DUB SIDE OF THE MOON
Reggae version of Pink Floyd classic Dark Side Of The Moon, performed by the Easy Star All Stars.
Released on Easy Star Records on
February 18th 2003, catalogue number: ES1012. Review by Matt Johns,
Brain Damage, February 2003.
With
perfect timing to coincide with the thirtieth anniversary celebrations
of Pink Floyd's classic, Dark Side Of The Moon, comes this ambitious,
authentic and even amusing reinvention.
Using the pick of the reggae and
soul community, who spent over three years on the work, Dub Side Of The
Moon is one of the more outrageous attempts at reworking Floyd tunes
that has come along over the years. And it works fantastically well! It
might seem sacriligious to some, but I think this is a great album! A
fantastic job has been done from beginning to end. If you are a purist,
hate cover bands, cover versions, and the like, you will probably hate
this. If, however, you enjoy hearing fresh versions of old favourites,
I urge you to check this out...
The idea came about in 1999 when
New York reggae label vice president Lem Oppenheimer convinced his
colleagues that this was a viable concept to cover. He imagined it
would "echo Dark Side's album artwork - refracting Pink Floyd's music
vision through a prism of reggaes's rich rhythmic and instrumental
possibilities". Gathering some of the best musicians of their genre,
the producers have approached the work seriously - so seriously in
fact, that the (alleged) Wizard Of Oz syncronicity apparently works
throughout!
Nyabinghi drumming kicks off the
album, along with the heartbeat (this bookends the album). Speak To Me,
with re-recorded comments (every sound, voice, whatever - has been
rerecorded in an appropriate style) moves into a nice version of
Breathe, easing the listener gently into the different sound given to
this very familiar work. A great vocal as well from Sluggy Ranks.
A kicking drum'n'bass version of
On The Run follows. The style fits this fairly timeless synth heavy
track well. The song climaxes, then some very funny alarm clocks herald
the start of Time. The opening (once the chimes have subsided) plays
down the normal rototom drum solo, David Gilmour's solos have been
replaced by some toasting, which works well. The song seems none the
worse for the lack of guitars...
Great Gig In The Sky has been
done really well - lovely, atmospheric, and a soulful vocal from Kirsty
Rock. Money then kicks off - no cash registers but the sound of bongs
(apparently - not that I would know) which puts a smile on the face.
Musically, the song is very similar to the original. The vocal is
provided by Gary "Nesta" Pine and Dollarman, who provides the effective
toasting that replaces David's traditional solo.
Up next, Us and Them. A nice,
uplifting bass line and a pretty faithful sax performance. Frankie Paul
does a pretty straight reading of this track, just adding a touch of
his own interpretation. Like Money, not a huge departure from the
original. Us And Them blends into another faithful (if reggae
flavoured) reading of Any Colour You Like, with David's solo replaced
effectively with horns.
A stripped down Brain Damage
follows, with Dr Israel sounding like he's singing through a megaphone
in places, which naturally leads to Eclipse, which to my mind is the
least successful rendering on the album. For what should be the climax,
it seems poorly paced, particularly vocally, and muted. However, the
Nyabinghi drumming that leads out, nicely wraps things up.
There are four bonus tracks - and
they enter heavy dub territory! You get Time, which starts like a
Zabriskie outtake, before heading into an instrumental, dub version.
Great Gig In The Sky gives you more of the same but with some awesome
bass. A great version! Finally, you have Step It Pon The Rastaman
Scene/Any Dub You Like, which is based on Any Colour You Like but
dramatically different, with a nice vocal by Ranking Joe.
It is a sign of a great piece of
music that it can be covered in different ways successfully - think
about the many ways that Lennon & McCartney songs have been
covered; Dark Side is arguably the pinnacle of Pink Floyd's career. To
still be so respected thirty years on, and in this case, in a
completely different music community, is a sign of Dark Side's enduring
quality and appeal.
As a concept, it sounds like it
just shouldn't work - but it does. Their obvious respect and love for
the original shines through and ensures the album stands up to repeated
playings. This is no "interesting novelty" that a project like this
could be in danger of becoming. Go on - give it a try. You'll be
missing a treat if you don't!
The CD can be ordered from all normal retailers, or from one of the following branches of Amazon: UK, USA, Canada, France, or Germany.
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