Category: Soul


Oh, there’s dust in the air and a glow from the old console turntable as you hear the clicks a new 45 drops down the spindle. The needle sets down, and J.D. McDonald coaxes out the Motown vision of the elusive “Boogaloo Santa Claus.” Suddenly before your very ears, you can see it: Santa boogieing and jiving and doing the popcorn.

That’s just one of the Christmas expanding visions waiting for you on the archive collection of tunes on Strut Records’ In the Christmas Groove. Leave it to the soul-funk label to mine the B-sides of the 60’s and 70’s to find these obscure holiday gems. Sure, tracks like “Black Christmas by Harlem Children’s Chorus which bring you right out of a suburban dream, but sometimes our image of Christmas needs expanding.

Let Funk Machine rock your world on “Soul Santa (Part 1).” Bluesman Jimmy Reed shuffles “Christmas Present Blues.” There’s visions of Martin Luther King, Jr., and John F. Kennedy in the clouds watching down on Christmas in Wild Honey’s “Angels Christmas.” Perhaps a bit better focused are the hallelujahs of “Christmas Morning” by Zebra, although even here the emphasis seems to be on mistletoe and gingerbread. The collection doesn’t really ever find Gospel-influenced tracks that might put the light on Christ. Still, it’ll change up your normal Christmas playlist, and when you need something beyond Holiday Inn and Bing Crosby, here’s another direction to check out.

In The Christmas Groove
Strut Records

Back in the beginning days of Music Spectrum in December 2003, I cracked open some words about DJ Pogo and Harmless Recordings’ The Best of Pulp Fusion, a double-disc set featured DJ Pogo’s mixing work on 70’s ghetto and soul tracks along with a disc of the unmixed original recordings. It is a shaking, grooving funk education.

Ill Mondo’s De Novo delivers some of that same education, albeit with live and original tracks. Consisting of hip-hop duo JRK (Wide Hive Records) and Johnny Red (One Little Indian Records), Ill Mondo brings together hip hop desk mixing with plenty of 70’s soul through the contributions of a huge cast. Tracks sprawl out as soulful jams and funk rock classics, all interpreted through a hip hop lens. It’s as if the band created a live recording of what DJ Pogo did through his mixing desk.

Things begins with the sneaky groove of “The Unblinking Eye” like the haunt of Living Things (see below). “Bentornati” comes bouncing on soulful horns like something from Was (Not Was) or the Boneshakers. Check out the tight drums on “Now is the Time.” “Tonate” speeds along like the flashing highway edge markers as if taking a new approach to the funk/soul instrumentals accompanying S.W.A.T. or CHiPs.

Actually, the feeling of wanting to drive down the highway while jamming to Ill Mondo reminds me of another 2011 release discussed here: The New Mastersounds’ Breaks from the Border (review), which I was glad to hear recently in my local Starbucks. Both Ill Mondo and the New Mastersounds revive the 70’s in a fresh form.

Circle Into Square offers De Novo as a free download, so go on and grab this music to fuel your weekend.

Living Things’ Malocchio
Earlier in 2011, Living Things released a mixtape titled Malocchio which came to mind hearing Ill Mondo’s blend of a haunt and groove. Like Ill Mondo’s De Novo starting off with “The Unblinking Eye” and its creep-around-the-door creaking, Living Things open their mixtape with “Pollen Path”—a furtive glance into something dark and sinister. It’s only the drums that give hint to the grooves that are about to follow.

“Pollen Path” devolves and flows into a reggae drum kick that sets up “Post Mortem Bliss.” Like John Brown’s Body, we’re in the world of reggae meeting jam band. Then comes the fat horns of “Gang Banksters,” a swaggering funk walk.

“Terror Visions” cranks things up with a tight-and-bright funk guitar riff and a much louder, near screamed vocal. “Unemployment Line” brings back the horns to launch a song that does a reggae shuffle in corners with the dark soul of the Heavy. “Honest Abe,” which incidentally wakes me up each morning as the alarm ringtone on my phone, picks out an acoustic, country-bluesy line like something from the Cave Singers or Black Mountain. It’s a song searching for spiritual truth, singing to Allah, asking for forgiveness. I like to think that the song, emerging from an album titled for the evil eye, is grasping for the truth of forgiveness as gift which can be found most fully in Jesus. The mixtape concludes with “The Stupor,” an the almost-emo-sounding, straight-ahead rocker backed by a disco ball drumset, sending the listener out of any remaining brooding darkness and into the light and hope of something beyond what we see in these haunted corners.

