BEATS & PIECES
SOUL II SOUL ‘Keep On Movin’’, having already topped the US Club Play chart in Billboard, last week was still number one in 12-Inch Single Sales and also hit number one in the overall Hot Black Singles chart (healthily as the top seller, rather than through radio play), although by now UK imports of ‘Back To Life’ are currently hotter than hot in the New York City — their follow-up here will couple re-recorded versions of the album’s ‘Holdin’ On (Bambelela)’ and ‘Jazzie’s Groove’ … Clivilles & Cole’s remix of ‘Clouds’ — surely the best track on her oldies album? — will be Chaka Khan’s follow up … ffrr’s UK pressing of Lil Louis ‘French Kiss’ will include two new local versions, presumably to give radio something easier to play … Teddy Riley is being sued by Jive/Zomba for allegedly wriggling out of a five year production and writing contract by crediting the more recent of his own creations to colleague Gene Griffin (also named in the suit), his remixing and arranging work obviously not being covered by the contract — Teddy, for instance, “arranged” the current Redhead Kingpin hit, co-penned/produced (as pointed out in its review) by a mysterious and so far unidentified Markell Riley … Bob Masters has moved from Supreme Records to become promotions manager at Sleeping Bag Records … Island — in the USA, at least — have launched a 4th + B’way sister label called Great Jones for what is considered there to be the more “underground” types of dance music, y’know, like rap and house! … Heavy D & The Boyz ‘We Got Our Own Thang’ — to judge from the national chart! — would appear to have been released here on the quiet (MCA Records MCAT 23942) … Kiara’s promo twinpack is now commercially available … Raul featuring J. Bonell ‘Guitarra’ has had its full commercial release delayed to coincide with BBC1-tv’s new Saturday morning ‘Up 2 U’ kids’ show, for which its various mixes are being used as theme music — meanwhile, the also Spanish guitar strumming Gipsy Kings have had a slight hiccup while their label A1 Records switches distribution from the defunct PRT to BMG/The Total Record Company, the same arrangement made also by Touchtone Records for the current Princess single … Milli Vanilli ‘Blame It On The Rain’ in its commercial 12 inch form has its (0-)97⅓bpm Club Mix flipped by a gentler (0-)97bpm Radio Mix and Pink Floyd cash till effects sampling jerky 123⅕bpm ‘Money (Remix)‘… Liz Torres ‘Payback Is A Bitch’, reviewed off better value import in all six of its mixes, has been promoed here in just its Club Mix and Spanish Version but the commercial release will couple first on July 24 the Club Mix, Bassy Bitch Mix and Radio Edit, followed on August 7 (Gallup chart rules permitting) by the Spanish Version, Edward ‘Get Down’ Crosby Mix and Lugo Dub Mix … Norman Cook’s video for ‘Blame It On The Bassline’ is great fun, a real game of spot the DJs, Norman sharing the decks with Streets Ahead while others cavort on the sidelines — his hit was originally promoed as a single side 12 inch with just the clubs aimed ‘Bassline’, the side its obviously been selling for but commercial pressings turn out to be A-sided by the supposedly more radio orientated (though not very), semi-falsetto title repeating jiggly calm walking bass burbled 0-105⅔bpm ‘Won’t Talk About It‘ featuring Billy Bragg, while the MC Wildski rapped ‘Blame It On The Bassline’ is also now in a DJ Streets Ahead scratched twittery hip house (0-)120½bpm Remix (Go Beat GODXR 33) … Mark Moore of S’Express and William Orbit have done wonders remixing Prince ‘Batdance’ (which I haven’t had time to BPM yet), making a fast but funkily driving coherent Batmix out of the uptempo ingredients and a separate Vicki Vale Mix out of the slower passage’s elements … Blacksmith’s long awaited Swing Beat Club Mix of their own ‘Get Back To Love’ is also about at last … LA Mix’s upcoming remix of ‘Get Loose’ replaces its Atmosfear break beat with a “harder” original groove … US imports I’ve had not time to review yet include the Clivilles & Cole created Maurice ‘This Is Acid’ and Jomanda ‘Make My Body Rock’ sampling (with two new dubs as flip) The 28th St. Crew ‘I Need A Rhythm‘ (Vendetta Records); twittery acidic hip house Smokin’ Gang featuring DJ Jack Boy, Rapper ‘Just Rock (Rap House Anthem)‘ (Hot Mix 5 Inc Records); breathily hushed muttering (by a guy previously spelt as Jerry) subdued loping house Jere McAllister ‘What I Do‘ (D.J. International Records); typical dated Todd Terry created “yo yo get funky” samples woven jittery lurching Royal House ‘Get Funky‘ (Idlers); samples studded jerky monotonous The Break Boys ‘Give Us A Break (Boyee)‘ (Fourth Floor Records) … I was instead driving along the sundrenched Devon and Dorset border last Tuesday afternoon listening to a Motown oldies show on BBC Radio Bristol when surprisingly the jingle appeared to identify its presenter as former SOLAR-fm supremo Tony Monson — but later investigation revealed him to be Tony Moxon (the “real” Mr Monson is currently back on Essex Radio presenting Saturday night’s 10pm-2am ‘Essex Mayhem’ soul show!) … London’s incremental FM licence winning station was due to have been informed of its success last Saturday … Adrian Allen (‘Little Chunky’), as last week’s mention was meant to read, has graduated on Metro Radio’s Teeside based TFM to hosting not only Saturday’s 5-8pm soul show but also the weekday 2.30-4.30pm afternoon show, while his colleague Tim Smith at Tyneside’s Metro FM sister station handles weekday 4.30-7pm “drive time” as well as Sunday’s 2-4pm