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'Funk for the 21st Century'
Linar note by Keb Darge
I am sure
you are aware that the world today is filled with crap
throw-away music, manufactured superstars, a plenty
of talent-less bedroom dance music producers with only
a few decent ones, a plenty of the experimental music
that is being released should have waited until it had
finished being experimented with, and critics who rave
about the next new piece of shite, simply because it
is the next new piece of shite.
In order to escape this
horror more and more of us are turning to the timeless
music of the past: Rockabilly, Jazz, Soul, Ska, Doo
Wop, 60's Garage, Funk, and a few others. Me? I have
concentrated on Soul and Funk. Like so many others I
searched high and low, and spent a fortune seeking out
new discoveries from a bygone era to satisfy my hunger.
I became a curator of these lost treasures. Then one
happy day a copy of Joseph Henry's "Who's the king
" arrived on my doorstep. Phooar! This was one
of the best early 70's records to ever have seduced
my ears. I found it more exciting than any of my James
Brown collection, and so did the dance floors I played
it to. However it wasn't from those hallowed days, it
was a brand new recording of a brand new tune. Produced
by my buddies Gabe Roth and Phillip Lehman in New York.
Suddenly the future began to look bright, and it was.
Desco records then sent me a constant stream of these
new works of art. Lee Fields, a name I was already familiar
with, but then, Sharon Jones, Naomi Davis, The Sugarman
Three, The Mighty Imperials, names I had never heard
of, but by Christ they were great. I had had a few records
from the Soul Saints in Germany before this, but they
were a very limited press and suddenly stopped coming.
However it was like they had thrown the Funk world a
lifeline soaked in inspiration. Next came a record from
Breakestra on Stones Throw records from California.
Then young Kenny Dope and I were record shopping in
London and the nice man behind the counter said "Mmm?
Keb you might like this one, it's just in". He
then produced a 45 on Blow it Hard records called "One
note brown". I grabbed one copy and Kenny bought
the remaining stock for his pals back home. Kenny was
the man who talked me into trying my hand at producing.
So I got together with long time friend and very talented
man, Nick Van Gelder and formed the Imaginary Visions.
Desco split up into Soul Fire and Daptone around this
time, but they both kept churning out great music. I
then did a gig with The New Mastersounds, the people
behind "One note brown". I asked Eddie Roberts,
their main man, if I could co-produce them and sign
them to my Deep Funk label, the rest is history. New
hard Funk bands began to spring up all over the place,
from the UK to the US, from Finland to Australia. Adrian
Gibson at the Jazz Cafe in London began to showcase
these bands, and in doing so introduced us to Speedometer
and the Soul Destroyers a band who's drummer and backbone
was another long time Deep Funk collector Malcom Cato.
Today things couldn't look better, Kenny and I are starting
our own label to specialise in this stuff, KD records.
Sharon Jones, The Sugarman Three, The New Mastersounds
have all done great albums to reach those who have not
yet discovered the joy of the 45. Mine and many other
Funk DJ's playlists are filling up with these new releases,
and you are now holding a sampler of this great music,
containing tunes that will still sound great in 2,000
years time. Plenty more to come, remember the curator
has a masterplan.
Keb
Darge biography click
here
Purchase
CD online at:
Play De Record (Canada): www.playderecord.com
Kudos Records (UK & Worldwide): mailorder@kudosrecords.co.uk
Dusty Groove (USA) www.dustygroove.com
Tunes (UK) www.tunes.co.uk
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