Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Tender Cuts - February 2008

As I noted in my round-up a couple of months ago, there were some serious contenders left off of my top ten. After spending a bit more time with these records, I feel they are deserving of more recognition than a mere mention.


Tracey Thorn - Grand Canyon (Ada's 1st Dub) (Virgin)
Buy it now here or here.
I was surprisingly underwelmed by Tracey Thorn's recent album Out Of The Woods, considering that most of it was produced by remix genius Ewan Pearson. In fact the only tracks on the album that raised my blood at all were produced by Martin Wheeler ("Easy") and Alex Santos ("Grand Canyon"). On the strength of those tracks, and because I love the sound of Tracey's voice, I kept an eye out for the singles. It's All True yielded a decent disco-inflected effort by Martin Buttrich that, I swear, is on every minimal mix I came across at the end of last year. The real gem, though, showed up on the second 12" for "Grand Canyon". Areal Records regular Ada turned in both a softly pulsing remix and a dub. The backing track is essentially the same for both, but the dub dispenses with all but the most soulful sections of vocal and, for my money, is the sweeter of the two.


Tone-Loc - Wild Thing (Peaches RMX) (Delicious Vinyl)
Buy it now here.
And now for something completely different. It's hard the imagine how one could improve on Tone Loc's 1989 pop-smash "Wild Thing", but I guess Peaches thought she could. To my shock, she hits it just right. As anybody who has heard the song knows, "Wild Thing" is a catalogue of encounters with sexually aggressive women. Written entirely from the male perspective on these fantastical events, Peaches shrewdly realized that she was in the perfect position to fill the other side of the equation: that of the sexually aggressive female. She adds a couple of explicit verses, subtly tweaks the sample to give it that electro-house sound and "Wild Thing" is born again. Track it down, you can thank me later


Eric Kupper - Electrikiss (Nite Grooves)
Buy it now here.
Eric Kupper's career spans the last 20 years of dance music and beyond. Starting as a keyboardist for the likes of David Morales, Frankie Knuckles, and Arthur Baker in the early 80s, Eric has been doing mostly remix work for the last 15 years. Checking his remix credits reads like a who's who of electronic music. All that aside, Mr. Kupper’s most recent effort, the “Faith Healer / Electrikiss” double A-side, is exactly the kind of keyboard work-out you’d expect from someone with chops like Eric’s. The one-note bassline pulses away underneath melodic pads while the melody sparkles on the top. The whole track puts me in mind of practically any scene from Blade Runner, and in fact would fit very nicely next to any the pieces from Vangelis’ score. That’s probably why it appeals to me so much; the track has that atmospheric quality that transports the listener to another place and time.

No comments: