Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Waxpoetics. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Waxpoetics. Mostrar todas as mensagens

domingo, 15 de novembro de 2009

Waxpoetics # 38
















Yummy!

It’s been a long time coming. In fact, for the past eight years and thirty-seven issues, we’ve wanted to do a Curtis Mayfield cover. It finally worked out for our unofficial Film/Hustler Issue, in which we take a look at Mayfield’s epic soundtrack recording Super Fly. New York writer Michael Gonzales pulls from his own 1996 Curtis Mayfield interview as well as tapping Curtis associates, guitarists Craig McMullen and Phil Upchurch and composer/arranger Johnny Pate, to tell the story of the finest blaxploitation score of the 1970s.

Once again, we’ve created a split cover–with Curtis on front both times and the back shared by two classic films: Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing (Radio Raheem in full effect) and Ralph Bakshi’s Coonskin (a Wax Poetics favorite). Besides speaking with both of these groundbreaking filmmakers, we also take a look at the new film Black Dynamite (Wax Poetics Records released the score and soundtrack), and music supervisor David Hollander reveals the fundamental facts of once-mysterious library music.

Last but not least, we finally unveil the Robert Beck aka Iceberg Slim story by longtime contributer Mark McCord (aka Mark Skillz). As the greatest hustler of all time, Beck finally gets his due.

Purchase at: Wax Poetics Storefront


Featured Articles:
Curtis Mayfield
“I don’t see why people are complaining about the subject of these films,” Curtis told Jet magazine in October 1972 in a statement that foreshadows the words of modern-day rappers. “The way you clean up the films is by cleaning up the streets. The music and movies of today are the conditions that exist.”
Spike Lee
What gets me mad about Bamboozled is that the New York Times refused to run the ad with Tommy Davidson and Savion Glover in blackface. The whole thing about the film was to show that there is a history behind this imagery.
Ralph Bakshi
When I was doing Mighty Mouse and The Mighty Heroes, I didn’t like what I was doing. That wasn’t the raw edge of life I grew up with. Bob Dylan was singing, the freedom marches were happening, Miles Davis was blowin’, and the stuff Coltrane was doing was brand new. So doing this stupid, old bullshit wasn’t good enough.

Also Includes:
Re:Discovery Melvin Van Peebles, Manfred Krug, Marvin Gaye, Judgment Night OST, John Carpenter
Roc Raida The Grand Master
Shadows and Phonographs This sinister role of the turntable in Hollywood classics
Brotherman Blaxploitation soundtrack for a film that wasn't meant to be
Adrian Younge Black Dynamite composer refuses to cut corners with his authentic old soul
Gangs On Film The South Bronx of 1979 documented in 80 Blocks from Tiffany's
Night Life Photographer Michael Abramson captured the magic of 1970s South Side Chicago
The Rhythm of Film DJ/producer David Holmes approaches soundtrack composition with a less-is-more philosophy
Mood Music European libraries created soulful instrumentals for '70s film and television
The Next Hustle Ex-pimp Robert Beck transformed into writer Iceberg Slim, introducing a new genre for literature, film and music
Comic Truth Animation and indie film pioneer Ralph Bakshi drew attention to race and culture
Gangster Boogie Curtis Mayfield injected his own cultural commentary into the Super Fly legacy
The Provocateur Director Spike Lee continues to tell personal stories by any means necessary
Playing It Straight Black Dynamite director Scott Sanders crafts high-caliber blaxploitation homage
Analog Out Cybernetics, Louis and Bebe Barron, and the sonic life-forms of Forbidden Planet

quinta-feira, 1 de outubro de 2009

Wax Poetics # 37


Though far from an all-encompassing Michael Jackson tribute issue, we still had to show how much MJ meant to us. We go back to Indiana and explore his hometown, talk to the Mizells about the Corporation, and chat with songwriters that MJ paired with through the years. Also: Wah Wah Watson, Bertram Brown, Nicky Siano.

