Saturday, December 26, 2009

Socrates Drank the Conium

This is a short one. I heard Wolfmother's "The Joker and the Thief" the other day and thought about how much Socrates Drank the Conium Rules...listen to their song Who is to blame....it has been blatantly ripped off.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Gallery oF Mites


Tim Cronin, credited on some Monster Magnet albums as the "Mountain of Judgement", put together Gallery of Mites in 2001. He called in a lot of favors on this one, namely, the who's who of New Jersey Stoner metal. Members of Solace, Black Nasa, The Atomic Bitchwax and of course, Monster Magnet.

What you get is a punk flavoured Stoner Rock album, with a sprinkling of Garage rock that is more accessible than any Monster Magnet album (except Powertrip). Everyone here is in top form and special guest John Garcia is groovy little bonus.


Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Norm...

i know its not music,but i love norm mcdonald. In this clip, the section that hes on Conan is sublime.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLkdSDAw1gU

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Them Crooked Vultures


This dosnet need to be said...its been said quite a bit already..but this album dominates!!!
So much more than the sum of its parts. Homme, Jones and Grohl are in top form here.

This supergroup is so much more than the sum of its parts. This album is riff heavy and extremely bluesy with Jones adding some very interesting keyboards to the album( like the Trampled under foot esque clavinet on Scumbag Blues).





The explore some pretty interesting musical territory on this album, for example, Bandoliers features a sort of psycho salsa guitar hook with with a very eerie vocal, courtesy of Homme.



This album is awesome. Simple as that.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Kula Shaker



Never since the Beatles have i heard an English band use Sitars and Tablas with such facility. On Pigs, Peasants and Astronauts ( Columbia Records), Kula Shaker forks over a slab of psychedelic schizophrenia that scares( in a good way) as well as thrills. This album sums up the entire universe in 12 songs. Everything from Love ( Shower your Love), Hope ( Great Hosannah), Anguish ( 108 Battles of the Mind), Fear (Time-Worm), Anger (S.O.S). This would be the perfect album to listen to if you were the Silver Surfer. The album spans the gamete of human emotion and the production of the album spans the gamete of the human mind.



But even if you strip away all the "Frills and Lillies", you are left with a band that can really tear it up. Crispian Mills is a fantastic songwriter and gifted guitarist, Jay Darlington (On this album) p absolutely sublime organ with rolls and waves of a thick hammond sound. The Rhythm section of Alonza Bevan(bass) and Paul Winterhart(drums) is rock solid, with both musicans keeping a very tight groove and keeping all fills extremely tasteful.



The production of this album is great but it is not what makes the album great. These songs are great songs and even if everything was stripped away, you would still be left with great songs. Pigs Peasants and Astronauts is an album that stands up to repeated listens and actually gets better with time because there is something new to hear every time you listen to it.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

The First and Last of...

A few weeks ago i was talking to Alex Brenneman, good friend of mine ( who is an exemplary writer) , we decided to do a little segment on this blog. The concept was simple--i would send him music, and he was give me his extremely well written first impressions, i would then comment further on music, giving a more rounded opinion of the music. So here we go the first installment of the first and last of!

1.Slavic Soul Party!

Alex:

Did you ever wonder what the world sounds like to the Pink Panther? Slavic Soul Party seems to be a band that pulled their inspiration straight from the head of that mischievous kitty. The quick and playful horns of this band practically beg you to get up to some light hearted wrong doing. It’s as though my speakers are spewing an intoxicating vapor of fun and freedom. So crank some Slavic Soul Party, pull some pranks, get into trouble, and do it while dancing with the grin of Loki’s own grandchild on your face.

Me:

Slavic soul party though very bright in their horn sound, sometimes loses the attention of the audience...at least on record. Not because the music is not spectacular, but because songs like Taketron are so gosh darn inspired, that other, slower paced tunes like "Get it how you live" pale in comparison. It is as if you went trick-or-treating at halloween, and grabbed a bunch of candy, and when you looked at your pile, you saw a twix on top but then you lifted the twix to see nothing but candy corn underneath it. The point is this--the candy corn would be much more enjoyable if there wasn't that twix around for comparison.

