I heard this on 96X in the car the other day and the song stuck with me. The DJ said it had been "big in France" for a while but it had just arrived here. Googling the next day I found out that it requires some unpacking. The song is "This Girl", and the 2016 release is from the French DJ Kungs (aka Valentin Brunel) and it's a remix of the 2009 song by the Australian funk/soul/Motown revival group Cookin' on 3 Burners (who remind me of St. Paul and the Broken Bones), featuring Kylie Auldist.
The original version sounds like it was recorded in the mid 70s and the Kungs version is a sped up, house version. Both are enjoyable and worth checking out.
Kungs vs. Cookin' on 3 Burners: "This Girl"
Cookin' on 3 Burners: studio, live
Sunday, August 28, 2016
Monday, August 15, 2016
Burial - "Rival Dealer" (LP Review)
Burial's (aka William Bevan) 2013 EP "Rival Dealer" has been working its way up my playlist. I have his critically acclaimed two full length LPs (2006's "Burial" and 2007's "Untrue") which I enjoy, but not nearly at the level at which this EP has captured my attention. Other reviews do a good job of contextualizing this EP within the rest of his canon (Pitchfork, RA, NME), but for me this EP synthesizes everything I liked about his first two LPs, as well as what I liked about Andy Stott's "Luxury Problems" and Balam Acab's "See Birds".
Bevan himself said in a BBC Radio 6 interview:
All three tracks are great, but the corner stone is clearly the closing "Come Down to Us".
Skip 'em tracks: none.
Standout tracks: "Rival Dealer", "Hiders", "Come Down to Us".
Final Score: 9/10
Bevan himself said in a BBC Radio 6 interview:
“I put my heart into the new EP, I hope someone likes it. I wanted the tunes to be anti-bullying tunes that could maybe help someone to believe in themselves, to not be afraid, and to not give up, and to know that someone out there cares and is looking out for them. So it's like an angel's spell to protect them against the unkind people, the dark times, and the self-doubts.”And there is a definite triumphant feeling to these songs, mostly abstract but some rather concrete. Furthermore, he samples an interview with NASA Earth scientist Melissa Dawson at various points in the EP. Although I haven't posted it here, I've shared with friends my theory that the US space program exists mainly to provide samples for electronic music, and with "Rival Dealer" Burial only reinforces my position.
All three tracks are great, but the corner stone is clearly the closing "Come Down to Us".
Skip 'em tracks: none.
Standout tracks: "Rival Dealer", "Hiders", "Come Down to Us".
Final Score: 9/10
Labels:
2013,
9/10,
Burial,
LP review,
Rival Dealer
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)