FACT Mix 494 - Colleen | |||||||
Running time: 59 mins |
Date: 04/05/2015
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01. Burning Spear Door Peeper 02. Scientist Dangerous Match 1 03. Tapper Zukie Simpleton Badness 04. Ras Michael and the Sons of Negus Long Time Ago 05. Noel Ellis Reach My Destiny 06. Augustus Pablo Pablo In Fine Style 07. King Burnett Paul Bogle 08. Niney And Observer All Stars Weeping Lotion 09. Collins Music Wheelers Collins Sweat 10. Wackies Rhythm Force Black Africa 11. Prince Far I Plant Up 12. Tapper Zukie Man Ah Warrior 13. Little Madness Mother Country Version 14. The Gladiators Bongo Red 15. Black Kush Natural Rock 16. The Upsetters Return Of The Super Ape |
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Notes The French composer has been releasing records for over 10 years, including the classic The Golden Morning Breaks and Les Ondes Silencieuses. Her recent work, however, has arguably been her best. 2013s The Weighing of the Heart, the first Colleen record to put her vocals centre-stage, was described by FACTs John Twells as 40 minutes of economic, uncluttered and most importantly unique music, while this years Captain of None is perhaps her most ambitious record to date: an ode to dub-reggae thats more bass and vocal-driven than her previous work. Colleens FACT mix is a companion piece of sorts to Captain of None, and focuses on music that has specifically influenced the album, mostly from the point of view of song-writing, interpretation, production, or just a general feel in the music, for lack of a better word. No other song, Colleen tells us, encapsulates how these various aspects of music-making are intertwined in Jamaican music better than Burning Spears Door Peeper. Released in 1969, the combination of Burning Spears voice, percussion, compressed horn line, minimal instrumentation and lyrics, and dry but deep production make this song one of the most earth-shaking Ive ever heard. At the opposite end of the spectrum, Scientists Dangerous Match 1? from 1982 sounds like underwater swimming in weird waters and shows how abstract and stylized Jamaican music can be. Elsewhere on the mix, examples of crazy tape manipulation, radical production and killer basslines remind us just how much even the more outsider side of todays music owes to dub. Colleens FACT mix closes with Lee Perrys Return of the Super Ape, a track that she heard in my childhood. [It was] one of the many Lee Perry/Upsetters songs contained on a tape that my parents bought in the late 70s and which we played in the car on long trips. To this day I just love this track and still find it totally unique and one of a kind: you can never be sure of what it is that youre hearing on this song: monkeys, spanners falling on the floor in a metal house, a jazz band lost in Jamaica, soap bubbles transformed into notes before one of the best breaks and song finales of all time. Comments |
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Link http://www.factmag.com/2015/05/04/fact-mix-494-colleen/ | |||||||
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