Songs like the aforementioned "Taketron" and "Missy Sasa" are truly inspired, while Opa Cupa sounds like it could be the alternate soundtrack to the Borat movie. All the music is good, but some songs definately jump out at you more than others.

Two things that i really really enjoy about this band:

1.Good Accordian: There is some seriously great Accordian on all of their recordings.

2.Style: They do not adhere to a strict brass band format even though that is what they technically are. Their style is much more reminiscent of a marching band than a brass band and they manage to create a sound that is much bigger than they actually are.


http://www.myspace.com/slavicsoulparty



2. Shrine Builder: Pyramid of the Moon

Alex:

I feel like I should be on top of a mountain, sitting on a granite throne and contemplating the fate of the world while I listen to these guys. There is some epic quality to this

band that goes beyond the heavy metal sound, something that makes me feel that by listening

to them I have transformed into a deep and thoughtful man. I could be deciding whether or not to have a banana with my dinner, and if these guys were on I wouldn’t be able to avoid contemplating the grave and direconsequences that would stem from my choice. Eerie and cool.

Me:

Shrinebuilder was a band hotly anticipated by anyone even remotely into stoner metal.

With Dale Crover( The Melvins), Scott Kelly( Neurosis), Al Cisneros(Sleep, Om) and Wino( St. Vitus, Every other awesome band), this line up was sure to be one to impress. And they sure do impress!

Their album is appropriately heavy and dirge-y and at times makes you feel like you are being rolled over a by a steamroller that is on fire. Imagine funeral music played by Orcs..well this is better than that. At least as good as funeral music played by electric Trolls.


For anyone who likes fast music, this album is not for you. It is long and slow, psychedelic and sludgey, and extremly, extremely heavy. But if you dig that...take a listen, chug some molasses, and be buried alive(sonically) by Shrinebuilder!

http://www.myspace.com/shrinebuildergroup


3 Yavuz Cetin: Cherokee

Alex:

It seems to me (and this is my very unexpert opinion) that Turkish must be a really hard language to make rock and roll lyrics with. That being said I can only speculate on Yavuz’s style, but here’s my hypothesis: I imagine he rides a dune buggy with razor wheels and a tinted

windshield through the Turkish desert, only at night and with his favorite pair of sunglasses on, while hunting demons dinosaurs from a different dimension. The evidence that I have for this is that a guy that rocks the guitar like Yavuz does has got to be at least this bad-ass. In fact he probably opened the dimensional portal himself by tearing through our universal fabric with righteous guitar Rockings!!



Me: Alex is right...the music is dead on, but turkish is a strange language to sing rock and roll in. Dont be fooled though. The funkyness of this song can not go unnoticed. Cetin is a very gifted guitar player and if he had Jamiroquai singing for him, he'd be taking over the world right now.


http://www.myspace.com/yavuzcetin1



Friday, November 6, 2009

The Harlem Experiment


Ropeadope records came up with a brilliant concept in 2001 that basically involved 4 steps.

1. Find a City with a rich musical History.
2. Find Adept musicians from Different genres that are based in that city. 3.
Get them together in a room.

4. Press Record.

This project became the Philadelphia Experiment (Wordplay!) with Avant-Garde Pianist Uri Caine, Hiphop magician ?uestlove and living bass legend Christian Mcbride. The music created was exactly what everyone hoped for. Seriously funky, out-there, musically heavy jazz. Ropeadope repeated this 'Experiment" with Detroit in 2003 creating an album that had more of an electronic flavour. But to me, the most accessable 'Experiment' is 2007's Harlem Experiment.

Featuring Harlem heavies such as Carlos Alomar, Steve Bernstein, Don Byron, Eddie Martinez, bassist Ruben Rodriguez, and drummer Steve Berrios, the Harlem experiment is less musically indulgent than the Philadelphia Experiment, and more focused than the Detroit Experiment. The emphasis here is on solid melodic and rhythmic performances that are well placed and never masturbatory.

While the Detroit and Philaelphia experiments, are amazing musically, there is a sense that the albums had been padded with extraneous material (eg. 8 minute songs that should have been 5). Not here. In that sense, the Harlem experiment is relatively stripped down, and more focused on the performance of the song and less with jamming.

