Way Back Wednesdays: The Specials – ‘Gangsters’

Good Morning to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for us to go retro with another weekly blog entry of ‘Way Back Wednesdays’ on the site, since it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Today, we really are going ‘Way Back’ because we are talking about the British Ska revival band The Specials, who were part of the 2 Tone and Alternative Reggae movements all of the way back in the late-70’s and they have continued to represent these styles through to the present day. I was going to see a tribute band for The Specials in Stoke-On-Trent before the pandemic hit in 2020 – which I was very much looking forward to, in a way – but, unfortunately, we know how that turned out in the end. Known for combining uplifting Dub melodies with the ferocious spirit of Punk, The Specials were formed back in 1977 when they lived in Coventry – and that is way before my time. They used to wear mod-style 60’s period ‘rude boy’ outfits complete with pork pie hats, tonic & mohair suits, and loafers on-stage, likely performing their greatest hits like ‘Ghost Town’ and ‘Too Much Too Young’ that reached #1 in the UK’s singles chart. They continued their career throughout the 80’s and 90’s under a revised line-up with an alternate name of The Specials AKA, which represented their informed political stance and their wry social commentary on British society. Most impressively, The Specials are still recording new material today, and they most recently released ‘Encore’ in 2019 – an original album that re-introduced vocalist Terry Hall to their ranks, and it was a #1 entry on the UK Albums Chart. ‘Gangsters’ was another of their classics, which was recorded in Studio One of Horizon Studios in Coventry during 1979 to be released as their first track under The Specials AKA name, and it peaked at #6 in the UK Singles Chart following release. Let’s give it a spin below.

Terry Hall created the vocals for ‘Gangsters’ by mixing an “angry” recording and a “bored” recording that were cobbled together, while Horace Panter had to re-cut the Bass parts because they were originally so extreme that they “blew the needle out of the record’s grooves” and pianist Jerry Dammers overdubbed a treble-heavy Piano instrumental on to the track to compensate for the low-end of the Bass. Lyrically, ‘Gangsters’ was allegedly written about a real-life incident where The Specials had to pay for damage caused to a hotel by another band (rumored to be The Damned) as they were held responsible, and the track is also reportedly a re-working of Prince Buster’s 1964 ska track ‘Al Capone’ because ‘Gangsters’ samples the car sound effects which played at the beginning of Buster’s track. Moreover, The Specials changed the refrain in the opening line to “Bernie Rhodes knows, don’t argue” as an insult aimed at Bernie Rhodes, who was the band’s manager for a brief stint. Taking all of these different stories into account, The Specials telling a story of dis-establihment in a bizzare way as they reference incidents like a mis-step involving a guitar above a perky variety of gently Skanting Dubplate beats and odd Middle Eastern-sounding instrumentals, while the lead vocals retain an energetic – yet eeire – delivery. The guitar melodies sound different to Al Capone’s track, and so The Specials did an excellent job of re-writing that track in their own image, with the deadpan vocals conveying a feeling of self-awareness about them. Overall, ‘Gangsters’ was a vital step in introducing The Specials’ take on British Ska to wider audiences at large by paying tribute to some nice influences in clear, yet poignant ways. The vocals have a quality of vagueness which retains an aura of mystery throughout, and the danceable Rocksteady drums are likely to encourage weird great uncle’s to partake in some questionable “jerky dancing” at some family parties. Injected with humor, darkness and youth – The Specials had a big hit on their hands when they released ‘Gangsters’.

That same year, The Specials also re-created ‘A Message To You, Rudy’ with the famous British-Jamaican saxophonist Dandy Livingstone. You can find out more about that here: https://onetrackatatime.home.blog/2020/02/06/todays-track-the-specials-a-message-to-you-rudy/

That brings me to the end of another nostalgic breakdown of a beloved classic for another week on the blog, and I thank you for spending a moment of your day with me on the site today. I’ll be back to bringing some new music to your eardrums tomorrow, as we take a light gander on a downtempo soul track by an experimental Toronto-based performance artist and producer whose music encompasses Pop, Indie Rock, Jazz, Neo-Soul and Bossa Nova. She has learned to play several exotic instruments including the Harp, a Pairometer and the Tenori-on. She has shared the stage with the likes of Janelle Monae and Aloe Blacc, and she contributed her vocals to Bob Wiseman’s ‘Giulietta Masina At The Oscars Crying’ that was first issued in 2012.