Featured Articles:
The Corporation
When asked about the breakup of the Corporation, the team of Motown Records songwriters responsible for the Jackson 5's biggest hits, Fonce Mizell is coy, if not straight-up avoidant.
Wah Wah Watson
"Working with Wah Wah is a real collaboration," says Herbie Hancock. "It's not like I had the overview and he was able to come up with different ways to express it. He is part of shaping the overview."
Nicky Siano
"David Rodriguez was my mentor and gave me all these DJ rules," Siano recalls. "Like, don't cut off the record before the vocal finished, and get to know your records."


Also includes:

Re:Discovery
Jermaine Jackson, Rebbie Jackson, the Finger 5, the Jacksons, Charlie Chaplin
The Mackrosoft
Ceremonies of sound from jazz-funk shaman
The Phenomenal Handclap Band
Brooklyn DJs-turned-producers forge rock-dance hybrid
Mayer HawthorneSoul's new breed kicks old-school Detroit harmonies
Illa J
Detroit's baby brother steps to the mic with help from another
Shawn Lee
Prolific producer trades instrumentals for fundamentals
Lee FieldsSoul veteran scores masterpiece with the help of Brooklyn's sophisticated funk
The Emperor Machine
Andy Meecham brings synth sophistication to the dance floor
Record Rundown
DJ Frane basks in a garden of vinyl delights
Goin' Back to Indiana
The sun set on a former steel town as the first family of soul rose to fame
Well-Oiled Machine
The Jacksons churned out hits with Motown's Corporation
Going for Self
With the help of hit-maker songwriters and producers, MJ charted his own destiny
The Transformation
Filmmaker John Landis created a monster with Michael Jackson's Thriller
Funky Vocab
Wah Wah Watson spoke a new language with the rhythm guitar
Incorruptible Message
Producer Bertram Brown kept righteous reggae alive in Greenwich Farm
In the Gallery
New York DJ Nicky Siano made an art of mixing records
Analog OutRoland D-50: distinctive synth of MJ's Bad

quarta-feira, 22 de julho de 2009

Waxpoetics # 36


E aí está ela. Se lhe juntarmos a nova Wire e a pilha de livros que se divide entre a mesinha de cabeceira, a mochila e a secretária (respectivamente Manhattan Transfer de John dos Passos, uma velha cópia de The New Radicals de Paul Jacobs e Saul Landau descoberta recentemente numa loja de velharias e ainda Black Music of Two Worlds de John Storm Roberts e a biografia de Sun Ra de John F Szwed que estou a reler) não vai sobrar muito Verão para tantas páginas. Mas antes assim. A WaxPo promete seriamente:

For our first Brazil Issue, writer David Katz sat down with tropicalia founder Gilberto Gil at his Bahia residence and spoke about the past and present. We talk with the great percussionist Airto Moreira and the brilliant Arthur Verocai, and take a look at soul man Tim Maia. Also: Jards Macale, Ceu, Joyce, Ze Bertrami.

Also Includes:

Re:Discovery
Os Brazões, Paul Winter & Carlos Lyra, Cassiano, Ozzie Dasilva, DJ Ricardinho

Márcio Local
Rio vocalist creates a natural flow from samba, soul, and hip-hop

Joyce
Brazilian singer-songwriter finds new light with lost album

Céu
Music is as open as the sky for the Brazilian chanteuse

Black Rio 2
DJ Cliffy offers advanced studies in funky samba

José Roberto Bertrami
Azymuth key-man puts forty years of playing into solo album

Triorganico
Los Angeles acoustic threesome conjures Brazil's breezy side

Record Rundown
Joe Stones preserves Brazilian psych at his NYC record boutique, Tropicalia in Furs

Like Minds
Jards Macalé and friends united a hemisphere of art and music

Truth to Power
Tropicalist Giblerto Gil declared independence despite Brazil's military regime

Man Out of Time
Arranger composer Arthur Verocai waited over three decades for the world to catch up

Percussive Passion
Airto Moreira brought Brazilian folkloric rhymes to American jazz

Soul Searching
In pursuit of his calling, Tim Maia sparked the '70s soul movement in Brazil