The guests on the album add an interesting flavor to the music. The version of ''A Rose in Spanish Harlem" on the album, featuring James Hunter is a beautiful ballad that feels like something between soul music and samba, while their rendition of Cab Calloway's classic "Reefer Man" featuring Taj Mahal on vocals is a delightfully upbeat, clarinet heavy take on the tune.






The instrumentals on the album are also top notch, blending genres that have evolved in Harlem like Hiphop, Soul, Funk, and Jazz.
Their take on the Yiddish classic 'Bei mir bist du schön' is a prime example of this--it infuses funk, soul, and a pinch of hiphop into an unexpected musical candidate.

The Harlem experiment is an extremely focused album that is very easy to pick up and very difficult to put down. Though Detroit and Philadelphia were amazing, they do not stand up well to repeated listens( At least in a row). The Harlem Experiment, by emphasizing music over musicians, is a thoroughly enjoyable project and i can only hope Ropeadope keeps putting out quality projects like these (New Orleans Experiment...PLEASE!!).



www.myspace.com/harlemexp

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

On the Jungle Floor


Van Hunt is a serious musical anomaly. He is an extremely talented Songwriter, Producer, and Musician, but his music, though extremely easy to get into, is difficult to describe. It is a blend of Funk, R&B, and Bedroom soul, with a pinch of Prince and dash of Zappa. What becomes apparent listening to Van Hunt's 2004 album On the Jungle Floor( Capitol Records), is that Hunt is a musicians musican, and a producers producer.

Most of the instruments on the album are played by Hunt himself and the album is extremely eclectic mix of everything from Garage Rock("Ride Ride Ride") to Prince-styled synth funk ("If i take you home"), demonstrating Hunts ability to write catchy pop hooks in a wide array of musical vernaculars.



Hunt's voice(both musical and physical) are very distinctive and he has set himself apart as a songwriter who is not afraid to experiment( musically and lyrically). Lyrical content on the album is wrought with wordplay and double entendres forcing the listener to pay attention to Hunt's subtle wit(Especially evident on "Hot Stage Lights").

Hunt's take on the obscure Stooges song "No Sense of Crime" shows that he is willing to explore any genre of music and has a large range of influences. It also indicates that Hunt will be a very interesting artist to watch, because OTJF gives the listener the sense that Hunt is not about stop experimenting anytime soon.



Listening to this album on headphones is a very strange experience. The music expands into another dimension and the production really shines, but there is a very strange feeling that accompanies this. It makes the listener feel like a voyeur...like what Hunt is saying was meant for himself or his diary and that by listening to it you are privy to something that you should not be.
In short, It is a headphone masterpiece.




www.myspace.com/vanhunt

Check out the song Man of thre Year...it is unbeliveable.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Connie Price and the Keystones


Im just gonna come out and say it. This band is BAAD. Helmed by Dan Ubick of the Breakestra on guitar and Todd M. Simon on trumpet, Connie Price and the Keystones take hard funk into dangerous territory.

In general, funk has two mortal enemies: Slow Tempos and Minor Keys. The Keystones have overcome these obstacles by creating grooves that, though slow, drip with soul so sticky, it would eliminate the need for tar in the process of tarring and feathering.

Where the Breakestra plays it safe, opting for more predictable upbeat, James Brown Style funk, Connie price and the keystones frequently explore more interesting musical territory collaborating with rappers like Big Daddy Kane and Percee P.


Their Debut Full length Wildflowers on Now Again Records, features appearances by Malcolm Catto, and members of: Funk Inc, Poets Of Rhythm, and The L.A. Carnival.An Appropriate title for this genre of music would be progressive funk because, even though the band handles old school funk with great facility, it is their experimentation that makes them extremely memorable. The Whimsicality of "the Buzzard", the slow dripping funk of "Give a Demonstration 2", and the ghostly, eerie, cinematic ability of "The Shadows of Leaves" are what sets this band apart from a conventional funk band.


Osmium


Osmium (1970, Invictus Records)

Lets Face it. Any project that George Clinton is involved with is going to have some of the strangest, funniest lyrical matter that anyone has ever come across. Lyrics alone don't make an album great though, and on Osmium (my favorite Parliament album), they are secondary. Even though the lyrical matter is seriously funny( "My Automobile", "Funky Woman", "Nothing before me but thang"), the music on this is a force to be reckoned with.

