Friday, August 28, 2009

JEFF WEISS: SUMMER SMOKE



(Editor's note: Jeff Weiss is one the most prolific young writers still going the print route, writing for the LA Times and LA Weekly besides running the excellent Passion of Weiss blog where he and friends riff irreverently on hip-hop and pop music at large. For his summer songs post, Jeff takes a hit off the nostalgia pipe and blows smoke rings in ode to his Jamaican weed adventure. --O.W.)
    Jeff Weiss: Summer Smoke--From Cali to the Caribbean



    Superficially, Southern California has little in common with Jamaica. But somehow, we understand each other—like fried chicken and waffles, Italians and Spaniards, Gucci Mane and polysyllabic, pasty white liberal arts students. I suspect it has something to do with the benefit (or burden) of constant sunlight, the omnivorous heat turning even the most lively souls languid, one endlessly slow and unspoiled season.



    Reggae is the purest summer music—the story (perhaps apocryphal) says that parturition occurred during one oppressive Kingston July, when ska seemed far too speedy. Even if the tale isn’t true, the facts line up—Los Angeles struts at a 4/4 pace, a dreamer’s shuffle consistent with the smoked-out votives proffered by those with Natty Dreads. The rhythm stays in your imagination, particularly for those with narcotic aspirations.



    Rita Marley-“One Draw”

    From Who Knows It Feels It (Shanachie, 1981)




    The city of “Indo Smoke,” “Hits from the Bong,” and “The Chronic,” can’t help but bob its head to this beat. Cypress Hill, straight out of South Gate, lifted the hook for "I Want to Get High" from Rita Marley’s “One Draw.” If potheads share a common bond, Jamaica and California, weed capitals of the world, may as well be Siamese siblings—along with Amsterdam, their quirky adopted brother.



    Peter Tosh-“Legalize It” (dubby version)

    From The Ultimate Peter Tosh Experience (Shanachie, 2009)




    Peter Tosh told us to “legalize it” 25 years before we did. Don’t let the High Times beatification fool you, Peter Tosh was a bad motherfucker, who wore his scars proudly and sported the nickname, “Stepping Razor.” Murdered in his home at just 42, Tosh never got the pan-global martyr treatment like his fellow former Wailer, but was massively influential. He is also widely believed to have coined the term “Hell A” to reference the City of Angels—like I said, Kingston and Cali are copacetic..



    Eek a Mouse—“Ganja Smuggling”

    From Wa-Do-Dem (Greensleeves, 1981)




    About a month ago, a fortuitous combination of circumstance and frequent flier mileage, landed me a trip to Sint Maarten, a 40 X 40 square mile, a half-Dutch, half-French strip stranded somewhere in the West Indies. Since federal law continues to consider ganja smuggling a crime, some stoners prescribe skeins of schemes to duck the Department of Homeland Security: hide it in your shampoo bottle, stuff it in a jar of peanut butter, alchemize it into suntan lotion and rub it on your skin. Basically, anything short of pulling a Stoudamire—i.e. walking through a metal detector clutching an ounce and a half wrapped in tin foil. Eek a moron.



    I don’t believe in ganja smuggling for two reasons: the first being that I don’t really enjoy courts, lawyers or possible prison time, the second is that it kills any sense of adventure. There’s something to be said about traveling to a foreign land and being forced to rely on your wits to score pot (that something to be said, is that I probably

    smoke too much).



    When my dreary U.S. Air flight dropped down over the lesser Antilles, my initial impulse was to make like Mittoo.



    Jackie Mittoo-“Hang Em High”

    From Keep On Dancing (Coxsone, 1967)




    It was the 4th of July, Dutch colonial style, and there was only one option for nightlife, a sleazy and cheesy club called "Bliss," a misnomer on par with this man being named Tiny Lister. A flier hawked a "DJ Mr. Vince" and a "DJ Mr. Kue," the latter of whom was advertised as one of the hottest DJ’s in upstate New York. Apparently, all you need to do to kill it in Utica is seamlessly transition between FloRida and Akon.



