Tuesday, November 30, 2010

STEVEN & STERLING




A Sweater Funk classic. On any given night one of the crew members will pull this out 12" out, instantaneously setting the dance floor on fire. Taken form the 1982 album titled "One Magic Night"- "Can I be With You Tonight" is easly one of my favorite cuts on the album.



STEVEN & STERLING - CAN I BE WITH YOU TONIGHT 1982

THE BADDEST BABY STROLLER ON THE BLOCK




Now that's what I call the next generation of Low-Riders. This kid has no Idea, well maybe he does. I wish I had one of those sweet rides when I was young.

For all you Low-Rider parents out there I know you want this! Seriously Bad ass! I'm sure you can find these custom built strollers on line.

Monday, November 29, 2010

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ROGER TROUTMAN :: R.I.P



Please take a moment to celebrate the life of a man who did so much for his City, Family and Friends. Roger was a Church Man, Non Drug user and Perfectionist, and he altered the way we heard music with his home made Voice Box which he took the nation by storm. In todays mainstream music, the Voice Box or Vocoder is popular more than ever thanks to this man.

Rest In Peace





SLOPE :: THE HOMEBOY EP



WOW, There is so much music floating around it's really hard to keep up. No wonder this EP slipped through the cracks.

Paying homage to the late 80's early 90s New Jack, R&B music, the Duo out of Berlin which goes by SLOPE is mainly know for there unique Uptempo Electronic Dance floor, and Futuristic Down-Tempo rhythms. In know time you'll be saying "This came out in 2008" Yes, it did!

This EP is slamming with 4 throw back jams. The Homeboy EP will have you second guessing, could this be a lost member of New Edition who went into hiding and started leaking old tracks? The EP is well rounded including 2 Midtempo jams (Could it be love & Homeboy), One Uptempo (Please be mine) and of course a slow jam.

Excellent work fellas. Hear The Sounds Supports!!!

SLOPE HOMEBOY EP 2008

SHY FX



If you've been following this blog for awhile, you already know I have a soft spot in my HEART for Drum & Bass/Jungle. SHY FX has been around for decades and his style of Ragga & Jump Up is one of my favorites. Shy FX has always had a Ragga/Dance Hall vibe including samples to MC's in his music.

Hailing from London Shy FX is among the pioneers of jungle drum'n'bass, with earliest record "Jungle Love" released in 1992 also head of Digital Soundboy label

Soon after, he signed on SOUR records and released one of the most well-known anthem of the genre in 1994: "Original Nuttah", featuring UK Apache.

Check out his New Video called RAVER

Sunday, November 28, 2010

AD BOURKE :: FUTURE FUNK



"Mirage" is the first Citinite EP from the Rome-based producer, AD Bourke. Combining soul chords, neon synths, hip hop beats and funk phrasing, he invites us on a trip full of light and expansion. This is some fresh FUTURE FUNK peeps, so pay attention!

Carrying the torch which was first lit by Dam Funk, and later carried by Onra, we currently have the pleasure of riding a wave of new producers using all the latest production techniques but with their heart firmly rooted in boogie and funk. The track which begins our journey, "Cosmic Connection", is the perfect introduction to Bourke’s cosmic style, with its relaxed rhythms overlaid by fizzing funk synthwork. It’s perhaps worth pointing out right from the start that Bourke’s music studio has only one window, and it looks straight up into the sky! "100" then drops with heavier, more club oriented beats. This was the track that first came to our attention via Benji B’s Deviation show. "Solar Commuter" with its fun acid bass is the newest track of the set, and along with the title track "Mirage" which opens side B, is more uptempo. "Diff Star" was recorded whilst Bourke was living in Brooklyn (and "One For Me" and "100" were recorded shortly after his return to Rome) and you can hear how that Brooklyn summer spirit left its mark. The last track is the incredible vocal version of "Cosmic Connection" featuring Stockholm based singer Amalia. With great attitude and a dynamic delivery she steals the track and makes it her own. An excellent debut, perhaps not with the all-encompassing anthology-like prowess of Dam-Funk's debut, but then I suspect this dude is a lot younger. Look out for more neon blushed vibes to come from this amazing new kid on the funk block!

