|
Go
![]() |
New
![]() |
Find
![]() |
Notify
![]() |
Tools
![]() |
Reply
![]() |
|
|
B2 |
The J.B.’s (James Brown)
James Brown was such a rigid taskmaster that he was legendary for being able to squeeze killer performances even from pickup bands he’d never worked with before. But with all respect to the Famous Flames, his backing group for the first 15 years, nothing could touch the razor precision with which the J.B.’s supported the Hardest Working Man In Show Business. Part of that was surely due to Brown’s notorious habit of fining his musicians for the slightest mistake on or off the stage. But with Jabo Starks on drums (augmented at times by the funky drummer himself, Clyde Stubblefield), Maceo Parker on saxophone and, for a time, future P-Funkateer Bootsy Collins on bass, the J.B.’s were the tightest (and possibly most terrified) band in the world, carrying out the orders of a ruthless disciplinarian and being rewarded by acting as the machine with which he invented a brand-new genre: funk. ------------------------------------------------ The Attractions (Elvis Costello) "My Aim Is True†established Elvis Costello as one of the sharpest, most important new voices in rock ’n’ roll, and it takes exactly five seconds for follow-up “This Year’s Model†to make it sound declawed. Credit the introduction of the Attractions, a crazily fierce unit with a surf-rock organ gone berserk and a rhythm section that constantly fell just on the right side of chaos. Starting out as a punk-styled Booker T and the MGs, the Attractions proved themselves flexible enough to swing with Costello’s changing moods (from soul to country to lush pop), making them indispensable... right up until he dismissed them after 1986’s “Blood And Chocolate.†But the Attractions returned in the mid-1990s, until a long-simmering conflict between Costello and bassist Bruce Thomas resulted in the latter being booted for good, with Costello later declaring that he only works with professional musicians. ------------------------------------------------ The E Street Band (Bruce Springsteen) When Danny Federici died this past April, the world lost what was in all likelihood the last great rock ’n’ roll glockenspiel player. That just goes to show how expansive the E Street Band truly is, something all the more impressive considering the conventional wisdom that they’re nothing more than a no-nonsense rock ’n’ roll combo. A friend once declared that they “rocked with all the authority of tenured professors,†which I think he meant as an insult. But while they may lack flash (except for the keyboard tag team of Federici and Roy Bittan, whose piano playing gave Springsteen’s songs an almost classical majesty), they compensated by providing a rock-solid foundation that amplifies the Boss’s power tenfold. And yet, with the exception of a handful of live albums, you won’t find the words “E Street Band†on any of the album covers. ------------------------------------------------ Crazy Horse (Neil Young) Neil Young has had a number of different backup bands over the years, but there’s a reason nobody ever rhapsodizes about the Bluenotes. Tapped for Young’s second solo album, “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere,†Crazy Horse helped Young develop the ultra-distorted, 4/4 plod of songs like “Cinnamon Girl†and “Hey Hey My My (Into The Black)†that earned the sobriquet “the Godfather of Grunge†years later. It’s no coincidence that it took the Crazy Horse-like “Rockin’ In The Free World†to reestablish him as a viable creative force after his sonic wanderings of the 1980s. And it’s no surprise that he followed that up by immediately reconvening the group to record “Ragged Glory,†an instant classic of volume and overdrive. Other bands have let Young be more versatile. Nobody’s ever let him be wilder. ------------------------------------------------ The Revolution (Prince) The Revolution had maybe the hardest job of anybody listed here, since it had to measure up to Prince’s previous backing group: Prince himself, multi-tracked in the studio. Not only that, it could find itself switching from the straightforward rock power of “Let’s Go Crazy†to the pop balladeering of “Purple Rain†to the hard electrofunk of “Computer Blue†to the indescribable rhythmic weirdness that was “When Doves Cryâ€... and that was just one album. The Revolution actually didn’t last very long — it’s only credited on three albums — but it was instrumental both musically and visually, helping to put Prince over the top as a superstar. With keyboardist Doctor Fink (real, boring first name: Matt) in his scrubs and guitarist Wendy Melvoin pulling double duty, writhing dull-eyed with keyboardist Lisa Coleman and then rolling her eyes at Prince’s ridiculousness, it’s the Revolution that people think of when they think of Prince in his prime. Who do you think is the best backing band? http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25520460/ |
||
|
|
A2 |
Yeah, I think the Revolution does come to mind for many people. I still love when it was Andre Cymone, Dez Dickerson, Lisa Coleman, Matt Fink, and Bobby Z. Gayle Chapman was before Lisa, but I really don't remember her. Prince was playing all the instruments in the early days. Did he even really need a band? As for "the best," gosh, I've never really thought of that. Does The Salsoul Orchestra count? They played on the recordings of artists on the Salsoul Label like Loleatta Holloway. And if we count orchestra's then I guess I would also include Barry White's Love Unlimited Orchestra. I think they backed him up on his records. *********************************** “It is certain, in any case, that ignorance, allied with power, is the most ferocious enemy justice can have.†-- James Baldwin |
|||
|
A1![]() |
Sweetback (band)
Sweetback is an English musical group made up of members of the band Sade, not including the lead singer Sade Adu herself. They are a jazz/funk band with R&B overtones. Stuart Matthewman, Paul Spencer Denman and Andrew Hale had been recording with female vocalist Sade Adu since 1984. The group Sweetback began in 1994 at the end of Sade's Love Deluxe world tour. Their albums feature a host of guest vocalists such as Amel Larrieux, Maxwell, Bahamadia and El Debarge just to name a few. Egungun, Egungun ni t'aiye ati jo! Ancestos, Ancestors come to earth and dance! "I'm sick of the war and the civilization that created it. Let's look to our dreams, and the magical; to the creations of the so-called primitive peoples for new inspirations." - Jaques Vache and Andre Breton "Capitalism is the astounding belief that the most wickedest of men will do the most wickedest of things for the greatest good of everyone." -John Maynard "You know that in our country there were even matriarchal societies where women were the most important element. On the Bijagos islands they had queens. They were not queens because they were the daughters of kings. They had queens succeeding queens. The religious leaders were women too..." -- Amilcar Cabral, Return to the Source, 1973 |
|||
|
| Previous Topic | Next Topic | powered by eve community |
| Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
|

