Monday, February 25, 2008

LANGERADO 2008 - The DYNAMITES featuring CHARLES WALKER


The first profiled band of the 2008 Langerado Music Festival are The Dynamites featuring Charles Walker. I first came across The Dynamites not long after joining 89.1 (wemu.org). The 2007, Outta Sight record release Kaboom! is a blues and funk driven album that thrives on authentic, original arrangements influenced by some Godfather of Soul recordings.

If you think back to James Brown in the 70s, his jazz album Soul On Top teamed him with horn extraordinaire Maceo Parker and tracks from that recording are surely the foundation of future sounds such as Kaboom! . Tracks “Dig Deeper” and “Can You Feel It?” bring forth less subtle jazz and swagger that are similar to “It’s A Mans, Mans, Mans World” from Soul On Top; moreover, aside from the fantastic groove of the band, the star power of Kaboom! truly rises from the featured vocals of Mr. Charles Walker.

Giving the down and dirty something to chat about, his belting voice beckons to be heard, supported by his demanding gospel, spiritual influences. Many critics have praised him for this new recording, acclaiming he is a presence to be seen in the absence of James Brown. I don’t know how I feel about that. I do know that what he is channeling on this album, that flows seamlessly-sync with the Dynamites, are great lyrics for a voice of his caliber. Mr. Walker is man who doesn’t sang a song. He is an artist who tells a story, paints a picture while putting his soul on the line…in an Otis Redding like fashion. A true Soul Man.

Below I have gathered some wonderful critical responses to Kaboom!, as well as a complete band bio with video footage found on You Tube of the band live. Pay close note to the video of Mr. Walker and soul maiden Sharon Jones. Doing a duet of “Summertime,” the Gershwin classic from Porgy and Bess, the two vocalist demonstrate a lesson passion and sincerity.

Make sure you tune in Wednesday Nite @ 11p.m.EST on 89.1 WEMU ONLINE [ WEMU.ORG ]. I will be featuring selections from the album Kaboom!

For further information on THE DYNAMITES featuring CHARLES WALKER visit the following links:

MYSPACE

MYSPACE.COM/TheDynamitesBand

BAND WEBSITE

http://www.thedynamites.net/press.html


-Rashon A. Massey

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“The Dynamites’ Kaboom! is just about the best deep neo-soul records you’re likely to hear this year. The grooves are tight, the mood is right and Walker has plenty of fight left in ‘im, even after all these years. Highly recommended.” -eMusic

“These ten songs, from the sinewy, low-rider hard fonk of “Slinky” (George Clinton, watch out!) to the uptown-struttin’, JB’s-styled grooves of “Own Thing,” sound ageless and out of time.”
-HARP

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Sharon Jones & Charles Walker "Summertime"


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“Old-school shouter Charles Walker joins the established eight-piece Nashville based Dynamites and the union is a match made in hard funk heaven.” -All Music Guide

“With Walker's gritty but supple vocals riding atop cold-sweat, JBs-like workouts ("Come on In"), slinking Sly Stone-esque grooves ("Can You Feel it?"), and Funkadelic-ized cosmic slop ("Way Down South"), "Kaboom!" comes across as nothing less than a new dictionary of old soul, hard funk, and vintage R&B.” -Boston Globe

“There's no getting around it - this Nashville ensemble's funk-soul hybrid is downright explosive.”
-Philadelphia Inquirer

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Charles Walker and The Dynamites - Live at the Mercy Lounge Nashville, TN



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Kaboom! – Outta Sight Records - Release date: June 12, 2007

If the first attention-grabbing horn lines of The Dynamites album Kaboom! evoke a dramatic curtain call from a late ‘60s funk concert at the Apollo Theater, it’s no accident. After all, that’s exactly where Charles Walker, the band’s singer and front man, first cut his teeth as a performer. When the revolutionary ‘new bag’ now known as funk first made the scene, Walker was right there in the thick of it, opening for the likes of James Brown, Etta James, and Wilson Pickett, and imbibing himself in a cultural movement’s genesis.

Walker recorded on many of the most reputed soul labels of the era, including Champion, Chess and Decca. In the early ‘60s, his group ‘Little Charles and the Sidewinders’ became one of the hottest acts on the New York club scene. All this, combined with his Tennessee upbringing, made Walker a natural to be included in the Country Music Hall of Fame’s Night Train to Nashville exhibit. As Doyle Davis, now The Dynamites’ manager, milled through the exhibit, curator Michael Gray raved about Walker’s recent performance at an event promoting the exhibit’s Night Train to Nashville release on Lost Highway Records. Davis knew then and there that he’d found the singer that Bill Elder, The Dynamites’ founder, had been searching for. The rest is history.

If this all sounds retro, think again. The Dynamites are far from being alone in their second millennium pursuit of rekindling funk’s original flames. A renaissance of funk and soul is snatching up listeners from coast to coast and beyond. As the NY Times article “What’s Going On? Everything Soul is New Again,” from February 2007 says loud and clear; soul music is making a formidable comeback. “More than at any time in recent memory, soul music’s pressing syncopation and stirring hollers are churning within the popular mainstream.”