MIRAGE EP PREVIEW by ad bourke

MAYOR HAWTHORNE :: SWEATER FUNK CREW



SF Station did a nice little write up for Mayor Hawthorne as he'll be in town next week to DJ. Not a Sweater Funk party, Sorry. After reading the press, We (Sweater Funk) were not prepared to hear what was about to come out his mouth.

Words can't describe how big this is. Were just a bunch or record nerds who do a FREE party every SUNDAY night. No, Money just love.

You can check the whole story via SF Station.

Also check the pictures from Sweater Funk 1 year when he absolutely destroyed the basement in China Town!


INTERVIEW:

SFS: When you have come to SF, I know you’ve played Sweater Funk a couple times. What do you like most about this party?

H: SweaterFunk is one of the best parties in America. The reason why it’s fun is because people come to dance. I feel like that’s something that’s missing at a lot of parties. When I go DJ in Europe, people come to the club to dance. For a DJ, that’s what makes it fun. SweaterFunk is one of the true spots where you know people are not standing around posting up on the walls.

FIRST TOUCH MUSIC



Fresh from First Touch Camp the fellas have delivered 2 of there latest projects. First Off this nice Re-Edit taken from Aurthor Admas, a Disco tune from 81. The Boys took the best parts, stripped it down and extended the break. Check this out


FIRST TOUCH - YOU GOT THE FLOOR







Along with the edit, the fellas also hooked up this G-Funk mix and let me tell you this has the WEST COAST bounce. All my Cali heads know what I'm talking about. Haven't heard some of these tunes in years, maybe a decade! There were also a few tunes I didn't recognize, but over all quality selections.

Enjoy



G-Funk Mix by FIRST TOUCH

DECEMBER 2nd :: SAN FRANCISCO

Saturday, November 27, 2010

FUTURE SOUND :: AN UNDERGROUND ELECTRONIC MUSIC DOCUMENTARY



Future Sound is a short documentary that looks into a small cross section of London's forward-thinking underground dance music scene, exploring some of the things that define and affect it as it moves into a new age of digital innovation.

BRENTON WOOD



You already KNOW!!! Check out this footage of Brenton Wood from the late 60's.

Early singles for Brent Records and Wand Records failed to chart. After signing with Double Shot Records, Wood had a hit with "The Oogum Boogum Song" in the spring of 1967. It reached number 19 on the Billboard R&B chart and number 34 on the corresponding Billboard Hot 100 pop listing. His biggest hit came in September of the same year, as "Gimme Little Sign" hit #9 on the pop chart and #19 on the R&B charts. It sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc In the song, "Gimme Little Sign" is not sung, instead the chorus repeats "Give Me Some Kind of Sign".


Friday, November 26, 2010

THE HOMIES CHRISTMAS



My Friend Arlene is Bad Ass, already started her decorations. I Love it!!!

I've already started to plan out my LAKER CHRISTMAS TREE this year = PURPLE & GOLD, See u down South this year!









Wednesday, November 24, 2010

JIVE TURKEY :: RUBEN MOLINA PRESENTS




Come out and Listen to real Chicano, Soul, & Sweet Soul musica on original wax from some of L.A.'s oldest and fiercest Record Collectors on the WEST COAST


Others on that list of Chicano groups who never received their due respect and place in musical history are Randy Garibay, the Dell Kings, the Dell-Tones, the Satin Souls (originally Whitie and the Escorts), Charlie and the Jives, Tito and the Silhouettes, the Broken Hearts, Jimmy Casas, Vince Cantú and the Rockin’ Dominos, Sal and the Centennials, Ricky Dávila and the Laveers, Henry (Peña) and the Kasuals, the Óscar Martínez Orchestra featuring Pepe Cavazos plus so many others, just their names alone could fill an entire book. And that’s exactly what Molina did. He filled the void left by many other musicologists.




WHO IS RUBEN MOLINA:

" started collecting 45 rpm records when I was playing drums in Washington Irving Junior High School in Lincoln Heights and they only cost a quarter. That was in 1966 and I never bought albums because I always had this thing for 45s because you got the song that you wanted, it was very personal,” Molina said during an interview at his home in La Puente, California".

