Monday, December 25, 2006

Rest In Peace, James Brown.


from CNN:


ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- James Brown, the legendary R&B belter, a singer and songwriter who created a foundation for funk and provided the roots of rap, a man of many nicknames but a talent that can only be described as one of a kind, is dead.
Brown died early Monday at Atlanta's Emory Crawford Long Hospital of congestive heart failure, his agent said. He was 73.

Brown was in Atlanta for a dental appointment when he fell ill and was admitted to the hospital over the weekend for treatment of "severe pneumonia," said his agent, Frank Copsidas.
"It appears what happened is that he did die of a heart attack as a result of his pneumonia," Copsidas told CNN Radio. Brown -- known variously as "the Godfather of Soul," "The Hardest Working Man in Show Business," "Soul Brother Number One" and "Mr. Dynamite" (and often introduced as all of the above) -- was known for his elastic dance moves, razor-sharp musicianship and all-stops-out performances. He was, literally, an impossible act to follow: The Rolling Stones were said to have been terrified to come on after Brown in "The T.A.M.I. Show," a 1964 concert that appeared on film the next year. ("Nobody could follow me," Brown told "T.A.M.I. Show" director Steve Binder, according to a Los Angeles Times article.) Brown's performance in that show even earned an ovation from the backing band. "You have the Rolling Stones on the same stage, all of the important rock acts of the day, doing their best -- and James Brown comes out and destroys them," producer Rick Rubin wrote in Rolling Stone. His influence was broad and deep. He was a soul innovator, bringing a churchy rawness to R&B with his early hits "Please, Please, Please" and "Think." He essentially created funk with mid-'60s songs such as "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag," "I Got You (I Feel Good)" and "Cold Sweat." His grooves were sampled by rappers and hip-hop artists. He was tough on his own backing band, the Famous Flames -- which included saxophonist Maceo Parker, guitarist Jimmy Nolen and drummer Clyde Stubblefield -- famously fining them if they missed a cue. They even walked out on him in 1969; Brown simply recruited a new band, which included bassist Bootsy Collins. (Many of the Flames later returned; they were renamed the J.B.'s.) He provided the ground that much of black music -- much of pop music -- stands on. "James presented obviously the best grooves," rapper Chuck D of Public Enemy once told The Associated Press. "To this day, there has been no one near as funky. No one's coming even close." Despite much-publicized personal problems that included a rap sheet and drug troubles, he also was a community leader. In the 1960s, he was a voice for calm during a period of urban riots; J. Anthony Lukas' book on Boston race relations, "Common Ground," notes that a 1968 Brown performance the day after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination helped keep the Massachusetts city from exploding. Later, dismayed by the school shootings of the late '90s, he spoke out against violence in schools, even writing a song, "Killing's Out and School's In." "We need to protect the kids by giving them something to do," Brown told CNN in 2001. "[It's about] making them interested, making them love mom and dad more, love the family more, love themselves more and love their school. So there won't have to be killing in school."

Superhuman Determination


James Brown was born on May 3, 1933, in Barnwell, South Carolina. His early years were rough. Abandoned by his immediate family, he was taken in by friends and relatives and grew up in an "ill-repute area" of Augusta, Georgia, he once said. He shined shoes and danced for change, and he also served time in a reform school for breaking into cars, rescued by the family of friend Bobby Byrd.
Byrd invited Brown to join his group, the Gospel Starlighters, which later changed its name to the Flames and then the Famous Flames. The group was signed to King Records and released its song "Please, Please, Please" in early 1956. The song hit the R&B Top 10 and the group worked it hard, touring the "chitlin circuit" -- as the series of African-American clubs and theaters was called -- incessantly. "What made Brown succeed where hundreds of others failed was his superhuman determination, working the chitlin circuit to death, sharpening his band, and keeping an eye on new trends," Richie Unterberger wrote on Allmusic.com. A second hit, "Try Me," gave the group staying power, and from there it was hit after hit: "Think," "This Old Heart," "Bewildered," "Lost Someone," "Night Train," "Prisoner of Love." Brown eventually scored more than 50 Top 10 hits on the R&B charts. Seventeen hit No. 1. Despite the occasional pop hit, crossover stardom eluded him until 1963, when "Live at the Apollo" -- still considered one of the great live albums of all time -- hit No. 2 on Billboard's album chart. In 1965, Brown hit the pop Top 10 with the groundbreaking "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag," a song that incorporated the intricate start-and-stop rhythms that would come to define funk, and his mainstream stardom was sealed. Brown's music was bold: 1968's "Say It Loud (I'm Black and I'm Proud)" was a defiant statement of black pride; 1970's "Get Up (I Feel Like Being Like A) Sex Machine" was blatantly sexual; 1971's "Hot Pants" leering. His sound was unlike anything on the charts and was copied by many artists, including Sly and the Family Stone and Parliament -- who, in turn, gave it their own spin.