soul slot … Greg Edwards is trying to syndicate his ‘Soul Spectrum’ show … Pete Tong (who surely can’t be slipping?) is amazingly in no direct way behind the currently exploding Italian scam! … London’s Charing Cross Road Busbys is where the Special Branch has returned to Doo it again every Friday with Nicky Holloway, Pete Tong and (upstairs) Gilles Peterson, Chris Bangs, Simon Dunmore — just like old times again! … Paul O Wain and Steve Poulton need no plugs for their Thursday at Rock City but are trying also to build up a harder house/garage/hip hop/funk/soul Monday scene at Nottingham’s Hippo … Upnorth Promotions’ fifth so-called “Blackpool” weekender — highly praised as being much more soulful that the others, always — actually moves up the coast to Morecambe on October 20/21/22, full details and £48 inclusive tickets on 091-389 0317 … Rhythim Is Rhythim ‘Sinister‘, about which Tim Jeffery raved in his Cool Cuts chart last week, has been out several times already in various combinations, including on a UK issued Jack Trax album … Tim Taylor has returned from a refreshing experience jocking for two nights in Brazil at Sao Paulo’s Nation, where he played a lot of latin hip hop/free-style but the mainly gay crowd (who were happy to dance to anything new) really got off on the likes of Ralphi Rosario, 2 In A Room, Double Trouble, Bang – The Party, Bones Breaks, WestBam, ABC, Voodoo Doll, A Guy Called Gerald, and indeed acid and techno in general (wot, no sambas!!) … Stephen Plant of Kings Norton raves about a “totally outrageous and over the top” Acid Remix of Petula Clark’s already recently rejigged ‘Downtown’, this newer treatment only being out in France on Clever Records … Hithouse turns out apparently to be a direct translation of Dutch producer/mixer Peter Slaghuis’s surname — certainly “slag” is Dutch for “cream”, as I’ve pointed out in the past, so maybe there’s an element of slang or poetic licence involved? … Sybil’s full name turns out to be Sybil Lunch! … KAOS is Simianne Joy, a Birmingham (West Midlands, not Alabama) singer for whom Kevin Saunderson created ‘Definition Of Love’ after she’d auditioned for him in London a year ago … Final Cut (whose ‘You Can’t Deny The Bass‘ was reviewed recently) are Detroit DJ Jeff ‘The Wizard’ Mills with Tony Srock (sic), accompanied by True Faith in the form of vocalist Jeanette Sellers … George Benson has finally been allowed to do what he wants to do, his new ‘Tenderly’ album being straight jazz in cocktail/easy listening style (apparently considered to be so uncommercial by Warner Bros that it has had hardly any promotion) … Greedy Beat Records’ marketing methods are beyond understanding: despite my encouraging reviews (and a supposed April 24 release date), their last batch of rather good singles still appear never to have reached either DJs or shops – and now they’re pushing out some new ones! … ‘Batman’ has a very clever logo — how many of you realised instantly that it was a bat shape, rather than the prominent front teeth (or Mouseketeer ears!) that its glittery surround initially suggests? … I’m outta here — BUT NOT FOR LONG!
HOT VINYL
PET SHOP BOYS ‘It’s Alright (The D.J. International Mixes)’ (Parlophone 12RX 6220)
Their ‘Introspective’ album’s Sterling Void cover version has been long awaited on single, a Frankie Knuckles remix once being rumoured, finally hitting the pop chart last week in a throbbingly frantic then typically vocal frisky flying (0-)124-0-123⅘bpm Extended Version (Parlophone 12R 6220), but this week it’s going to hit The Club Chart in the form of these authentic house remixes, The Tyree Mix being a thudding and twittering hard (0-)123¼-123½bpm acidic instrumental with just Tessa Niles & Sally Bradshaw’s background vocals while (remixed by the tune’s originator along with Rocky Jones) The Sterling Void Mix is an also twittery although actually much softer and poppier 123½bpm full Pet Shop Boys vocal.
STARLIGHT ‘Numero Uno’ (CityBeat CBE 1242)
Originally credited as being by Starlight Invention Group when on Italy’s Dee Jay Lelewel label, one of the biggest and best DJ created volume pumping contenders to follow Cappella in the suddenly much hyped “Italian house” trend is this brightly jumping 123-123⅕-0bpm jitterer sampling Hi-Tension’s “bless the funk”, James Brown grunts and a whole host more over jauntily jangling piano and driving beats, with a synth buzzed less “vocal” 123-0bpm Alternative Mix flip. While nothing new, it’s so simple and instantly infectious it’s sure to smash when out here fully on July 31.
KOXO CLUB BAND ‘Paradhouse Remix’ (CityBeat CBE 1240)
Already raved over on import many months back, this long established Balearic smash has been deservedly huge at certain venues for over a year, a superb Spanish guitar picked and girls muttered disco-flamenco bounder along the lines of the Gipsy Kings and Raul featuring J. Bonnell with bursts of ‘Tequila’ and other party rousers in the previously reviewed 127⅘-117⅗bpm German remix by Bob One, Enzo Persueder and Sunny, who actually combined the Spanish ‘La Maranza’ with — coupled now for the first time on the same record — the piano jangled more mundane but beefily driven good house-ish chugging 119bpm Original Mix and instrumental 118⅘bpm Piano Mix which, without any Spanish influence, were in fact the creation of yet another Italian DJ, Mario Tomasoni (who recently quit Rimini’s The Yellow Flag club to enter the priesthood!). Continue reading “July 15, 1989: Pet Shop Boys, Starlight, Koxo Club Band, Black Box, Skipworth & Turner”