    Two watered down and overpriced whiskeys, four pairs of Apple Bottomed jeans later, a man stepped out of the shadows and introduced himself as Slick. He whispered "Weed, coke, and ex," not slick.



    Nodding, I followed him to a spot in the corner, where he whipped out two grams stashed inside individual mini-ziploc bags. It was dark, but I didn’t need Junior Murvin to tell me what it was.



    Junior Murvin-“Bad Weed”

    From Police and Thieves (Island, 1976)




    "You don’t have anything better than that?"



    "Nah boyee, this is from Jamaica.”



    Compared to the fluffy, marshmallow nugs currently ubiquitous in marijuana dispensaries across the Golden State, this was stale three-day old bread beginning to mold. But desperate times call for desperate measures when you’re in the tropics and there is penicillin to fall back on.



    I purchased both sacks. As we shook hands, Slick offered a money-back guarantee.



    “If you don’t like this, come back in heyeah and axe, where Slick be at. I gawtcha brutha," he said, with a dreadlock-thick Jamaican accent that I look absurd attempting to write out phonetically. Then he wished me a Happy Independence Day, we exchanged daps and pounds and a bunch of chintzy lime and lemon fireworks fizzled into the sky. The most logical option was suggested by Black Uhuru.



    Black Uhuru-“Big Spliff”

    From The Dub Factor (Island, 1986)




    So I rolled a log of the sere brown cess, that made up for in efficacy what it lacked in aesthetics. “Tropic Thunder” came on the hotel television, the air conditioning was turned way up, and Linval Thomson’s prophecies had been revealed.



    Linval Thomson—“I Love Marijuana”

    Available on Don't Cut Off Your Dreadlocks.




    Or if you prefer a different nomenclature, I was happy that I’d found,



    Bob Marley--"Kaya”

    From Kaya (Island, 1978)




    Or even.



    Black Uhuru, “Sinsemilla.”

    From Sinsemilla (Island, 1980)




    Since this isn’t a travel blog and I don’t own a single pair of Bermuda shorts, I’ll spare the plot details. St. Maartin is a tiny island, ravaged by world recession, ignored by foreign capital, and sinking into a sad sort of tropical entropy. There is a gaudy casino-clotted tourist district or two, but otherwise it’s filled with crumbling banana and guava buildings, abandoned storefronts, unemployed teenagers loitering on motorcycles, and island women hawking license plates and handmade Caribe dolls.



    Sometimes, Calypso beach bands blare Wilson Pickett's “Mustang Sally,” during two-for-one well drink specials at the Sunset Bar, and the sun sets purple and maroon and it is some kind of wonderful. The place has a stubborn beauty that no amount of poverty can eradicate, and everywhere, Jamaican culture holds sway—from color schemes, to hairstyles, to patois, to pop culture. I originally had myopic notions of attempting to imitate Calypso ’70 and come home with a crate stocked with obscure Antillean albums, but only found a single music store, adorned in a Jamaican flag, filled with thick tufts of smoke, wool rasta caps and a rack full of Lee Perry, Bob Marley, and King Tubby CD’s priced at $17 a pop.



    When I asked if they had anything native to St. Maarten’s, a stoned clerk pointed me in the direction of The Isis Band with Falasha and offered a money-back guarantee. Upon later examination, the band was revealed to be from Aruba, but I suppose it was close enough.



    The Isis Band with Falasha—“Faya Faya”

    From The Isis Band myspace page




    For the next 48 hours, I listened to nothing but the Isis Band, while circling the island in search of a pulse I only found in fits in starts. By the end of the week, it was doubtful as to whether I really understood Sint Maartin, let alone Jamaica--but at the very least, I discovered that we smoke significantly better weed.


