Monday, June 8, 2009

Summer of Soul Pt. 2 : Electric Boogaloo '09



















Ahh summer. The long days, the barbecues, the beaches and the beer all represent this special time of the year where, even if you don't have any more time on your hands than usual, you certainly act like you do. Summer is when we all attempt to recall those care free days of memories past that may have existed only for a moment, but are forever encapsulated in notions of everything from pool-side days, fleeting summer romance, and grandiose travel plans that were half baked at best. Last summer DJ Marcus Newmatic had a novel idea, "The Summer of Soul". There are many artists and songs that are perfect for those summer moments, but I think DJ Newmatic was on to something in that there is no genre of music that I feel epitomizes summer more than soul.
Soul music like the idea of summer is in many ways is about escape. Coming from Detroit, Chicago, Philadelphia, New York and other Black urban centers soul music in a very real way served as a place to overcome and forget the daily struggles of inner city life while promoting hope, celebrating love, and mourning heartbreak. Summer as previously noted with its mythology of freedom, is steeped in nostalgia. And soul music with each horn hit, each upstroke of the hollow-bodied guitars, and each warm crackled cry of a hopeless romantic on the microphone are drenched in the uplifting thoughts of yesteryear. More importantly perhaps is the lasting sonic power that these songs have. Even with the aspects of "old" among its sound are found tunes that connect deeply to the power of pop music while maintaining the musicality and tact that make these songs transcend their period maintaining accessibility to the ears of todays generation as well. Fitting handily on any standard blank cd and playing in any boombox or car cd player, I say without hesitation, that this is the soundtrack of your summer. So without further ado I give you the playlist for the ....

Highlights:



Whats on it:
As Long as Ive Got You (Demo) 3:16 the emotions songs of innocence/experience
Misdemeanor 2:41 Foster Sylvers Summer Songs '09
ABC 2:59 Jackson 5
Tell Me 2:46 Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings 100 Days, 100 Nights
In These Very Tender Moments 3:14 Eddie & Ernie Lost Friends
Maybe So, Maybe No 3:04 New Holidays 7" (Soul Hawk)
Make It Good To Me 4:52 Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings Dap-Dippin' With...
Respect 2:28 Aretha Franklin I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You
Seven Years 2:19 The Impressions The Young Mod's Forgotten Story
You're No Good 2:50 Harvey Averne Viva Soul
Cold Game 3:34 Myron & E with The Soul Investigators
Ole Man Trouble 2:36 Otis Redding The Dock Of The Bay
Goodbye Baby (Baby Good Bye) 3:23 Solomon Burke Rock 'n Soul
Many Rivers To Cross 2:42 Jimmy Cliff The Harder They Come-The Definitive Collection
A Change Is Gonna Come 3:13 Sam Cooke Ain't That Good News (Remastered)
Together (Album Version) 2:56 The Intruders The Best Of The Intruders: Cowboys To Girls
I Heard It Through the Grapevine 3:05 The Temptations Clould Nine
(Sittin' On) The Dock Of The Bay 2:45 Otis Redding The Dock Of The Bay
05 - Slip Away 3:02 Hank Ballard Can't keep a good man down - 1969
What Becomes of the Broken Hearted 3:00 Jimmy Ruffin
Woman's Got Soul 2:18 The Impressions Big Sixteen
11 Lost Someone [-] 2:42 James Brown Live at the Appollo
He Ain't Comin' Home No More 3:10 Nina Simone High Priestess Of Soul (Originals)
This Time 3:07 Dj Shadow The Outsider Hip-Hop
Tired Of Fighting 3:32 Menahan Street Band Make The Road By Walking
This Magic Moment 2:34 The Drifters Atlantic Rhythm & Blues (1947-74) - Disc 4 (1957-60)

Happy Listening,
MC J-Sauce

p.s. if any of you readers have your own summer playlist feel free to share it in the comments sections I will surely take a listen.