The Malocchio mixtape can be found here for free.

Ill Mondo
Circle Into Square
Living Things (Explicit)

A recent warm spell in October in the Upper Midwest finds me recalling summer’s sounds. Of course, it also coincides with attempting to catch up on the music that’s been stacking up in the Music Spectrum office.

The 2011 summer may be drawing to a close despite this last gasp warmth, but one disc has certainly made an impression on me that will keep the heat turned up into the winter months. The New Mastersounds’ Breaks from the Border made summer drives jam with funk, blues, and soul. Mile markers flashed on past like swaggering, shimmying dancers. Even now as I type this in a coffee shop on vacation in Winona, Minnesota—what a pleasant, Mississippi River town—I can’t keep my legs from bouncing under the table as if my legs could actually tap out the guitar, Hammond, and bass solos, or match the funk trap set.

The New Mastersounds formed in the late 1990’s in Leeds, UK, out of the ashes of the original Mastersounds led by Eddie Roberts (guitar/vocals) and Simon Allen (drums/vocals). Adding Pete Shand on bass guitar/vocals, while eventually bringing on Joe Tatton on keys, the New Mastersounds could be straight from Motown. In fact, I thought being “New” meant a revisit of something from the 70’s as if the Mastersounds were a long lost funk/soul group that had reformed in 2011 to relive glory days and write new music.

Instead, these lads from Leeds are the original. And these ain’t no fakers. This stuff cooks. Shand’s bass wows and warbles and sends off the train on the opener “Take What You Need.” Tatton’s organ drenches the tight guitar riffs of “Ride the Gauntlet.” Smooth guitar akin to “Superstition” from Roberts reins in the funk of “Freckles.” There’s a way in which “Passport” throws on funk on top of what could be a Monkees song.

Like a calling card, “Can You Get It?” finds the band on gang vocals shouting out: “Can you get it,/This is British soul?/Can you get it,/This is rock ‘n’ roll?” We needed Tower of Power and others to bring soul/funk to where it is, but side-by-side this summer with Tower of Power’s 40th anniversary live disc, the New Mastersounds come out on top as they propel this stuff forward.

The New Mastersounds

There’s a hidden gem of a beach on Lake Michigan near the Illinois/Wisconsin border that I have known about for years. Now that we live nearby, I take my boys there to run in the sand, throw rocks, and splash in the cold water while I listen to the Chicago Cubs on the radio.

It takes about 20 minutes or so to get to the beach which means we need driving music, music of summer and sun, music to get you ready for enjoying the beach. Among the others I’ll probably chose for our 2011 beach excursions, we grooved to the Detroit rock/funk/soul of Dennis Coffey’s Dennis Coffey. A veteran Motown guitar player, Coffey lays out blistering soul rock that makes you want to roll down the windows as you drive, crank out the jams, and groove along your way to the beach.

The self-titled album starts off with my boys’ favorite, “7th Galaxy,” an instrumental of soul/funk rock proportions. Elsewhere, Coffey and guests (Kings Go Forth, the Dirtbombs’ Mick Collins, the Detroit Cobras’ Rachel Nagy, and more) conjure up Marvin Gaye, Smokey Robinson, Sam Cooke, and more of the Motown sound, such as the smooth “All Your Goodies Are Gone” (featuring Mayer Hawthorne) and the 70’s hip-shaking soul “Somebody’s Been Sleeping” (featuring Lisa Kekaula of the Bellrays).

So that get us to the beach. Now if the Cubs aren’t on the radio, what would I choose for our musical companion while we’re throwing rocks into the water? Probably the soulful sensations of Danger Mouse and Daniele Luppi’s Rome. Alternating between stretched out 70’s cinematic gloss and sweet soul resonating with R&B balladry, Rome is made for sitting back, sipping in the sunshine, humming along, and letting the day slip away.

Rome stars Norah Jones and Jack White in a tribute to Italian film, especially Ennio Morricone’s soundtracks. That’s what can carry you away as you listen in front of whatever landscape you chose—a lakefront, a cityfront, a backyard, a jazz club.

