Friday 29 April 2011

Del Naja's Blog

Obviously, I really respect 3D as an artist, musically and in fine art. On the other hand, his blog is fantastically shit.
It is in the form of a "photo blog", which is fine in itself - an efficient medium. But... there must be quality control. For example, here is a good picture that I enjoy looking at in a photo blog:

Here is something that I do not enjoy looking at in a photo blog:

What the fuck is that? That's the sort of pseudo-artsy texture bullshit that you get when you give a camera to a 13 year old girl who listens to Linkin Park. I could see that if I went outside on a cold January morning. Waste of internet.

And this picture here:

Oh look, it's 3D, and he's playing the part of an armed robber! Nice that he's trying to relate to black ghetto culture, but the shoes aren't fooling anyone.

Also, he plugs the things he cares about too much. It's embarrassing. I mean, I understand that Massive Attack like to think they're nice and political and shit (a lot of bands do) and they've done some nice things, such as giving proceeds to charities,  but you need to put a limit on this sort of thing.

Supporting a Wikileaks campaign is a sensible thing for Massive Attack to do. It's up their street, liberal etc.. But saving trees? Really? Couldn't you skip that one and give us a teaser for a new EP, or maybe some original artwork? And I haven't even heard of this campaign, a protest against tax evasion. Who the fuck thought of that?! Everyone already hates tax dodging apart from tax dodgers. You don't need to make a campaign against it. Just report that shit to the authorities if you have knowledge, otherwise you can't do anything about it unless you're a regular Columbo and want to sniff around peoples filing cabinets whilst they're asleep.


So please 3D, sort your damn blog out, because I'd love to read it if it weren't so shit.

Monday 25 April 2011

Tobacco - Fucked Up Friends (2008)

It's trippy, it's hip-hoppy, does this make Tobacco's "Fucked up Friends" trip-hop? Probably not.
But it IS the finest non-trip-hop psychedelic hip-hop album out there (that's a bit too niche a market to aim for, but he's selling records so is obviously doing something right).

The album is archetypical summer music. Whether you're driving with your windows down, or enjoying a refreshing hops-based alcoholic beverage in the sun, or smoking illegal substances (not an activity I like to partake in, but I know lots of people do, and I don't want to exclude them because I'm a nice guy) this album will capture (and enhance) your positive emotions.
So, what makes Tobacco special? Let's identify the elements.

1) Lo-Fi production - The use of analogue synthesisers and tape music is sweet and leads to some very thick sounds. The first track, "Street Trash" is a particularly strong example of this. The bass synth is covered in noise, making a fuzzy sound over low beats for a head-popping experience. It reminds us all of the variety of sounds that can't really be replicated by digital technologies.
Also, vocoders being used well. Not like the kiddies with their microKORGs and trendy rock bands and haircuts. No, not at all. As seen in "Dirt", the vocoder is used to enhance the psychedelic experience, rather than use as a spot-effect. Which is lame.

2) Hooks galore - This is not Animals as Leaders. I'm not expecting a technical experience using 12 different chords in 4 bars in a 13/8 time signature in Diminished Lydian mode in D. I'm expecting something cool and catchy, and Tobacco never fails to deliver this, with ever-so-hummable leads which will buzz around your head like a disabled fly in a glass box. The harmonies that Tobacco does offer are always used effectively.
At times I take a step back from the album and note that, in reality, the album actually offers very little in terms of musical phrases. In fact, since there are 16 tracks on the album, I'd say that there are probably about 16 different intrinsic musical phrases. But I suppose this adds to the hypnoticism of the album.

3) Feels good man (or inc.) - Since you have access to the internet, there are probably moments during your life when you feel unhappy, since the internet=sadness. But fear not, because this is cheerful as fuck. And danceable. If you want to feel gloomy and think of your ex-girlfriend whilst masturbating and crying (followed by a quick self-harm session), don't listen to this album. Go for "Third" by Portishead.

Actually, as part of a social experiment conducted and carried out by me, James Skelly, I have this task for you: Start your masturbating and crying session (whilst thinking about your ex), and whilst doing so play the song "Grease Wizard" on repeat. My hypothesis is that you will become too happy to continue. Please post your results, preferably with before and after pictures as scientific evidence.