Monday, May 25, 2009

Patrice Rushen: Pizzazz

















While walking around in Brooklyn, showing my visiting cousin around the city, I stopped at one of the many tables of people selling records.  Looking through this guy's collection and thinking his price for a Joe Pass album was more than I wanted to pay I happened upon a copy of Patrice Rushen's 1979 release Pizzazz.  Though I am relatively unfamiliar with her catalog, I had heard a few songs by her and knew of her talent as a musician and it was worth five dollars to me to check it out... and I did.  Much to my joy this record turned out to be, what I will call, "an uplifting parade of soul".  Though trained in jazz, in this album Rushen is able to deftly maneuver a more pop sound.  Between the vocal and orchestral arrangements what is found is a sound that blends aspects of everything from Parliament to the Talking Heads to create a sound that is both soulful and oh so utterly retro-fun.
I hope you enjoy.


Yucatecan Garlic-Spice Marinade by Rick Bayless

















This is one of my favorite recipes by renowned Chicago chef and Obama favorite Rick Bayless. I have made a few times it to use as a marinade for chicken and served it with steamed squash. This recipe is based off of a common flavor combination, reminiscent of North African flavors, sold in packets or as a seasoning paste in Mexico's Yucatecan markets. This marinade has a complex combination of flavors that can be applied to almost anything you need to marinade. And as Bayless notes in his book Mexican Everyday this marinade can also serve as a killer dressing for tomatoes, green beans, or steamed chayote.



1 head of garlic (about 12 cloves)


1/3 cup vegetable or olive oil


6 tbs vinegar (apple cider is traditional)


A pinch of ground cloves


1/2 teaspoons ground black pepper


1/2 teasponn ground cinnamon, preferably Mexican canela


1 teaspoon dried oregano, preferably Mexican


1/2 teaspoon sugar


Salt


Cut a slit in the side of each garlic clove. Place them in a microwaveable bowl, cover with plastic and microwave on high for 30 seconds. Cool until handleable, then slip off the papery husks. One by one, drop the cloves into a running blender or food processor, letting each get chopped thoroughly before adding the next. Stop the machine, remove the top and add the oil, vinegar, spices, herb, sugar, and salt. Recover and process until the mixture is as smooth as you can get it. Scrape into a small jar, cover and refrigerate for up to a month or more.



Note: This can be made without a food processor. For that method I would recommend finely mincing the garlic by smashing individual cloves with your knife and giving them a thorough chop while intermittently pressing the garlic with your knife and repeating the chopping process. For extra mixing potential I would recommend a whisk.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

America The Playlist


So I started this blog in part kind of intending it to be an off shoot of a project on Folk music I have been working on for my honors thesis. Semantics and discourse aside, I have been listening to a lot of different types of music native to this here great land and would like to share with you a sweet playlist that I think is representative of the general quality and diversity of music connected to (and some part of) that old American sound that to many sounds just archaic and weird. Those people are clearly wrong. Well, not really, but I do feel that considering the deep impact a lot of those recordings (like the Anthology of American Folk Music) have had on the modern musical landscape, that point is a little moot or so they say. Plus I think it is time to fully admit, these days a lot of new music is just sounds tired to me, too many synthesizers and too impersonal. Like, I get it, your in a band, am I supposed be impressed or something or just accept you playing your instrument like a cold fish? JK JK... As per-usual this playlist is a little of the familiar and a little of the unfamiliar, anyway I hope you enjoy it.


Beams of Heaven 2:43 Rosetta Tharpe
Come Back to Us Barbara Lewis Hare Krishna Beauregard John Prine Prime Prine

The Fugitive 2:58 Merle Haggard The Definitive Collection

this land is your land 4:31 Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings Naturally
Cold Rain & Snow 6:44 Grateful Dead Dick's Picks Volume 5 (Disc 1)

Lonesome and a Long Way From Home 3:56 Delaney & Bonnie & Friends Motel Shot
Sugar Man 3:48 Sixto Rodriguez Cold Fact

You Ain't Goin' Nowhere 2:43 Bob Dylan The Basement Tapes (CD 2) 1

Spike Driver Blues 3:17 Mississippi John Hurt Anthology Of American Folk Music, Vol. 3B:

