Saturday, December 25, 2010

Godfather Lives Through



Every Christmas for the past four years I, along with a lot of other people, think a lot about James Brown. And though I've never been particularly fond of the ritual of celebrating and remembering folks on the anniversaries of their deaths - rather than, oh say, their birthdays - I can't really help it in this case. The memory of gathering with neighbors and strangers in the frigid cold along Lenox Avenue three days after James passed to watch (and ultimately follow) a horse drawn carriage usher him down to the Apollo Theater for one final appearance is one I'll forever associate with the holiday season in Harlem. A few days after hearing that I was among the many compelled to attend the Godfather's public wake, Brendan Frederick of Scratch asked me if I'd be down to eulogize James Brown in the magazine. This is what I wrote.

The Shining
By Chairman Mao
Originally published in Scratch Magazine, March/April 2007

In the early hours of Christmas Day 2006 James Brown, weak from pneumonia and suffering congestive heart failure, turned to his long-time friend and manager Charles Bobbit and said simply, “I’m going to leave here tonight.” After making his peace with the Creator, the Godfather of Soul lay back in his Atlanta hospital bed one final time, passing on to a better place not of this earth.

Music fans of the world mourned the passing of a legend. James Brown, it had seemed to many of us, was bigger than life, someone that no hardship, obstacle, or setback – be it growing up in the Jim Crow South, incarceration, band mutinies, or changing popular musical tastes – could hold back. We of the hip-hop generation, of course, felt a great kinship with James for having helped him overcome the latter. During the better part of the late ’70s and early ’80s when Black radio turned its collective back on JB, essentially writing off Soul Brother #1 as Soul Brother # Done, South Bronx selectors kept his heaviest beats in rotation – one break and two copies at a time – and commemorated his birthday with annual Zulu Nation throwdowns. By the mid-’80s, when producer Marley Marl discovered the powers of digital sampling (and soon after the super-powers of sampling James Brown and his productions) the Godfather was once again back and, to quote a line from his own “Coldblooded,” hipper than hip. He was hip-hop.

Rap cats took great pride in taking credit for the restoration of his career (lest we forget Daddy-O’s oft-quoted lyric from Stetsasonic’s “Talkin’ All That Jazz” – “Tell the truth James Brown was old/ ’Til Eric and Ra came out with ‘I [Know You] Got Soul’”). But the truth of the matter was it was James who’d blessed us by laying down the true blueprint of hip-hop (sorry, Kris; sorry, ’Hov) with the pioneering rhythm method of his funk recordings of the late ’60s and early ’70s. On ground-breaking groove-centric workouts and extended jams like “Soul Power,” “Funky Drummer,” “Escape-Ism,” “Make It Funky,” “Mind Power,” “Papa Don’t Take No Mess,” the almighty “Give It Up or Turnit a Loose,” and countless others, traditional song structure was handed its walking papers, replaced by funk-drenched vamps repeated to the edge of panic before temporary relief arrived in the form of a bridge every now and then. This was rhythm for rhythm’s sake, a celebration of beats so bad (meaning good) that the self-dubbed Minister of New New (two times!) Super Heavy Funk could even cease singing, drop entire songs of spoken jewels, or have his prodigious band-members shout out their hometowns and still keep the party live. This was the future – the basis of not just hip-hop, but every other genre of modern club or dance music now in existence. James himself knew it; it just took the rest of us a while to catch up to him.

No such uncertainty existed on Thursday, December 28th, 2006 when blocks upon blocks of James Brown fans withstood several hours waiting on line in the winter chill to see our musical guiding light grace the stage of Harlem USA’s Apollo Theater one last time, and say goodbye and thank you. We represented different generations; from old timers who’d seen the Godfather perform frequently over the years; to young children – there at the behest of their parents – for whom hearing “Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud” sung in unison by a crowd of strangers the same complexion as theirs induced an epiphany that was priceless to witness. Our common bond was undeniable: the soundtrack to our lives would be entirely unimaginable without James Brown.

The King is dead; long live the King. James Brown Forever. R.I.P.

Friday, December 24, 2010

Spine Blowing Decisions Vol. 30: Goodbye, So Long



This past week the last ever episode of "Spine Blowing Decisions" hit the Interwebz (get it here). And though I'm admittedly a little bummed to see the show go I'm grateful as hell to have had the opportunity to host it for the past few years. I put together 30 shows altogether (nearly all of them, with the exception of maybe one or two, Space Echo-enhanced) and can honestly say I feel pretty damn pleased with how all of them turned out. One of these days I'll post up some of the old eps (they stopped archiving them on the Spine site many moons ago) so they don't just waste away forever on my hard drive.
Anyways, once again big, big, big thanks to Zaid M, who was instrumental in getting me (as well as luminaries like the homies Kon & Amir) down with the program initially, and curating something special. Thanks also to JBX, DCT, Young Hsulu, K-Prince & co., and Monk for the support, Matthew Africa for all the kudos, the Nonsense crew out in London Town for letting me rock with them at Plastic, and anyone else who tuned in. For the final "SBD" I thought I'd go out with a bang, so I pulled a couple of exclusives and specials, dropped in a lil' blend action, and previewed a possible Emerson-type modern soul future classic (the sick, sick, sick Michael Dean instro), before resurrecting one last time the show's unofficial anthem - Emerson itself (here given the Monk-Uno magic touch). Playlist below. Enjoy!

(Oh, and of course, please don't forget: I'll continue to inflict damage on the electronic airwaves with my monthly "Across 135th Street" program over at redbullmusicacademy.com. So do continue to check for that. Next ep on the way soon!)

Spine Blowing Decisions Vol. 30: The Final Chapter!

Ultramagnetic MC's - Chilling With Chuck Chillout
Kings of Pressure - You Know How to Reach Us
Pleasure - Bouncy Lady (DJ Boogie Blind Dub Re-Edit)
Ray Alexander Technique - My Special One (Alternate Mix)
Funk Inc./Lord Finesse - Goodbye, So Long (Instrumental)/Funky Technician
45 King/Notorious B.I.G. - Big Tramp
Busta Rhymes ft. Rampage - Abandon Ship (J Dilla Remix)
EPMD ft. LL Cool J - Rampage (Demo)
Eric B. & Rakim - Don't Sweat the Technique (Demo)
Ultramagnetic MC's - MC Champion (Original Version)
Ultramagnetic MC's - Feelin' It (T.R. Love bonus verse)
Dennis Coffey - Scorpio (Alternate Mix)
T Bottoms - Pistol Whip
Red Rack'Em - Dance Valet
Jason Lev - Be Thankful
Michael Dean - Lovehygh (Remix)
Emerson - Sending All My Love Out (Monk-One Edit)

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Ice, Ice, Baby



Starting 2nite for two nights only - a theatrical extravaganza destined to join the Rockettes at Radio City, and the Nutcracker (peace, Melachai) at Lincoln Centre as must-experience-before-you-leave-this-earth NYC yuletide events. Prince Paul and P.Forreal (a/k/a, the son of Prince Paul) join forces for Negroes On Ice. Go here to reserve your tickets (only $5 - cheap!). Those fearful of attending in light of recent tragic events, please don't worry: We guarantee Spiderman will not fall on your head if you attend. (The Dew-Dew Man, however, is another story.)