good songs on impulse
olden_style_hats
11 Posts
hey yall. its your favorite herb super producer.i asked yall for some advice for this remix project I did for verve couplw months back,... and yall had really good ideas but they were too original and I forgot that these projects are usually corny and I ended up doing the only left cause i was so late to be asked to do it.it turned out good and its only on the japanese release of the verve remixed jawn. (walter wanderly's popcorn)anyway, they tying to get at me to do one for impulse too. so im early on this and I wanted to choose one that was interesting - as far as sounds or something that you guys would be feeling like playing out, but it isnt really like that yet ... tom scott - today comes to mind but I doubt that would be available cause impulse doesnt own it and they gay.but if you have any ideas that wouldnt be so obvious. go aheador you can just diss me. either one. just make it funny.
Comments
John Coltrane - Love Supreme
Oliver Nelson - Blues/More Blues & The Abstract Truth
Roy Haynes - Into The Afternoon w. Roland Kirk
Nail some of that Sun Ra "Magic City" or "Atlantis" shit or go balls out and take on "The Creator Has A Master Plan".
Be a real high powered remix hero and choose Ayler, like "Music Is The Healing Force Of The Universe" or "Universal Indians".
Deep beats and deep crates,
SonicReducer
(TEAMAARON)
There is a dude I see around at free jazz shows with an Impulse tattoo shit is serious
Oh shit - something offa Howard Robert's "Antelope Freeway", but like, Philly style, you know.
Pharoah Sanders "Love Is Everywhere"
Impulse Discography
I think you should remix a song on impulse that has personal significance for you.
it will come across better on the remix cd/lp if you chose a song that means something to you because you'll actually enjoy making the track. If you don't have one, just leave it alone.
the biggest reason why most jazz remix albums are corny is because there are too many unknowledgeable remix artists chosen in the first place. Also, what can you possibly do to make a 60's avant/free jazz piece better on a computer? Cut up the drums and loop a muted trumpet riff? Please no.
i just don't understand why Impulse would want to do a remix album anyway. The last thing they should want is to water down their catalogue.
If you want to do something significant, tell Impulse records that they should hold off from doing a remix project all together. At least that way the original songs will keep their integrity and Impulse will stand out in the market for NOT doing a corny remix project.
or errrr alice? cover an alice coltrane song?
and get joanna newsom on the track?
michael whites magical music company for drums?
theres really a lot of options. i wouldn't really know what to do. Id ask for reels of alice playing by herself and listen to them in a park. fuck the remix
pharoah was my introduction to impulse so id have to be nerdy and do an ode to him. tauhid basslines with the golden lamp tabla shit
Max Roach "Garvey's Ghost" from Percussion Bitter Sweet
Buddy Montgomery - This Rather Than That
erotic
dude are you serious???
Impulse does not exist anymore in the format you imagined it to be. Please throw these romantic notions out the window and focus on the realitly of today. Creed Taylor ain't sitting in the office drawing up plans for a remix album, it's a corporate decision. Either you like it or not music is about commerce. I personally don't mind these remix projects, albeit I do agree most of the tracks end up being a waste of time. That doesn't mean they're not beneficial for the original music itself. The 21 yr old hipster girl who's into RJD2 and dip-ro gets hipped to Impulse, perhaps broadening her musical horizons. That's a good thing no? Generally speaking, these releases are accompanied by a 2nd cd with original versions, often at a lowered price.
Secondly, so what if they're unknowledgable? An untrained perspective might breath new life into a song. I don't expect a producer to have an intimate knowledge of session info or whether he sampled the og RVG mono pressing. That's just bringing unnecessary beat digging snobbery into it. These people aren't taking this as a piss in the wind either just because they lack "your" knowledge. They're probably curious and genuinely interested in discovering the Impulse catalogue. Lack of knowledge does not equate ignorance, you have to give people a chance to learn.
Slighty more on topic.......I think the best remix I've heard so far in this grouping is the Mark de-Clive Lowe rework of Shirley Horn's "Return to Paradise". It fits the description of the topic at hand, breathing new life into a track and making it danceable.
I'll have to check it out.