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New Album Release Fridays: Hembree (feat. Bodye) – ‘Operators’

Good Afternoon to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time for us to take a quick peek at one of the weekend’s most compelling album releases for yet another weekly entry of ‘New Album Release Fridays’ on the blog, given that it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! With new LP’s coming out from the likes of Black Country, New Road (Whose frontman Isaac Wood has just decided to leave the band), Mitski, The Animal Collective, Bastille, Cate Le Bon, Rolo Tomassi and Hippo Campus coming from left, right, front and center of the release spectrum today, it looks to be the first truly stacked week of the year from where I’m standing. However, there is also the sophomore album release from Hembree, a Kansas-based indie rock band whose music has been featured in a variety of ad sync placements for Bose, NFL and Apple ever since they gained national attention in the US with ‘Holy Water’ in 2018. Since then, Hembree have supported higher profile names like Phoenix, Cold War Kids, Joywave and Vance Joy on the live touring circuit. You may have also heard their material on the soundtracks of ’13 Reasons Why’ and ‘Outer Banks’ on streaming television. ‘It’s A Dream’ arrives today from Hembree, who were named one of NPR’s Slingshot Artists To Watch in 2018, and the band describe the LP as a record about getting freaky even while you’re freaking out, a quotable sentiment that is relatable to everyone who was left down in the doldrums while the album was written during the pandemic in 2020. A Funk-led single, ‘Operators’ owes a featured credit to Bodye. The band were also joined on a Saxophone section by Henry Solomon, who has previously linked up with Haim. Let’s hear their final results below.

Lead vocalist Isaac Flynn explains, “I wrote it right when all of the protests started in the summer, and the chorus in particular is about when the officers, national guard and even some of the city officials would act like they were with the protesters in solidarity, and then turn around and gas and attack them”, when he spoke about ‘Operators’ in a press release, adding, “They were acting like they were there to help, but it was all for show. It all felt almost cartoonishly villainous to me. I wanted to reflect that in the lyrics and in the dark, dance heavy groove of the song”, to his press statement. Starting off with the headstrong lyric of “Maybe, this time we’ll open our eyes”, ‘Operators’ quickly establishes itself as a track that is directly about 2020, which is fitting given how it was written in Hembree’s hometown in Missouri and recorded remotely from home studios during lockdown. It rolls along with a chirping Saxophone-led groove that is decorated by light percussion that ticks along at a brisk pace, while overtly political lyrics like “What do they want and who are they trying to please” emerge in the chorus. The drums kick along in the uptempo verses, although lyrics like “Overcalculated villains/They’re tying up, What everyone wants” and “Sundown to sunrise, we see the antithesis” find Flynn crooning with a subtle brutality that carries the point across. The rhythms come to life with the Baritone-style saxophone riffs by Solomon, while a more Hip-Hop led verse by Bodye continues to add some variety to the recording in terms of mixing the Funk influences with some Post-Disco vibes and making the lyrics feel as violent or aggressive as they should, given the subject matter of the songwriting. Overall, it’s pretty fantastic as a complete package. The chorus feels punchy and upbeat, but the verses have a tone of brutality to them which make them stand out among more light-hearted Pop offerings. The instrumentation sounds fresh and diverse, yet the Saxophone riffs are constant but not tedious. It feels like a mature pop song overall that offers something fresh to the market, with the lyrical messages about duplicitous law enforcement agents never feeling at odds with the brisk, snappy rhythms of the saxophone and the percussion since the instrumentation has a heavy edge to it as well. Full of violence and vibrancy.