Analog Out
Rediscovering Latin America's forgotten electronic pioneers

segunda-feira, 20 de julho de 2009

David Axelrod & Wax Poetics


Enquanto não chega a nova Wax Poetics - que deverá ser o número especial dedicado ao Brasil (há igualmente planos para uma edição especial dedicada a África) - resolvi dar uma vista de olhos ao site e ao conteúdo online da revista e reencontrei esta grande entrevista de Eothen Alapatt com o mestre produtor que agora volta a estar na ordem do dia graças ao novo single de Rakim, de que falámos por aqui há uns dias... Ficam por isso mesmo por aí alguns links para se mergulhar no universo de David Axelrod, a começar na entrevista referida.

Entrevista de David Axelrod na Waxpoetics

David Axelrod no HitDaBreakz 1

David Axelrod no HitDaBreakz 2

David Axelrod e Rakim no Hip Hop is Read

sexta-feira, 19 de junho de 2009

Wax Poetics # 35

É cada vez mais uma parte incontornável do meu calendário pessoal de leituras e, certamente, de muitas outras pessoas. O mais recente número da Wax Po chega hoje à Flur e merece toda a nossa atenção. De Roger Troutman a Booker T. Jones, são muitos os nomes de peso que compõem mais este festim para os olhos e para o espírito. Haja tempo e uma esplanada onde mergulhar em mais uma Wax poetics.

quinta-feira, 26 de março de 2009

Waxpoetics # 34


Graças ao Atento Brother Funkula do fórum Hitdabreakz. Vem aí uma "jazz issue" da Wax Po e pergunto-me se terá conteúdo relacionado com Portugal? Hum...

sexta-feira, 20 de fevereiro de 2009

Waxpoetics # 33

A Flur já tem disponível o novo número da Waxpoetics, revista que cada vez é mais incontornável. Aliás, a wax Poetics começa a ser mais do que uma revista: reedita pérolas perdidas, lança livros, parece até que vai entrar no terreno da produção de filmes. A dinâmica é, de facto, de louvar. Mas o que interessa agora é o número 33 desta revista. Tenho a colecção completa da Waxpoetics, incluindo as valiosas primeiras edições, e ainda me lembro de como era difícil conseguir cada nova edição quando a internet ainda não funcionava como hoje e quando a distribuição em Portugal simplesmente não existia. Felizmente, hoje é muito fácil conseguir esta revista, pelo menos em Lisboa (e como a Flur faz venda postal, não há-de ser complicado fazê-la chegar a outros pontos do país).
A Waxpoetics dedica então o número 33 a Filadélfia, a cidade do amor fraternal, de Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes e, claro, da fabulosa dupla Gamble & Huff (que adorna a capa) e de Teddy Pendergrass (que está no verso). E isto levanta uma história curiosa: a Waxpoetics começou por ser uma revista para diggers experimentados e nos primeiros números abordava nomes que exigiam já um certo grau de conhecimento de toda esta cultura do diggin' (Idris Muhammad, Timothy McNealy), mas em tempos mais recentes tem vindo a reconhecer que mesmo em terrenos mainstream há nomes que podem e devem ser relembrados, como acontece agora com a dupla Gamble & Huff, autêntica máquina de fazer hits que transportou a soul de um modelo Motown até ao limiar do disco sound. Andre Torres, o editor da revista, reconhece isso mesmo no editorial quando diz que tempos houve em que ignorava o som de Philly ("in my early days of record diggin', i slept hard on the Philly Sound"). Na verdade, estes grandes nomes (James Brown, Isaac Hayes, Motown, Stax, Philadelphia International Records)são a base de tudo o resto, a fonte de onde emanaram todos os pequenos afluentes que também adoramos explorar. Ainda ontem li um post de um dos participantes do Hit da Breakz a confessar que não conhecia muito bem James Brown, facto que não o impede de fazer válidas sugestões de novíssimos e obscuros grupos de funk. A minha pergunta é: quando não se conhece bem a raíz, como é que se pode apreciar convenientemente o fruto? A Waxpoetics conhece bem as raízes. Aproveitem esse conhecimento.