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  • Red Snapper Making Bones Rar
    카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 12. 01:06

    Upon listening to Our Aim is to Satisfy Red Snapper, I went back to Making Bones, the group's last release, to make sure I hadn't underestimated it. Like everybody, I occasionally dismiss a record and find out later that I kind of like it. I remembered that I didn't think much about Making Bones when I reviewed it way back in 1998, and Our Aim is to Satisfy sounded good right out of the blocks. A quick listen to Making Bones eased my mind: it's not terrible, but it sounds pretty average. This year's model is anything but. The songwriting is sharper, the sounds are more varied, and there is barely any British-accented rapping (an extreme and possibly xenophobic personal bias).Oddly, the thing that keeps this band from greatness is their insistence on a live rhythm section. I never could have imagined myself saying such a thing five or six years ago.

    1. Red Snapper Making Bones Rar 2017

    Back then, I always wanted drums to sound live, even if I knew they were sampled. I liked a certain amount of electro and '80s pop, but the sound of drum machines in general turned me off, especially when there was no 'song' working as a counter.

    But having ingested so much digitally-based music over the last couple of years, I've come to appreciate the expressive power of the computer. Red Snapper's drum sound and the stand-up acoustic bass are very similar on most of their tracks (also the problem with my once-beloved Soul Coughing), and it now strikes me as a limitation.Still, there's much on Our Aim is to Satisfy to love. The first track, 'Keeping Pigs Together,' sets the tone.

    Red Snapper Making Bones Rar 2017

    An instrumental (my favorite kind of Red Snapper track), the song borrows its chords from U2's lovely 'October,' adding a churning beat beneath to drive home the plaintive melody. Soon, the disc rolls into 'Some Kind of Kink,' wherein Red Snapper bring the funk with two basslines at work: one owes a lot to the O'Jays' 'For the Love of Money'; the other works its scholarship for the Roni Size Brown Paper Bag School of Slippery Acoustic Drum-n-Bass.

    Tack on a pounding snare, a spooky synth refrain, and some pinched, stanky vocals right out the 1970s and you got yourself a killer track.Similarly impressive is 'The Rake,' with an odd Donald Duck style vocorder and the kind of spare, low-key rapping I can deal with. And several of the new trip-hop-meets-soul cuts, which were unbearable on Making Bones, end up working rather well. 'Shellback' contrasts slow, heavy beats with the angelic voice of Karime Kendra.

    Sure, she hasn't got anything to say, but she says it rather beautifully. A few of the tracks in the latter half of the record fail to register at all, but enough standouts remain to recommend Our Aim is to Satisfy to the curious.

    This is a very important release I think. I have both the CD and the vinyl, which is:-The tracks on both the CD and the vinyl release are exactly the same. I first heard of Red Snapper back in 98' after hearing Suckerpunch. I had heard a lot of MC Det before, and along with GQ I always rated him as the best MC to pick up a mike. That said, I was very interested in hearing how top drawer MCing and a tight band would sound together.In a word? This is a great album. Well produced, with talented musicians, a great MC and strong vocals.

    All in all, a great fusion of Jazz and D & B elements as well as a downtempo Trip Hop sort of vibe. Coupled with great song writing, the album has a feel almost reminiscent of what Bryan Gee and JJF were doing were doing with Roni Size on V Recordings in the mid 90's. There are more modern elements though, with an almost Metalheadz quality to them. I would like to hear Rob, Goldie and Dom remix this entire album. I think if that ever happened, we would all be in for one hell of a ride. Ten out of ten.

    Buy this album, you won't regret it.

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