Influence on disco, hip-hop, rap


Brown went into eclipse in the mid-'70s. His 1974 song "The Payback" was his last Top 40 hit for 11 years, and even his appearances on the R&B/black music charts were irregular. He returned to the Top 10 with "Living in America," the theme from "Rocky IV," in 1985, but it was his last hurrah on the pop chart.
Brown also was plagued by personal problems. In the late '80s he was in the news for being accused of assault and battery by his then-wife. In 1988, high on PCP, he led police on a chase through two states before officers shot out the tires of his truck. He received a six-year prison sentence, serving 15 months in prison and 10 months in a work release program before being paroled in 1991, according to the AP. But his musical influence was undeniable. He was part of the first group of artists inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986. He won Grammys for "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" and "Living in America." He received a Kennedy Center honor in 2003. He knew what he'd accomplished. "Disco is James Brown, hip-hop is James Brown, rap is James Brown; you know what I'm saying? You hear all the rappers, 90 percent of their music is me," he told the AP in 2003. Brown's traditional performance close -- wailing "Please, Please, Please," falling to his knees, being covered with a cape, led almost off stage, still singing quietly, only to rise again, returned to the center, bringing the crowd to its screaming feet -- is indelible. It suggested nothing short of a life force, one that lives on in his many followers.

Which was what James Brown hoped for.
"I would like to pass on the want to do something," he told CNN in 2000. "The need is there. Good lyrics are good things, but I would like to pass on that drive, that vigorous undying determination."

James Brown - Please, Please, Please (mp3)

Sunday, December 24, 2006

Christmas Time Is Here


Wow, Merry Christmas.

The post before this one is called "Thanksgiving." That's just about one month since this blog has seen any love at all, and there are four main reasons for this:

1. The Unfulfilled Desire: Human Vampirism and Vampiric Humanity in Literature and Film, by Trevor Stout

2. C6H5(CH2)2NH2: The Connotations of Sensuality and Hedonism of Chocolate in Science and Culture, by Trevor Stout

3. Holy Cross, Holy Wood: The Vera Crux in Legend, Art & Reality, by Trevor Stout

4. Lethargy

But I digress; we're back now, just in time for the holidays.


This Christmas mix is particularly ridiculous, with US Air Force PSA's from 1983, the "Nutcracker Suite" made completely from sounds created by hitting a bicycle, a song sung by a small child about "Zoomah," the Santa Claus from Mars, Madonna telling you not to drive drunk, a high school chorus doing an ill-advised, completely sung version of "Twas The Night Before Christmas," Christmas at Hogwarts, Ed Shepp being depressed, a song that I need only say is called "What Can You Get A Wookie For Christmas (When He Already Owns A Comb)?" and much, much more:

A Very Lamb Lies Down On Broadway Xmas (.zip file, click, scroll to the bottom of the page, click "free," and follow instructions to download)

