Grail or Fail -poast a track that can please or cleanse a dancefloor
Frank
2,373 Posts
I had people go nuts for this and two months later at the same venue, same night, I cleared the floor with this track. I had even passed on the record when I got it in for the first few times because the vocals are so painfully out of tune but at the same time, you hear it once and it stays with you for better or worse.
Comments
I would dance my ass off to this.The poor man's strings in the song sound so awesome. I wish that moog and the kick drum would be higher in the mix. Great thread!
Uchenna of Comb & Razor fame comped this on his first release "Brand New Wayo". Can't recommend the record highly enough.
i've played this out a handful of times, ive kind of had similar reactions and think it just depends at what point in the party your drop it. good tune. i quite like it.
Sometimes it goes down a treat and causes a frenzy, sometimes you can see the the tumbleweed blowing across the dancefloor.
The more true house heads and clued up people are in the place the better it works on the floor.
Played it out for the first time during prime time and probably had the worst reaction to any records I had played at that night in all those 5 years that I did this party. I usually had the floor going until 6:30-7 in the morning so this turned into one of those tracks that I loved to play to send people on their way when the sun went up outside. Once I had someone come up to me and request this track earlier in the night. I just had to oblige since educated requests are such a rare thing and should be honored and to my surprise it went over well. I guess even one or a couple of people who "get it" can make a huge difference.
I would dance the fuck outta Joe Moks though.
I play out very infrequently these days, but recently had a nasty experience dropping Girl You Need A Change Of Mind to a younger audience... maybe I played it at the wrong moment, maybe it was the wrong crowd for the song, but the lack of reaction made me consider if '60s-'70s black American music has ever had a lower profile in my town*, and it also made me feel older than a hell of a lot of other things (facebook. ipads, laptop DJs etc) have ever managed.
*no soul/disco/funk nights anywhere from what I can tell, from '99 to '09 it seemed kind of dominant standard club music to mix in with newer stuff, as well as dedicated nights with deeper sounds than Car Wash
On a related "being old" note, I kind of came to the realization that the younger kids, say early to mid-20s, that are the ones dressing up, going out and getting loose at clubs (aka making your DJ night a good time), to them I think DJing off of vinyl is actually less cool and now actually a detriment to your DJ night. I believe this marks a huge sea change as far as DJing aesthetics goes in relation to local trendsetters. I mean, regular ass becky's and chad's have never cared what the DJ is playing off of, but I'm not talking about them at all. I'm never talking about them.