“At that time I was into soul, rhythm and blues; and Motown. Huggie Boy was the big DJ in the community and played nothing but R&B that local Chicano bands were recording. All the Chicano groups in L.A. were covering popular R&B tunes and oldies. Very few bands performed Spanish language tunes at the dances, but groups like Thee Midniters, The Romancers, and (Steve and Rudy) Salas Brothers (who later became Tierra) played Spanish-language tunes at wedding and quinceñeras.”

In 1972, Molina joined the U.S. Marines, but he continued to follow and buy musical releases recorded by Chicano rock bands, groups such as Santana, El Chicano, Tower of Power and later Tierra.

Although groups like Rudy and the Reno-Bops, the Dell-Kings (Los Blues), Mando and the Chili Peppers and Sunny and the Sunliners made the long trip to Los Angeles during the fifties and sixties Molina who was eleven-years-old in 1964 and never got a chance to see them until 1980 when East L.A. promoter and owner of Whittier Records Eddie Torres put together a touring group. Along with R&B legends like Tony Allen, Mary Wells, and Brenton Wood, several top Chicano artists as Sunny Ozuna, Rosie, plus Rene and Rene and Thee Midniters filled the bill.

“They met at the corner of Whittier and Atlantic Boulevards in East L.A. that’s where the artists boarded the buses, which took them as far north as San José (California),” Molina recalled. “They carried the Chicano sound to places like Bakerfield, Fresno, Oxnard and Delano where that sound is still popular. When they did their shows at the Montebello Ballroom we got a chance to see some of the great Tejano singers”

Before he knew it, Molina’s collection had grown to over 4,000 (45 rpm) singles mostly R&B,, doo-wop and Soul. The collection also includes approximately 600 recordings by Chicano artist from the 1950s and ‘60s. “Those have become my prized possessions” says Molina “I am really proud of being able to show the world the contributions that the Mexican-American has made to American pop music.”

In 2002, Molina self-published “The Old Barrio Guide to Low Rider Music 1950 – 1975,” which is a 184-page encyclopedia with an alphabetical listing of 75 percent Black, some White and Brown musical groups and vocalists who wrote and created thousands of hits that appealed to the Chicano Low Rider crowd.

Three of those major hits were War’s “Low Rider,” “Cisco Kid” and “Cinco de Mayo,” written by Howard Scott, whose songs were inspired by his years growing up in the mostly Chicano neighborhood of Long Beach, California.

“That book was a tribute to the Low Rider movement and the style of music that it adopted. People were writing books on surf music, punk music and the English invasion. I thought why not us.” Molina said as he thumbed through boxes of 45 rpm records.

As for ‘Chicano Soul,’ Molina said he wrote that book “because there is a need for us to document our contributions to American culture. And to recognize those music pioneers that laid the path for future groups to follow. The book has sold over 1,500 copies in the U.S., Japan and Europe, where there’s a big interest in Chicano culture. I am proud to say that Chicanos here bought the book because they became interested in their own culture.”

Giving credit where it’s due, among the many people Molina cited as helping him when he began to amass all his information on Texas Mexican American groups in 2004 was Juan Mendoza in San Antonio, Joe Sílva, in Dallas; and George Reynoso of All That Music in El Paso.

Locally, Mendoza has been highly instrumental in getting all the artists together for the recent Patio Andaluz Reunion oldies concerts at Plaza Guadalupe and another show at the Josephine Theater. He has also been instrumental in getting Sunny, Rudy Tee and the late Dimas Garza to perform with the Austin-based Larry Lange and his Lonely Knights.

What makes “Chicano Soul” a coveted reference book is that it is chocked full of vintage photos, rare posters and color graphics of groups that produced the “Interstate 90 Sound” from Lake Charles, Louisana to San Antonio. This also translates into a trip down memory lane for the old school crowd and an insightful look at Chicano music history and a source of pride for today’s youth.

