Soul Strut 100: # 79 - McNeal & Niles - Thrust
RAJ
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I will slowly be unveiling the Top 100 Soul Strut Related Records as Voted by the Strutters Themselves.
# 79 - McNeal & Niles - Thrust
Please discuss your reactions to this record. The thread will be archived later here.
About
???It makes Prefuse-73 sound inconsequential???, said one of my record obsessive friends after hearing McNeal & Niles ???Thrust???. And if there???s one thing that every music nerd loves hearing, it???s an album that turns everything they thought they knew on its head! For once, it???s not hype: this album is a true anomaly. Not much is known about it, other than it was custom recorded in 1979 and released in obscenely tiny numbers with an easily overlooked generic sunset cover. You???re unlikely to find out anything more about the album, because the liner notes focus entirely on its almost fictional rarity and the chance encounter that led to its re-release. This is disappointing, considering that availability of an album and who found it are arguably the least consequential parts of its history.
But none of that matters once you drop the needle on the first track. The opening ???Ja Ja??? is especially brilliant. It layers laid-back groove on top of laid-back groove, redefining sublime. In fact, the whole album is full of odd proto-electro beats, straight-up delivered with just the right tinge of funk. Keyboards provide a languid wash of chords that make you want to go barefoot. These carefully crafted songs also win points for being unabashedly goofy, like a more hip-hop version of Stereolab. The duo???s uncanny sense of repetition is made more palatable by their restrained musicianship. Most of the time there???s nothing more playing than solid 4/4 drums with synthesizer and guitar or bass, which keeps the tone gloriously under-produced.Slap bass and cheesy female vocals threaten to tip the scales into disco territory, but even these dips are unexpectedly left-field: think ???disco not disco??? like ESG or Arthur Russell. ???Thrust??? probably sounded like an out of place sell-out attempt in 1979, but now sounds eerily prescient. Chocolate Industries couldn???t have done a better job finding an album that sounds like a direct forefather if they faked it entirely!
http://www.soulstrut.com/index.php/reviews/indepth/Thrust/
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# 79 - McNeal & Niles - Thrust
Please discuss your reactions to this record. The thread will be archived later here.
About
???It makes Prefuse-73 sound inconsequential???, said one of my record obsessive friends after hearing McNeal & Niles ???Thrust???. And if there???s one thing that every music nerd loves hearing, it???s an album that turns everything they thought they knew on its head! For once, it???s not hype: this album is a true anomaly. Not much is known about it, other than it was custom recorded in 1979 and released in obscenely tiny numbers with an easily overlooked generic sunset cover. You???re unlikely to find out anything more about the album, because the liner notes focus entirely on its almost fictional rarity and the chance encounter that led to its re-release. This is disappointing, considering that availability of an album and who found it are arguably the least consequential parts of its history.
But none of that matters once you drop the needle on the first track. The opening ???Ja Ja??? is especially brilliant. It layers laid-back groove on top of laid-back groove, redefining sublime. In fact, the whole album is full of odd proto-electro beats, straight-up delivered with just the right tinge of funk. Keyboards provide a languid wash of chords that make you want to go barefoot. These carefully crafted songs also win points for being unabashedly goofy, like a more hip-hop version of Stereolab. The duo???s uncanny sense of repetition is made more palatable by their restrained musicianship. Most of the time there???s nothing more playing than solid 4/4 drums with synthesizer and guitar or bass, which keeps the tone gloriously under-produced.Slap bass and cheesy female vocals threaten to tip the scales into disco territory, but even these dips are unexpectedly left-field: think ???disco not disco??? like ESG or Arthur Russell. ???Thrust??? probably sounded like an out of place sell-out attempt in 1979, but now sounds eerily prescient. Chocolate Industries couldn???t have done a better job finding an album that sounds like a direct forefather if they faked it entirely!
http://www.soulstrut.com/index.php/reviews/indepth/Thrust/
Related Threads
Records you would sell your soul for..
Best sounding Soul/Funk RAERS???.(LP ONLY)
~~Top Rated Private Press Funk LP???S~~
Media
Comments
b/w, in my opinion this record is an ABSOLUTE ESSENTIAL. One of my top 5 records of all time in the collection.
Also, the last track on Thrust Too and the other 3 records where the added the shitty saxamaphone have heat as well.
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Get it if you don't have it... whether on cd, vinyl, MP3 or toiletpaper: just grab it.
This is also their best album by far IMO.
My reaction the same as LRadiomc too, love it to death. Thrust Too Definitely has some good stuff as well, though not as killer as the first. They missed their stride on the third one though, starting with the title: Thrust: Re-entry .
Such a special record, Grateful for days....