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Aug 24, 2011

Jungle Brothers - Straight Out the Jungle (1988)

"What's Going On" by Jungle Brothers


De La Soul were one of the leading hip hop groups from the east coast alternative scene. Before even releasing their first record, they networked with two other hip hop groups that would form the creative nucleus of a collective called the Native Tongues posse. The posse supported each other, toured together, featured one another on select songs and remixes, and shared a common artistic and political perspective of hip hop and life. One of the other two groups in the collective, a group that also featured on De La Soul's single "Buddy", was Jungle Brothers.

Decked in bush gear, Jungle Brothers expounded on the metaphor of the city as a jungle first introduced by hip hop artist Afrika Bambaataa and his Universal Zulu Nation. Like De La Soul, Jungle Brothers is a trio of two MCs, Afrika Baby Bam (Nathaniel Hall in homage to Bambaataa) and Mike Gee (Michael Small), and a DJ, DJ Sammy B (Sammy Burwell). With the benefit of famous local disc jockey DJ Red Alert being Mike Gee's uncle and the group's manager, they signed with independent label Warlock Records on which they released several singles and their debut Straight Out the Jungle in 1988.

Their debut, like De La Soul's, is considered a landmark for alternative hip hop. Their energetic horn samples colored the album with a jazzy tone while Baby Bam and Mike Gee added light-hearted, humorous, and politically conscious lyrics. Their rhymes spoke out against street violence ("Straight Out the Jungle", "What's Going On"), foresaw ethnic advancement in society ('In time, I see a better black reality' from b-side "In Time"), promoted Afrocentric themes ("Black Is Black"), and parodied hip hop's stereotypical sexual themes ("Jimbrowski", "I'm Gonna Do You"). Still, the album is light and humorous and never takes itself too seriously. These qualities effectively make Straight Out the Jungle a prototype to De La Soul's 3 Feet High and Rising which came out a few months after. Although it might seem unfair, the Jungle Brothers's debut has since been overlooked by critics as alternative hip hop's landmark beginning in favor of De La Soul's debut. However, 3 Feet is considered a more concise album with better lyrics and a more innovative style of DJing for its time. Besides jazz rap, Jungle Brothers also ventured into "hip house" when they rapped over Terry Todd's "Can You Party". Their debut met to middling success but they were soon brought to national prominence with the success of their fellow Native Tongues members.

Here is the discography surrounding Jungle Brothers's debut album:

Jimbrowski / Braggin' & Boastin' (1987 single)
On the Run (1988 single)
I'll House You (1988 single)
Straight Out the Jungle
Straight Out the Jungle (1989 single)
Black Is Black (1989 single)



If you have any ideas for where the tour should go next, please give a shout. I'm open to whatever as long as the artists are historically related in some way and go in an artist's chronological order.

Pass the Headphones!!

Aug 18, 2011

De La Soul - 3 Feet High and Rising (1989)

"Eye Know" by De La Soul


Since 2000, the National Recording Preservation Board annually selects a myriad of different recordings from popular songs to historic speeches for preservation in the National Recording Registry. Last year, Mort Sahl's At Sunset and De La Soul's 3 Feet High and Rising were two of 25 recordings chosen and deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically important, and/or inform or reflect life in the United States."

With their debut in 1989, De La Soul heralded an alternative movement that had been growing and solidifying in the hip hop underground for several years. Forming in 1987 when the trio were still in high school, the group consisted of MCs Posdnuos (Kelvin Mercer) and Trugoy (David Jude Jolicoeur) and DJ Maseo (Vincent Mason). Then again, those stage names are only one of several the group could choose when referencing themselves. With the studio guidance of producer Prince Paul, De La Soul's album worked against the standing stereotypes of hip hop. Their sound borrowed samples from non-traditional palettes (country and jazz) and extended their use from not only hooks and drumbreaks to "split-second fills and in-jokes". In attitude and appearance, the trio maintained their own style, promoting individuality, that stood in strong contrast to the burgeoning popularity of the gangsta rap trends of doo rags and bling.

While a gangsta rapper's themes included street violence, profanity, and walking on the wrong side of the law (aka the realities of inner city life), alternative hip hop held a sunnier disposition on city life, promoted individuality, and made relevant social statements. De La Soul's debut in particular promoted the D.A.I.S.Y. Age ("Da Inner Sound, Y'all"), a peace and love mentality that earned the trio an unwanted 'hippie' label. All of these elements put together constructed an album linked together by multiple concepts (a game show transmitted from Mars), featured an innovative sound that strengthened the direction of alternative hip hop, and highlighted by poignant lyrics with definite things to say, underwritten by positive themes, veiled by quick-witted humor. The unlikely popularity of 3 Feet High and Rising and its singles symbolized the expected rise of the alternative hip hop scene out of the underground. A rise that would not come to fruition (at least not then).

Here is the discography surrounding De La Soul's debut album:

Plug Tunin' (1988 single)
Jenifa (Taught Me) / Potholes in My Lawn (1988 single)
This Day and Age (1988 EP)
Eye Know (1989 single)
3 Feet High and Rising
Me Myself and I (1989 single)
Say No Go (1989 single)
Buddy / Ghetto Thang (1989 single)
4 New Remixes (1989 single)
Buddy / The Magic Number (1990 single)





If you have any ideas for where the tour should go next, please give a shout. I'm open to whatever as long as the artists are historically related in some way and go in an artist's chronological order.