Starting with the inimitable "I Call my baby Pussycat", the band goes off on a notably heavy, Hendrixesque journey, that, for a Parliament album, is remarkably structured. Vocals all round are excellent, and the guitar intro from "Hardcore Jollies" doesn't hurt either.



The Ruth Copeland penned "Little ole Country Boy"(best known as a sample from De La Soul's "Potholes in My Lawn" ) is a funky and at times psychedelic, humorous lament that uses just the right amount of twang, while "The Silent Boatman" and "Moonshine Heather" are beautiful songs that , though out of place, add a stranger, more interesting dimension to the album.



Parliament does rock music better than most rock bands. They infuse into it an underlying groove that is undeniable, and that is why the rockier tracks on this album ("Nothing Before Me But Thang", "Funky Woman" and "Living the Life") excell. There is something on these tracks that the listener would not get with a conventional rock n roll band. The Afro Alien funky mythos runs wild on these tunes.

The real treat on this album however, is the bonus tracks. "Red Hot Mama" is an interesting example of this song before it transformed into the version we know on "Standing On The Verge Of Getting It On." "Come in out of the Rain" is the single most poignant song on the album and sounds like the theme song to a political march.



If you are looking for an early Parliament album but are unsure of which one to get, buy this album. While "Up For the Down Stroke" is a great record. This album has ten times more soul and musical spirit and expresses the great fun and carefree mentality that Parlia-Funkadelic still had in their early days.

And if you ask me....it is the best album that Hendrix never made. R.I.P Eddie Hazel.

Tracks

1. I Call My Baby Pussycat
2. Put Love On Your Life
3. Little Ole Country Boy
4. Moonshine Heather
5. Oh Lord, Why Lord
6. My Automobile
7. Nothing Before Me But Thang
8. Funky Woman
9. Livin The Life
10. The Silent Boatman
11. Breakdown (Mono version)
12. Red Hot Mama
13. Come In Out Of The Rain
14. Loose Booty
15. Fantasy Is Reality
16. Unfinished Instrumental
17. Breakdown (stereo unedited version)

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Re-inventing the Remix



Keys N Krates give us and idea of what hiphop might sound like if it were played by jam band. That description however is flawed--The phrase "jam band" has connotations of noodling and musical masturbation, and KNK do not participate in such antics. What they do is live remixing of hiphop songs--the dj generates the acapella vocals and scratching, and the instrumentals are left up to the Keyboardest and Drummer, which are generated on the spot. Dont beleive that this is awesome? Check out their version of Talib Kweli's Get BY. It will force you to edit your concept of live remixing.



I first witnessed the magic of Keys N Krates earlier this year at the Brooklyn Hip hop festival, where they finished their first set and then, because they were so gosh darn good, came back for a second set. They are based in Toronto, which was fairly surprising to me...i guess we shouldnt totally discount Canada as a place from which to get credible hiphop.

KNK do a lot of things right--Their music is available online for free, their live shows are fun, and they seem be the perfect medium between Girl Talk(whose remixes are rapid fire), and conventional mashups (one song, one mashup). Some have said that they should incorporate a rapper into their sound, and to them say, a rapper could not deliver the vocals to these songs better than the sampled artists, so why mess with that? If you are looking for a band to make you bob your head like its 94', give KNK a chance, they will not dissapoint.

Check out their version of Fu Gee La!

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

The State of Soul

The last post was almost titled "The State of Soul", until i realized that if the state of a given form of music is going addressed, then talking about just one band would simply not be enough. So since the topic at hand is the "State of soul Music", i will talk about soul in its different manifestations today. Traditional soul music today is either played by older musicians that no longer have the fire they once did, or, in very stereotyped ways by cover bands aiming for a retro feel(Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings excepted).

Soul music has evolved considerably over the years and though it may exist very meagerly in a category unto its own, it has assimilated into other styles of music like a double agent. Here is speculation was to what a conversation with this double agent might be.

