menacing keyboard intro launching immediately into hip-shaking drum patterns, the Jeremy Harding creation was exactly what the "Doctor" ordered, the 'Doctor" in this case being Beenie Man, whose career-defining global hit "Who Am I" surfed this premium riddim track to unchallenged success, the beat having already served Sean Paul ("Infiltrate"). It also served to introduce Mr Vegas - via "Hands In the Air (Nike Air)" who would later go on to collaborate with Sean Paul ("Hot Gyal Today") and establish himself as a hitmaker in his own right, even to this day.

Diwali
Keyboardist and producer Steven "Lenky" Marsden provided the soundtrack to many of the international dancehall hits of the early 2000s through this  Indian dance-music influenced track, which featured on hits by Sean Paul, Bounty Killer, Elephant Man, Lumidee, Brick & Lace (although the latter's record, "Love is Wicked" was actually a 2007 release), It is recognized as arguably the most prominent and popular riddim of 2002 based on the number of top-ten hit songs that charted in Jamaica or internationally that used the instrumental, such as "Get Busy," "No Letting Go," "Pon de Replay," "Never Leave You," "Overcome," "Elephant Message," "Sufferer," "Party Time," in addition to the aforementioned. To this day, the riddim and the songs sampling it are still guaranteed party movers. 
The beat is characterized by syncopated clapping, and it was given the name Diwali for its. The riddim has been featured in American television commercials via Sean Paul's song "Get Busy

Joyride
Buju Banton, Frisco Kid and Lady Saw ("Sycamore Tree") were but a few of the acts who rode this propulsive riddim from the reclusive "mad scientist" of dancehall, Dave Kelly, to local and regional chart joy. Having transitioned from sound engineer to producer at the famous Penthouse Studios, Kelly departed and formed his now famous "Madhouse" imprint with perhaps his most famous collaborator being Cham (aka Baby Cham) for whom he produced the worldwide smash "Ghetto Story" and Terror Fabulous, who voiced another worldwide topper, "Action" with Nadine Sutherland.

Pepperseed
Again from the fertile, well-guarded mind of Kelly, comes this somewhat underappreciated gem of a riddim. It may not have resonated on international pop charts the way that Diwali and Playground did, but it powers some much-loved, authentic dancehall hits such as Frisco Kid's "Big Speech" and Daddy Screw's "Big Tings A Gwaan"

Military
Shane Brown, son of legendary Treasure Isle engineer Errol Brown, conceptualized this hardcore staple, which backs Sizzla's 'I'm With The Girls" Elephant Man's "Badmind Anthem" and "Step Pon Dem" by Assassin/Agent Sasco among others. Its marching syncopation, drum rolls and military-style keyboard lines made it an instant hit that will still get "forwards" at sessions and parties.

Drop Leaf

Not a strict dncehall riddim in its initial conception, this simple yet haunting guitar riff was nonetheless quickly adopted by the likes of TOK ("Footprints") Tanya Stephens ("After You") and Bermudian star Collie buddz ("Young Girl") after providing the 'breakout' (pardon the pun) hit for the then incarcerated crooner Jah Cure - the lyrically prescient "Longing For". Drop Leaf was the creation of Donovan "Corleon" Bennett who, along with his cousin Oje - latterly known to the music world as Protoje - came up through the sound system route (the Vendetta sound in their native Manchester