Thursday 21 April 2011

Father Time strikes Portishead

So yeah, old news I know, but Portishead are going to be releasing a new album soon enough, as Geoff Barrow tells BBC 6 Music. But that's common knowledge, and yes, we are all very excited judging by the strange changes which have occurred in their charity release "Chase the Tear".
What I really wanted to point out was something else.

When the hell did they get so old?!




AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

What happened? Where did the time all go? Oh wait, it's been like... 13 years since NYC live. But still. I mean, she could be my mother. Easily. Adrian Utley looks like the sort of guy that goes to the pub with your dad, only to complain that it's too noisy and that the Guinness tastes like water. And you don't understand why your dad likes him. And then your uncle comes along and they all get really drunk and start making inappropriate comments and tell you that you can't handle your beer in slurred voices, despite that you are designated driver. And then it reaches 11:45 and they're all tired and one of them falls asleep.
But I digress.

What happened to the real Beth Gibbons?

I guess she died with the rest of the 90's. Obviously, the band has produced some fine music in the 21st century, but in reality, don't we want the friendly groove of economic growth, a labour government and Dummy?

On a largely unrelated note, the line-up for Portishead's All Tomorrow's Parties looks tasty. If only I had the money and desire to go.

Massive Attack - Blue Lines (1991)

How else can one start a blog without trip-hop without first writing about the album "Blue Lines" by Massive Attack? It remains, along with Portishead's "Dummy", the most prolific trip-hop album ever. Yes, and that includes Mezzanine.

So, to start: Massive Attack started as a sound system in Bristol called "The Wild Bunch". Now, there are a couple of things that hit me whilst looking at that sentence.

1) Bristol - When I think of Bristol, first I think of trip-hop. Then I think of the slave trade.
2) Sound System - When I think of "Sound Systems" (In this context) I think of Dancehall music and MCs and... not white people.

These two pieces of information are important to the album Blue Lines, and to Massive Attack as a whole. If we look at the members, we will notice that two of the 3 primary members at the time were black. So was frequent contributor Horace Andy. So here is a primarily black group, sitting in the slave capital of England in a scene which is largely of black culture.

Why did Blue Lines find the sound it did? Why didn't it turn out to be a hip-hop album? Because let's face it, it is a completely different entity to hip-hop at that time (for example Dr Dre's "The Chronic" was to be released the following year).
There are several likely reasons. This was not The Bronx. Hip-Hop was not as influential in the UK as the USA (our biggest hip-hop producer at that moment was Coldcuts). The influence was moreso reggae and dancehall music, joined with the dance scene of the late 80s and early 90s. Hip-hop, no doubt, was an element, but not necessarily the primary one.
And with this said, there was obviously more of a white influence on the music than in hip-hop - with Del Naja providing a creative force, and Cameron McVey producing, the album was not one which was racially confined, as early hip-hop was (Grandmaster Flash's "The Message" was hardly aiming to reach a white audience, was it?). As evident in the track "Unfinished Sympathy", Shara Nelson shows that the more accessible genre of soul was closer to Massive Attack's sound.

Indeed, the various of influences of trip-hop seem to have amalgamated in the legendary club "The Dugout", which Del Naja described as "probably the only place in Bristol where black and white people could hang out together, because of the music". DJs played funk, soul, hip-hop, electro and reggae there, a highly fertile soil for the genre that would germinate from it. We can look at the width of blue lines, and see "One Love" next to "Daydreaming", with a vast sea of difference between the two.

But by the by. Nobody wants to hear a history lesson, do they? So without further ado, here is a track by track breakdown of Blue Lines.

1. Safe from Harm - An establishing song and single. It still gets plenty of airtime, frequently used in adverts, etc.. To be frank, I consider it much more typical of Blue Lines than Unfinished Sympathy.
The first track on the first trip-hop album starts as you'd think. A rolling bassline with chilled beats and eerie keyboards, not to mention Shara Nelson's haunting (a cliché, I know, but a true one) vocals, and holding it together are the male vocals; not quite rapped, not quite spoken, not quite whispered.
The song is also notable and typical of trip-hop style as it is heavily sample based, taking nearly all of its key elements from Billy Cobham's song "stratus" - another indication of the varied influences which amalgamated in Blue Lines.