When You Got A Good Friend 2:40 Robert Johnson King of the Delta Blues Singers Blues

Little Martha 2:07 The Allman Brothers Band Eat A Peach

Drifting Too Far From The Shore 4:54 Jerry Garcia, David Grisman & Tony Rice The Pizza Tapes
The Unwelcome Guest 5:06 Billy Bragg & Wilco Mermaid Avenue

House of the rising sun 5:45 Dave Van Ronk Just Dave Van Ronk

It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry 4:09 Bob Dylan Highway 61 Revisited

Is This Enough 4:48 Roadbirds Live in the Wilde

Georgia Stomp 2:48 Andrew & Jim Baxter Anthology Of American Folk Music, Vol. 2A:

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Amadou and Mariam



















Amadou and Mariam are musicians from Mali, who also happen to be blind which I think is kinda interesting(they met at some school for the blind in Mali and are now married, says wikipedia). They are getting bigger these days, as a result of their 2008 release "Welcome to Mali" which has been received with wide critical acclaim. Also west african music is pretty hip in general these days (see fela kuti post, also the new Animal Collective album which also has wide critical acclaim I feel harkens to this trend with similar rhythms and song structures) so naturally their combination of African and elctro sounds are a good introduction to this trend. Anyways, I think this music is really cool music, despite the fact that pitchfork likes it too.

PEACE
MC J-Sauce



p.s. This is my 30th post... WOOOO!!! Don't you love arbitrary reference points.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Chocolate Chip Cookies by Jaques Torres

I am reprinting the recipe for supposedly the "best" chocolate chip cookie around (according to renowned pastry chef Jacques Torres) . Really there are two things that make these cookies special, one is that the dough is refrigerated for 24 hours to promote some kind of chemical reaction in the dough that I don't know about. The second is that this recipe calls for a special expensive french style of chocolate chip (its really more of a disk) that you can only find at specialty stores, Whole Foods, or the like. I'm not sure what difference it makes but these cookies are undoubtedly the shit, and taste like they came straight from a professional bakery.

Time: 45 minutes (for 1 6-cookie batch), plus at least 24 hours’ chilling

2 cups minus 2 tablespoons

(8 1/2 ounces) cake flour

1 2/3 cups (8 1/2 ounces) bread flour

1 1/4 teaspoons baking soda

1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1 1/2 teaspoons coarse salt

2 1/2 sticks (1 1/4 cups) unsalted butter

1 1/4 cups (10 ounces) light brown sugar

1 cup plus 2 tablespoons (8 ounces) granulated sugar

2 large eggs

2 teaspoons natural vanilla extract

1 1/4 pounds bittersweet chocolate disks or fèves, at least 60 percent cacao content (see note)

Sea salt.

1. Sift flours, baking soda, baking powder and salt into a bowl. Set aside.

2. Using a mixer fitted with paddle attachment, cream butter and sugars together until very light, about 5 minutes. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Stir in the vanilla. Reduce speed to low, add dry ingredients and mix until just combined, 5 to 10 seconds. Drop chocolate pieces in and incorporate them without breaking them. Press plastic wrap against dough and refrigerate for 24 to 36 hours. Dough may be used in batches, and can be refrigerated for up to 72 hours.

3. When ready to bake, preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a nonstick baking mat. Set aside.

4. Scoop 6 3 1/2-ounce mounds of dough (the size of generous golf balls) onto baking sheet, making sure to turn horizontally any chocolate pieces that are poking up; it will make for a more attractive cookie. Sprinkle lightly with sea salt and bake until golden brown but still soft, 18 to 20 minutes. Transfer sheet to a wire rack for 10 minutes, then slip cookies onto another rack to cool a bit more. Repeat with remaining dough, or reserve dough, refrigerated, for baking remaining batches the next day. Eat warm, with a big napkin.

Yield: 1 1/2 dozen 5-inch cookies.