As a result, this book has created a demand for Molina to speak at Chicano Studies classes at universities across the country and on February 2, he and members of Los Lobos plus Los Lonely Boys will be the featured panelists at a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame symposium on “The Direction of Chicano Music After 1958.”

SOULERA'S SWEET SOUL




Hi there I'm Arlene aka The Soulera..I'm a Rare Soul Oldies Vinyl Collector always on the prowl looking for the best sounds..you can find me on youtube Rlenes5150, also you can hear me on Live365.com Soulera's sweet soul.....

Trust me when I say LISTEN TO THIS STATION!!!!


RAIN OR SHINE, ITS FUNK TIME



Great write up on last weekends SWEATER FUNK party with guest Laroj (Funkmosphere). We must be doing something right! Every Sunday we are packed with familiar and UN familiar faces. Last weekend we had a hell of storm pass through the city of SF, but that did not stop all the FUNKATEERS from coming out in full force to dance.

Check out this great ARTICLE recapping last Sunday Night at Sweater Funk.

This is my favorite quote from the article

‎"No one really seemed to be interested in anyone else; you could certainly let loose down there". ( by stephanie echeveste )




SF STATION ARTICLE:


People always ask me if it rains a lot in San Francisco. I usually say no, but that’s because I most recently lived in a place where it would rain non-stop for days. I rarely saw the sun.

Rainy weather makes most people feel depressed — you want to be with people but you have no motivation to get yourself to where they are.

Last weekend was definitely a wet one, and I had no desire to leave my house. Between the pre-Thanksgiving potlucks, thunderstorms, and random rays of sunshine, my time was spent running outside to catch a rainbow, fighting my way home through wind, rain, and crammed buses, or simply stuck in a food coma.

Sunday night I broke loose, pulled out my winter coat for the first time this year and jumped on the 49. I was going out rain or shine. The moment I stepped off the bus it started pouring again (I, of course, left my borrowed umbrella at home). I met up with some friends, drank some mulled wine, and had some fireside chats — without the fire. Everywhere a fireplace facade, yet nowhere an actual fireplace.

We walked up and down Sacramento Street past a foggy Grace Cathedral and into the heart of Chinatown. The short walk was free of rain and people. The silence of the city normally dense with sounds was a rare treat, until it became kind of eerie.

The bouncer checked our IDs and that was it. We were inside the kitschy bar that was, surprisingly, rather full. The ATM was broken so we had to get cash outside across the street, and when we entered again the bouncer didn’t remember us and checked our IDs a second time. There was no cover.

We heard music but couldn’t tell where it was coming from. Neither of us had ever been to the Li Po Lounge, but I knew the party Sweater Funk happened there every Sunday, and I was determined to find it. We followed the signs to the bathrooms, and then continued through a dark concrete hallway to find a dark steamy basement where late 70s and 80s soul jams were blasting. Although there weren’t that many people, a definite dance party was going on.

The space was big enough to really show off and there were booths around the perimeter if you needed to take a breather. No one really seemed to be interested in anyone else; you could certainly let loose down there. I imagined myself breaking out into a Flashdance inspired routine, complete with a bucket of water splashing over me. I wished I hadn’t just cut my hair so it would be less sleek and more all over the place. I really wanted to be wearing a thong-leo.

We walked through the party and back upstairs. We knew we didn’t really want to dance and we definitely didn’t want to stay in the basement like wallflowers. Instead, we grabbed a place at the bar.

Because sometimes you just want a drink. It doesn’t matter how good the music is, how much you love to dance or how cold it is outside, sometimes you travel across town for a party and realize you are really there to catch up with an old friend or get to know a new one. The rain probably won’t go away, but neither will all the people. You just have to go outside.

SOUND SYSTEM



2 of my favorite DJ's / Sweater Funk members will be playing some records Thursday Dec 2nd at Beauty Bar (SF). Pencil this one in!

THE FUTURE OF SPORTING EVENTS :: ROLLERGAMES




The show took place in the Super Roller Dome, where all matches were broadcast.