If no one else has done it, how about Pharoah Sanders' "The Creator Has A Master Plan"?
That could be dope if done right and would be right up dip-ro's alleyhole
Killa, you're my pseudo-bol and all but that's a piece of music that people eventually formed a religon (Church of John Coltrane in SF). Not for nothing that's almost sacreligious for any producer dude to even touch.
tell it do Das Efx and those "What's a Bro to Do?" dudes
Alice is a good look for the skipper tho
What's good [email]P@trock?[/email]
Absolute & OJ para mi
already been 'touched'
I'm at Kero's laying down a beat...I swear we need 8 outs on the mpc. Solo-ing every track and fucking letting the entire song play 09284093 times is .
this is a good one
as well as several songs from
Gabor Szabo: Jazz Raga
Hey Fag,
I think you only have 1 option. "Creator Has a Master Plan" by Pharoah Sanders.
Seriously. Throw a "Da Back Woodz" instrumental under it and call it a day.
Do this and you will be on the cover of the next issue of Tiger Beat without a doubt.
Imagine all the PR opps.
Next think you know you'll be on tour with Ryan Cabrerra.
That's a good choice, but I would prefer to hear "Stopover Bombay" from side 2. That bass/piano workout with the harp flutters...
Still, my vote is for Clifford, who could use the shine.
I can see hyderNZ's perspective. There's nothing I want less than to hear a "beat digger" take on pharaoh sanders' "black unity". Sanders has been covered a lot (then as well as now) and I'm not sure what a new perspective could bring.
For all the ways musicians want to tie the two together, jazz and hip-hop are totally different beasts. It's difficult to take what's good about a 20-minute jazz song, or coltrane "love supreme" - bristling, glowing, neverending sax improvisation, and translate that, confine it, into a hip-hop beat or mash-up. Almost all jazz remix projects and collaborations to date have been wack: jazzmatazz, madlib doing blue note (minus the first track, I think it was), and that miles davis remix project.
Maybe an Impulse remix project on the "spiritual" side of things by No Neck Blues Band or Fennesz WOULD be a good stylistic match. A group or person able to use the wildness of jazz in an unusual way.
But, on the other hand, nothing against diplo. He's got that connection to do something wild like this, it's a great opportunity, run with it to the bank. Maybe he'll come back with an amazing remix, like a bangin club mix of a Mel Brown track, and all the indy kids will be rocking "blues & the abstract truth" on their ipods.
actually, YEAH[/b]... that's my vote. go into the impulse office and say
img src="http://www.ineer.org/ISCMeet/2004-07-06-030.jpg"height= 396" "width=500"[/img]
"gentlemen, I'm thinking a mel brown remix would be fresh. perrier breaks for days, nawmeen??!@"[/b]
But the passages leading to and from the main part of the song is perfect for manipulating.
Wes, if you want something out of the ordinary, get something from Mel Brown's Chicken Fat[/b], Sam Waters' Crystals[/b], Clark Terry & Chico O'Farrill's Spanish Rice[/b], Charlie Haden's Liberation Music Orchestra[/b], or go against the grain as I would and use something from Michael Brecker's albums that he did for Impulse in the 90's, and give it the old Impulse sound. His Tales From The Hudson[/b] album features Pat Metheny, Jack DeJohnette, Dave Holland, and McCoy Tyner. Two Blocks From The Edge[/b] has "Delta City Blues", and that's open for possibilities. Too bad these two don't have the drumming of Ben Perowski, whom played with Brecker when I saw him in 1988. Perowski's beats alone are ready-made for fucking up.
Second time's the charm?
W*s: Definitely peep this CD (and the companion CD that came with it) before you end up remixing something that's been done before.
As for song choices, I'm with Paycheck: "Attica Blues" could be a dope choice 'cos it's already funky but it's loose & raw enough that a remix could give it a nice boost.
Peace-
no offense at all, but please don't.
cosign. one of my favorite DJing memories is DJing an art opening that got outta control and went on til 5AM and there were hot chicks who took off their pants and skirts and danced in their panties to that song...why does shit like this only happen when you have a girlfriend?