"Yes sir...im in Rock music. No. Theres nothing of substance. Ok. I will try to start a revolution. I will report back next decade. Agent Double O Soul Out"

There exist microcosms of soul revolutions hidden away in other genres of music. Lets look at a few shall we?

Psychedelic Soul

This sub genre of soul music was popular, for the most part, from the mid 60's to the late 70's, and combined soul music with distorted guitars, Wah Wah Pedals, heavy organ, and pounding drum beats. A genre that was as curious and it was enjoyable, this sub genre of soul was not afraid to explore a darker side of soul music. The Next Morning , the Undisputed Truth, and the 5th dimension, all explored darker thematic material and the sounds generated on their albums can be genuinely arresting at times. Other bands like Sly and the Family Stone, Parliament, and Cane and Able, took soul in a more Rock&Roll direction.Even Motown groups like The Temptations, and the Four tops had brief adventures into psychedelic territory, releasing the albums "Cloud 9" and "Still waters run Deep"(both on Motown records) respectively.Some of the best music these bands ever released was during this era and the flag of soul flew high in a different camp.

Required Listening:

Temptations-Cloud Nine
The Chambers Brothers-The Time has come
Parliament-Osmium
Sly and the Family Stone-Theres a Riot goin on


Rock soul



Bands like the Dirtbombs, Kings X, and King Khan and the Shrines, combine soul with notably heavier elements--Fuzzy Guitars, and sometimes unreal speed and energy, these bands take soul music to aggressive heights. Punk rock, heavy metal, and garage rock influences blended with soulful melodies and beats drive this genre and make for a very enjoyable listening package.

Required Listening:

King Khan and the Shrines-The Supreme Genius of King Khan and the Shrines
The Dirtbombs-Ultraglide in Black
King's X-Tape Head
Living Color-Vivid






Neo Soul


This delightful little genre is probably the most popular form of soul music today. With artists like Erykah Badu, Jill Scott, D'angelo, and of course Lauryn Hill, it has has had the most crossover success of any sub genre of soul in modern times. Combining elements that made classic soul so enjoyable, with hip hop, jazz, funk, and sometimes house, Neo soul artists are generally well informed politically and socially, and a great percentage of the recordings in this genre have some social or political implications. Another feature of Neo Soul that makes it unique, is that there is a re-found emphasis on songwriting and live instrumentation. All of the above mentioned artists as well as most in the genre write their own music and lyrics and use live instrumentation as opposed to samples and drum machines and samples of contemporary R&B. If you are having a problem differentiating between contermporary R&B and Neo Soul..here is an trick.. Contemporary R&B is R. Kelly and Usher, neo soul is John Legend and Jill Scott.

Required Listening:

Lauryn Hill-The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill
Erykah Badu-Mama's Gun
Amp Fiddler-Waltz of a Ghetto Fly
D'angelo-Voodoo



Soul Jazz

Self Explanatory....Soul music mixed with jazz. It is a sub genre of Soul music which incorporates strong influences from blues, gospel and R&B in music for small groups, often the organ trio which featured the Hammond organ. Cannonball Adderly's The Cannonball Adderley Quintet in San Francisco is probably the most famous soul jazz recording that launched "soul jazz", according to NPR , bridging "the gap between bebop and funk." Important figures from this genre are Melvin Sparks, Charles Earland, and Grant Green, and, more contemporarily, Chrisitan Mcbride, and Casey Benjamin.

Required Listening:

Cannonball Adderly-The Cannonball Adderley Quintet in San Francisco
Christian Mcbride-Live at Tonic
Charles Earland-Black Talk!
Grant Green-His Majesty King Funk


Revival Soul

This is a relatively new genre of soul so it is hard to define the trappings of it. The title that i have provisionally given it probably sells it short. Live band music that incorporates horns, synths, and hip hop elements. The Revelations, Orgone, and Stone Mecca are big names in this genre. Personally, this is my favourite modern incarnation of soul. It is analog, well produced, and the most part simple, and well executed.

