Friday, 27 June 2008

CD: N*E*R*D, Seeing Sounds

If dogged persistence always equalled success, then Hillary Clinton would be the Democratic presidential candidate and N*E*R*D might well be the biggest band in the world. For the best part of a decade, production duo Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo have dutifully plugged away at creating a hybrid between rock music and the R& B and hip-hop with which they made their name. N*E*R*D's two albums to date have been modestly received, and yet you can see why they keep at it. If there's one thing that rock music could really do with, it's a shot of the blue-sky sonic thinking that Williams and Hugo have brought to records by Madonna, Justin Timberlake and Jay-Z. But if the theory behind N*E*R*D's sound is straightforward, the practice has proved troublesome. Their albums to date have strongly suggested that Williams and Hugo can't actually work out how to meld R&B and rock. They had two runs at their debut, In Search Of ... , withdrawing the original electronic version in favour of one featuring live instruments. The follow-up, Fly Or Die, ended up sounding like a nu-metal album, which is really never the right answer, regardless of the question.












Seeing Sounds suggests they're still having problems. They try distorted 70s rock riffs over pungent drum'n' bass and crunk shouting. They try straightforward new-wave pop on Happy. They try employing the Hives: while it's nice to see the Swedish garage rockers' latterday career as muses to the world's greatest urban producers continuing bafflingly apace (they also turned up on Timbaland's last album) their contributions to Windows seem oddly anaemic. Not all the ideas are unsuccessful: Kill Joey has a great 70s cop-show chase riff, Everybody Nose's attempt to transpose rock dynamics on to rattling breakbeats and acidic synth squelch is appealingly propulsive. But even the best tracks are marked by a sense of something lacking, usually a decent song. On the rare occasions when they fetch up with a memorable tune - amid the descending soft-rock chords and thick harmonies of Sooner Or Later, for example - they cling desperately to it for six and half minutes, smothering it with extended codas and widdly guitar solos.

Lyrically, Fly Or Die rather cravenly courted the angsty teenage market. It didn't really work - there's something deeply odd about hearing a 34-year-old multi-millionaire (taking time between squiring Jade Jagger and launching his own jewellery range for Louis Vuitton) trying to convince the globe's adolescent goths that he feels their misery. Seeing Sounds holds back on that kind of thing. Instead, the lyrics are largely about sex. Occasionally, this is diverting: "Nobody make me come like you," offers You Know What, a funny thing for a bloke to sing, implying as it does that she makes it shoot out of his ears or something. But it does get wearisome. The single Everybody Nose putatively tackles the issue of cocaine abuse, but it swiftly becomes apparent that Williams' objections to the drug have less to do with say, the trail of death and environmental devastation wrought by its production, than the fact that a girl with a nosefull is more likely to be interested in dancing or gabbling on than fulfilling her life's destiny, which should be having it away with Pharrell Williams. It has one of those odd introductions that rappers go in for, where they mutter their name a couple of times, say "yeah ... uh huh", then offer a pre-emptive summary of the track's nonpareil qualities: "It takes a lot of courage to say this." It's hard not to feel this is pitching it a bit high: under what circumstances does it take a lot of courage to say that people on cocaine are a pain in the arse? During a night in with the Primrose Hill set? At a meeting of the Norte del Valle Cartel?

You leave Seeing Sounds convinced that Williams and Hugo are no closer to their dream of inventing a successful R&B/rock hybrid. And if producers as talented as this can't do it, then who can? Certainly not their rival Timbaland, whose recent efforts in this direction have been equally underwhelming. It's a hugely appealing idea, but maybe it just can't be done. Perhaps it's time for N*E*R*D to take a leaf out of Mrs Clinton's book and finally concede defeat.


See Also

Tuesday, 24 June 2008

Dub Tractor

Dub Tractor   
Artist: Dub Tractor

   Genre(s): 
Acid Jazz
   Ambient
   



Discography:


Hideout   
 Hideout

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 9


Delay   
 Delay

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 10




 






Friday, 13 June 2008

Kanye West, record labels sued over jazz samples

NEW YORK - Rappers Kanye West, Method Man, Redman, Common and their record companies are being sued by late US jazz musician Joe Farrell's daughter, who accused them of using her father's music without approval.The lawsuit, filed by Kathleen Firrantello in the US District Court in New York, names the rappers along with various labels owned by Universal Music Group.None of the record companies or representatives for the rappers were immediately available for comment.The lawsuit said all the rappers used portions of Farrell's 1974 musical composition Upon This Rock in three separate songs - West in "Gone," Common in "Chi-City" and Method Man and Redman in their song "Run 4 Cover."Firrantello is seeking punitive damages of at least $1 million and asked that no further copies of the songs be made, sold or performed, according to the lawsuit.- REUTERS/Nielsen

Sunday, 8 June 2008

William H. Macy booked for Nantucket fest

Taking part in a panel about screenwriting and acting





William H. Macy will take part in the 13th annual Nantucket (Mass.) Film Festival, which runs June 19-22. Macy is scheduled to join in a conversation about screenwriting and acting with Time critic Richard Corliss.


Brad Anderson's "Transsiberian," starring Woody Harrelson, Emily Mortimer, Ben Kingsley, Kate Mara and Eduardo Noriega, will serve as the opening-night film. Jonathan Levin's "The Wackness," starring Ben Kingsley, Famke Janssen, Josh Peck, Olivia Thirlby and Mary-Kate Olsen, will close the festival.


This year's fest will also introduce the Music Cafe and panel featuring Aware/Columbia artist Mat Kearny, who will perform songs that have appeared in such TV shows as "Grey's Anatomy" and "Friday Night Lights." He'll then join East Coast creative and EMI publishing vp Dan McCarroll and Aware Records/Asquared Management president Gregg Latterman for a discussion.


Other scheduled participants at the festival include Judd Apatow, who is set to receive the NBC Universal Screenwriting Award, and Meg Ryan, the first recipient of the Compass Rose Acting Tribute.


Leonard Maltin will host daily panels with visiting filmmakers under the heading of "Morning Coffee With."



See Also