Saturday, August 22, 2009

THERE GOES YOUR SUMMER


Meaghan Smith: Here Comes Your Man
From 500 Days of Summer Soundtrack (Sire, 2009)


This is a quick addendum to the last post but I just heard this for the first time today (and I haven't even seen the movie yet). A little voice is telling me I probably should find it just a touch cloying and overly XM-Radio-The-Coffee-House-Channel-ish but I tell that voice to shut the f--- up and I'm happier for it.

Keep in mind too, I think the original is the best damn thing the Pixies ever recorded and 20+ years, I still love the original. And somehow, Smith manages to tweak the emotional vibe of the song into something altogether more bittersweet and quirky and the type of pop ditty (I mean that in a good day) that I would have put on a mixtape back when I was in love with, well, anyone in my 20s.

What I'm saying is that this song makes me feel young and old at the same time. And it also seems to fit - perfectly - with the end-of-summer theme.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

EDITOR'S CHOICE




Please start by reading this first.

Part of why I solicit people for their summer songs posts is because I have a hard time reinventing the wheel for my own sense of what summer means via music. This year, the one song I knew I wanted to write about was "We're Almost There" by Michael Jackson and in many ways, that song brought me back full circle to my very first summer songs post.

I had a chance to revisit that theme for a post written for NPR's Summer Songs Series:

As much as I like classic summer anthems — bright, splashy, exuberant — they rarely capture what I think of as the essence of the season. Summer wants to be immortal and endless, and that beautiful delusion has birthed countless pop songs. But for me, summer is always a tangle of conflicted emotions: hope and disappointment, desire and frustration. It's the season of promises that, at their core, are impossible to realize.

Summer is more about what we want it to be than what it actually is — what I once described as "drops of reality dissolved into a vat of fantasy." Idealism may make a potent brew, but we know the season inevitably ends. That's why my favorite summer songs are almost always tinged with fragility and marked by melancholy. This is music that admits the painful truth about summer: Even the best times won't last, as long days fade with autumn's encroaching dusk.

And here were the four songs I picked to illuminate those ideas:

Michael Jackson: We're Almost There
From Forever Michael (Motown, 1975)


Like millions, I've spent the summer of 2009 revisiting the Michael Jackson catalog. The song that continues to haunt me is "We're Almost There," from 1975's overlooked Forever, Michael. I keep getting stuck on the idea of being "almost there." The song aches with the yearning to complete, as Jackson sings, "just one more step," but it's that "almost" that lingers. "Almost" teases and tantalizes, but it's as much a threat as it is a promise. Almost means maybe we won't make it. Almost means maybe "one more step" is, as Aretha Franklin once sang, "a step too far away." That's summer in a nutshell: an ambition within reach, but also one step from being lost.

William Devaughn: Be Thankful for What You Got
From Be Thankful For What You Got (Roxbury, 1974)


Has there ever been a smoother, more sublime summer jam than this? William Devaughn's ability to paint with such vivid lyrical imagery -- "Diamond in the back / Sunroof top / Diggin' in the seam with a gangster lean" -- is perfectly matched by the slick insouciance of the song's bass lines and conga slaps. This is no high-noon groove, though; it's a low-rider sunset, a time for quiet contemplation during the slow cruise home. Be thankful for what you got, Devaughn keeps instructing. Take nothing for granted. But even in the fading light, Devaughn's ultimate message is one of hope: "You may not have / a car at all / but remember / brothers and sisters / you can still stand tall."

Ice Cube: It Was a Good Day
From The Predator (Priority, 1993)


If Devaughn opens solemnly but closes on an up note, Ice Cube goes the other way on this 1993 hit. He ostensibly celebrates a halcyon day of basketball games, lucky dice and a late-night motel romp. But it's the turnaround at the end of each verse that tells the true story: "nobody I knew got killed in South Central L.A." & "I didn't even to have to use my AK." Those sobering afterthoughts carry an unease echoed in the somber mood of the music itself. The sample source is The Isley Brothers' "Foosteps in the Dark," which has all the feel of a classic seduction jam: the slow tempo, the syrupy strings. But there's a sadness that flows through; those "footsteps," after all, are of a sneaking lover. "It Was a Good Day" wisely taps into that implicit discomfort. (For a contrast, listen to the far sunnier remix, which uses a different sample.)

