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BLACKWELL'S RECORD OF THE WEEK

BLACKWELL'S RECORD OF THE WEEK

Innerzone Orchestra

“Bug in the Bass Bin” (Jazz version) b/w “Bug in the Bass Bin” (original version)

scum stats: test pressing…but it’s techno, so this could easily be one of 100 or even more


If you did a random scan of every time a drum beat popped into my head, this would be what you’d find 33% of the time.

Seriously, walking down the street, my daughters waking me up in the middle of the night, chewing on some gummy bears, unnecessary conference calls…Bug in the Bass Bin is the soundtrack to all of this.

I don’t think I’d heard of this song before doing research in the lead-up to the Dirtbombs techno covers LP “Party Store" almost ten years ago now.

I believe I read somewhere that this track was considered the “first” drum and bass song. That was enough for me to investigate.

Cue all kinds of apocrypha regarding the unknown origin of some of the samples, playing the 33rpm version at 45rpm, the underpinned jazz influence to it all…and I was quite happy to be in that rabbit hole.

I welcomed the challenge of trying to figure out how to translate the drum beat into something that Pat and I could replicate in the studio. We did alright, but in hindsight, I regret not learning how to play the five bass drum beats that (I think) begin each measure.

The session was actually pretty funny…I set my iPhone next to me with a timer running, the plan was that we’d just play the thing for ten minutes or so.

But pretty quickly, my screensaver activated and went to black, so no one in the band had any gauge as to how long we’d been playing the song.

And as repetitive as this groove is, once you’re in it, you really do lose all sense of time.

We played for over twenty minutes. The reel of tape ran out and we didn’t even know.

Word started to go around town about us working on an album that was all covers of Detroit techno tunes and through some stroke of fortune, Carl Craig (the brains behind Innerzone Orchestra) actually wanted to guest on our cover version.

Pretty. Damn. Cool.

He wanted to play modular synthesizer and had this set up that looked like it was responsible for sending the Apollo missions into space. All knobs and levers and I think some weird nylon string with a metal ball on it. And from what I can tell, he set this thing up and like a boulder at the top of a hill, just pushed it once and let it go on it’s own.

His sounds start the song, are pushed to the front of the mix around 10:36, and then to the front again around 19:06.

This song is so long that you cannot stream it on Tidal. I think that’s more an issue with whomever owns the publishing on the track, but whatever.

I asked him about the drums on the original, he said they were sampled and sliced up from an instructional dance record, but when I pressed him for more info, he clammed up and didn’t want to talk about it.

I am still DYING to know if that’s actually true and if so, what in the hell that record is.

I don’t expect anyone here to know, but if so, mention in the comments and I’ll pull a gem in the closet and send it your way.

(side note: the drums are NOT sampled from First Choice “Let No Man Put Asunder” but “Bass Bin” DOES sample a little keyboard riff from that track)

When we told Carl that we got lost in the song while we were tracking it and went on for twenty minutes, he smiled “That’s the whole spirit of the track,” he said. His comment felt reassuring. There’s a reason he did a 7-inch for the grand opening of Third Man Pressing. He gets it.

Anyway, I think the jazz version is pretty ace. A drum groove that I wish I could summon from my spaghetti arms. I wholly applaud Carl for his expansive musical palette, seems like techno fans can be close-minded, but he’s spreading the word.

As for the record…yeah, I’m a sucker for a test pressing. I still don’t even have the copy with the printed sleeve.

Three versions linked below, original, jazz, and Dirtbombs. Lemme know what you dig best in the comments.


Comments

DonTazeMeBro

I am a fan of the original version best. Going to use this opportunity to just say that having a this forum as a place to hear about and discuss music has been mind opening and so badass, I will give you an example, at the Goodwill this weekend, I was digging through the ever shrinking and typically beat to shit vinyl section, (honestly I am always shocked at how much Perry Cuomo is out there) they have one small magazine rack that is so jammed with records they only way you can actually dig through them is by taking them out flipping through them and then stuffing them back in. As my daughter comes up to me with a giant stuffed banana that had clearly been won at a Statefair years gone by, one of the records I was flipping through caught my eye. I can say with all certainty that I owe my pause specifically to this forum, the cover of the album was super flimsy felt a piece of humid paper towel, a bunch of blue dye stained the bottom, it looks like maybe it had gotten wet while next to another album and the color had bleed into the sleeve. The lettering looked like some bubble letters I used to draw in 8th grade. This is not something I would have ever slowed down for. The cover read, “The Apostles” Black is Beautiful. If you are all sitting there saying “well duh The Apostles of course dummy” excuse my ignorance of 70’s Nigerian Pop. If your not saying that (peep the link at the bottom and have your mind blown) To my surprise the album was actually not just in the sleeve but had an inner sleeve and wasn’t just sitting in the cardboard, additionally it was in fairly decent condition no deep gauges, totally playable. Like all records at my local Goodwill the .99cents price is always right and when I read the back of the sleeve; “There is no doubt that the Apostles are just about the biggest thing to hit the Nigerian Pop Music scene, recently” I knew I had struck Goodwill gold. This album is awesome, the Hammond on “Don’t Huzzle For Love” sucked me in but the whole album is great. Grateful to have a place to pick vinyl brains and discuss music.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2hxLZn4f48w

TrickyRaven

Dirtbombs is cool and spacey. It does stick with you doesn’t it. That test pressing roulette idea was extremely awesome and cruel! I bet they went quicker than free pancakes. I just saw it, seems like always at the right place, wrong time in the Vault, which is great because not much keeps me excited about stuff like this anymore, not like free pancakes once did.. “I think I’m going to make an order from TMR tonight, maybe try a few roulettes because they’re awesomely 20% off” *look in Vault novelties.. “wow that is the coolest addition to the this online store yet, I finally found some hidden vault only gem!” *clicking repeatedly and trying to add to cart, finally notice: “sold out”. That’s why it’s not working.. haha. Test pressings are just cool, make you feel like you were closer to the actual creation of the album you like somehow, I’ve got 1 but it’s not mine (wasn’t supposed to be anyone’s) I’m just holding it for someone ;)

TommyB3intheD

I played all 3 on my office computer late Friday afternoon (I know the quality is poor when playing on office computer) but my office mates seemed to like the jazz version best but it may be because it is an older crowd. I would hesitate to say the I liked the Dirtbombs version best for fear of being seen as a kiss ass. But you have to give props to anyone who can string out a song for 20+ minutes. Kudos Ben!

Zoso

Spiraling smooth transportation with a determined vibe. Good background for paint work. Diggin it, Ben…

Aquamarine2

“Innerzone” seems so appropriate.

NoRightOpinion

I like the original best. The pop of the snare with that stairwell sounding reverb. The sexy, muted bass line. I don’t know where you get this stuff, but thank you.

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