Returning to the
scene of a rhyme, Soul Movement 2 is the sequel to Slakah The Beatchild’s
critically acclaimed 2010 debut.
“For the original
Soul Movement album, the whole purpose was to make music that I love, with no
boundaries and no restrictions. And the music that I love, I mean REALLY love,
is soul and hip hop.” Says Slakah aka Byram Joseph (the name he wrote in felt tip
on his first ever vinyl purchase Chubby Checker & the Fatboy’s The Twist)
who released his debut, also on BBE Records, when his profile as a hitmaking
producer was already in its ascendancy.
Arriving hot on the
heels of a 2009 Juno Award (think Canadian Grammy’s) via Divine Brown’s global
hit Sunglasses, Soul Movement Vol. 1 chimed like a harmonic siren outta
Hogtown. With both the r&b and hip hop genres on their knees in 2010,
established black music acts, in an effort to get heard above the herd, had reverted
to sixties duplication or 808’s and heartbreaks. Soul Movement, against this
background music, was the art & beats that contemporary r&b had
abandoned.
“The original was
collaboration of like-minded people who were doing the same thing and I wanted
them to be there with me, as part of that movement, but with number 2 I eased
that back a little - I’m looking forward to setting out and touring this album on
my own.”
Alá Quincy Jones, a
fellow Performing Producer, Slakah’s debut album was choc full of features and
collaborations; with a whole host of T.Dot locals including superstar rap king
Drake. Indeed Soul Movement 2 still benefits from additional expert talent;
however the list – including Glenn Lewis, Ayah, Spek Won & Tanika Charles
this time – has become more select. This time the movement Slakah needed was
already on his shoulders.
From the first cut
and buzz single - the largely instrumental, mod funk bitches-brew of Cut A Rug
(Byram’s Groove) – Slakah’s virtuosity and expertise is evident. “I’m not sure
where the influences for Cut A Rug came from.” He wonders, though he has no
such trouble with Where’s Yesterday, a lament on the dearth of quality new
songs blaring outta North American radio stations. Says Slakah: “Commercial
broadcasting forces us to listen to things we don’t always want to but it’s
really developing music in a weird way. So I let that out in song – but I
wanted to shout a few my heroes at the same time.”
The spirit of two
of those, J. Dilla & D’Angelo, can be heard channelled on the brilliant Us
Theory, a song Slakah counts as one of the most personal on the album: “When I
record the music I sing nonsensicals over it to begin with, just melodies, but
the word “always” just kept coming back. It paved the way. The groove, whilst
it was recorded on acoustic drums, has that push/pull unquantized feel of a
Dilla or D’Angelo track.”
It’s not his
girlfriend’s pick though. Intriguingly, that would be the cool jazz thing
titled Miscommunication a song originated by rapper Spek Won.
“I get the best
feedback from my girl,” Says Slakah. “Because she’s not your typical hip hop or
soulhead, and I like getting viewpoints from people whose taste in music
differs to my own – it means a song can translate across genres.”
Despite the title
there’s no lingering issue between them, especially after Slakah let his
girlfriend get a few right hand shots in when she played the duck (yes Duck!)
in the recent video teaser he directed promoting this new set. There are songs
for the lovers too you see, and you can hear how The Beatchild’s vocal chops
have developed since his last EP Something Beautiful on the sultry Adventure
For Two. “Basically, I was feeling real frisky when I wrote that song, and
sometimes - not necessarily sexually - you gotta do crazy, scary things
together. I’m the adventurous one; I’ll walk towards the explosions when
everyone’s running away. I can be heard asking ‘wow, what’s blowing up?’”
Blowing up? Could
be the collaboration with major label star Glenn Lewis or the cut with newbie
Tanika Charles, who appears on the short sojourn to Slakadeliqa (a Slakah side
project) via the cool sixties soul stomp Love Fool. In Tanika, Slakah has discovered
a gem of a voice, one of those tortured early classic soul vocalists who sound
like they’re man has been sleeping around with Barbara Mason (From His Woman To
You).
Slakah The
Beatchild’s T. Dot Soul Movement continues to march on …
Track listing:
1. Byram's Groove
(Cut A Rug)
2. Stompthatflo
feat. Spek Won
3. Adventure for 2
4. Number 1 feat.
Glenn Lewis
5. Where's
Yesterday
6. Keep Up feat.
Ayah
7. Something About
Her
8. Miscommunication
feat. Spek Won & Ian Kamau
9. Endurance
10. Wanna Do
11. Us Theory
12. Someone Like
That
13. Love Fool feat.
Tanika Charles
14. Overtime~ bbemusic
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