Often a landscape's sounds influence its music. It's well documented how the early Sun Records artists derived their chugging rhythms from the clack of passing rail cars. Think Johnny Cash, Elvis, Roy Orbison, or Carl Perkins who more often used the guitar as an instrument of rhythm rather than one of melody. If you delve further into the American songbook, you can find pieces like Blind Willie Johnson's "Dark Was the Night, Cold the Ground" - a sparse, blues adaptation of a 1700s hymn. Likely due to Johnson's blindness, the piece evokes the sounds of unimpeded wind and rolling pastoral prairies of the rural, Central Texas landscape where he was from.
Central Texas, March 2012 |
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for a fresh take on fusion jazz/funk, try On the Corner Columbia Records, 1971 |
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DNA on DNA No More Records, 2004 |
Farther down the island, the late 1970s sonic art form called No-Wave emerged out of Manhattan's lower east side. Differentiating itself from the punk music scene that was happening in the same neighborhoods at roughly the same time, No-Wave artists seemed to be responding to urban aesthetics rather than challenging socio-cultural norms. DNA, one of the scene's better known groups, recorded "Grapefruit" a piece that culls the drones, grumbles, and squeals of the city. Amid skewed time signatures, the guitars' atonal noises become pitched subway brakes, the trapped, droning echoes of diesel trucks, the voices of the passing crowds whose collective din resemble a continuous, indiscernible mumble.
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ESG: A South Bronx Story, (Universal Sound, 2000) is a strong compilation, but for the band's best recording check out Come Away With Me, Fire Records, 1983 |
- It began in the summer when she was a girl. Their apartment had no air conditioning, so at night she and her sisters slept with the windows open. From the park many floors below, the sounds of the street musicians reached up into their window. The instruments they played were plastic tubs, spoons, and coke bottles. Each summer night Renee was treated to this concert as she drifted off to sleep. She acknowledged the beautiful sensation of the rhythms breathing into her dream space. What came out, years later with the care and support of their mother, was the singular and infectious sound of ESG.
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