1. Brian Wilson - Christmas Announcement
2. Cotton Top Mountain Sanctified Singers - Christ Was Born on Christmas Morn
3. Reind Dears - White Christmas
4. Red Flag - Ave Maria
5. Barry Gordon - Zoomah the Santa Claus from Mars
6. John Williams - Christmas at Hogwarts
7. The United States Air Force - Something Good (1983)
8. Flip - Bicycle Nutcracker Suite
9. Round Lake High School Music Department - 'Twas The Night Before Christmas
10. The Knife - Christmas Reindeer
11. Miss Frenchie - White Christmas
12. Christmas In The Stars - What Can You Get A Wookie For Christmas (When He Already Owns A Comb)?
13. Marc Bolan (T. Rex) - Xmas Message
14. Incubus - Get Your Dreidel On
15. Sir Paul McCartney vs. Jennifer Lopez - Christmas On The Block
16. Feist - Lo, How A Rose E're Blooming
17. Oh My God - This December
18. Ed Shepp - Scenes From A Life: A Lonely Christmas
19. Madonna - Don't Drive Drunk
20. PostPrior - Snow Ogre

(I feel like I should post the lyrics to that last song, because it has become my winter mantra:

Confusing Scientists
With Conscious thought and moving limbs
The sun comes out and then he melts
Only to re-form again

Avoiding Mobs and cops
Because they know not what he does
Cause this his life 'twas forged in ice
And so misunderstood

GO SNOW OGRE, POUND YOUR FISTS AND ROAR
GO SNOW OGRE, A FINE AMBASSADOR
GO SNOW OGRE, LET THE SNOWFLAKES FALL
GO SNOW OGRE, THE ICE CONSUMES US ALL

Mom and dad, are just a lab, he has no place, of residence
Alone on Christmastime

Speeding Sleds, Gingerbread, Hyper kids, packages
Rotate through his mind

In the snow, he built a fort, with fine decor and even more
The Ogre trims the tree

Down below, warmer homes, throw a bone, and telephone
Say Ogre PLAY WITH ME.

Go snow ogre, go snow ogre, go snow ogre go!
Go snow ogre, go snow ogre, pound your fists and roar
Go snow ogre, go snow ogre, go snow ogre go!
Go snow ogre, go snow ogre, a fine ambassador
Go snow ogre, go snow ogre, go snow ogre go!
Go snow ogre, go snow ogre, let the snowflakes fall
Go snow ogre, go snow ogre, go snow ogre go!
Go snow ogre, go snow ogre, the ice consumes us all.

Nuts, right?)

So, while you're at it, grab Lemon-Red's Christmas mix:

Snack & C'mish - Lemon-Red X-Mas Mix 2006 (mp3)

Here’s the tracklist:

Vince Guaraldi Trio - “Christmas Is Coming (C’mish Remix)”
Jim Jones - “Ballin’ On Xmas”
Elf Elf & Dok-Im - “My Christmas Bells (Remix)”
E-40 - “Hope I Don’t Go Back (Instrumental)”
Instant Funk - “Body Twinkle (Larry Levan Mix)”
International Music System - “Bonus Gift Single ‘Joke’”
Chil Fac Tor - “I’ll Satisfy Your Desires”
Chromeo - “Breathe (Al Dare Edit)”
Bangles - “Hazy Shade Of Winter (Santa’s Bounce Edit)”
Yello - “Jingle Bells (Interlude)”
The Knife - “Reindeer”
Faze-O - “Santa’s Riding High”
George McCrae - “I Get Lifted In A Sleigh”
Black Uhuru - “Chillout New York”
El Michels Affair - “This One’s For My Baby”
Binky Griptite - “Stone Soul Christmas”
Barrington Levy & Trinity - “Flash Your Christmas Dreads”
Afroman - “O Chronic Tree”
Kurtis Blow - “Christmas Rappin’”
Voices In The Dark - “Keep It Warm (Re-Edit)”
Bodega System - “Silver Bells”
Freeez - “Southern Freez”
Only Freak - “Can’t Get Away”
Vince Guaraldi Trio - “O Tannenbaum”

ALSO, A Christmas Story will be playing today for 24 hours on TBS, if you want an Official Red Ryder Carbine-Action Two-Hundred-Shot Range Model Air Rifle.

Take it, Dino.