DIZZEE RASCAL / Boy In Da Corner
(XL)
As a 16-year old East Londoner, Dizzee threw a big bomb at the UK
mainstream charts with some serious pirate radio fare raising his hype
profile several notches, but luckily delivers some excellent follow-up at
age 18 with this new full length. The sentiment is steeped in the legend
of UK garage, which seemed to dry up as soon as the economy went wack.
Indeed the shadow of the desperate times looming over Dizzee's locale
rings loud on this record, with his vulnerability matching his bravado
through the chaotic electronic skitter and off-the-mark weird chords that
come looming over his thickly-accented MCing. Elements of raga and
jungle flow in and out of this great, homemade, paranoid hip-hop for a new
Britain in need of some new, angry music.
SOLGER / Codex 1980 (Empty)
Solger existed for six months in a crusty Seattle basement (and really
sounds it), opened for Black Flag and then seemingly disappeared into the
void. People had been talking about them for years, and I never heard the
single, so when this retrospective (well, as much as you can do with a
handful of songs, you get the "good" cleaned up tracks, the "bad" quality
live ones and the "horrendous" original versions they first put out)
popped up I was psyched to finally check it out. Totally nihilistic slopped
up punk rock fitting somewhere between the Germs and the Damned (both of
whom they covered) with hateful and juvenile lyrics ("Dead Solger
(Soldier)": "We're future soldiers and no one gives a damn! We're future
soldiers waiting to be shot! We're suture soliders and we're just gonna
rot rot rot.") Mudhoney guys, who write the liners, were suitably blown
away and confused, and now you can bathe in the no-fidelity sound of
Solger.
REV. CHARLIE JACKSON / God's Got It (Case Quarter)
If you're a regular listener to WFMU, then you've know doubt experienced
the pure snake-charm that is Kevin Nutt's Sinners Crossroads show (on
Saturdays at 9 AM these days). Well, prior to the show taking flight Kevin
would circulate to me these amazing CDRs of relatively-unknown (well at
least in the McDonalds-sponsored gospel music biz) fellas like Isaiah
Owens and Charlie Jackson that would send a chill up my spine like the
first time someone around me played Hasil Adkins' "We Got a Date." In
fact, ignoring the fact these preachers would never consider cutting their
dates heads off like Hasil, there's quite a similarity of vibe in what is
going on (much more holier of course). Now running his own label, Brother
Kevin's first release compiled 1970s singles on the Booker and Jackson
labels from Rev. Charlie, and it's a jawdropper. The raw fidelity here
coupled with the universe-altering pulse of the tremelo on Jackson's
hissing amp, spare but powerful Fender guitar and primal, astounding voice
that combines fierce testifying and sanctified singing is a real
stunner. And we're not just saying that because he's a WFMU staffer. This is the
real GOLD.
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