Instead of a banked oval track, a figure eight track was used where one side heavily banked. It included obstacles such as the "Wall of Death" (which was located on the heavily banked side) and the "Jet Jump". The only ones who could score during each 45-second scoring cycle were the "jetters," who wore helmets and got six points if they got above the top line for three steps on the Wall of Death without going over, and two points if they got between the two lines for three steps. The "Jet Jump" had a 12-foot marker that allowed six points if the jetter got past it, and two if the jetter landed in front of it. In either case, the jetter had to land safely. The jetters also got one point each time they passed a skater in their opponent's "penalty pod," used like the penalty box in hockey.





The rest of the cycle involved traditional roller derby elements of scoring one point for every opponent lapped. The players got as many 45-second cycles as possible within four six-minute periods (cut down from eight 12-minute periods in traditional roller derby). The team with the most points won.

As a tiebreaker, two skaters would skate around a pit full of alligators. The first skater to skate around the pit five times or to throw his or her opponent into the alligator pit was declared the winner. The debut episode was the only time live alligators were ever used, as no ties ever happened after that.

The show also included halftime entertainment by musical performers like Lita Ford, Warrant, Exposé, and had halftime commentary by Wally George. Former Phoenix, Arizona news reporter Shelly Jamison (who also appeared nude in Playboy) served as sideline reporter. RollerGames premiered in 95% of the country, and, though generally panned by critics, was well-received among teenagers and college students.{fact}

In many cities, RollerGames aired late at night, against Saturday Night Live, while in others it aired mid-day on Saturdays. Although the show's ratings were quite good, even beating out American Gladiators, it only lasted one season before getting cancelled due to some of the producers going bankrupt (War Productions, Sans-Miller Productions). However, co-producers Motown Productions, Quintex Productions, and the distributor, LBS did not go bankrupt due to RollerGames.[citation needed] RollerGames delivered a 4.7 national rating vs. the American Gladiators 2.5 rating. Its debut in New York scored a 9.3 overnight rating.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

CLASSIC STYLE CAR CLUB (L.A.)















THE CONTROLLERS



Picked up this Sweet 45 a few weeks backs over at Rooky's (SF)

The Controllers are a soul/ R&B vocal group, originally from Birmingham, Alabama, who had a series of successful recordings in the late 1970s and the 1980s.


Originally part of an eight-member gospel group, the group became four by the time they entered junior high school, comprising Reginald McArthur (baritone lead), Ricky Lewis (tenor lead), Larry McArthur and Leonard Brown. Their growing reputation in the Birmingham area led to an introduction to Cleveland Eaton, bassist for the Ramsey Lewis Trio. Under Eaton's guidance "The Soul Controllers" as they were then called, recorded their first single, called "Right On Brother, Right On". It became a regional hit while they were still attending Fairfield High School.

The group came to the attention in 1976 of Juana Records, run by writer/producer/artist Frederick Knight, also from Birmingham. Recording at the famed Malaco studios in Jackson, Mississippi, their first single on Juana, from the album, "In Control" charted, but it was their second release, "Somebody's Gotta Win, Somebody's Gotta Lose", that really established them. The song, a ballad lasting over 8 minutes on the album, climbed to #8 on Billboard's R&B chart and #3 on the Cashbox soul chart in 1977. The group's on-stage performances also helped them to open for renowned artists such as Ray Charles, Nancy Wilson, B.B. King and The Temptations.

A follow-up ballad, "Heaven Is Only A Step Away" climbed to #37 R&B, but despite the release of two more albums on Juana, the group failed to find another major single success.

In 1983, the group signed with San Francisco-based manager, the now late Jimmy Bee, and soon landed a recording contract with MCA Records. Their first release on the label, "Crushed" (which featured Stevie Wonder on harmonica) returned them to the charts, reaching #30 R&B, in 1984 and two years later, "Stay" climbed to #12. Their cover of the Marvin Gaye classic, "Distant Lover" from the same album, "Stay" also proved popular. These hits led to a series of appearances on "Soul Train" and performances at Radio City Music Hall and Carnegie Hall. During this time, the group also performed on MTV, BET's Video Soul and on HBO.