So let that soul drench you with Italian roast—a hybrid of relaxing in the sun and drinking in the aural caffeine that may spark more energy from you than you first thought. Let that soul drench you as you find your hidden gem of a beach in your life’s landscape.

But then in true rock ‘n’ roll fashion, if you’re like me, you’ll get kicked off that little beach because it’s private property. (More than 15 years of going there, and I never realized it). You’ll get kicked off the beach, jump back in your car, and crank up the bass-led funk of Dennis Coffey’s “Knockabout.” As you go home, you realize you’ve had a very good day.

Dennis Coffey
Strut Records
Danger Mouse & Daniele Luppi
Danger Mouse
Daniele Luppi
Capitol Records

Among the Americana gems on Amos Lee’s soulful Mission Bell is the Gospel-fueled “Jesus.” Handclaps and dirty guitar lead the way into the call-and-response chorus. It’s as pointed as any of the complaint Psalms, the Psalms of the Old Testament that take the pain right up to the throne of God. The chorus is a cry for God’s help, even while the verse admits to feeling wild and free, feeling as if life could go on without acknowledging the divine. But then the speaker admits that his heart “was a skipping stone/But now the world has jaded me/Oh, corrupted and defeated me.”

Then the turning point of faith:
You know I never felt you hated me,
But I never felt so alone.

As much as the speaker is feeling alone, feeling separated from Jesus, feeling as if he’s alone in a world that’s left him “corrupted and defeated,” still he senses God’s love. Jesus doesn’t hate him. There’s still hope. There’s still some way in which he can be restored to God.

This psalm of complaint closes out with the cries for Jesus’ help while the instruments clang and challenge the present state of affairs. It’s as bluesy as the album gets, and it’s a deep-seated blues ripe for prayer vigils, counseling, meditation, and preaching inspiration for days when we need to know that we can walk right up to the throne of God, approach Him through Jesus, and call upon Him in every kind of trouble.

Amos Lee
Blue Note Records

Sure, I suppose they usually talk about Motown Summer, soul songs meant to accompany you with the top down on the convertible, on the radio at the beach, and on the living room stereo as the warm wind blows through the open windows.

But for a Minnesota boy, there’s nothing more soulful than winter, so I’m glad to have some Motown Winter music in the form of Charles Bradley’s No Time for Dreaming. It’s music for driving in the snow and warming up around the fireplace. It’s music that sings about love even while being aware that it’s a cold, cold world that needs some new kind of action (“Golden Rule”).

While Bradley is from New York, his music drips with 70’s soul associated with Motown. At 62 years old, the world has been remiss to miss out on his voice. Thanks to Daptone Records, Bradley voice can now be heard. Styling himself after James Brown, you’ll more often find Bradley more subdued, letting some Marvin Gaye come through the groove. Under a faux 70’s album cover, you’ll find great wisdom, heartache, and some funk.

Charles Bradley
Daptone Records
Dunham Records

This review should’ve appeared back in August, in part to coincide with the release date and in part due to the fact that the funk-jazz-soul sound works well for summer nights. The Budos Band’s III has a sound that revolves around a jazz club funkified and fortified by soul. The tracks walk on creeped out organ, bounce along on Fishbone horns, and are held together by tight percussion. Instrumentals all, the album also features some dark bass sounds, contributing to its humid, after midnight vibe, although who’s to say it couldn’t also work as a bass-rich autumnal resonance. Plus, the tripped out play of “Reppirt Yad,” a cover of the Beatles’ “Day Tripper,” is excellent.

The Budos Band
Daptone Records

V.V. BrownIn 2008, Raphael Saadiq’s The Way I See It gave me the impression that he was singing over sampled mash-ups of soul classics. The fact that the music was original meant he was breathing extra funk into what otherwise may have sounded like rehashes of tired standards. The Way I See It rides on R&B flow with enough dance floor grit to match today’s skitch-sketch Hip Hop-influenced sound.

So now V.V. Brown lands on her singer/songwriter feet with that same skitch-sketch approach to reliving the 60’s soul-rock sound. Her debut, Travelling Like the Light has a Motown vibe, Supremes style, and Hip Hop flavor. Again, the fact that Brown writes or cowrites most of these originals makes the songs compelling in their freshness and makes Brown more than a pretty voice/face. This isn’t American Idol tribute night to the soul classics; this is an artist who is camped out within R&B and soul in order to let something new emerge from her explorations.