That brings us to the bottom of the page for another day, and I’ve got to go to work now. Thank you, as always, for taking a moment out of your day to visit the site, however. I’ll be back tomorrow, just like I always am, with something nice and easy since it is Saturday. We’ll be listening to the brand new single from a rock band from Oxford in the UK who have toured internationally for a decade. They told us ‘What Went Down’ in 2015 and had a UK #1 album with ‘Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost – Part 2’ in late 2019. They also performed a surprise set at Glastonbury Festival in 2019.

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Countdown To Christmas 2021: Max Headroom – ‘Merry Christmas Santa Claus (You’re A Lovely Guy)’

Good Morning to you! My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s time to leave a place in your front drive for Santa Claus (I know him!) to park his sleigh in the early hours of tomorrow morning after reading about your daily track on the blog, given that it has always been my day-to-day pleasure to write about a different piece of music every day! It is pretty tricky for me to describe what Max Headroom truly is, since I was not born at the time and it sounds like an awkward concept to wrap your reindeer’s ears around in the first place, but ‘Merry Christmas Santa Claus (You’re A Lovely Guy)’ is certainly a candidate for being the most bizzare track that has ever been covered on the blog. To the greatest of my understanding, Max is not an artist at all and is, in fact, a character of artificial intelligence portrayed by comedian Matt Frewer in prosthetic make-up and aided by some simplistic editing trickery, that had a cult TV show in the 1980’s. Created by the trio of George Stone, Annabel Jankel and Ricky Morton, Max was known for his wit, harsh lighting and pitch-shifting voice – and he was called “the first computer generated TV personality”. He had his own television series in 1984 that aired on Channel 4 in the UK, but the idea came from a British short sci-fi film – ‘Max Headroom: 20 Minutes In The Future’ – that found popularity after being shown on Channel 4, which is set in a futuristic dystopia that is ruled by a network of television channels. The idea was originally to create a series of five-minute episodes to tell his origin story, but the producers realized that this was impractical from a viewership standpoint, and commissioned an 80-minute TV movie instead. Although a US version of the show was made, it was never repeated and only fourteen episodes of the pretty faithful remake aired on NBC were ever made – and all of this great info comes from clivebanks.co.uk online. There was a little-known Christmas special, however. I have read another story that the special was terrible, however, and even cameos from big then-contemporary stars like Tina Turner or Robin Williams failed to save it’s quality. The finale was a Christmas song that was released as a single, which failed to chart, with a Country-influenced B-side of ‘Gimme Shades’, and a crop of YouTube channels have restored the video from MTV 2 to decent audio/video quality. Let’s boot him up.

Forever Young gives us context with, “1986 was a big year for Max (and Matt Frewer) – they already scored an international hit with “Paranoimia” (with The Art Of Noise), there was a British cult TV show called ‘The Max Headroom Show’ in its third and final season, and they were on the verge of an American drama series, Max Headroom, which started in the spring of 1987 – and Coca-Cola commercials somewhere in-between. Not long after the success of “Paranoimia”, Max Headroom did a holiday special in the UK, ‘Max Headroom’s Giant Christmas Turkey’, and from that special, a limited edition 7″ holiday single was commissioned and then released on Chrysalis Records” on their website. Forever Young states that the producers thought it was a good idea to have Max perform several jolly ballads throughout the episode, and it gradually built into this climactic finale for the special and, safe to say, it unfortunately did not take the world by storm. Lyrically, Headroom jolts through different contexts of Christmas, such as recalling the night that baby Jesus was born in a stable in Bethlehem, with some passionate Jingle Bells that build momentum as we transition to a snowy winter exterior, where the Southwark Gospel Choir join him for a final sing-along of the chorus. The main bulk of the track revolves around Father Christmas being a selfless and underappreciated soul, and Headroom continues to make light of all the usual holiday TV special tropes with his pitch-shifting voice and the structure of the video performance. While the vocals range from horrible to slightly creepy to wholly deranged, it is a fun four minutes to spend a bit of time from your day with, and I think that I enjoyed it purely because of how niche and obscure it is, as well as how strange and peculiar the music was. A less remembered alternative Christmas anthem that was crafted in the same ilk as Bo Selecta’s ‘Proper Chrimbo’ or South Park’s ‘Mr. Hanky The Christmas Poo’, this fluttering rendition of ‘Merry Christmas Santa Claus (You’re A Lovely Guy)’ takes things to weird proceedings and it makes you feel quite cheerful despite its inherent dreadfulness. So yeah. This exists…

That’s all for now and thank you a lot for sparing a moment with me on the blog for Christmas Eve. It’ll probably be a short and sweet one tomorrow as it is Christmas Day, but I must fulfill my mission of writing up about a different piece of music every day! I have crowd-pleasing Desert Rock lined up for you tomorrow as we shift our focus towards a brilliant Alternative Rock anthem from popular Las Vegas natives who headlined Glastonbury, in 2019, on the main stage on Saturday on that weekend.

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Countdown To Christmas 2021: Norah Jones – ‘A Holiday With You’

Good Morning to you! I’m Jacob Braybrooke, and I’m asking you to allow me to be the elf on your musical shelf for yet another festive daily track on the blog, because it’s always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! As I was researching new Christmas music for exposure on the blog, I was prioritizing in finding something original to show you, rather than going for cover versions. The wish has been partially met by the Manhattan-born Jazz vocalist, songwriter and pianist Norah Jones, who has seemingly got into the seasonal spirit pretty early this year, as she released her new holiday album, ‘I Dream Of Christmas’, in October via the iconic Jazz label Blue Note Records. I was also suprised that I hadn’t previously heard of Norah Jones, who has won nine Grammy Awards and she was named as Billboard’s top Jazz artist of the 2000’s in 2013. She has sold over 50 million albums worldwide, and she made her feature film debut as an actress in 2007’s ‘My Blueberry Nights’, a film that was directed by Wong Kar-Wai. What is wrong with me, then? Anyhow, Jones is also the daughter of the Indian sitar legend Ravi Shankar and the concert producer Sue Jones, and so she is also technically a member of the rich Shankar heritage of musicians. She has yet to release a holiday album until this point, and the record features a mix of cover versions and original material. Renditions of ‘Winter Wonderland’ and The Chipmunks’ ‘Christmas Don’t Be Late’ are therefore joined by native festive tunes like the album’s opening single, ‘Christmas Calling (Jolly Jones)’ and prior single ‘Christmas Glow’. Another original ballad that meets your ears on Jones’ eighth LP is ‘A Holiday With You’ – which you can check out below.

Jones began to draft ideas for ‘I Dream Of Christmas’ together when she was listening to Christmas albums by Elvis Presley and James Brown last year, and Jones began writing her original material as soon as the period ended in January 2021, which she says gave her something fun to work on and look forwards to. She also says, “When I was trying to figure out which direction to take, the original songs started popping in my head. They were all about trying to find the joys of Christmas, catching that spark, that feeling of love and inclusion that I was longing for during the rest of the year” in her album’s description. Opening with a gentle Piano melody that changes chords, Jones uses expressive vocals like “Winter isn’t easy when you’re holding back the tears” and “Just you and I, a starry sky/And nothing else to do” to set the scene, giving the rhythm guitar melodies a languid feeling and then introducing some mellow Horn sections into the mix. Later lyrics, like “Would you be happy with a holiday in bed/With covers over head” and “Your heart is lost, inside a frost/I’ll give you mine instead” are veering more towards romantic and wistful, even occasionally flirtatious and ever so slightly sensual, suggestions. The chorus finds Jones continuing to express a deep desire for a sense of companionship in the season atop some muted percussion and chiming Piano chords, while the overall production is very stripped back and intimate, revealing some light emotions more alike to a perennial roasted Chestnut within the season instead of one that reveals upmost joy, necessarily. Overall, Jones does an excellent job of using her classical Jazz origins to immediately put her own Christmas stamp on this rare original recording, which feels a little subdued and restrained in comparison to your most typical Christmas songs. It feels warm yet bright, and it makes for a pleasant alternative to your usual festive playlists.

