Giveaway: Thee Satisfaction @ the Echo on June 19th!

Thee Satisfaction are a dynamic, abstract Hip-Hop duo from Seattle that gained prominence (and a record contract with Sub Pop) after featuring on Shabazz Palaces well received debut last year. This year Thee Satisfaction released an equally well received album and will be in Los Angeles performing at the Echo with Ras G and Open Mike Eagle. I actually have a couple of pairs of these tickets so, if you’d like to go courtesy of Melting Pot, e-mail me at michael[at]meltingpotblog.com before 12noon on Monday, June 21st!!!

Here’s the video for their track “QueenS”:

Here the women of Thee Satisfaction perform the tracks “Pause” and “Do You Have The Time” for a KEXP showcase:

In Heavy Rotation: Allo Darlin’ – Europe – Slumberland

Allo Darlin' – Still Young

First heard Allo Darlin’ driving around LA on KXLU fairly recently. I was lucky enough to stay within the broadcast range to hear the DJ back announce the name of the band and have had a music crush on them ever since. Lucky enough for me they’d just released their second full-length album, Europe, on Oakland’s Slumberland. Allo Darlin’ are a very twee band based out of London featuring some rather distinctive vocals from Elizabeth Morris. Morris is originally from Australia which might explain why her phrasing sounds a bit different, a bit like Victoria Bergsman, but with a much sweeter quality to her vocals. Morris often brings out a Ukelele which can often seem a bit gimmicky with other bands, but it fits into the sound of Allo Darlin’, especially on “Still Young,” when the main melody breaks down and we’re left with just Morris and her ukelele until things pick up again at the end. Truly lovely music.

Added bonus, and a real highlight of Morris’ vocals and ukelele playing, “Tallulah,” also featured on this new album:

Dig Deep: The Hook – Will Grab You – UNI (1968)

The Hook – Homes
The Hook – Turn Your Head
The Hook – Lookin’ For You

Originally ran into this at Groove Merchant about a year ago. I’d held off on posting anything on it, because I was sure that several of the songs on the LP skipped. A couple months ago I packed it with the gang of records I bring for end of the month all-vinyl shows on KPFK and lo and behold, as if by magic, all the songs that skipped no longer skipped!

The Hook featured Bobby Arlin, who once upon a time was in a band called the Leaves, who are notable for being the first group to record “Hey Joe.” There’s a distinctly California vibe and sound to this music, with a nice really fat sound from everybody, the drums, bass and especially the guitar. Musically, it’s a pretty impressive recording, great solos and more than a little bit of funky style, especially on “Turn Your Head.” Lyrically, there’s a bit of sustained silliness that keeps this from being a true classic, though ocassionally there are some great lines, such as “Even in the country people think we’re so funky, and even in the city, people think we’re so pretty,” delivered with great panache by Arlin on “Homes.” Ultimately it’s the great sound I keep coming back to and what makes this LP worth tracking down.

Cheers,

Michael

What Does It All Mean? Van Morrison – Ballerina

It’s been an eternity (almost 2 years!?!?!) since I did one of these posts so I thought I’d ruminate a moment on one of my favorite songs from one of my favorite albums. The nascent music suprevisor in me has always envisioned this song being used near the end of a film when a man sees his wife in her wedding dress for the first time and then played throughout the credits. Something about the way the song opens with the vibes and acoustic guitar and bass that just puts the picture in my mind of a man looking up to see the woman he loves as she comes towards him. From an album of truly beautiful work, this one continues to take the cake for me even though you never hear it on the radio (even non-commercial radio shies away from the 7 minute running time).  I hear this song and I hear a man that desperately wants a woman to be his, perhaps she’s someone he’s just met, or someone who he used to know who he’s become reacquainted with, but the nature of their relationship seems to make him a bit unsure at various times, such as when he sings “and if somebody, not just anybody, wanted to get close to you…for instance me baby” or “well I maybe wrong, but something in my heart tells me I’m right that I don’t think so.” He also strikes me as a man who feels like he can save this woman, or perhaps she can save him depending on who you think he is describing in the lyrics.

You know I saw the writing on the wall,
When you came up to me,
Child, you were heading for a fall,
But if it gets to you,
And you feel like you just can’t go on,
All you gotta do,
Is ring a bell,
Step right up, and step right up

I’ve never been able to tell here if this is what the singer is telling this woman, or if “when you came up to me,” signifies that the woman is telling the singer, “child, you’re heading for a fall,” Similar themes rise up again later on:

Well it’s getting late,
Yes it is, yes it is,
And this time I forget to slip into your slumber,
The light is on the left side of your head,
And I’m standing in your doorway,
And I’m mumbling and I can’t remember the last thing that ran through my head,
Here come the man and he say, he say the show must go on,
So all you gotta do,
Is ring the bell,
And step right up,

I’ve always loved that line about mumbling and not remembering what’s in your mind. (along with the whole “Grab it, Catch it” verse, which I occasionally still hear as “Grab the ketchup” which really confuses the hell out of me with the whole “Sigh it, Die It” later…) Love can have that kind of powerful effect on you when you meet the person that’s right for you. But I like how the singer regains his senses and when the “show must go on” he’s able to give the advice that serves as the chorus, to get up and keep on moving.  I’ve never read anything directly from Morrison on the exact inspiration behind Ballerina. Strangely a number of people seem to be convinced that this song is about a prostitute, perhaps because of some of the other somewhat shady characters that populate Astral Weeks (especially thinking of “Madame George”), but there’s nothing in the lyrics that give me that sense at all. I more apt to believe that he wrote this after meeting one of his wives, who I believe was an actress and dancer. The song’s lyrical narrative seems to tell double stories, one about this newfound rush of love the singer feels and another that seems to be related to either the struggles of the singer or of the woman he loves as they attempt to “keep a-moving on, little bit higher” through their life. But those are just my thoughts, what do you hear when you hear “Ballerina”?

Van Morrison – “Ballerina” from Astral Weeks (1968)

Spread your wings,
Come on fly awhile,
Straight to my arms,
Oh little angel child,
You know you only,
Lonely twenty-two story block,
And if somebody, not just anybody,
Wanted to get close to you,
For instance, me baby,

All you gotta do
Is ring a bell,
Step right up, step right up
And step right up,
Ballerina

Grab it, catch it, fly it, sigh it, try it

Well, I may be wrong,
But something deep in my heart tells me I’m right that I don’t think so,
You know I saw the writing on the wall,
When you came up to me,
Child, you’re heading for a fall,
But if it gets to you,
And you feel like you just can’t go on

All you gotta do,
Is ring a bell,
Step right up, and step right up,
And step right up,
Just like a ballerina, stepping lightly

Alright, well it’s getting late,
Yes it is, yes it is,
And this time I forget to slip into your slumber,
The light is on the left side of your head,
And I’m standing in your doorway,
And I’m mumbling and I can’t remember the last thing that ran through my head,
Here come the man, here come the man and he say, he say the show must go on,
So all you gotta do,
Is ring the bell,
And step right up, and step right up,
And step right up,
Just like a ballerina, yeah, yeah
Grab it, catch it, fly it, sigh it, c’mon die it, yeah
Just like a ballerina,
Just like a just like a, just like a, just like a ballerina
Get on up, get on up, keep a-moving, movin on, movin on, movin on
little bit higher, baby,
Get on, get on, get on, get on, get on, get on, get on up baby,
Alright, a-keep on, a-keep on, a-keep on pushing, keep-on, a-keep on pushing,
Stepping lightly,
Just like a ballerina,
Ooo-we baby, take off your shoes,
Working on,
Just like a ballerina

In Heavy Rotation: Curumin – Arrocha – Six Degrees

Curumin – Paris Vila Matilde

Arrocha is the latest from Afro-Japanese-Brazilian artist Curumin. It’s been almost four years since Curumin’s last record, Japan Pop Show, but he’s lost none of his genre-defying style. Arrocha shifts effortlessly from big beat funk to more psychedelic tracks to the more soulful and just downright tender, such as my favorite on the album, “Paris Vila Matilde.” LA Peeps, Curumin will be in town shortly, playing at the El Rey along with another Brazilian phenom, and another personal favorite, Céu, on June 21st!!!

Dig Deep: Coke – Coke – Sound Triangle (1973)

Coke – Na Na
Coke – Got To Touch Your Face
Coke – Que Seria De Mi

After not posting much of anything for most of May, I wanted to make sure I got off on the good foot for June, so here’s some straight up Latin heat courtesy of Miami’s Los Coke. I’d seen this record several times before running into it at Groove Merchant a couple of years ago. Needle dropped on “Na Na” and I was sold…but didn’t have enough money to get the album at the time. Fast forward to earlier this year and during some internet searching I came across a dealer who was selling a copy on the cheap because of condition. Took a chance and rolled the dice on a record that was graded as a “G” and ended up getting an “O.G.” copy with much better sound than I even remember the Groove Merchant copy having.

Los Coke, as they were sometimes called (at least before Coca-Cola forced a name change to “Opus”) were a clearly Santana influenced bilingual group that didn’t necessarily hit big outside of the Miami area, but the sounds on this LP (from the same label that brought you the legendary “Quit Jivin'” from Pearly Queen) have made many a DJ and crate digger happy, especially those drums from Ruben Perez. Clean breaks just jump out of the speakers on each of the chosen tracks and a few others on the LP, I only wish the group had been mic’ed a bit better so they were a bit warmer, but when they hit this hard over so many tracks, really who can complain? “Na Na” remains my favorite and something that I’m just DYING to put on at a place like Funky Sole to see the dancers dance. Everytime Paul Fernandez sings “Life Could Be Much Better, If We Had Our Shit Together,” I say “Amen, ain’t that the truth!” The way things frequently drop out, often with just the voice and drums, on the song slays me each and every time.

What I particularly like about this copy is that somebody took the time to color in all the parts of the LP cover that weren’t fully colored originally, which gives it an even more striking look than the version sold in stores. You can find represses of this LP on the cheap, not sure if the sound quality is much better, but I’m sure the price will be, though I’m sure you know that originals are always tastier.

Cheers,

Michael

In Heavy Rotation: Sonnymoon – Sonnymoon – Plug Research

Sonnymoon – Every Summer Night

First heard about Sonnymoon a few years ago when KCRW DJ Anthony Valadez was raving about them to anyone with ears. With an abstract future soul sound reminiscent of Little Dragon and Quadron I was convinced that the band just had to come from Europe, but alas no, they hail from the Boston area and are mainly comprised of Anna Wise and Dane Orr. For some time I’ve been wondering when we might get more sounds like these from stateside artists and finally the duo’s full-length has arrived courtesy of Plug Research, already a contender for indie label of the year. I know it’s not technically Summer yet, but “Every Summer Night” still seems an apt choice, especially since the group just spent time here in LA for the UCLA Jazz & Reggae Fest Memorial Day soiree. They’ll be back in town later in June and hopefully I’ll be able to corral them into the KPFK studios to find out more about how they create these sounds.

…as an added treat here’s a bonus clip of the band performing “Near Me” in fine trippy style at this year’s SXSW:

Breakdown: May Fundraising Shows on KPFK

Really apologize for being MIA virtually this whole month of May, but I’ll be back starting this week with new posts. I won’t however be on the air for Melting Pot on June 3rd, instead it will be a fundraising special. We’ll be back on the KPFK airwaves on June 10th to celebrate the radio show’s 2 year anniversary.

Melting Pot on KPFK #85: First Hour
Melting Pot on KPFK #85: Second Hour

Melting Pot on KPFK #86: First Hour
Melting Pot on KPFK #86: Second Hour

Breakdown: May 13th on KPFK’s Melting Pot

Folks I’ve been so incredibly busy this past week (and clearly for the last month or so, based off of the pace of posts) that this has been the first chance I’ve had to catch up with things. Last Sunday’s show began and closed with a couple of Mother’s Day inspired tracks, featured a fair amount of new tracks, and also had a tribute to Donald “Duck” Dunn, one of the most respected bass players in Soul music history because of his work with Booker T & the MGs. This coming Sunday we’ll be raising funds for KPFK with a lot of fantastic music and giveaways for subscribers. Now that the semester is done I’ll be getting back into the swing of things again with regular posting (this time around I mean it!) and hopefully some more interesting things this Summer.

Melting Pot on KPFK #84: First Hour
Melting Pot on KPFK #84: Second Hour

Dig Deep: Jeremy Steig – Portrait – UA (1971)

Jeremy Steig – Howlin’ For Judy
Jeremy Steig – Rational Nonsense
Jeremy Steig – Waves

Wanted to make sure to give proper respect to Adam Yauch aka MCA this past week, leaving his tribute post as the top post. One of the other best ways I felt to pay tribute to his legacy and the legacy of the Beastie Boys was to highlight music that I never would have discovered without their help. With so many fantastic samples over the years, which shaped my musical sensibilities from searching and tracking down so many of them, it’s hard to choose a particular breakbeat used by the Beastie Boys to highlight. Personal favorites have always been the massive drums that serve as the beat for “Lookin’ Down The Barrel of A Gun,” from the Incredible Bongo Band’s “Last Bongo In Belgium” and the multiple ways the band used Jimmy Smith’s “Root Down” on a their own track of the same name. I don’t own those records anymore, but I was lucky enough to run into this collection of flautist Jeremy Steig which includes the immediately recognizable “Howlin’ For Judy,” later sampled by the Beastie Boys in “Sure Shot.”

Even since this was sampled, Steig remains somewhat underrated. Most diggers I don’t think realize that he recorded a lot of material in the late 60s and early 70s that was just as funky if not more so. This collection compiles some of the best tracks from three records, This Is Jeremy Steig, Legwork (both released originally on Solid State) and Wayfaring Stranger (originally released on Blue Note). Most of the tracks feature his usual rhythm section, Eddie Gomez on bass and Don Alias on drums, and the band really knows how to lay down some slinky funky, as they do on “Waves,” but as is the case with most of Steig’s music, things rarely just stay in the pocket for long. Steig and his players are constantly playing around with sounds, quite a lot of “Rational Nonsense,” moving in a variety of unexpected places and spaces, just like MCA and the Beastie Boys did musically. For this, and all the rest of the music I never would have heard without them, I have the Beastie Boys to thank, Adam Yauch especially…may you rest in peace.

Cheers,

Michael

Five + One More for MCA aka Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys…R.I.P.

On yesterday’s Melting Pot, Guest host Oliver Wang of Soul-Sides.com broadcast this 48 minute tribute to MCA and the Beastie Boys, with a mix of classics and rarities from their entire career.

Tribute to Adam “MCA” Yauch of the Beastie Boys: Mixed by O-Dub of Soul-Sides.com

Shocking news in the music world today that Adam Yauch, better known as MCA of the Beastie Boys, passed away at the age of 47. Yauch had been battling cancer for the last several years, but the news still came as a shock to me. Growing up in the 1980s, the Beastie Boys were a favorite band of mine, both in their party-hard early days and their conscious prankster later years. Tracking down samples from Beastie Boys records broadened my tastes and my appreciation of Hip-Hop production as much as any other groups, save the Native Tounges. MCA’s conversion to Buddhism expanded my curiosity into a variety of philosophies and helped me to find greater calm and patience at times when I was dangerously close to losing both. Here are 5 of my favorite tracks that MCA cut with the Beastie Boys, and the 5 I’ll remember him most for.

Beastie Boys – Brass Monkey

My first experience with the Beastie Boys, I can still remember a crew of four of five black kids at my elementary school in the halls singing the lyrics to this song, at a time where Hip-Hop was still thought of as purely “Black Music.” I’m not sure if they even knew the Beastie Boys were white, or if the fact they made Hip-Hop was enough for them to claim them as their own, but that moment is forever etched in my brain, as well as  MCA’s classic line that was probably the first time I’d even ever heard of Brooklyn.

“I drink Brass Monkey and I rock well
I got a Castle in Brooklyn – that’s where I dwell”

Beastie Boy – Sabotage

Quite possibly the single most entertaining music video of all time, “Sabotage” marked the emergence of Spike Jonze and got me to appreciate 1970s genre cinema. Even though you don’t really hear MCA’s voice in this track, that fuzz bass is so important to the sound, especially when everything breaks down in the second half, that it’s impossible to imagine this song being a success without that rumbling sound.

Beastie Boys – Jimmy James

A tribute of sorts to Jimi Hendrix, featuring 5 or 6 separate Hendrix samples, I’d never known until today that this was originally just an instrumental track and that all the cuts were by Adam Yauch himself.

Beastie Boys – Sure Shot

Aside from the blistering Jeremy Steig sample and one of my favorite lines, “I Strap On My Ear Goggles And I’m Ready To Go,” which caused me to refer to headphones as “ear goggles” for about a year, “Sure Shot” was also the song where MCA publicly denounced the misogynistic lyrics and behavior of his past and called for other artists to follow suit.

“I Want To Say a Little Something That’s Long Overdue
The Disrespect To Women Has Got To Be Through
To All The Mothers And Sisters And the Wives And Friends
I Want To Offer My Love And Respect To The End”

That kind of mea culpa and statement of solidarity, affected my own thinking on issues of gender, and likely helped to put me on the path where today I educate other men and women on the influence of popular culture on our ideas of gender, race and class.

Beastie Boys – Bodhisattva Vow

There are so many songs the MCA had great lines and rhymes, but this track from Ill Communication remains what I think is his signature song. A deeply personal and sincere take on his Buddhist faith and who his beliefs have affected his character.

“If Others Disrespect Me Or Give Me Flack
I’ll Stop And Think Before I React
Knowing That They’re Going Through Insecure Stages
I’ll Take The Opportunity To Exercise Patience
I’ll See It As A Chance To Help The Other Person
Nip It In The Bud Before It Can Worsen
A Change For Me To Be Strong And Sure”

The backing track was also stunning, with its use of Buddhist chant, drums from “Kissing My Love” and what sounds like the doors of a monastery crashing and closing. Hearing it the first time was like a revelation, one only made possible because of Adam Yauch, Rest In Peace.

In Heavy Rotation: V/A – The B-Music of Jean Rollin – B-Music/Finders Keepers

Pierre Raph – Gilda & Gunshots

{LA People there’s a special Jean Rollin event at Cinefamily May 7th, featuring an special remixed screening of La Vampire Nue (original trailer below) and new score by Demdike Stare!!!}

Jean Rollin was a french film-maker best known for his horror/gore/exploitation films of the late 1960s and 1970s. Given his filmography, it’s not a surprise that music associated with his films would be right in the wheelhouse of B-Music and Finders Keepers and they’ve recently compiled a bunch of it for this collection. The spot on appropriately titled “Gilda & Gunshots” stands out for me, just because of the absurdity of it all. I’m sure seeing the visuals would make this song make more sense, but hearing it, with those driving drums and bass line, a woman in pain or ecstasy and all those gunshots, it sounds like pure mayhem is going down.

As a further taste of Jean Rollin’s style, here’s the trailer to his 1970 film, La Vampire Nue, a heady mix of wild visuals for sure:

Elevation! A Conscious DJ Event – Tonight at The Virgil in L.A.!!!

Currently getting a set together for Elevation,  an incredible DJ event with fellow KPFK DJs Morgan Rhodes, Mark Maxwell, Carlos Nino, Santana Westbrook, Teddy Robinson, Abraham Beltran, the Breakbeats & Rhymes crew, Kristi Lomax and our special guest Marques Wyatt!  Tickets cost $15 or $25 for VIPs and all the proceeds go directly to KPFK.

I’m thinking of doing a set of classic breaks and sampled funk, we’ll see what I come up with when I go on at 10pm tonight! I’ll be sure to share the playlist and maybe the set itself with you all in the near future.

Hope to see you tonight!