Archive for the "Hip Hop" Category

The Wild Bunch

wild-bunch-sketch

I started writing this post about The Wild Bunch a month or two back, but I couldn’t quite figure out how to talk about a crew that I actually know very little about. My lack of knowledge on these guys from their active days (1983-1986) makes sense, given that:

  1. I was still rocking single digits in years back then, and
  2. I lived in North America and these guys were from Bristol.

My interest in them mostly comes not from who The Wild Bunch were, but who some of the guys in the crew eventually became; after the Wild Bunch splintered up, Nellee Hooper went on to become a member of Jazzie B’s Soul II Soul soundsystem, Mushroom, Daddy G and 3D teamed up to become Massive Attack and Tricky would have a successful solo career as a vocalist/producer on his own after contributing to Massive Attack’s first two albums. All those post-Wild Bunch projects had a pretty profound effect on me personally.

Soul II Soul put me right on my ass the first time I heard “Keep On Movin’” on Energy 1200 back in 1989. Snagging their full album (on cassette, obviously) ended up being my very first dance music purchase.

Soul II Soul – Keep On Movin’
Club Classics, Vol 1 (1989)
http://www.dailymotion.com/videoxvfmt

Massive Attack’s first 2 albums got heavy heavy rotation on my stereo in the mid-90s. The video for “Karmacoma” was always on MuchMusic (back in the day when they actually played videos instead of the pap that’s on now) so I picked up a copy of the “Protection” LP and was instantly hooked. Soon after that buy I purchased Massive’s first album “Blue Lines”, which easily ranks on my Top 10 Albums of All Time list.

Massive Attack – Unfinished Sympathy
Blue Lines (1991)
http://www.dailymotion.com/videox5svr

Massive Attack – Karmacoma
Protection (1994)
http://www.dailymotion.com/videox1ae65

Tricky was another MuchMusic find; they were playing the video for “Overcome” on a regular basis. You’d be hard-pressed to find a more sombre, brooding tune on the airwaves in 1995, and given that I was a sombre, brooding teenager at the time it’s easy to see why I bought a copy of “Maxinquaye” soon afterward. It was a more challenging listen than any of Soul II Soul or Massive Attack’s output, but the weirdness of it made me a fan.

Tricky – Overcome
Maxinquaye (1995)
YouTube Preview Image

I was kind of shocked at first when I found out that these acts all had worked together previously in a UK soundsystem back in the mid-80s, but as I got used to the idea it started to make more sense. They were all on a similar wavelength but took different paths; dance music (Soul II Soul), mood music (Massive Attack) and hybrid rock/hip-hop (Tricky). They all had a relaxed approach to urban music, and they all showed a heavy soul influence.

You can see the common thread that runs through them all in “The Wild Bunch – Story of a Sound System”, a mix that crew retiree DJ Milo put together in 2002. The mix is a showcase of all the different styles (hip-hop, electro, disco, early house) the Wild Bunch pushed when they were up and running. Along with the tunes he used to play, Milo includes short clips of Wild Bunch performances complete with crowd noises to give the listener an idea of what kind of party Bristol’s finest soundsystem hosted.

The Wild Bunch
[excerpt from "Bombin'"]
YouTube Preview Image

Anyways, enough yapping.

wild-bunch-mix

  1. The Wild Bunch – Hands In The Air One Time (Live Intro)
  2. The Russell Brothers – Party Scene
  3. The Crash Crew – On The Radio
  4. Spoonie Gee – Love Rap
  5. T La Rock – It’s Yours
  6. The Wild Bunch – Tearin’ Down The Avenue (Live)
  7. Knights Of The Turntables – Techno Scratch
  8. Newcleus – Jam On Revenge (The Wikki Wikki Song)
  9. Micronawts – Smurph Across The Surf
  10. Man Parrish – Hip Hop Be Bop (Don’t Stop) / Sucker DJ (Suckapella)
  11. Younger Generation – We Rap More Mellow
  12. Empress – Dyin’ To Be Dancin’
  13. Fresh Band – Come Back Lover
  14. BBCS & A – Rock Shock
  15. Odyssey – Inside Out
  16. Evelyn “Champagne” King – I’m In Love
  17. Teena Marie – Behind The Groove
  18. Thelma Houston – You Used To Hold Me So Tight
  19. The Wild Bunch – Double Fresh (Live)
  20. Visual – The Music Got Me
  21. Montana Sextet – Who Needs Enemies With Friends Like You
  22. Chain Reaction – Dance Freak
  23. Mr. Fingers – Can You Feel It
  24. The Wild Bunch – Dub Plate Fashion (Live)
  25. The Wild Bunch – The Look Of Love

Download: DJ Milo – The Wild Bunch – Story of a Sound System

Wu-Tang vs The Beatles?

I got a tip from Soundcloud a couple of days ago that The Smoking Section had upped a new bit of material to the site. I skipped the last few files that they’d shared, but the name of this one intrigued me right from the get-go: “Wu-Tang vs The Beatles – Enter The Magical Mystery Chambers”

Wu-vs-Beatles-cover

Too weird. One of the best hip hop crews of all time against one of the best bands of all time? I was half-intrigued, half-filled with that “urg, this is going to be a trainwreck, some unknown dude’s clamoring for attention, big time” feeling. So I clicked on the thumbnail for the LP cover, saw what you see above, and laughed. I figured that this Tom Caruana dude went all tongue-in-cheek when he put this project together, so I hit play on the file and gave it a listen.

I got four tracks in and I was hooked. Wu-Tang acapellas with beats made with Beatles instrumentals. I went about finding the full release right away.

Now, despite me getting hooked in and whatnot, I wasn’t entirely wrong with my initial “uh oh” feeling. In one sense, this LP definitely isn’t 100% as advertised. It turns out that only 6 of the 27 tunes use genuine Beatles instrumentals; the rest of the tracks use instrumentals from Beatles covers by other bands.

George, you so gangsta.

George, you so gangsta.

Knowing this only dampened my initial yes-ness for “Enter the Magical Mystery Chambers” a little bit, and all the bonuses (Beatles outtakes, clips from interviews with crazed Beatles fans, Ol’ Dirty singing “Love Me Do” with John and Paul) made up for it.

LP highlights? Give a listen below:

Killah Priest – Cross My Heart vs Marty Gold’s “Yesterday”

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Method Man’s bit on “Uzi (Pinky Ring)” (@ 2:18), on top of the original “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”

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Rae, Ghostface & Cappadonna – Daytona 500 vs “Good Day Sunshine” by Roy Redmond

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Inspectah Deck – Forget Me Not vs “You Won’t See Me” by Ernest Ranglin

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Want to snag the whole project? Download a copy of it here. For all you trainspotting types, I include the names of each Beatles tune sampled in the Comments section of each track.

Let me know what you think.

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