Required Listening:
Orgone-The Killion Floor
Breakestra-Hit the Floor
The Revelations-The Bleeding Edge
Stone Mecca-First Contact

in addition to these, there are sub sub genres of soul that blend elements of the above genres, moving soul music into strange beautiful territory. The curious will be happy to know that soul music is alive and well, and constantly foraging into unexplored musical territory.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Old Soul...... Done New.....Done Right

Soul aint dead...it just smells funny.
-Frank Zappa(modified)




If you've been jonesing for some old soul, and i mean Stax-style old school, Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings is the band for you. With a sound that is so crisp, it would send potato chips running for their money, Jones and her band of merry gentleman give us a style of soul that hasn't been heard in a while. The band manages to pull of a retro vibe without sounding dated, which is a noteworthy accomplishment. Jones's voice is everything you want in a soul singer--raspy and smooth in all the right places, which makes humming along to her songs easy and enjoyable.

The real treat here is the band. The rhythm section of the band plays so perfectly that, often times, you dont even notice that they are there. The groove is so perfect it seems impossible for them to falter, giving the listener the impression that if they were to actually flex their musical muscles, we would all be in for a serious treat. But they are too classy and professional to throw in a drum, guitar, or bass fill every 4 bars...they keep us wanting more and that is something we will have to deal with. The Horn section is equally gifted--hitting notes so sharp that they almost make you forget that there is a singer. They blast with surgeonlike precision and lumberjack like power which makes you wonder what it would be like to write with a pen that used lightning instead of ink.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EB69Ij5X6AE

"Tell Me" from the album "100 Days, 100 nights"(Daptone records), comes off a very nowtro song. It has old school soul with an updated sharpness that can not be defined with words except to say that, while listening to the song, the band you picture will be wearing suits and skinny ties. The Dap Kings, when they play live, wear suits and skinny ties, while Jones is usually attired in an elegant dress. Seeing the Dap kings live is the total package--Jones' cheery persona and brilliant vocals, the rhythm sections unbelievable groove, and the extreme soul and precision of the horns.....all dressed up. Its nice to see a band that wants to impress you.

If there were ever any concerns that Old Soul was a dying genre, Jones and the Kings put those fears to rest. The brandish their musical torches and go to battle in an increasingly soulless world. What they do may not be groundbreaking but gosh darn it, they do it well.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0iGhFwZx6c

Friday, September 18, 2009

Wu Tang Mix Box

Alright. Everyone knows "Enter the 36 chambers", "Liquid Swords", "Only Built for Cuban Linx", and "Tical". They are the required listening for anyone into Wu tang, but in addition to these gems, there are quite a few albums from the clan members and affiliates that are very interesting and funky.

What i have here is a Wu tang Mix of sorts...a compliation of Wu tang songs or songs by other artists featuring wu members and affiliates. 10 Wu Tang tracks that are often overlooked.

1.Biochemical Equation-Rza & MF DOOM(Think Differently Music: Wu-Tang Meets the Indie Culture/Babygrande Records)

The Villian's association with the clan has recently become more noticeable with him producing large parts of Ghostface's Fishscale, and his propensity for Kung-Fu/General nerdiness really shines on this song. The toned down production really lets both MC's shine--the beat dosent really come in untill about 2 and a half minutes into the song.The slow pace makes this song feel like it could be the soundtrack to a slow march up a mountain to fight a long epic battle.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6uxhFnEVRWU

2.Old Man-Masta Killa feat. RZA and ODB (No Said Date/Nature Sounds Records)

This song is seriously funky, with a Sanford and Son guitar sample that might be some of the grooviest guitar ive ever heard. Masta Killa is a very underrated and solid MC from the Clan with an old school style of rapping that is more reminiscent of Rakim and Big Daddy Kane than the GZA or Ghostface which is a nice contrast between him and the RZA on this track. ODB makes an extremely comical appearance on this track which alone makes it worth listening to.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JaXEGLRAWbQ

3.The Shoot out-Killarmy(Dirty Weaponry/Priority Records)

Killarmy is one of the more interesting Wu affiliates. Where standard clan recordings tend to use Kung Fu samples, Killarmy recordings tend to use samples of radio war broadcasts, giving their music a notably darker tone. The beauty of this track lies in delivery--5 relatively unknown MC's absolutely shred the mic over an extremely gritty orchestral sample that evokes Liquid Swords and Apocalypse Now at the same time.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rg3vh52bGJE