For the unconverted or simply indifferent, Kaboom!’s first track, “Body Snatcher,” provides a potent wake-up call. But no worries, this body snatcher isn’t the grisly stuff of horror movies, but a smoking instrumental that simultaneously underscores the band’s virtuosity while skillfully dismantling their listeners’ aural inhibitions.

From the get go, the spirit of James Brown is in the house. Nevertheless it is worth inserting a disclaimer: habituated ears will be caught off guard. There’s something new in the mix and The Dynamites definitely have their own thing going on. Bill Elder, the band’s composer, guitarist and producer has made sure of that. He’s also made sure that nothing was left to chance in creating The Dynamites’ sound.

Elder, a.k.a. Leo Black, spent two years composing and fine tuning prior to unveiling the band onstage. In a Nashville Scene article, Elder explained why creating their sound took time. “The music is put together in a very calculated way, though it doesn’t necessarily give that impression. Every piece has to be looked at from a spatial standpoint, a rhythmic standpoint. It’s about every instrument having its own space to do its thing.”

With the instrumental red carpet of “Body Snatcher” laid out for him, Charles Walker comes in with guns drawn on “Own Thing.” Elder’s lyrics are infused with Walker’s surging emotion: ‘Boss man, you got a whole lot of nerve. You’re going to get what you deserve. You’ve been chipping away my bones for far too long.’ The song is an anthem for any hard worker who’s paid his dues working for ‘the man,’ but still dreams of being the master of his own destiny. The song’s pounding beat brings to mind, not so much a purely funk groove, but rather a powerful Wilson Pickett soul song.

As Doyle Davis, who’s also a deejay of a long running soul and funk radio show in Nashville, pointed out in the NY Times, it’s soul music’s inherent authenticity that’s brought it back into the limelight. “People have been fed prefab music for so long that it’s starting to resonate with them that it’s not real.”

And, part of being real is a willingness to accept a little grit. The disc’s fourth song “Come On In” features a raw bass break. The segue recalls the hallmark sound that deejays have dubbed the “Deep Funk” movement. The international movement includes acts like the Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, Breakestra, Poets of Rhythm, New Mastersounds and The Bamboos. Doyle says the Deep Funk movement got its moniker from British deejay Keb Darge. Darge coined the name to encapsulate the little known funk music from the ‘60s and early ‘70s he spun on his turntables, as well as the newer recordings derived from that sound. According to Doyle, Deep Funk is more ‘gritty, raw and soulful’ than the funk-inspired disco characteristic of the late ‘70s. As Elder puts it, “We keep it in the swamp, and away from the spaceships.”

While The Dynamites are the first to acknowledge their roots in the Deep Funk movement, they are by no means purists. The genre’s producers and musicians tend to aim for an antiquated sound. Listeners are often kept guessing; were the songs recorded 30 years ago or yesterday? The Dynamites have taken a different approach. The richly recorded sounds of Kaboom! attest that while The Dynamites are devoted to an old school sensibility, they aren’t afraid of sounding like their music was recorded in 2007.

“Way Down South,” a wailing, mournful song, is further proof that The Dynamites aren’t content to live in the past. Elder, who grew up in New Orleans, uses the song as a springboard to voice the conflicting feelings that any modern Southerner knows too well. His lyrics face up to the hard truths and ironies of segregation and Katrina while at the same time embracing the beauty that even a brutal hurricane can’t completely erase. “Way down south we got hurricanes with beautiful names, 287 years gone up in flames. Now the soul of a nation flooded in tears, half of a city just disappears!” The song eerily blends Hammond organ, lowdown percussion and spooky horn lines filled with Crescent City grit to create a backdrop for Walker’s woeful and yet strangely hopeful wailings.

After the dark musings of “Way Down South,” “Slinky” kicks in with all The Dynamites’ cylinders burning. The organ, guitar and horn lines work together like a well-greased funk machine with Walker crooning at the top of his game. The song is a beautiful marriage of a heavy, danceable groove and the flexible woman that the song describes. On “Every Time,” Walker reaches deep, and the nasty horn lines fly the listener like a 747 straight to the ‘Nawlins streets that must have inspired them.

“Dig Deeper,” a heart-wrenching soul ballad, shows why 40 years of professional singing has given Charles Walker a distinct advantage over the competition. Walker builds the emotional ending into an edge-of-your-seat crescendo. Just how high he can take it? “Killing It” finishes the album at the same blistering pace with which “Body Snatcher” started it off.

For soul veteran Walker, finding songwriter Bill Elder has been an epiphany. More importantly, he’s found in Elder a songwriter that writes for his voice. This stands in sharp contrast to the days when he was asked to record songs whether they inspired him or not. “I didn’t have the songs that I felt were right for me. Now I can pick and choose the songs I want to do. When I was with Chess and Decca I did what they wanted me to do.” The result being that Walker is more relaxed and at ease in the studio. “I feel so confident now. I can remember being under so much pressure to try and get a hit record. Now I’m just in there doing what I like to do.”

Walker is relaxed and at the top of his game and any discerning listener can feel it. The fuse has been lit. Kaboom! is readymade for detonation. And, as comeback albums from soul artists like Charles Walker grace the charts, it seems the public is ready too. Get on the floor, ‘cause The Dynamites are killing it!

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