Showing posts with label DJ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DJ. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 October 2017

CMFCP October Podcast

Curious Music for Curious People
October Podcast




New new and new old music from around the globe - it's the resurrected CMFCP podcast series! Featuring new new and new old music from the likes of Jazzman Records, Psychemagik, Tramp Records, Monsaldo Y los Figuridos, Actual Doctor, Tundra and more.





  1. Michael Embellon - Gravity (Psychemagik Edit)
  2. Junior Byron - Trying to Hold On
  3. Initial Talk & Deena O - I'm in Love
  4. Coco Bill - Evita (Don Dayglow Edit)
  5. Sandy Lee - Song For Stormy
  6. Charlie Chisholm Bosstet - Wade In the Air
  7. Gene Faith - When My Ship Comes In
  8. Arian - Nisam Taj
  9. A Pila el Arroz - Ghetto Kumba (Afro Rework)
  10. Monsalvo Y Los Fotrajidos - Abeja
  11. Monogram Caribbean Orchestra - Calypso Cha Cha for Spooks
  12. Actual Doctor - Revolution Type
  13. Aeon Musk - Time
  14. Tundra - Got U
  15. Africaine 808 - Everybody Wants You
  16. The General - Tough De Things

Sunday, 27 August 2017

Jackson - Push Through EP

Jackson                                             
Push Through EP (Self-Released)          

If Stevie Wonder, Pharrel and Public Enemy were taken hostage by Sun-Ra, Mogwai and Mike Patten, forced to spend a decade devoid of outside contact in a Fritzl-esque cellar, and then forced to record an album, it would sound exactly like this. Exactly. Like. This. I fucking guarantee it.



Following on from assured sophomore release Time, Jackson deliver on their unquestionable promise with new record Push Through. 
Building on what is becoming a signature sound, the band, helmed by Jack Baldus, combine world-class musicianship with the kind of relentless creativity that can be as demanding as it is invigorating. Songs swerve violently, lurch and crash through their arrangements; yet every step is deliberate and meticulously performed. Influences and styles coalesce like battery hens, each one fracturing into a mix that defies categorisation; an amnesiac captivated by an unplaced reminiscence; something sinister; something sweet. Golden eggs indeed.

The band are led by songwriter, keyboard-wizard and lyricist Jack Baldus, whose increasingly impressive list of credits include work with Sure Thing. DJ Die, J. Morrison and Laid Blak. Joining him is regular vocalist O.Love, AKA 5 times DMC UK scratch champion DJ Asian Hawk, who combines sharp cuts, choice samples and impassioned vocal performances. This combo are the brains trust, behind which come the exceptional talents of a band of semi-regulars on session duty across drum, guitar, and brass instruments... including Gary Alesbrook on trumpet, he of Kasabian fame.




I could list the influences I hear in the record, but that would do a disservice to the composer, Jack Baldus. His uncompromising dedication to creating his own sound is clearly the driving force here. If you had to classify, you'd call this a jazz-funk-prog fusion record, akin to those the likes of Stanley Clarke gave to the 70s. Yet there's something Punk about the refusal to water down arrangements for modern audiences. 
I'll explain. Punk itself was a violent backlash against the proggy, jazzy sounds of the 70s that irked a generation of upstarts who wanted their music to stand for something, and saw the beardy prog bands as the preserve of a snobby upper-class. These days, music is most often delivered in soundbites; easily digestible simplicity set to a checklist of tired tropes. A horse! A horse! My kingdom for a song without the word 'tonight' in the chorus!
The received wisdom is this: Audiences are over-saturated, over-stimulated and under-educated. The steady dumbing-down of modern radio since the Telecommunications Act of 1996 has had its desired* effect, and the audience clamours for More Of The Same.

Of course, that's not the whole story, and the internet has enabled the proliferation of new styles and sounds, but the audience has dwindled. Represses outsell new records on wax and Ed Sheeran and Taylor Swift outsell everyone by a ratio of approximately 10000:1

There is simply no common-sense in a self-funded, self-employed professional musician with only a modest fanbase putting themselves through the agonies and ecstasies of creating a band, recording and gigging when it's one as wildly inventive and academic as Jackson. 

By railing against this received wisdom, Jackson's Push Through delivers a record that might just remind you why you fell in love with music in the first place. You deserve music with passion. You deserve music that aspires to be the best. You deserve songs that mean something to the writer. You deserve Push Through.

Here's a short teaser video





Buy Push Through Here: Bandcamp / iTunes


Also since Jackson isn't the most Google-friendly search term going, here are some links to connect on social media

WEBSITE – FACEBOOK – TWITTER – INSTAGRAM – SOUNDCLOUD


*That's a whole other story, but if you're interested in how the Telecommunications Act affected diversity in the musical landscape, I recommend this illuminating report


Friday, 25 August 2017

The Allergies - Push On

The Allergies' debut album introduced the world to the way they effortlessly fuse funk, soul, disco, hip-hop and breaks into dancefloor-ready nuggets of ear candy. Taking classic sounds and reshaping for the modern age is the signature that won them plaudits across the globe. 

Not ones to rest on their laurels, it hasn't taken long for them to deliver more of the goods on their second full-length album, 'Push On'. As well as taking the successful formula of the first record and expanding on the sound with raw Funk, Psych, Northern Soul, and Boogie influences, The Allergies enlisted two giants of underground Hip-Hop to bless mics on the album as well. 

After a hugely successful collaboration on their debut LP, once again the dynamic lyricism and production skills of the inimitable Andy Cooper (Ugly Duckling) are present and correct in this new collection. Besides bringing the party on tracks like 'Main Event', he also settles scores with 'It Won't Be Me', before destroying all-comers on the battle Rap behemoth, 'Buzzsaw'. Also joining in on the action is UK MC veteran, Dr Syntax (The Mouse Outfit, Foreign Beggars) who prescribes some more healthy Hip-Hop advice on the track 'Remedy'.

Other highlights include the vintage Soul stomper, 'Entitled to That', Sixties uptempo groover, 'Hold You Close', and the fantastic little strutter, 'Get Down On You'. All in all it's a brand new set of future classics from your new favourite funky beatmakers, The Allergies.

Get it below

Tuesday, 4 August 2015

August Podcast!

August 2015 Podcast now up!
We're delighted to bring you our very first podcast! We dig into some very odd records and talk bollocks. What more could you want.
It'll be up on iTunes shortly, but for now you can hear it Mixcloud...

Tracklist
  • Idris Muhammad - Soulful Drums
  • La Batteria - Scenario
  • Tullio de Piscopo - Drum Fantasy
  • Dr Strangely Strange - Strangely Strange yet Oddly Normal
  • Belle Epoque - Taste of Destruction
  • The Night Terrors - Pavor Nocturnis
  • Awolnation - Hollow Moon (Bad Wolf)
  • Propagandhi - Haile Selasse Up Your Ass
  • Powerglove - Blood Dragon Theme
  • David Hasslehoff - True Survivor