“Quick Fix” mixes up some old 50’s rock and 60’s bubblegum. “Shark in the Water” grooves along, built from a classic acoustic guitar line, and erupting in a chorus that hand-wags its way into your hips. Take on some introspective dance balladry for “Bottles,” counting down towards love.

V.V. Brown hits her best strides when those soul sounds are built up from that acoustic guitar, such as also on “Crying Blood.” It’s refreshing to hear the guitar take center speaker even as she shimmies her way through the dance hall.

GenerationalsThe Generationals
The Generationals also draw heavily from previous incarnation of rock ‘n’ pop. Where V.V. Brown lands on the R&B side with her time travels, the Generationals end up much more in the rock camp. Con Law lives up to the band’s name by invoking elements from the 50’s, 60’s, and 80’s. Horns and keyboards transport you to multiple generations in one song—“Nobody Could Change Your Mind” has 60’s horns and 80’s keys.

Bubblegum pop shows up on “Faces in the Dark” which skips along with echoey vocals along for the ride. Fuzz keyboard opens up the spritely “Wildlife Sculpture,” filled out with blips and beeps to update the sound. “Exterior Street Day” could have been built from the scraps of some Madchester tune, while “Bobby Beale” taps into a Prince-like funk link and another side of the 80’s with a “Funky Town” chorus.

Soul keys introduce the best track, “When They Fight, They Fight,” the opening then punctuated by a burst of marching band percussion before it slides into a 60’s Motown dress. Handclaps, horns, backup singers, and more make it an extremely playful song about saying “I love you, baby,” to the one you fight with.

V.V. Brown
Park the Van Records
The Generationals
Park the Van Records

Now that summer 2008 is here, it’s time to go back and talk about a perfect summer companion released in 2007. Marc Broussard’s S.O.S.: Save Our Soul has this tremendously fresh nostalgic blend of Motown and blues, custom-made for sunny picnics, beach blanket bingo, drives through the country, and backyard barbeques. As the songs bounce along on horns, piano, soul guitar, Broussard’s smooth-smoky vocals, and beehive-hair voiced backup girls, it’s no wonder that Hollywood goes back to 60’s Motown as the soundtrack for hopeful, romantic, upbeat scenes. That classic soul/R&B sound punches negativity with a blow so loving that you forget that these are fighting words. It’s a sound that rises up on a rogue wave that—instead of dragging a tired swimmer into an undertow—floats you peacefully in the moonlight. Broussard doesn’t just mimic this sound; he exudes this sound.

Marc Broussard
Atlantic Records

The Sevilles
The Sevilles are a ten-piece wedding band, playing parties, receptions, and special events in the Midwest, and they are one of the best cover bands I have ever seen. Ranging from Motown to 80’s to rock to funk to soul to classics, the band is one of the hardest working bands I’ve seen. Playing at my friend’s wedding reception this fall, the band made me want to dance—but also to just stop and watch them do their magic on the songs we all knew yet were coming out fresh and live from the band right there in front of us.

It’s great going to a wedding dance when the dance floor fills up on the favorites, songs that can really get everyone enjoying the party. But there’s something else completely special about having a live, full band lead you through these memory lanes of rhythm and melody.

It apparently hasn’t happened yet, but the Sevilles would make a tremendous cover album—an album that would make you fall in love again with the old songs while making you actually think that the Sevilles were a part of the scene the first time around.

Take a Soul Blues Band a Home:
The Miller Brothers Band’s Tales From Foundry Town

The Sevilles
While the Sevilles only live on in my memory of that evening, and I can only hope to be at a party where they’re playing again, the Miller Brothers Band delivers up some good soul blues on Tales from Foundry Town. There’s a real blues feel to the songs—“Wolf at Your Door” even has an Eddie Turner-like riff. However, with outstanding keys from Bob Ramsey, soulful backup singing from Gia Ciambotti and Sharon Celani, plus a Motown bass line from Tommy Miller and Mark Tomorsky. It’s a bit like the Commitments tapping into soul, funk, blues, and Motown, although the Miller Brothers Band serve up all originals.

Thanks to the Sevilles and the Miller Brothers Band for the review CD.

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