That’s all for now! Thank you for snuggling up to the fire in tune to another festive track with me today, and I’ll be back tomorrow with an in-depth review of some exciting new music from a Brisbane-formed dorky group who explore the genres of Dance, Acid Pop and Indietronica in their music. They have performed at festivals including Splendour In The Grass Festival. They have also received nominations at the Queensland Music Awards, National Live Music Awards, J Awards and the AIR Awards.

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Countdown To Christmas 2021: Elle King – ‘Please Come Home For Christmas’

Good Morning to you! You are reading the words of Jacob Braybrooke, and the time has arrived for our first festive post of the new year’s holiday season, and that’s also because it’s always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! The John Lewis advert is out. The supermarket shelves are full of tat. The Hallmark movies are now showing on TV almost each day and everybody’s sharing a list with an item or two. That can only mean one thing: It’s here again for another year. Whether you still think it’s too early or not is up for debate, but since this is me writing the blog and planning a post out every single day, I’ve decided that it’s time to start looking at different artists who are getting into the seasonal spirit as we begin our own ‘Countdown To Christmas’ series of Christmas-themed posts on the blog, which will be spread throughout the next seven or eight weeks, or so. We’ll be listening to a variety of on-brand Yule tracks, both new and old, that will provide alternatives to the yawners from Sir Paul McCartney and Elton John that we seem to get over-exposed to every single year, while sharing the same goal of injecting some Christmas flair into your streaming playlists. My first exhibit of the season this year is Elle King, an LA-born multi-instrumentalist and singer songwriter who is the daughter of the comedic actor Rob Schneider and the former model London King. You may remember her from scoring a big hit in the mainstream with ‘Ex’s & Oh’s in 2017, a track which reached #15 in the UK Singles Chart and the top ten in the US charts. She’s also known for her collaboration, ‘Drunk’, which she performed with Miranda Lambert, a single which has racked up over 150 million streams worldwide. She has also toured with acts like James Bay, Joan Jett, Of Monsters & Men, Michael Kiwanuka and Train. Check out her new rendition of ‘Please Come Home For Christmas’ below.

To tell the truth with you, when I first heard Elle King’s version of ‘Please Come Home For Christmas’ a week ago, I had never heard of the track before at all and it was only when I was researching some information for this post that I learned that it’s a cover version of an ancient and traditional Christmas R&B recording. It was originally performed by legendary Blues pianist James Brown in 1960, which he co-wrote with Gene Redd, and it reached #76 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart in December 1961. Since then, it has been covered by the likes of Bon Jovi, Kelly Clarkson, The Eagles, Willie Nelson, Josh Gracin, Gary Allan and Lee Roy Parnell. Elle King is just the latest to join their ranks and, hopefully, put a fresh spin on the original version. She does so with her mid-pitched crooning and sultry guitar melodies that feel representative of her Country-leaning solo material, while also keeping the Jazz element of the original track intact. Lyrics like “Oh, what a Christmas to have the blues/My baby’s gone, I have no friends, To wish me greetings once again” discuss the melancholy felt by those people who spend Christmas alone and apart from loved ones, while the later verses show a more optimistic take on simply enjoying the festivites of the time of year, as sequences such as “Choirs will be singing/Silent night/Christmas carols, by candlelight” and “Friends and relations send salutations/Sure as the stars shine above” trade the longing and agony of the opening verse for feelings of anticipation and contentment, as the final hook of “No more sorrow, no grief and pain/I’ll be happy, Christmas once again” draws things to a naturally mood lifting conclusion. This was a decent take on the original carol because Elle King manages to modernize some of the widely universal themes of the old 1960’s recording and King sounds absolutely accessible to a casual, very easygoing audience of listeners. While her take didn’t really suprise me in any way or did something that I’m likely to remember for that long, regrettably, this was perfectly fine and enjoyable to listen to as it sounded pleasant and it has a solid, calm vibe going on. A cheerful carol, with an air of Amy Winehouse to it, that everyone can find relatable if heard by all of the family at dinner.

That’s the only trick that I’ve got left in my stocking of seasonal strains for today! I’ll be back tomorrow for more of the same ‘Scuzz Sundays’ shtick as we look back at one of the Pop-Punk era’s memorable anthems of the late-90’s to mid-00’s era to see if it can hold up to some quality and value tomorrow! On the chopping block this week is an Agura Hills-formed Post-Grunge band with a silly name who haven’t appeared on the feature since March of 2020 – when the global lockdowns began. Known for hits such as ‘The Reason’, the Californian band have sold over ten million albums globally.

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Way Back Wednesdays: Jimmy Cliff – ‘The Harder They Come’

Good Afternoon to you! This is Jacob Braybrooke, and you’ve come to the right place for a seminal selection of my weekly ‘Way Back Wednesday’ series of classic appraisals, because it’s always been my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! Even the most casual audiences of music would have heard some material from Jamaican Ska and Rocksteady multi-instrumentalist, producer, actor and composer Jimmy Cliff before, since he composed iconic tracks like ‘Hakuna Matata’ and ‘Reggae Night’ that have been etched deeply into popular culture. Also known for hits like ‘You Can Get It If You Really Want’ and his cover version of Johnny Nash’s ‘I Can See Clearly Now’ that was used in Disney’s classic ‘Cool Runnings’ film about the first ever Bobsleigh team from Jamaica to enter the Olympic games, Cliff is a crucial component in popularizing genres such as Reggae and Alternative Soul across the world. One of five performers inducted into the ‘Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame’ in 2010, the St. James-born vocalist is the only living reggae musician to hold the Jamaican government’s Order Of Merit, the highest honour that can be granted for his services to performing arts and sciences. ‘The Harder They Come’, the soundtrack album and its titular lead single from the Perry Henzel-directed motion picture of the same name released in 1972, is widely considered to be one of Cliff’s greatest releases. The record peaked at #140 on the US Billboard 200, and, in 2021, the album was deemed to be “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant” by the Library Of Congress and so it has been selected for preservation in the National Recording Registry. Let’s remind ourselves of the iconic title track below.

Voted as the 73rd greatest album of all time by Entertainment Weekly’s editors in July 2013, the soundtrack was a true celebration of Reggae globalization with prominent guest spots from 60’s Jamaican Rocksteady icons like Desmond Dekker, The Maytals and The Melodians. Speaking of the hit title track, Jimmy Cliff recalled in an interview conducted for the Wall Street Journal in 2013, saying, “The lyrics came from my past. I grew up in the church and had always questioned what they were telling me. Like the promise of a Pie in the sky when you die”, elaborating, “I wanted the song to have a church feel and to reflect the environment I grew up in – the underdog fighting all kinds of trickery”, in the text. Like some other songs on the album, ‘The Harder They Come’ appears twice, paralleling both the movie’s core themes and the autobiographical essence of Cliff’s career. It’s placement during the middle of the album gives it an entirely different feel than when it appears as the uplifting, positive closer, and this works well as it is sandwiched between the nostalgic sweetness of The Maytals’ guest track and just prior to the more alarmed warnings of ‘Johnny Too Bad’ shortly afterwards. Following a simple story of a character who is proving his naysayers wrong and overcoming the odds stacked against him, Cliff recites motivational lyrics like “As sure as the sun will shine/I’m gonna get my sure now, what’s mine” and “Between the day you’re born and when you die/They never seem to hear your cry” and acknowledges realistic expectations in sequences like “I keep on fighting for the things I want/Though I know that when you’re dead you can’t” that bring his ambitions to earth at brief intervals. The second verse is a standout, and the vocals emphasize the power of religion and ignoring bad influence upon your personality from the people who doubt your potential. The track still manages to stand out nicely in this modern time by feeling relatively grounded yet still upbeat and cheerful, boasting some optimistic lyrics that don’t shy away from recognizing fault in setting unrealistic targets for yourself. There are a few shades of Calypso, Tropicalia and Belefonte in the Gospel-leaning sounds of the recording, where a collective sequence of backing vocals from a choir lends some assistance to the cinematic atmosphere of the single’s filmic roots. The percussion has some smooth, breezily flowing instrumentation and the inherent excitement of the key Soulful harmonies gets a positive message across. In conclusion, ‘The Harder They Come’ is a down-to-earth, but nonetheless still interesting, Reggae classic that still works well in the present day. The odd Organ chords and the gently quickening Reggae beats are great at supporting Cliff’s optimistic lyrics about his life, but the bleaker moments never feel glossed or sugar-coated over too much. A solid, universal Ska crossover hit.