2. One Love - From the full sound of Safe from Harm, the tempo dips considerably into the sparse "One Love", dub influences at the ready, Horace Andy ready to fire, sir. Whilst this does show variety in the album, it does not represent Massive Attack's sound at all. However, it's still quite enjoyable, simply because of a few chilled samples and Horace Andy's crooning.

3. Blue Lines - My favourite from the album. The perfect title track, summing up the whole album. Lyrically - incredibly strong. Musically - chilled as fuck. And you are getting plenty of Massive Attack for your money, including Tricky (before he put his (oversized) experimental boots on).
Trick delivers the lines that sum up the whole album to me.


How we live in this existence, just being

English upbringing, background carribean



This says it all. Here, they firstly display the fusion between their black roots and British sensibilities, which influences the music they had chosen to make. Also, the line "How we live in this existence, just being" sums up Blue Lines perfectly. In Mezzanine, it would seem highly inappropriate, but Blue Lines was written by a group who fell into place - not aimed at making money (or even a real album as a real band), it represents these young people who made music because they enjoyed it.

4. Be Thankful For What You've Got - A William DeVaughan cover. This song works nicely, is chilled and shows soul roots. But it's just a cover.

5. Five Man Army - Another track where you're looking at a lot of Massive for your money. It also includes Daddy G's biggest vocal contribution to the album - a voice so deep that it nearly matches the groovy bass loop in frequency. This track seems to be a throwback to the soundsystem partying feel. It also contains the lyrics


This is the miracle of the dubplate dub selection
So whether you're black white or half-caste in your complexion
Yes pull out your phono plug and tuck you in your phony
It's started by marconi resumed by sony
A summary by wireless history and only
The massive attack enorme explosione

How accurate they are.

6. Unfinished Sympathy - This is not my favourite song on the album by any means, and I really don't want to go into the details of why. Just look on a list of the greatest songs of the 90's for more information (if you even need it, which I doubt since this is one of the most whored songs ever).

7. Daydreaming - Setting a precedent for the "uneasy" style of trip-hop that would follow, and a natural ancestor to much of mezzanine, such as Inertia Creeps. However, it's not actually that enjoyable. There's something about when Shara Nelson's cry of "I'm waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaalking on air" which depresses me to the point of not being able to listen to the song, firstly because it sounds so desperate, and secondly because it reminds me of Home and Away. Which is a depressing thing to think of.

8. Lately - A lazy song, with a squelchy bassline which reminds me of very primitive bass sequencers. However, this plodding bassline makes the song incredibly catching, as does the falsetto chorus. And a sampled sweeping sound breezes through the song every couple of bars, which adds a bit of scenery. Essentially, the song does very well for itself, considering its simplicity.

9. Hymn of the Big Wheel - The album finisher, and a very strange choice in reality. Strangely, this was released as part of "Massive Attack EP", along with Be Thankful. Some sort of environmental anthem (I prefer The Postal Service's "Natural Anthem" to be honest) emerges here. Unfortunately, it's not particularly well produced, which detracts massively from the grandeur that I suppose it wanted. In fact, my favourite part of the production is the bass drum which is bowel-moving. I suppose that in all, it is quite an inspiring song, but it would have been nice to hear a song which was closer to the Massive Attack sound to finish this piece of Trip-hop history. But hey, you can't have everything.


So, that is Blue Lines. Enjoy listening.

Thursday 14 April 2011

A license to Chill

Hello reader.
I'm James Skelly, a downtempo enthusiast and trip-hop artist. It's getting towards summertime, and for me that incurs excessive amounts of chillout music - primarily trip-hop.

This blog is more for my own development than for the benefit of any readers that may appear magically. I used to actively search for and listen to lots of trip-hop, but at some point I lost the motivation for keeping an eye out for new (and old but unknown to me) artists. So I hope that this will inspire me to re-immerse myself in the genre.

So, thanks for reading. I intend to start reviewing trip-hop albums, some old and some new (some borrowed, and definitely some blue (lines (are the reason why the temple has to shatter))).