I should add: "It Was A Good Day" was inescapable in 1993, and even now, 16 years later, it still resonates with the summer.

The Heath Brothers: Smilin' Billy Suite Part 2
From Marchin' On (Strata East, 1975)


If I had to score summer's end, this early Heath Brothers song from 1975 would be an easy choice. It positively drips in melancholy, especially through Stanley Cowell's use of an African mbira (thumb piano) to play the memorable "Smilin' Billy" motif. I imagine the song patiently playing out as September days drift quietly towards the fall equinox. There's one last, rousing gasp of life that unexpectedly sparks at the end, but with one dramatic thump, it’s all over. Summer's gone

Sunday, August 2, 2009

ADAM DUNBAR: ECLECTIC RELAXATION



(Editor's Note: Adam Dunbar runs one of my favorite new blogs - Musica Del Alma - dedicated to the crossroads between Latin, funk and soul. Top-notch stuff and filled with the kind of tropical sabor that I thought would be perfectly matched to the summer season. --O.W.)
    First off, hats off to O-Dub for doing a great guest post on my Latin blog, Musica del Alma.

    For many out there summer can mean travel to exotic locales for adventure or relaxation. I have made it a point in the past to take long excursions whenever possible to places like South America and Indonesia in search of excitement and exploration. This summer, however, is my first as a contracted employee in the "real world", after recently graduating from college. With no prospect of travel on the horizon for quite a while (yeah, life is rough), I have instead focused my time this summer on exploring new styles of music and "digging deep" for hot records in the Bay Area. So for me, the summer song is a lifestyle and what I am constantly in search of hearing, whatever the season.


    Richard Ryder and the Eighth Wonder: "PHASE III"
    From the PHASE III 7" EP (Y'Blood Records, 1972)


    The Phase III track represents the perfect song that I want to start off my exceptional summer day: one that can be played first thing in the morning and PLAYED LOUD. The moment those drums kick in over that majestic piano, you know this is going to be something special.

    "I ain't singing no more sad songs
    Gonna have to sing the whole day long"


    So dope...

    Exit 9: "Fly"
    From the Straight Up LP (BRC Records, 1975)


    Recorded by a teenage band from Canada, "Fly"'s youthful exuberance is both infectious and inspiring. If things weren't already hype, the Caribbean stylings of the second half of the song really heat things up!


    Ray and his Court: "De Eso Nada Monada"
    From the S/T LP (Sound Triangle, 1975)


    ¡Ay, que Tropical! A great song from a great record. I get the urge to fly south every time I drop the needle onto the grooves. ¡Vamos a bailar, mi gente!


    Jorge Ben: "Criola"
    From the S/T LP (Philips, 1969)


    Heading further south brings us to Brasil and Jorge Ben Jor, the king of Tropicalia. The guitar of "Criola" really reminds me of the intro to Marlena Shaw's "California Soul", another classic summer song, and is a similarity which further establishes the track as quintessential to my ears.


    The Chakachas: "Hot Hands"
    From the Eso Es El Amor LP (RKM, 1977)


    An old favorite of mine that does the job every time, whether horizontal in a hammock or feelin' the stress at work. They key is to relax. Love the way the song builds up and breaks down with ease as the drummer adds his style.


    Poor Righteous Teachers: "Word Iz Life"
    From the Word Iz Life 12" (Profile, 1996)


    Word iz life, people! No Hip Hop songs gets me more hyped. Period.

    Get out there and connect!

    -Adam D.