Note: Disks are sold at Jacques Torres Chocolate; Valrhona fèves, oval-shaped chocolate pieces, are at Whole Foods.



Thursday, April 23, 2009

Taj Mahal: A "Monumental" Musician

I have been a fan of Taj Mahal ever since hearing him in my dads record collection sometime in highschool.  He is a great guitarist which I always appreciate, but generally a great musician all around.  Over spring break I saw him perform at The Belly Up in Aspen Colorado where he played the banjo, piano and guitar all very proficiently, as well as put on one hell of a show.  He has some great tunes and this first two are tunes I heard for the  at The Belly Up and just rediscovered it today, also I included another tune just to show how much of a bad ass he is... enjoy.









Monday, April 20, 2009

Not So Guilty Pleasures Part 1: Phish

This is a selection from Phish's first night of their recent March reunion at Hampton Colosseum.  This song is off of their 1990 album "Lawn Boy".  Just for reference I, personally, am partial to their earlier stuff though this is not why I chose this song.  I chose to share this song because I think Paige McConnell's piano solo at the end I think sounds really sweet.
If you didn't know this already I used to kinda be a big Phish fan, and with their reunion and the reunion of Led Zeppelin (the other band with a very large and special place in my heart) all in the same year of an economic meltdown and the election of Barack Obama the world feels like it is coming together in a weird way. Compounded with this is the fact that while listening to the new shows Trey's improvisation I get the impression his soloing has changed a little bit to allow in general to for a more reflective and pensive tone due to an increase in the minor character of his phrases.
  Trey's solo in this song (at around 4:45) is representative of this fact, in the original their wasn't even a guitar solo and now as a result the song is gaining a new character 18 years later.  But Trey's solo is not the highlight for me.  For me it is the feeling I get when I listen to Paige McConnell's solo following Trey.  This solo is in the original version, but I think that this one is particularly powerful (speaking partly from the perspective of a Phish fan) in part because of Trey's solo and the character of the recording.  Listening to the clarity of the sound and the palpable awe and excitement of the crowd just makes me realize that now more than ever, Phish is back and probably really never left.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Broccoli with Butter and Lemon


With food, I tend to get the most pleasure out of making and eating simple, delicious dishes. Now, I know what you are saying, "Simple, well thats easy. Delicious, how do you even define delicious? Is there such a thing? And does acknowledgment of the previous question in fact disqualify me from discussing such a definition? And plus wouldn't deliciousness by definition be of the exotic or complex?... or have I just contradicted myself." So let me clarify, something that is delicious does not need to be complex or even interesting. In fact it is not acknowledging this notion that allows us on a daily basis to ignore and abuse the great flavors present in everyday food. Deliciousness can be the simplest of flavors paired in just the right way, or in the case of this recipe three simple ingredients that just go well together no matter what you do.
Broccoli, butter, and lemon. If you were not a broccoli fan before, or one of those "only with cheese" people, I suggest you try this at least once. Not only is broccoli a cheap vegetable easy to always have on hand, it is also filling and highly nutritious, making it among the more practical options for a side or main dish on any given night.
The simple flavors here (broccoli, butter, lemon) represent a fundamental flavor combination that evokes nothing but the basest acknowledgment of nourishment. It is hard to forget you are eating something healthy while eating broccoli, but it is also hard to deny the pleasures of eating anything with a tablespoon of butter melted over it. I think it is the brightness of lemon that puts this combination in context reminding us that this preparation its a little indulgent, probably good for you, but overall it just tastes simply sublime and straight from home. Perfectly pastoral in every bite.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Langston Hughes & Charles Mingus: Weary Blues