Pass the Headphones!!

Aug 13, 2011

Mort Sahl - At Sunset (1958)

At Sunset by Mort Sahl

With his popularity as a comic rising, Dick Gregory more commonly found his name and work referenced in the papers. And of course, a reporter can't describe one artist without using another as a measuring stick, so Greg found himself being compared to his white contemparies. They described him as the "negro Mort Sahl... Bob Newhart and Shelley Berman". As the joke goes, Greg read a diversity of papers that included the Congo Daily Tribune. In these papers, he could find the likes of Mort Sahl described as the "white Dick Gregory".

Mort Sahl's audiences were highly educated college students and recent graduates who enjoyed his comedy routines in between jazz acts like the Dave Brubeck Quartet. Where his predecessors in comedy relied on solid jokes with deliberate punch lines, Sahl relied on a free flowing set whose topics came from the daily newspaper, recent publications, fliers, and the liner notes of jazz albums and were all littered with a number of subtle punchlines throughout. In order to get his comedy, not only did audiences have to have a certain level of literacy and knowledge of contemporary events, but they had to play close attention because jokes could come at any time. Like Gregory, Sahl's comedy routines took on overt political opinions, a natural side effect of using the newspaper as source material. He was especially critical of McCarthy Conservatives in power but didn't hold out on the inconsistencies of any politician of the day.

Besides being known as one of the preliminary figures of modern comedy, Mort Sahl also holds the distinction of having recorded the first modern comedy album. The album was cut without his knowledge at a jazz club in 1955 and briefly released by Fantasy Records. Briefly because Mort Sahl did not authorize this use of his material, and the record was pulled. Interestingly, his rate of speech was sped up slightly in order to fit the whole performance onto the record.

Here is the discography surrounding Mort Sahl's debut album:

At Sunset

BBC Four Piece on Mort Sahl and the "Cerebral Comedians" (slightly inaccurate)


If you have any ideas for where the tour should go next, please give a shout. I'm open to whatever as long as the artists are historically related in some way and go in an artist's chronological order.

Pass the Headphones!!

Aug 1, 2011

Dick Gregory - In Living Black & White (1961)

"Shoveling Snow" by Dick Gregory


Dick Gregory is not a musician, but he is an artist. He's a comedian, and both he and Chuck Berry attended Sumner High School, an African American high school in St. Louis. Now, I suppose I've purposefully broken my blog's bylaws by covering a comedian when it's clearly called the Musical History Tour, but I think I've always intended on doing so. Although I mostly cover music (and so far a very specific kind of music) and wish to branch out as far as possible within the realm of recorded music, organizing and connecting to artist's through albums predisposes me to a sort of foundational failure. I want to cover composers, for example, but simply getting to them through my system of connections is difficult. Organizing and sifting through the recordings of the composers would prove just as troublesome. It's already proven tedious with the recordings from pre-1957 folk singers I've covered so far, and they don't have their work performed by orchestras across the world. Foreign artists and bands are difficult to get to as well, and I know I've heard a couple requests to delve into the contemporary American and British music scenes. The system also sticks me in long stretches of "movements" or "categories". So far, I've gotten "stuck" in Australia, the punk movement, and several folk/blues movements; the last from which I finally see the light of day. For all of my system's failings, I feel it does open the door to all recorded materials whether it's music, comedy, sound effects, or field recordings (the last two of which have recently been possibilities). The thing is: I don't see where I'm going. I try not to plan ahead, and in doing so, I can use this blog to arrive at unexpected new places or old familiar stations. I just might not have given the blog the most appropriate name.

To cut a long rant short, one new place to discover is the comedy of Dick Gregory. In the early sixties, he was one of a small group of black comedians that began distancing (very quickly) their stand-up performances from what used to be considered black comedy, minstrel shows. He started performing stand-up in the military and eventually took his routine to black audiences after his tour of duty. His jokes could be about anything but almost all of them had an underlying theme of social justice. He made light of segregation, integration, voting rights, the Ku Klux Klan, his Negro Jewish friend Sammy Davis, Jr., and racist behavoir, but made the topics so personable, matter-of-fact, and funny that you can't help but laugh along. His comedy acted as a form of escapism for his black audience as they could remove themselves from the issues he casually brought up, issues they faced every day, and see them from an non-traditional and hilarious perspective if only for a moment.

Greg also made a surprising connection with white audiences as well despite confronting them with these same issues. In his words, he was "the first Negro comic permitted to work a white night club. That had never happened before because no black person was permitted to stand flat-footed and talk to white America." In his case, he talked directly to White America, made them laugh and made them think while pushing the contemporary Civil Rights Movement to the front of their minds. In 1961, Hugh Hefner hired Greg to performe at the Chicago Playboy Club. Soon after, he furthered his success by performing on Jack Paar's The Tonight Show, a financial blessing for any young comedian. After his success with growing and diverse audiences, he recorded his debut album In Living Black & White some time after his Tonight Show performance.

Here is the discography surrounding Dick Gregory's debut album:

In Living Black & White



If you have any ideas for where the tour should go next, please give a shout. I'm open to whatever as long as the artists are historically related in some way and go in an artist's chronological order.

Pass the Headphones!!