4.Cross my Heart-Killa Priest (Heavy Mental/Geffen Records)

This tune is so raw and powerful that it would be at home on Enter the 36. Priest, GZA and Inspectah Deck deliver classic Wu Tang raps over an extremely raunchy and notably lo-fi beat that sounds suspiciously like early RZA production but is the work of Wu Dj, True Master. Killa Preist is known for his tendency to draw parallels between the condition of Black people in the United States to that of the Jewish people during Exodus, and this cut is no exception. The anger and power with which these verses are delivered set it apart from other Clan recordings in which, the energy is high but the content is just not up to the mark.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nN7CT61K4Y

5.Angels- Ghostface and MFDOOM(Nature Sounds Presents...Natural Selection /Nature Sounds)

This is an unbelievably interesting and funny song. It pits Ghostface and Doom against each other and each of them have their own version of Charlies angels. With Ghost playing the hero and doom playing the villian (obviously), the song tells the story of their respective operations. The sheer creativity of the lyrics makes this a song to pay attention to..with brilliant lines like:

"
Staggerin' except for the socks and mask naked
Grabbed up the boxers, fussin', pissed and
checkin' for the keys, stacked
A robbery expected, yet nothing obvious is missing"

.....which upon reading it, does not look like it rhymes...at all...but rest assured it does...beautifully. This song is an anomaly in that it has no references to Kung Fu or street life, and the lyrical prowess of the 2 MC's involved makes that change extremely enjoyable.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NroRvYrJ2lQ

6.Cameo Afro-RZA feat Big Daddy Kane, GZA, Suga Bang (Afro Samurai OST/Koch)

Big Daddy Kane is heard here doing something rarely heard from him--slow rapping. This song is a horn and string heavy sample with extremely old school clan rapping. GZA is as vicious here as he was on liquid swords and though RZA does not rap on this track, his presence is deeply felt through the haunting, ominous beat. This song has a strong visual component...it is slow and brooding and for me creates images of martial art battles on war torn fields .

Listening to this song in a car makes you drive fast...very fast.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SkJNB2MMG8g


7.El Michels Affair-Criminology(Enter the 37th Chamber/ Truth and Soul Records)

This is a treat--A live band doing Wu tang covers. Their original material is awesome, but their versions of Wu songs are so brilliantly done that they are often better than the original instrumentals. Their version of Criminology is so crisp, its no wonder the clan recruited them as a backing band for live performances. Not much more to be said except that this band was a great find and i expect to hear big things from them in the future.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjPV8HaZREQ


8. 9 Milli Bros-Ghostface Killa feat. the Clan(Fishscale/Def Jam)

This MFDOOM produced track pushes the Clan into a place they hadnt been in a long time and it is a beautiful thing.The minimalist production forces the clan back to their roots--Raw, rapidfire verses that leave the listener wanting more from each respective MC. There certainly are some verses that shine more than others but overall, this is an extremely satisfying track will please any old school wu tang fan.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jck_UGElBY

9. Kill Too Hard-Inspectah Deck, U God, & Masta Ace ( Chamber Music/E1 Records)

This is one of my favourite Wu Tang songs period. It has everything that i want from a Wu Tang song: A seriously funky beat, awesome lyrics, great delivery, and kung fu samples. With live instrumentation from Brooklyn soul band, The Revelations, this song(and album for that matter) stands out as a hard hitting, pseudo Blaxploitation, soul/hiphop experiment( think Curtis Mayfeild meets M.O.P), and it works brilliantly.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4nxp8Rw_d8

10. Live from the PJ's- X-Ecutioners feat. Ghostface Killah, Trife da God and Black Thought(Revolutions/Sony Records)

Ok..so this one is mostly because of Black thought, who is one of my favorite MC's ever, but still....Ghostface and Trife do a great job on this X-ecutioners track. The beat has an 80's flavour to it, but it is extremely danceable and the lyrics are great from start to finish at first painting a picture of an urban barbecue and then segueing into Black thought simply destroying the mic. Ghost is great here and this is the type of collaboration i would like to see more often.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1bhovBlCQ4

And there you have it....wu tang songs that are less than well known but are absolutely spectacular. Enjoy