Under the guidance of Jimmy Bee, the Controllers made a move to Capitol Records in 1989 for the cd "Just In Time" which failed to produce any hits but rekindled their popularity among the group's loyal following.

After a break from touring and recording, the four returned in the late 1990s and joined the Malaco label for their self-produced cd album, "Clear View", containing a re-make of Stevie Wonder's "Superstition" and a revised "Somebody's Gotta Win".

The two remaining active Controllers, Leonard Brown (bass) and Reginald McArthur are co-hosts of a syndicated talk show in the southeastern United States, "Inside The Juke Joint", where known artists, writers, arrangers and musicians talk about their careers and lives, then and now.




THE CONTROLLERS - FEELING, A FEELING 1977

SWEATER FUNK WITH GUEST LAROJ (FUNKMOSPHERE)



Always a great time when our family from Los Angeles comes up to play in the basement. This time around we had one of the smoothest brothers next to Dam-Funk "LAROJ". Laroj came in and rocked the Basement like hurricane. The dance floor was steady the whole night and the dancers must of heard Laroj was in town because they were out in full force. The rain did not stop people from coming to Church on Sunday night.

What a great night, Check out more pictures HERE












THE SEATTLE SOUL & FUNK SCENE IN THE 1970's :: WHEEDLE'S GROOVE




The story arc traced by WHEEDLE’S GROOVE — Jennifer Maas’ documentary about the Seattle soul and funk scene of the ’70s — is the best expression of the city’s zeitgeist in recent memory.” – Jonathan Zwickel, Seattle Times

“The best documentary of 2010", Wheedle’s Groove is a moving cinematic testament to the pure power of music and not only a tribute to the Seattle soul music scene, but to a time in our nation’s not-too-far-off past when it felt for a beautiful minute like America had soul.” – Michael Simmons, Huffington Post

“Maas’s unearthing of this small group of musicians, decked out in platform shoes, soul ’fros and pimp hats, serves up pure gold with every frame.” – Johnson Cummins, Montreal Mirror

“Wheedle’s Groove resists becoming a sentimental pastiche of bittersweet Old School reminisces by deftly illustrating how music shapes community, breaks barriers and forges new paths.” – John Hubbel, Indie Memphis Film Festival

“The filmmakers have approached the subject and its players with a sense of appreciation and compassion that is evident throughout the film. It is a must-see for any fan of soul, funk, and R&B music.” – Tim Sampson, Communications Director, Stax Museum of American Soul Music.

Monday, November 22, 2010

KINGS GO FORTH :: MYRON & E :: TSDJK



Truly a unforgettable night. Two of my favorite groups at the moment "Kings Go Forth + Myron & E. Vintage soul sounds with modern twist were about to set the night on fire! San Francisco was ready and welcomed them in with open arms.

Starting the night off is my good friend & San Francisco's favorite MOD "The Selector DJ Kirk". As always Kirk brought the Sweet Soul Sounds of the late 60s through the Mid 70s. Heavy weight records on the dance floor. While grooveing I took a second to look around, you could really feel the anticipations in the air as the crowed piled in waiting for the Myron & E to start. (By the way Both bands did a fantastic job)

Hitting the stage first was Myron & E backed by Hot Pocket (who sounded real tight + The Soul Investigators is there regular band) performed "On Broadway" to kick things off. The combination of the 2 sounded perfect, The vocals were on point and Hot Pocket sounded real tight. Its like 2 have been performing for years.

Fast forward Kings Go Forth also did an amazing job. This was my first time seeing them live and they really blew my mind. These guys have mastered the live performance and crowd interaction. For me the Horn Section stole the show. This was the best Ten Bucks I've spent in a long time.

If you have the chance to see this band live I highly recommend you do so. Oh yeah, also after the show I had a chance to talk with Kings Go Forth. Once again they said San Francisco was the best show of the tour.

"San Francisco heads just understand the music and vibe" Andy Noble













More pictures from Kings Go Forth Show


I also captured a few videos from the night, unfortunetlly I had a few drinks and found myself singing along. My voice is not the greatest and I really killed the songs. "On Broadway" by Myron and E is probably the only video where I'm not singing