That brings us to the end of yet another daily post on the blog! Thank you for your support, and I’ll be back tomorrow to review a relaxing, new and entirely Ambient Electronica project from an English-born experimental electronic music producer who has contributed to albums for Brian Eno and Coldplay in his career so far, and he has appeared twice on the blog in different capacities before. His new album, ‘Music For Psychedelic Therapy’, shall finally be releasing on Domino Records next weekend.

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Way Back Wednesdays: Patti Labelle – “Music Is My Way Of Life”

Good Morning to you! You’re reading the words of Jacob Braybrooke, and it is time for me to get typing up for yet another daily track on the blog, because it is always my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! As a diva that is responsible for selling over 50 million records worldwide, an actress who has appeared in productions like ‘Dancing With The Stars’ and ‘American Horror Story: Freak Show’, and an entrepreneur with a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame, as well as a lifestyle TV host for ‘Living It Up With Patti LaBelle’ and an inductee of the Apollo Theater Hall Of Fame, the question for Patti LaBelle is more clearly: What hasn’t she done? For her musical career, she started singing at church and later formed a vocal group, Patti LaBelle and The Bluebelles, which later became simply known as The LaBelles, and they scored a US #1 single with ‘Lady Marmalade’. As a solo artist, she set the R&B genre alight once again with ‘It’s Alright With Me’ in 1979, her third full-length LP, which she produced alongside the Grammy Award winning mixer Skip Scarborough, and the album enjoyed a sizable run of mainstream radio and chart success, reaching the #33 position of the US R&B charts. ‘Music Is My Way Of Life’, later to be remixed by electronic music producers like Joey Negro and John Luongo, soon became an ultimate R&B/Disco classic of the late 1970s. Follow her philosophy below.

One of the most interesting facts that I’ve read about the Pensylvania-born singer is that, in 2015, she released her own ‘Patti’s Sweet Potato Pie’ to the US supermarket shelves, and, due to a YouTube video praising the product shortly going viral, literally sold like hot cakes, as if they were, and shifted millions of units where, through the result of a 72-hour period, Walmart reportedly sold one pie every second. An 8-minute dance stomper, 1979’s ‘Music Is My Way Of Life’ came around when Disco was huge and hit a commercial peak, although LaBelle mixed things up a little by working with Scarborough, known for producing his romantic ballads, to create arrangements that were more sleak and intricately designed. ‘Music Is My Way Of Life’ isn’t a slow jam however, and it provides a lot of Disco grooves instead. Lyrics like “When I dance they look at me, That’s the one thing you can’t take from me/That’s the music that I feel in my soul” and “When the daylight comes and I’m leaving the dancefloor/By night time, I’ll be back for more” feel exuberant and triumphant, and it is filled up with feel-good instrumentation to boot. The Jazz elements shine through clearly, and there’s plenty of guitar licks that keep proceedings feeling upbeat and light-hearted. The vocal performance is strong, and LaBelle sings about how music shapes her identity and how dance music brings her together with loved ones with a convincing passion. The track is also filled with a floating Piano line of chords that add to the Jazz sound, and the Horn section creates another soulful groove. Overall, ‘Music Is My Way Of Life’ is a classic due to it’s traditional Jazz and Funk grooves, and it’s open-armed embrace of unity and Disco. If that is her philosophy – then It’s Alright With Me.

Thank you for checking out my latest throwback track post on the blog today, and I’ll be back tomorrow for a long-awaited debut appearance on the music blog from an emerging female-led Post Punk band from the Isle Of Wight who will be touring in locations such as Cambridge, Oxford, Guildford and Reading in the winter months. Signed to Chess Club Records – the home of artists like Sinead O’Brien and Phoebe Green – the 4-piece have been praised by UK newspapers like The Observer and The i.

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