This is an album I picked up from my good friend DJ Joe-sephus, mad mad respect . It is a great recording, and needless to say because of the brilliance and high regard of its collaborators, is an important and interesting American cultural artifact.
Recorded in 1958 this album takes the groundbreaking 1926 work of Langston Hughes' Weary Blues (which includes the famous "A Dream Deffered") and pairs it with compositions written in collaboration by Charles Mingus, Leonard Feather, and Horace Parlan. Mingus has a knack, I feel, for making music that is sometimes rousing, sometimes chilling, always original, and always eloquent music. This combined with Hughes "cool" prose that itself is written with rhythms straight out of harlem makes a perfect pairing. I feel that this album, because of its stirring poetry and pristine music, can be enjoyed by jazz and non-jazz enthusiasts alike.
The effect of this recording I feel exemplifies a lot of what I look for in music; something that is both interesting and moving which in my opinion (as was previously stated) is duly accomplished both on a musical and literary level. Overall though I just love the music and the poetry. Hughes voice is unparalleled in his delivery, and the words have never meant more as a result. This album is hard to find a copy of, I saw it on Amazon with new copy's going for as much as 40 dollars. Luckily DJ Joe-sephus l was so generous, and luckily you read this blog.

Personnel
Langston Hughes -
poetry
Shafi Hadi (Curtis Porter) -
tenor sax
Jimmy Knepper -
trombone
Horace Parlan -
piano, leader
Charles Mingus -
bass
Kenny Dennis -
drums





The Whole Thing:
http://www.zshare.net/download/5838186662489c46/#

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Resurrection of a 90's Classic: Boombastic







So you may know Shaggy for his 2001 hit "It Wasn't Me" or "Angel" but how many of you are familiar with his first break out hit from 1995 "Boombastic"? (Though for some reason I have a feeling my Flossmoor people remember this track more than others) I picked this album up a while ago, pretty excitedly for 2 dollars at a Ukrainian church rummage sale on 2nd street and I don't regret a thing.  Why should I? I remember my older sister playing this song all the time when I was seven years old and thinking it was the shit.  Now 13 years later I think the same thing and wonder why this song isn't in our collective faux-retro consciousness like other classic 90's bangers such as Tootsie Roll or Jump Around.  Maybe its just because it doesn't tell us how we should dance (in my opinion jukeing/grinding is clearly the implicit instruction), or maybe it is just too down beat for these fast paced times.  Either way this track deserves a little revisiting and I hope next time you find yourself the unsuspecting DJ somewhere that is in desperate need of just a little more fun music, think of Soundout-Loud, then think of Boombastic... and put it on.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

House Fire: Roy Ayers


So the other day while meandering around St. Marks I was deciding between an eight dollar copy of Sonny Rollin's Saxophone Colossus or a set of self/co-produced remixes from vibraphonist and funk/soul/jazz composer Roy Ayers.  So instead of Rollin's timeless classic I decided to go with the more adventurous purchase and happened upon one pretty interesting album.   "Virgin Ubiquity, Remixed" off Rapsterr records (2006), is an exotic mix of house, drum and bass, chopped up funk, and eerie 90's throwback that leads to a deep cutting sound that has a slippery nature overall (if that makes any sense).  I get that feeling about a lot of downbeat house music, the slippery part, but I feel that this music manages to parse the questionable impression that I get from that sound- and that I would only really expect to hear in a Spanish jean store.  Overall Ayers, I find, stays close to his roots and doesn't let this musics ambitious modern sound loose sight of the type of person to be buying Roy Ayers remixes.  This is the type of downbeat easy to feel music that is so synonymous with hip-hop, with beats tastefully unbridled by too much instrumentation or vocals,  which allows for a more sophisticated effect. I am not that educated on the issue of dance music but I know that there is some I like and some I don't, I think I like this.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Musical 80's Brat Pack Homage:

So to counter all the april fools bullshit I see going online today (myself included) here is something I think is pretty cool, it is a song "Lisztomania" (Unofficial Brat Pack Version) by the french band Phoenix, set to dance scenes from our favorite 80's movies. If you like this see Sat. Night Live this weekend, as well as Phoenix making an appearance teen heartthrob (well maybe only my heart is throbbing) Seth Rogen will be hosting.



another taste:
a cool link to extract the mp3:

Unhappy March intelligentsia Day... April Fools!



Fool Like Me - King Kahn and the Shrines



 
also Soundout-Loud March 09 radio right here: