Moonbeam Levels

Amar Patel

Mixtape x record club™️ 🤯 music selections and conversations. amarofpatel.substack.com

  1. A late 2000s beat tape

    5 days ago

    A late 2000s beat tape

    Hello pod people, How’s it all going? Summer is almost here in the UK, as is another political circus and a World Cup. What a time. So … I’ve been thinking about the hip-hop instrumental and 2000s’ beat culture, in particular. The spark being Flying Lotus first album 1983, which was released exactly two decades ago. That’s mad. I remember picking up the record on my first trip to NYC and thinking music would never be the same. The way I heard hip-hop would never be the same. It’s also been 20 years since Jay Dee/J Dilla passed away, just three days after the release of his momentous mixtape Donuts. This is more than a coincidence. For one thing, Lotus was interning at record Label Stones Throw around the time of Dilla’s final days and recalls dropping off a cheque at his house. Though saddened by how frail this 32-year-old legend had become, seeing all his gear lit up and Dilla still so committed to creation galvanised the young artist to get to work. I was a rookie reviews editor and writer at Straight No Chaser in the 2000s, a starchart for “interplanetary sounds, ancient to future”. It was my job to seek connections between generations and genres. It was clear that Lotus and his contemporaries, both in LA and elsewhere, were part of a lineage. The torch was being passed. Leaving Records’ Matthewdavid said as much in All Ears, Gus Sutherland’s documentary about the LA scene in 2013. “When [Donuts] came out, it was like a hit in the face. A call to action. We will not let this sound die.” In truth, Dilla had been going ‘out there’ for several years prior – embracing synths, techno, the wildest samples and odd time signatures (check Dan Charnas’ book on how he reinvented rhythm). Thinking back to Slum Village, the ’97 mix of ‘Players’ hit different, as did the raw dynamics of ‘Raise it Up’, which I used to skip on Fantastic vol 2 in my neo/smooth era! His debut studio album Welcome 2 Detroit in 2001 featured the Kraftwerkian ‘Big Booty Express’. Later came Ruff Draft and the new wave-y ‘Nothing Like This’. Common’s Electric Circus bewildered many of us when it dropped in 2002. Dilla was an executive producer on that, programming and playing on several tracks. Today, it’s widely acknowledged as what it always was: an epochal vision of what hip-hop can be. Chaotic yet liberating. This music was eons away from his work with the likes of A Tribe Called Quest and The Pharcyde, and Soulquarian collaborations with Erykah Badu and Bilal. Today, you can hear traces in releases on Lotus’ label Brainfeeder, Leaving Records, LuckyMe, Ghostly and many others. Sa-Ra deserve recognition for their experimentation, crashlanding with ‘Glorious’ and freaking the beat as early as 2004 with remixes like this for DJ Mitsu. Another pioneer is Dabrye, whose ‘Game Over’ had Dilla guesting on the mic and sounded like an enormous stargate smashing open. At their best, productions from this era were more than wonky wormholes or glitchy portals. More than sub-busting, circuit-melting departures from the sparse boom-clap, boom-bap of the 90s. Though it was thrilling to get blasted by these retro-future sonics in the club, the music that stayed with me had a more elusive quality to it, resonating far beyond the nostalgia of 8-bit frequencies that hooked a whole generation of avid gamers. It had nuance, intricacy and texture. It built a world to inhabit, conjured tension and release. Far more compelling than today’s immensely popular ‘lofi beats’, or “Starbuck music” as Lotus likes to call it. In a recent interview with Hearing Things’ Dylan Greene, he described the boundlessness of the LA scene back then. “It felt like we had so much potential to the way we were turning beats away from just rappers and crafting a producer world. I was curious to see how far we could take it.” “Dilla really opened up the possibilities of what could be done with samples,” he adds. “For so long, people were so fixated on getting a two or four-bar loop out of a sample, where he’d get little pieces of a thing and make it sound like it was a four-bar loop.” Dilla set the trajectory and gave the next generation of producers confidence to take centre stage, to be the headliner. Soon, beat culture would become “part of the fabric of pop culture” according to historian and author Laurent Fintoni. Did you know that Paul White produced for a young Charli XCX? Or that Bullion wrote one of my favourite songs of recent years with Carly Rae Jepsen? Anyway, I thought it would be fun to go back – back to the future. So here is a beat tape time capsule of some of my favourite MC-free transmissions from around 2006 to 2010. The rules are simple. No MCs. No guest vocalists. No interruptions. It’s compiled in the spirit of latter-day Dilla and where he was taking hip-hop: deep into the realms of electronic music. Though if you ask Dabrye, that’s where it’s been since the beginning. This sound convergence reached its zenith, arguably, in an East London car park during two consecutive summers. Look at those bills. By 2009, you had the likes of Lotus and Pursuit Grooves releasing on Pinch’s Bristol label Tectonic. United in bass. Ok, it’s your turn. Please reach me [at]amarofpatel on IG or in the Substack comments with memories, favourites, thoughts… I’d love to know whose influence you see where in modern music. Look out for part two, where I’ll be in conversation with one of the artists I featured. Otherwise catch me for the usual runnings on Sister Midnight FM, 26 May and 23 June from 2-4pm GMT. Stay cool. Stay close. And turn it up! A ***** FLYING LOTUS – Fall in Love (c2006) FLYING LOTUS – 1983 [Brainfeeder] (2006) 3m 20s(FYI, FlyLo’s Dilla’s Still Here mix on Dublab in 2006) DIMLITE – In Groups To The Hydrandd (Album Edit) [Sonar Kollektiv] (2005) 7m 30s 2TALL – Distant Shadows [The Content Label] (2008) 11m 50s HUDSON MOHAWKE – Fuse [Warp] (2009) 15m 30s(Hudson’s Heeters vol 1 also very influential in the heyday of Myspace) MIKE SLOTT – Snow Birds (2009) [Lucky Me] (2009) 18m 25s BULLION – Are You The One? [One-Handed Music] (2009) 21m 30s PAUL WHITE – unreleased beat (c2007) 24m 10s AMMONCONTACT – Infinity of Rhythm (Instrumental) [Ninja Tune] (2004) 26m 30s TAKE – In Every Way You Can [Poo-Bah] (2006) 30m 30s RAS G & THE AFRIKAN SPACE PROGRAM – El Saturn Day [Poobah] (2010) 33m 15s RAS G – Power of Thought [Poobah] (2005) 36m 00s KNXWLEDGE – Dryice (2011) 38m 05s MUHSINAH – Gogh [Rock Slinger Incorporated] (2009) 40m 10s(Tip: the full vocal version is one of my favourite songs of the era.) FLYAMSAM – The Offbeat [Ghostly International] (2009) 40m 40s DORIAN CONCEPT – Define Soft [Earstroke] (2006) 44m 00s DAK – Frthbnghtsthtnvrhppnd [Leaving Records] (2009) 47m 30s DABRYE – That’s What’s Up (instrumental) [Ghostly International] (2006) 49m 50s HARMONIC 313 – Köln [Warp] (2008) 53m 40s AZYMUTH – Melô Dos Dois Bicudos (Harmonic 313 remix) [Far Out] (2007) 57m 15s PURSUIT GROOVES – Healing Secrets (2006) 1h 01m 15s PAUL WHITE – Marshen Signals [One-Handed Music] (2010) 1h 04 50s WAAJEED – Tetris (2009) 1h 06m 35s MNDSGN – Trance Dance (featuring Devonwho) [Klipmode] (2009) 1h 09m 55s THE BIG PAYBACK (BYRON THE AQUARIUS & ONRA) – Cosmic Travelling [Rush Hour] (2007) 1h 12m 10sFull project / Backstory KID SUBLIME – I’m Back [Rush Hour] (2007) 1h 17m 10s GEORGIA ANN MULDROW – Frames (instrumental) [Stones Throw] (2006) 1h 20m 45s(My interview with GAM for Straight No Chaser in 2006. Possibly her first cover feature.) GEORGIA ANN MULDROW – Pad Control [Mello Music Group] (2010) 1h 22m 35s DR WHO DAT? – Deep Blaque [Viberian Experience] (2006) 1h 24m 05s SA-RA CREATIVE PARTNERS – Timeless Continuum [Plug Research] (2006) 1h 29m 30s SHAPE OF BROAD MINDS – Viberian Sun [Lex] (2007) 1h 31m 40s FLYING LOTUS – Satelllliiiiiiiiteee [Warp) (2010) 1h 33m 40s FLYING LOTUS – Glendale Galleria [Tectonic] (2009) 1h 37m 20s BLACKPOCKET – STA Simonez [Exit] (2007) 1h 40m 10s BEAT SPACEK – Alone in Da Sun [Ninja Tune] (2007) 1h 42 05s BARON ZEN – Burn Rubber (Dam Funk remix instrumental) [Stones Throw] (2007) 1h 47m 50s TOKIMONSTA – Lucid Waking [Young Art] (2010) 1h 52m 30s BULLION – Crazy Over You [One-Handed Music] (2010) 1h 55m 40s MR DIBIASE – Keep On Runnin [Fat City] (2010) 1h 58m 20s OHBLIV – Send it On Down [Thrash Flow] (2009) 2h 00m 45s DANNY BREAKS – inginging [Droppin’ Science] (2014) 2h 4m 00s ^Go deeper^ * A Beat Happening with Laurent Fintoni and Kutmah (whose Sacred Geometry was a landmark mix in 2009) * Bedroom Beats & B-Sides: Instrumental Hip-hop and Electronic Music at the Turn of the Century by Laurent Fintoni * How Flying Lotus Redefined What Instrumental Hip-Hop Could Sound Like * All Ears, a documentary by Gus Sutherland (dakim clip here) * Dublab’s Secondhand Sureshots featuring Ras G, Daedalus and Nobody * Beat Culture & the SP-404 (Roland short) * Mass Appeal: Rhythm Roulette (start with Paul White and Dibiase) * Questlove Show with Georgia Ann Muldrow * BTS Radio archive (shout out to Andrew Meza) This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit amarofpatel.substack.com

    2h 6m
  2. 12 Apr

    Moonbeam Levels – March 2026 (extra time)

    Hello, How are you feeling? As I write this little covering note, Lewisham is bathing in sunshine and the plants are about to bloom. My dog can roam in the park without his snood and I don’t have to whine (as much) about the daily clean-up, particularly those ears that swipe up all the street gunk like extra-large flannels. Finchy is a loveable rogue but he is work. The tracksuit bottoms are about to come off – by popular demand – and the light is beginning to charge my cells. You see, this is why the changing seasons are so important. I haven’t managed to submit to the quirks of each one but I do get a buzz from seeing the back of winter! All this is to say that hope is in the air, which is a distant memory to any Tottenham fan. The plan is to channel some of this extra energy into more spontaneous and frequent writing on here, especially given the dearth of freelance opportunities. In case you missed it, this reflection on Chadwick Boseman’s play Deep Azure was a decent warm-up. As was this trip to The Weight of Being, an exhibition that explores how mental health shapes creative expression. The painter and teacher John Wilson McCracken caught my attention. I have another story lined up about my local area, gentrification and the importance of holding on to the best of a place. To the music… Twice in one month? Confusing, I know. This is what happens when you are scheduled to broadcast every fourth Tuesday. What can I say? Take advantage. It’s a double-shot of a show. I am still defiant in my commitment to making life online a little more genuine and convivial, so please write back with your favourite moments, or to share whatever good news has come your way. Back at the end of April with a guest 🤞🏾 Want to come on? Message me. I’m very keen to speak to SE London dwellers. The artists, activists, writers, community builders and late bloomers. If you like talking about music, even better. Stay close… Amar ***** MESHELL NDEGEOCELLO – Papillon [Universal Music Jazz France]Having completed the last show featuring the tribute to the late great engineer Bob Power, I dug into more of his work and realised that not only had he helped make Peace Beyond Passion with Meshell Ndegeocello, he was also in the studio for jazz excursion The Spirit Music Jamia: The Dance of the Infidel in 2005. ‘Papillon’ features Kenny Garrett on soprano sax and Federico González Peña on keyboards. Spellbinding. GREGORY UHLMANN – Imprint [International Anthem] 11m 40sAnother month, another selection from Chicago’s International Anthem records, stewards of contemporary, forward-thinking jazz music. You may have encountered Gregory Uhlmann before as co-leader of the fiery SML, who have featured on Moonbeam Levels. Or in a trio with saxophonist Josh Johnson and bassist Sam Wilkes. His solo debut Extra Stars is full of harmonically rich and meditative compositions like ‘Imprint’, with Uhlmann trying to coax unusual sounds from stringed and other instruments. Alabaster Deplume and Anna Butterss are among the guests dropping in. BY.ALEXANDER – Bloom in Paris (featuring Charles Bukowski) [Blue Note] 14m 25sThe music of By.Alexander, aka Alex Da Kid, passed me by for a minute. Perhaps it was the fashion dimension to the project. But then I started reading all the comments from fans on IG. All that appreciation got me curious, so I paid closer attention. He has a very particular conception of jazz that he’s not afraid to disrupt or agitate through sonic experimentation. Compositions like ‘Bloom in Paris’ (featuring infamous poet Charles Bukowski) access some netherland in the mind. Well, they do for me. The expanded edition of Memories For Sale… is coming in April and his choice of guests says a lot about how wide open he is musically – Theo Coker, Rapsody and JD Reid. MIKIO MASUDA – Moon Stone [Nippin Columbia Japan] 19m 15sFor his second Nippon Columbia compilation, Tokyo archivist and artist Kunimond Takiguchi turns his attention to jazz funk. Expect to hear the full spectrum, from orchestral and baroque movements to the nighttime frisson of city pop and fusion for the fleet-footed. Names such as Eri Ohno and Jiro Inagaki will be familiar to all you diggers out there. The stargazer in me can’t look past Mikio Masuda’s ‘Moon Stone’, which recalls Lonnie Liston Smith at his most seductive. Out to Portal records for putting me on to lots of Japanese gold via Instagram. Follow them for more like this. MYSTIC JUNGLE – The Memory (featuring Roxana) [Stix] 24m 00sOff volume six of Disco Reggae, this is Periodica Records founder Mystic Jungle with Roxana doing a cover of Roy Ayers Ubiquity’s classic groove ‘The Memory’ (source LP Vibrations is tremendous, featuring genius Edwin Birdsong and bassist William Allen). I actually wanted to play a new track called ‘Mountain River’ but you’ll have to wait until May for that one to emerge on 7” from a very remote corner of Napoli. KJADE – Virginia is for the Lovers 28m 20sI always fall for a lackadaisical flow over a thick bass groove, the artist rappin’ about how she “died three times and came back just to write this”. KJade first popped into my world through Spotify’s begrudgingly useful Discover Weekly – ‘Sankofa’ off debut album The Sound That Trees Make. On Everything I Love, she’s in a bit more of a hurry to unload feelings and indulge desires, bluntly stating on ’Virginia is for the Lovers’, “I need you to be all over me”. Oh, FYI KJade wants you to play her music in your local café. “OMG, I love it when people tell me that,” she tweeted last month. You know what to do. ANNE CLARK – Poem for a Nuclear Romance [Dark Entries] 31m 40sImpending doom never felt so good. Anne Clark was a punk and poet who hooked up with Psychic TV affiliate David Harrow to make two albums: Changing Places in 1983 and Joined Up Writing the following year. From the latter, various versions of ‘Our Darkness’ comprise the bulk of this reissue, and you could imagine the early house and techno pioneers across the pond flipping out over the machine pulse and wanting some of that arpeggiated intensity in their tracks. But ‘Poem for a Nuclear Romance’ speaks to my plaintive heart in this moment. TIOMBÉ LOCKHART – Strange Things [Mothertongue] 36m 20sLA-based Tiombé has been a name to check for since I discovered her on the PPP album back in the early 2000s and this rare song produced by Bilal, which you can find on her unofficial debut album, The Aquarius Years. She always glides and tip-toes gracefully over heavy beats and this dub rhythm, courtesy of frequent collaborator Georgia Ann Muldrow, is no exception. Coming Forth By Day came out last year and deserves wider attention. VIRGO – The Art Roots [Mukatsuku] 40m 00sNick Weston from Mukatsuku Records has collected four classic ambient techno tracks from Form@ records on one 12” for your pleasure. I adore music like this at the moment. It calms my mind and helps me to find a flow state. Virgo is the alias of Yasutaka Sato, who adopted the moniker from 1996 to 2004 before shelving it for 20 years. With its icicle melody and robotic oscillations, ‘The Art Roots’ creates a strange yet addictive sensation. For more ambient experimental business out of Japan, listen to this NTS Special on Japan’s CD-era electronic underground. SHY ONE – Nort Wess [Touching Bass] 44m 15sShy’s new album is rightly getting lots of attention for its adept fusion of great Black British music from the past few decades, from soundsystem and street soul to grimey, UK funky and broken. I still remember getting very excited about early tunes such as ‘Waterfalls’ but if you look on Bandcamp, you’ll find unreleased material from as far back as 2010 (see below). It’s not easy to make a project feel this cohesive, particularly with such a wide array of guests dropping in (George Riley, Steve Spacek, James Massiah). But Mali is just that. Bass, Mids, Tops co-author Joe Muggs traced the roots of this record really well in his piece about lineages of sound. SHY ONE – Cardiophobia 47m 40sA precocious offering from a collection of previously unreleased beats and bleeps made between 2010 and 2011. 2562 – Stranger Than Paradise [Tectonic] 51m 25sDave Huismans (aka 2562) was one of the names I would check for regularly at the dawn of what became known as bass music around 2006-7. His releases on Tectonic quietly helped to inform the sonic architecture of this nebulous and ephemeral sound, a mutation of dubstep and techno among other influences. This scurrying monster is on an EP of previously unreleased music from that period, which Dave discovered on an old studio PC. SECOND STOREY – Viper Returns [Frustrated Funk] 56m 30sOff the Descend to Ascend 12 by Berlin-based UK producer Alec Storey, this is reminiscent of that golden period of Hessle Audio releases in the early 2010s. Made to fry bassbins. JULION DE’ANGELO – NOWnormal [Mother Tongue] 1h 01m 00sJulion’s been steadily building a rep for punchy and raw productions like ‘NOWnormal’ from his debut EP, as well as dynamite edits like this. There aren’t enough percussive trax out there these days, or afro dubs in the vein of classic MAW. The kind that DJs could use to work the crowd over with, before reeling us in with an irresistible vocal. KEVAN ADRIAN – Give It Up (Grusane Dub) [Rush Hour] 1h 08m 10sThere’s a great story behind this joyous floorfiller, made by Nigerian-born Kevan Frost while working as a session man in 90’s London. In place of pay, he would be given free time to record and the self-taught musician knocked out ‘Give It Up’ in just two days using C-Lab on his old Atari, the Akai S-1000 sampler and a few instruments. Decades later, a friend of Chicago DJ Mark Grusane found a copy in the Africa Record Centre in Brooklyn and handed it to him. Mark recognised its magic and a

    1hr 41min
  3. 15 Mar

    Moonbeam Levels – March 2026

    KWES – Orange Blue [Warp]I consider one-time Lewisham resident Kwes a singer-songwriter at the root, because that’s how I first met him in 2009 with the track ‘Tissues’. On more recent Warp releases he’s been experimenting with an ever-widening palette of noises, creating these little idiosyncratic universes of sound, tuff but sweet. ‘LGOYH’, last heard on his Rye Lane Soundtrack a few years ago, showed his earnest lyricism could still tug on the heartstrings in a very British way. But instrumental snippets like ‘Wave at Boats’ hinted at where he might go next – ambience with a featherlight touch. Latest album Kinds offers nine colour-coded variations on a theme, for all the synesthesiasts out there. DUVAL TIMOTHY & CJ MIRRA – Passing On [Carrying Colour] 4m 50sThe kind of score that has you rushing to the cinema for full audio-visual immersion, this is Duval Timothy and CJ Mirra with ‘Passing On’ from Akinola Davis Jr’s debut feature film My Father’s Shadow, which was written by his brother Wale. I’ve yet to watch it but it’ll happen. Always interested in complex father-son stories. Aren’t they always? Set over a single day in Lagos during the 1993 Nigerian election crisis, Akin’s debut follows an estranged father guiding his two young sons across the city as political unrest threatens their journey home. SULAH JORDAN – Leaves in the Trees [Test Pressing Arts] 11m 00sHappy to see that Oakland artist Sulah Jordan’s EP Lady Bug from 2023 is getting the vinyl treatment on Test Pressing’s offshoot label Test Pressing Arts. I included ‘Musee Melancolique’ in a previous edition of Moonbeam Levels after being seduced by the iridescent beauty of that debut, which transported me to some cove shaded by tropical leaves. So why not this track next? FABIANO DO NASCIMENTO & VITTOR SANTOS ORQUESTRA – Trenzinho Imaginário [Far Out] 15m 05sVILA is the very classy collaboration between guitarist Fabiano Do Nascimento and trombonist/arranger Vittor Santos, who leads a 16-piece orchestra here to breathtaking heights. It’s inspired by the former’s upbringing in a Rio de Janeiro neighbourhood called Catete and exudes a beguiling mix of grandeur and homeliness. The swirling strings of melody, to me, represent the best of big band Brazil. TILAYE GEBRE & THE DAHLAK BAND – Tizita [Muzikawi/Mr Bongo] 18m 00sThe product of one-take live sessions that Tilaye would conduct with his band at the Ghion Hotel in Addis Ababa in the 70s, ‘Tizita’ is the saxophonist, composer and arranger at his most winsome and romantic. The lo-fi haziness of the recording lends a little eeriness to proceedings. Check the extensive liner notes for more about his path in music. BRENT FAIYAZ – Butterflies [ISO Supremacy/UnitedMasters] 27m 35sBrent is one of those artists from the post-MySpace era that I would discover almost daily on blogs and YouTube. I think it was the Black Child EP that hipped me to his use of heavy atmospherics in the pleasure centre of R&B and rap. He’s now ascended to the realm of pop superstar (man’s got more than five million IG followers), making tracks such as ‘Pure Fantasy’, which, as one commenter wrote, has him “fully in his MJ bag”. Others are in disbelief that the same guy who wrote ‘Wish You Well’ is now falling in love with superwomen on ‘Butterflies’, which I had to include for that audacious intro alone. There’s a whole team that produced this track, but the project is executive produced by Mr Instant Vintage, Raphael Saadiq. CHARLOTTE DAY WILSON – Selfish [XL] 31m 30sLet’s stay in song mode with something from Patchwork, the latest self-produced album from Charlotte Day Wilson, who just has this undeniable gift for aching melodies. All it took was one guest spot on a BADBADNOTGOOD record in 2016 to know she’s a ride-or-die artist. An old soul with an alluring tone. Remember, she made Van and Earn catch feelings again in Atlanta. Tempos shift across this project but the writing is rock-solid, from the refined slow jam ‘If Only’ to the doo-doodoo two-step that propels ‘Selfish’ and then evaporates. GENA – Douwannabwithastar [Lex] 35m 10sThe Pleasure is Yours, the full-length remote collab between Liv.e and Karriem Riggins, is out now. As satisfying and uplifting a collection of boomin’ ditties as you will hear this year. There are styles for miles, so it’s almost impossible to pin down. All I will add is that it’s soul-deep top to bottom and sounds like Karriem’s workin’ the kit right next to you. God Energy, Naturally Amazing, uh huh. Fun fact: the project name is inspired by Tisha Campbell’s character in the TV show Martin. “Specifically how Martin Lawrence would say Gina [Payne’s] name”, Liv.e told Hearing Things. “That’s how these songs make me feel.” ** Tribute to Bob Power ** A TRIBE CALLED QUEST – Rhythm (Devoted to the Art of Moving Butts instrumental) [Not on Label] 38m 00sWe recently lost one of the great mixing engineers of the past 30 years plus. You may not know the name but you will definitely have savoured Bob Power’s work if you were raised on a similar diet to me. First up, A Tribe Called Quest’s Low End Theory and Midnight Marauders. On the back of the former, he’s given the nickname “LOCKED”. No doubt, a nod to his powers of precision, focus and the ability to get sh*t with finesse. Then there was De La Soul’s Bulhoone Mindstate and De La Soul is Dead, The Roots’ Illadelph Half Life and Things Fall Apart, Baduizm, Brown Sugar, Dee-lite, Meshell Ndegeocello’s Comfort Woman and Peace Beyond Passion, Common’s Like Water For Chocolate, Ozomatli’s Embrace The Chaos, India Arie’s Acoustic Soul… His mastery of dynamic range, pitch, timbre, clarity and frequency balance ensured the artist’s sonic vision was coming through just as clearly as their musical one. And he also knew when to get out of the way. Let’s hear from man himself and then run through a few underappreciated moments of his greatness. Plug in your best phones or speakers and listen closely. For more on Bob, check this interview where he gives a very telling anecdote about recording Chaka Khan. Chip Fu, who worked with Bob on Fu-schnickens’s first Jive album, breaks down what made him so good in the studio here. A TRIBE CALLED QUEST – The Chase Pt 2 [Jive] 42m 40s“Bob Power, you there? Adjust the bass and treble, make my s**t sound clear!” A TRIBE CALLED QUEST – Same Ol’ Thing [Jive] 46m 01s THE ROOTS – Distortion to Static [Geffen] 50m 05s“Redder than pork, comin’ to New York to mix, It’s Bob Power with the snares and kicks to fix.” MESHELL NDEGEOCELLO – Andromedia & The Milky Way [Maverick] 53m 58s ** tribute ends ** BRIAN AUGER’S OBLIVION EXPRESS – Total Eclipse [Strut] 75m 55sIt’s been a while since I’ve listened to anything Brian Auger-related. In my early loop-digging days I would stumble on some of his 60’s releases with Julie Driscoll and Trinity. In the next decade, the British organist and composer strode confidently into the age of jazz rock, forming the Oblivion Express. Strut has reissued their self-titled offering and on there is one of the group’s finest grooves (‘Total Eclipse’), which we’re gonna ride for the full 11 minutes to appreciate the rhythm section of bassist Barry Dean and drummer Robbie McIntosh. Though guitarist Jim Mullen is all up in this track, saying don’t forget about me. ROLAND BRIVAL – Créole Gypsy [Soundway] 1h 09 20sOsunlade introduced me to the resonant timbre of Roland Brival with his Yoruba Soul remix of ‘Sakitayo’ in 2004. The Martinique poet and painter’s Jon Lucien x Leon Thomas incantations instantly put me in a trance and hinted at a rich musical heritage. And so it was that in 1980 he made a spiritual jazz opus about his Créole identity, love and colonial injustices that became a private press obscurity. Until now… HUNEE – The World [Rush Hour] 1h 17m 05sI think it was Rush Hour who served me this flashback to 2015 Hunee. I knew of his reputation as a marathon DJ and selector at the time, but I skipped over his album Hunch Music. Listening more than ten years after its release, there is a nagging sense of unease or introspection in tracks like ‘Bruises’ and this one, which samples June Tyson on Sun Ra’s ‘After The End of The World’, beckoning us into whatever comes next. A track for precarious times, right. SHACKLETON – The Dream in Fragments [AD93] 1h 23m 00sAfter dropping one of Shackleton’s many versions of Saagara in the last show, I couldn’t resist giving the trance master a little more airtime with this, ‘The Soul of Everything’, taken from AD93 album Euphoria Bound. The PR blurb for it chooses some very apt words to describe its mood … or should that be mode? Dissolution, erasure, disintegration… Yes, something is being shed or cast off in this set and it all feels necessary. To make way for renewal. NONDI – Tree Festival [Planet Mu] 1h 27m 15sComing out of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, Nondi makes these very raw but melodic rhythm trax that draw from juke, footwork and IDM among other sources. Think Aphex, Actress, Rashad… Ringing, rumbling, clattering into your ears and down the spine, it’s a full-body experience. ‘Tree Festival’ is my eargasm of choice. Check out Nondi’s first Planet Mu release Flood City Trax as well. DJ FOOD – Peace (Harvey’s 30 Something Mix [Mr Bongo] 1h 30m 25sA standout track from Luke Una’s third volume of É Soul Cultura. A psychedelic coolout track that I haven’t heard since picking up Harvey’s Late Night Sessions mix years ago. Always open to some gratuitous shredding, especially when it pops up in unexpected places. Luke’s been playing some proper parties around the world recently, restoring my faith in the floor. Go dance with him. WILLIE COLÓN – Set Fire To Me (Inferno Dub) [A&M] 1h 38m 25sPure Afro-Cuban soun

    2h 27m
  4. 23 Feb

    Moonbeam Levels

    After easing into the new year with a home-based episode of Moonbeam Levels, the plan was to come to the Sister Midnight FM studio with a special guest in tow for February. One of Lewisham’s greatest success stories who has ventured far and wide in his pursuit of a sound to call his own. But it wasn’t to be, so I had to pivot at the last minute. I’ve been listening to a lot of Jill Scott recently as a new album is here. In particular, one disc of live music that I have obsessed over since its release in 2001. It got me thinking about how often I prefer to reach for live renditions of songs. Wondering which artists can hold a crowd better than others, or seeing who’s most willing to deviate from studio recordings. I thought, why not share a couple of hours’ worth of the ones I always come back to? Unfortunately, most of my live tracks are on CD, which we don’t use in the studio, so this is more of a limited sampler culled from whatever I could get my hands on quickly. The focus is soul, jazz, rhythm and blues, which are at the core of my being. But, hey, I am a man of many moods and sounds. Why not make this a series? Expect me to stretch out much further in volume two – from BB King, Gil Scott Heron and Erykah Badu to Toumani Diabate, Majid Bekkas and Hermeto Pascoal. For now, enjoy this testimony to some awe-inspiring moments of human connection. And do send me some of your favourites, either to [at]amarofpatel on IG or in the comments section. Back on SMFM on 3 March at 2pm GMT. Subscribers, I’ll get the show out to you soon after. Laters, Amar ***** JACO PASTORIUS – Jaco’s Solo/SlangA mesmeric solo performance from the maverick genius while on stage at Santa Barbara County Bowl during Joni Mitchell’s Shadows & Light tour in 1979. Jaco was her musical director at the time, wrestling with a few demons and prone to tyrannical episodes from what I’ve read. But who else could coax these vibrations from their fretless bass? Space Echo working overtime here. DWELE – Red Clay Revisited (live at Maida Vale, 2004)Recorded at Maida Vale in Summer 2003 for Gilles Peterson’s Worldwide show in front of a studio audience, this after-dark broadcast remains one of the greatest radio sessions I’ve ever experienced ‘live’. Just a magical atmosphere, a star ascending, beguiling his audience, musicianship to the fore. This one is a riff on Freddie Hubbard’s original composition ‘Red Clay’, featuring the great Roy Hargrove on trumpet who is dearly missed (and let me tell you why). Dwele G we need you back, sir. Something’s off in the world. PRINCE – 17 Days (piano and a mic version) [NPG/Warner]You can’t do a live music special and not include the artist who raised the bar highest night after night on copious tours. And then did it again just hours later at one of his infamous afterparties. Sometimes, all it took was a bluesy solo guitar interlude to send me. Most of my top selections are on CD so I’ve cheated a little bit and included this studio rendition. But it might as well be live because the way he gives goosebumps by summoning such visceral energy on his own, drip-feeding the track as he kick-drums on the piano, is all about being the moment. ARETHA FRANKLIN – Wholy Holy [Atlantic]On Amazing Grace, the biggest-selling gospel record of all time, we hear the Queen of Soul taking it back to her church roots as she stirs the crowd to shiver-inducing, hand-to-the-heavens glory, backed by Cornell Dupree on guitar, Chuck Rainey on bass, Bernard Purdie on drums and the 30-strong Southern California Community Choir led by mentor Reverend James Cleveland. Their cover of ‘Wholy Holy’ (from Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On) is where the concert became a truly transcendent for me. There is perhaps no greater testament to the power of faith and communion through voice than this landmark. You must watch the documentary. DONNY HATHAWAY – I Love You More Than You’ll Ever Know (live, 1971) [Atlantic]My favourite vocalist of all time. The intensity and sincerity Donny Hathaway could radiate through his voice struck me from day one. These Songs For You Live, a compilation of performances that flows like one concert, is one of his first albums I bought. I wrote about the other one here. Such a wonderful group of musicians backing him including Phil Upchurch and Cornell Dupree again on guitar, Willie Weeks on bass and Fred White (later of Earth, Wind & Fire) on drums. BILL WITHERS – Grandma’s Hands (live at Carnegie Hall, 1973) [Sussex]This is the other live album I played obsessively as a young adult, always beaming at the rapport Uncle Bill had with his audience. That alone was worth listening to on repeat. But when you throw in storytelling like the intro to Grandma’s Hands’, his simply yet profound lyricism and the quality of the musicianship around him (most evident on a rousing ‘Harlem/Cold Baloney’), this set will stand the test of time and be aspired to by artists for generations to come. D’ANGELO & THE SOULTRONICS – One Mo Gin (live in LA, 2000)From day one, D’s integrity was sky-high. The intention was to make art. For the son and grandson of Pentecostal preachers, catching the spirit and moving people were birthright and vocation – from the pulpit side to the stage. Just listen to this extended rendition of ‘One Mo Gin’ from 2000 in LA. The artist in deep meditation as a vocalist, pouring over each line, oblivious to the lustfulness of the crowd just inches away from him. The way this Voodoo staple is extended and indulged in is pure ecstasy. I wrote a lengthy reflection and created a words-and-music special for my man here. MAXWELL – This Woman’s Work (live on MTV Unplugged, 1997) [Columbia]Originally written by Kate Bush for her album The Sensual World and used before that in a film called She’s Having A Baby, ‘This Woman’s Work’ was turned inside out by Maxwell and his band on MTV Unplugged in 1997. It’s surely in the running for best cover of all time. Bush imagined a man waiting for his wife to give birth and “being left on their own in a big way”. He has to grow up suddenly and release he could be a better human being. Maxwell expands the emotional scope of the track to place the man in an even more vulnerable place, perhaps contemplating the loss of someone important, and trying to convey their pain through a fragile falsetto. The concert is a fun watch. An urban hang suite, for real. So is this on BET. ODETTA – All The Pretty Horses (live at Carnegie Hall, 1960) [Vanguard]Odetta, who was a big inspiration to Bob Dylan and Joan Baez in the 50s, forged her own path in American folk music by incorporating blues and spirituals into her repertoire. And by delivering deeply resounding performances like this captivating set at Carnegie Hall. Gently propelled by bassist Bill Lee (father of Spike), you can hear the unique timbre of her voice stretching across aisles, ocean and ages. Sombre yet dignified, this live version of ‘All The Pretty Horses’ from the Odetta at the Gate of Horn LP featured on the first edition of my Singers, Songs & Strings series from around 2010. PARLIAMENT FUNKADELIC – Mothership Connection/Swing Down Sweet Chariot (live on P-Funk Earth Tour, Houston Summit, 1976)One of those live experiences that probably would have changed your life. Seeing The Mothership land as Glen Goins takes it to church, I’d have come out believing anything was possible. George Clinton and his Parliament Funkadelic all-stars were on a mission “to save a dying world from a funkless hell”, taking black music places it had never gone before (Sun Ra not withstanding perhaps). Extraterrestrial brothers mining outer space for that uncut funk. I could study the p-funk universe at length. The different characters, the wild fashion, Pedro Bell’s artwork and liner notes… My philosophy eternal: “free your mind and your ass will follow.” Put documentary One Nation Under A Groove on your watchlist. THE ROOTS – Proceed (Live at Elysée Montmatre, Paris, 1999) [MCA]My expectations of hip-hop were transformed by this all-the-way-live recording of The Roots in Paris. The musicality and jazz chops each instrumentalist brought to beats and rhymes. I’d never heard anything like it before. Bass vibrating in the pit of the stomach, keys making the skin tingle, hi-hats fizzing through the air… The showstopper on here is probably Jill Scott’s performance on ‘You Got Me’, but it’s the arrangement and raw sonics of ‘Proceed’ that still get be buzzing. JILL SCOTT – Love Rain Suite (live at DAR Constitution Hall, Washington, 2001) [Hidden Beach]Speaking of which… My inspiration for doing this show can still go toe to toe with anyone on any stage. I am a huge fan of her first album and was fortunate to see her perform it live in London a couple of years ago. Poet first, singer second, she puts so much of herself into each song, each performance, that’s why the bond is so strong. And Jill loves flipping originals. My first experience of that was her 826+ double CD. This version of secret track ‘Love Rain’, recorded in Washington during her Words & Sounds tour, just soars and soars, then twists and turns into a whole other movement. You better get in line for those To Whom This May Concern gig tickets. MAZE – You (live at Saenger Theatre, New Orleans, 1980) [Capitol]Singing along to Uncle Frankie – I have many soul uncs – feels so good. This tune is among the band’s most cherished and has soundtracked many a cookout and kitchen bop since its debut in 1977. Maze had a special relationship with New Orleans, going on to headline the Essence Fest there for more than 20 years and closing the Congo Square stage at Jazz Fest for 11 consecutive years. When it came time to record a live album in 1980, there was only one city in the running. ‘You’ is a contrite declaration of love for someone who loves you

    1hr 57min
  5. 1 Feb

    Moonbeam Levels – February 2026

    Ello! One twelfth of 2026 has already gone 🤯 How’s it been for you? January is always what I would call hard yards. Slowly thawing from Christmas, chasing the light and straining to act on all those resolutions – though rituals are far more important, ok. Getting back to basics is my way of trying to ease in. Part of that is renewing my commitment to these monthly radio sessions. The gradual process of accumulating from all around, then weaving it all into something that feels cohesive and satisfying to you, even if some of it isn’t your vibe. As a writer, sharing acquired knowledge is a big part of everything I do. So, I will always have notes and links to set you off on your own voyage of discovery. This year I would like to have more open-ended conversations ‘on air’ with neighbours and strangers, dipping into the culture and events that provoked the art that fascinates me. Previous guests include musician Sam Akpro and FOLK author Stef Macbeth. I’d like to talk more about the struggle to make work amid all the financial precarity, inner and outer conflict that exists. Is that you? Come on the show. Perhaps, you’ll see more of me, quite literally. I hear algorithms like faces, and people seem more interested in being talked to than written for (when it comes to phone browsing, anyway). None of this tiny mic-holding affectation, however. It’s called a lapel for a reason 🤦🏽‍♂️ This episode is an amalgam. A bit of housecleaning as I open the window and let out a winter surplus of sounds. Inevitable tributes to more departed heroes, plus a look over the horizon to upcoming releases and rising stars. As I explain on the broadcast, the February edition is a special gift for the subscribers, recorded at home on a primitive mixer, so apologies for the erratic levels. If you would like to listen live, I’ll be back on Sister Midnight FM every four weeks from 3 February 2-4pm (GMT). Working on a special guest… Please let me know you’re into and what you would like to hear more of, either in the comments or by sending a message [at]amarofpatel through socials. Equally, if you subscribed to read more of what I am not providing enough of … well … I am a people pleaser. Try me. As a board member, I am duty-bound to mention that we have opened the next round of crowdfunding to renovate an old working man’s club in central Catford, my neighbourhood in South East London, and turn it into the borough’s first community-owned music venue. Shares are available from £25 and give you a real stake in how things are run. If you believe in solidarity, equity, mutual benefit and giving venues a legitimate chance of long-term security, community ownership is the way ahead. And guess what: invest before 31 March and your amount will be match-funded by both Music Venue Trust and Co-operatives UK's Energy Efficiency Sharematch, turning our £25,000 target into £75,000. Join a community of more than 1,000 members and let’s kick open the doors. Stay close, Amar*** YOSHIAKI OCHI – Anywhere [WRWTFWW]Ochi’s 1990 album Natural Sonic gets a loving reissue courtesy of WRWTFWW. A high point of so-called environmental music, created when he was in-house composer and performer for Issey Miyake. An interesting fact that hints at the artist’s elemental nature. This is a primal and deeply resonant record that offers vital breathing space. All water, wood, earth and stone. FYI, there is a Natural Sonic 2. SAAGARA – Earth, Water and the Holy Groove (Shackleton Version) [Glitterbeat][4m 50s]There are few better than Shackleton when it comes to reimagining the possibilities of percussion in electronic music. Every once in a while, I pull out my ‘Blood On My Hands’ 12”, crank it up and let the endless trance take me. Saagara asked the man from Lancashire to remix one of their tracks from 3 and he responded with his own version of the album. Now that is dedication to your craft. Shackleton also has a new album of rumbling, clattering skull disco out on AD93, called Euphoria Bound. GRACE JONES – Private Life (dub version) [Island][10m 15s]Sly and Robbie can lay claim to being the most-recorded artists in history with great confidence. Not many rhythm sections could run the gamut from Bob Marley, Junior Murvin and Chaka Demus & Pliers to The Rolling Stones, Serge Gainsbourg and Marianne Faithfull. For disco dub disciples like myself, they are perhaps most loved for their time in the Compass Point All Stars and the three genre-bending albums they recorded with the inimitable Grace Jones. This version of Chrissie Hynde’s song is bloodfire, the late drummer peppering the riddim with the rata-tat-tat. Other Sly-related releases to check out include Raiders of the Lost Dub (Black Uhuru, in particular), A Dub Experience, Riddims collection 1978-80 and Gwen Guthrie’s Larry Levan-enhanced Padlock EP (one of the best-engineered records of all time). HUGH B & THE MODERN POP EMSEMBLE – Young Donny[18m 15s]I think Hugh B and the crew performed a version of this live set from Australia on Charlie Bones’ Do You breakfast show. A lovely way to start the day. Blissful, bleached-out, guitar-laced grooves in the key of Steve Hiett and JJ Cale, made for reflecting in the sunshine. Or imagining somewhere you can. They do an energising cover of Stereolab’s ‘Brakhage’ but ‘Young Donny’ is calling to me. Fun fact: Hugh has also produced house music under the name Hubert Clarke Jr. Check this one put out by my friends Wolf Music. LISANE BAHIR – Lisané Bahir ልሳነ ባሕር [Flying Carpet][23m 00s]Fourth album in and Lisane has used analogue modular synth to summon his Ethio-jazz ancestors and transport them to a distant musical dimension. In their new context, these traditional scales feel born again. The record’s textures so tactile as they waft into the ears. The title track sounds like Tangerine Dream hooking up in the studio with Hailu Mergia. PHIL UPCHURCH – Black Gold [Cadet][29m 00s]This is probably the first track I heard that was credited to the late guitarist and composer when I was following the tributaries of Charles Stepney and The Rotary Connection’s “I Am The Black Gold of the Sun’. Dusty Groove put me on to his eponymous solo debut and said in no uncertain terms that this was a seminal recording in the history of Chicago soul, blues and rock. They weren’t wrong. Step arranged, conducted and produced this session. He also wrote ‘Black Gold’, the psychedelic seed of what would become the aforementioned anthem. Here, Upchurch was “backed by 36 pieces, including 20 strings and five voices”, as the liner notes tell us, and the result is “sheer electricity”. A quick look on Discogs reveals that Upchurch has more than 600 credits, almost 200 of which are for writing and arrangement. He co-wrote ‘Voices Inside (Everything is Everything)’, made famous by Donny Hathaway and ‘Afro Harping’ with Dorothy Ashby. The kind of prolific artist who goes underappreciated. PS If you haven’t heard this Stepney podcast I helped to make, treat yourself. I tried to get Phil involved but he was busy working on his autobiography, which I will be picking up if/when it comes. UPCHURCH & TENNYSON – Don’t I Know You [Kudu][34m 20s]A mid-tempo banger that I discovered in the early 2000s on a compilation. Keyboardist Tennyson Stephens was a perfect foil for Upchurch, who eschewed any grandstanding on the guitar in favour of a more symbiotic exchange from track to track. ‘Don’t I Know You’ recalls Curtis Mayfield and wouldn’t feel out of place on a classic Blaxploitation soundtrack. The rest of the album is strong, spritely – not-too-smooth soul jazz arranged by Bob James. It also features another version of ‘Black Gold’, which echoes the refrain of his first on that self-titled Cadet LP that Stepney produced. NAISSOO FREEFORM QUINTET – White [NooPop][37m 12s]I’ll take any chance to show a little love to musicians from Estonia, a country I have visited and toured a bit on my limited DJ excursions. Jazz heritage runs deep across different parts of the Baltic state and this set led by keys player Tõnu Naissoo is among the more expansive ones I have heard. The vibe segues from Mwandishi 70’s fusion to the astral reveries of Lonnie Liston Smith. Moog, Fender Rhodes and ARP Odyssey in full effect, with Meelis Vind’s bass clarinet adding an ear-catching counterpoint on this one. Destination out. THE CONTEMPORARY JAZZ QUINTET – Unknown Track #3 [BBE][45m 40s]A high-tension and sinuous standout from DJ Amir’s second volume of The Sound of Detroit, which shares more precious recordings from the gone-too-soon Strata label that brought us Lyman Woodard Organisation’s Saturday Night Special and Kenny Cox’s Clap Clap among other diggers’ delights. Things get very interesting halfway through here – someone must have sampled that bass riff! There’s also music from The Soulmates, Keith Boone and Fito Foster. Volume one is here in case you missed it. FLEA – A Plea [Nonesuch][54m 35s]Anyone familiar with Michael Balzary and the origins of Flea will know that there is a jazz man in him eager to burst out. He doubted he could go there but with the support of some prime exponents of the form including Deantoni Parks on drums, Anna Butterss on bass and Jeff Parker on guitar, he’s flying. The sentiment behind this rousing number is the energy I would like to carry into 2026. “Make something beautiful. I don’t care if it’s a little scrap of squiggly crayon on a paper. Make something beautiful and see somebody. Give it to somebody.” Album Sonora is on the way at the end of March. DJ HARRISON – Recycled [Stones Throw][1h 02m 15s]The Richmond producer returns with more so-good-it-could-have-been-sampled grooves, organic and effervescent. His music continues to explore the lineage of black music in a way that feels more of t

    2h 41m
  6. 25/11/2025

    Moonbeam Levels – November 2025

    Season’s greetings! As I was climbing a mountain in Wales last weekend with my doggie (more on that soon), I had to miss studio day at Sister Midnight FM. Short of time and eager to offer something to counter the winter chill, I thought, why not release volume five of Singers, Songs & Strings? This is a series I started in 2010 to celebrate the bare beauty and sacred mystery of songwriting. Mostly acoustic but not always. Sometimes instrumental and occasionally veering into the electronic and ambient ether. Lots of names you will recognise here, including Jeff Buckley, PJ Harvey, Can and Sinead O’Connor. But I have also folded in some more obscure moments from the likes of Cy Timmons, Skip Prokop and Hako Yamasaki. All braided together into that signature ML odyssey. Something high-tuft for you to stretch out on. I hope it’s good to you and at least one of these tunes induces a sweet little reverie. Round and round the burning circleAll the seasons, one, two and threeAutumn comes and then the WinterSpring is born and wanders free’Milk & Honey’ – Jackson C Frank The mathematicians among you will note that there should be four other volumes before this. If you would like them, let me know in the comments or DM me at [at] amarofpatel on IG. Back in January with a more ancient-to-future selection, but you can expect a dispatch before then. Stay close, Amar *** DAVID HORRIDGE – At First Sight [Smiling C] DOROTHY CARTER – Along The River [Palto Flats] 3m 10s CY TIMMONS – Nowhere [Erewhon Music] 8m 36s MARIA RITA – Canção De Garoa [Mr Bongo] 17m 00s JEFF BUCKLEY – Opened Once [Columbia] 18m 30s HAKO YAMASAKI – Komori Uta [WRWTFWW] 21m 47s MARC RIBOT – Sobo (composed by Frantz Casseus) [Knockwurst] 25m 43s LINDA PERHACS – Parallelograms [Kapp] 29m 55s ANDRE GIBSON & UNIVERSAL TOGETHERNESS BAND – Valentine Lover [Numero] 34m 09s LINDA LEWIS – It’s A Frame [Reprise] 35m 48s SKIP PROKOP – Blue Boy [NTS] 39m 21s JUST US – Just A Thought 43m 55s CHARLIE MEGIRA – Smile Now, Cry Later [Numero] 48m 40s CAN – She Brings The Rain [Spoon] 52m 28s ULTRA VIOLET – How Do You Do (Children Of The Most High) [Light in the Attic] 56m 40s BO HARWOOD & JOHN CASSAVETES – No One Around To Hear It [Efficient Space] 1h 00m 55s THE REPLACEMENTS – Sadly Beautiful [Sire] 1h 04m 13s EVERYTHING BUT THE GIRL – My Head Is My Only House Unless It Rains [Blanco y Negro] 1h 07m 22s DEAN BLUNT – Woosah [Rough Trade] 1h 10m 10s THE ROCHES – Hammond Song (featuring Robert Fripp) [Warner] 1h 13m 05s SINEAD O’CONNOR – Black Boys On Mopeds [Chrysalis] 1h 18m 30s PJ HARVEY – Beautiful Feeling (Peel Session 2000) 1h 22m 21s RY COODER – Houston in Two Seconds [Warner] 1h 26m 10s NICK HAKIM – Needy Bees (live on NPR Tiny Desk) 1h 28m 10s EDDIE FLOYD – I Will Always Have Faith In You [Stax] 1h 31m 28s JACKSON C FRANK – Milk & Honey [Antarctica Starts Here] 1h 33m 28s GUNS N ROSES – Patience [Geffen] 1h 37m 06s FRED NEILL – Faretheewell (Fred’s Tune) [Capitol] 1h 42m 54s KAREN DALTON – Are You Leaving For The Country [LITA] 1h 46m 53s FAIRPORT CONVENTION – Who Knows Where The Time Goes [Woodworm] 1h 50m 00s LOU REED – Coney Island Baby [RCA Victor] 1h 55m 00s This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit amarofpatel.substack.com

    2h 2m
  7. 21/10/2025

    Songs in the Key of D

    Last Tuesday was heavy. Already in the quicksand of loss, I had a very physical response to the news that D’Angelo had left us. I stood in the kitchen for almost half an hour, winded, pacing around… Freshly chopped onions and garlic left to dry out as a chilling air suddenly enveloped the night and swiped my appetite. This wasn’t some melodramatic reaction to the end of a parasocial relationship. This is a man I have admired, studied, grown with (and through) over more than a quarter of a century. I was once told that things made with heart will reach the heart, which is to say that communion of that magnitude forms a significant bond that is worth grieving. I’ve bought the albums, made the T-shirt, cut out the magazine pages and put them on the wall, sung his words everywhere from Brixton Academy to my bathroom. It was fandom in full effect. Devotion. I still remember my first track. It was ‘Me & Those Dreamin’ Eyes of Mine’ on a Kiss Smooth Grooves double cassette compilation in 1996. Back then, I was in thrall to the bump and swing of RnB. The voice was immaculate, even to my novice ears, but it was all a bit too smooth and refined for me up against a Tony! Toni! Toné! ‘Let’s Get Down’ or Brownstone’s ‘If You Love Me’. If I had bothered to check the album, I would have discovered a subtle edge to the man’s music, melded with the raw essence of soul that stood out amid all the polish and posturing of the day. Ok, ‘Sh*t, Damn, Motherf*cker’ ain’t so subtle. D talkin’ about gettin’ his nine… “I weren’t no choir boy,” he would later tell us. A few years later, my uni mate Helen (aka Babs) handed me Brown Sugar. Digging in the crates by then and following the many tributaries of hip-hop that reached back to the ancestors – producers reimagining them for a new age – I was ready to receive it. The one-time MC was a child of hip-hop, among other things, lest we forget. And he carried that musicologist’s curiosity throughout his career, always striving to connect the dots. He could trace the funk back to Otis Redding, see Sly Stone as “Ray Charles on acid”, sense rock god Jimi Hendrix was a blues man at heart and hear The Meters in Marley Marl. At his audition for Jocelyn Cooper’s Midnight Songs publishing company, D’Angelo performed a Jodeci track, a gospel song and something by Miles Davis. He was 17 at the time. Trawl back far enough in his life and it all begins to make sense. D may have come from the church and gospel on the south side of Richmond, Virginia, but his musical ambitions lay on the frontier. At one point, he wanted to become a concert pianist. By the end of the 90s, I wasn’t just listening to albums … I was analysing them, ‘training’ to become a music journalist and trying to encapsulate how these sounds made me feel. The soul boy within had progressed from popular releases to lesser-appreciated ones. Let’s say a Here, My Dear after Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On, or a Fulfillingness’ First Finale after Stevie Wonder’s Songs in the Key of Life. Ahead-of-their-time masterpieces were also in the mix, including There’s A Riot Goin’ On and Band of Gypsys. The Godfather stoked my urge for funk and a syncopated groove, an instinct fully surrendered to years after first shakin’ my moneymaker to this Sony ad. When I wore a T-shirt with the iconic label “A James Brown Production”, I meant it. Some days, I would holla or just scream in his inimitable way, just to connect to that energy where I felt so alive, uninhibited and in the moment. He led me to Prince, who burst out of the shadows of Michael Jackson – in my mind, anyway – as I began to appreciate musicianship, arrangement and synthesis more. A friend and I would scour the net for live performances, like this one from the Parade tour or this bizarre encounter that wasn’t so easy to find before social media. Or vintage Stevie taking studio recordings someplace else. I wasn’t the only one studying. Stories of the making of D’s magnum opus Voodoo are beyond fable at this point. How he, co-pilot Questlove and others would spend weeks on end in the late 90s watching tapes of their “yodas” in action, soaking up black genius before jamming through the night at Hendrix’s Electric Lady Studios. A bandcamp-cum-academy environment that produced more than 70 hours of music most of us have never heard. That one I was not ready for back in 2000. Its murkiness, shifting states and the opacity of the vocals threw me off. But I was beckoned by Voodoo’s ritualistic opening and how ‘Playa Playa’ combined Roy Hargrove’s sweet horn arrangements with the gritty groove laid down by Pino Palladino and Questlove. I could feel James in ‘Chicken Grease’, with its nod to Black Caesar in the ad libs, and went nuts for Voodoo’s audacious outlier ‘Spanish Joint’ from first play. The uncompromising commitment to his craft and aesthetic was compelling. D set out to seek what his heroes sought. To allow himself to be a conduit for the spirits of the past. The recording of that album was like a three-year seance. Speaking to Vibe around the release, he cast off any concerns about sophomore jinx, instead plotting a path way into the future with the tools handed down to him. “The way he [Sam Cooke] would do his vocals, with his musicians all playing major chords … And he would just come out of nowhere in this minor key — it’s hard to put in words the effect that has on you – the chills. It’s just evolutionary… I want to be free like that.” Here’s the thing about D’Angelo and why his loss feels so devastating. He didn’t settle for emulating the sound of the masters. His inspirations were launchpads. How many of us could hear Hendrix in ‘The Root’? From day one, his integrity was sky-high. The intention was to make art. For the son and grandson of Pentecostal preachers, catching the spirit and moving people were birthright and vocation – from the pulpit side to the stage. Just listen to ‘One Mo Gin’ live in LA from 2000. Image was secondary. In that Vibe article, the writer Dream Hampton recalls D holding her hand throughout a two-hour conversation and says, “He hears what you’re saying, but what he really wants to do is feel you.” He loved giving guys a pound every 20 or 30 seconds, as DJ Premier told her. The Alchemist recently shared a hilarious weed story about that. After spending so long in the past, I was looking around for someone to step up – to take it there. He was the one. D wanted to find his own conception of black music: sensual, spiritual, dynamic, liberating. To f*ck with time and texture, forming rhythms and intonations only he could imbue. To fuse the technical ingenuity of those early 70’s soul masterpieces with the ecstatic fervour and spectacle of a Prince, p-funk or Fela Kuti stage show. He was willing to shoulder the responsibility of leadership and open himself up to scrutiny, not least through his own eyes. A God-fearing young man who dared to step out of his comfort zone behind the keys and transform himself into this carnal effigy onstage, if it could serve the music. But knowing how all that adulation and power had corrupted forbears such as Marvin Gaye. Risking possession by dark spirits that threatened to render him a false idol, torment and consume him. Speaking to GQ in 2014, D said, “There are forces going on that I don’t think a lot of motherf*ckers who make music today are aware of. The stage is our pulpit, and you can use all of that energy and that music and the lights and the colours and the sound. But you know, you’ve got to be careful.” Psalm 23:4 was D’s “creed”. tattooed on his left arm. “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me.” In the end, his faith saw him through, which is why ‘Prayer’ from Black Messiah is one of the artist’s greatest personal triumphs. I know that you will make it to the promised land, ohBut you gotta pray, you gotta prayOh, you gotta pray for redemption, LordLord, keep me away from temptationDeliver us from evil, oh yeahAnd all this confusion around meGive me peaceI believe in love The mark of a great artist, to my mind, is someone who commits to growth, unwavering in the face of public expectation and industry demands. As they learn, we learn with them. And so it was with D’Angelo. His exquisite taste in covers led me to Parliament Funkadelic, Ohio Players, Curtis Mayfield deep cuts and gospel acts such as The Hawkins and The Pilgrim Jubilees. He would sprinkle source code into intros and interludes at shows. Speaking to writer Nelson George in one interview before Black Messiah dropped almost 15 years after Voodoo, he vowed to carry the torch and teach the youth. Who talks like that nowadays? Who is willing to wait, no matter how frustrated their fans become?” Who is willing to flout convention, the call for relentless consumption and instant gratification, to go away and tussle with that art until to takes the form it needs to, no matter how slow or arduous the process? To risk being ridiculed, forgotten or, worse still, hurt? Looking around, there is a distinct lack of musicians who seem willing or able to transcend their influences. Industry forces may be a big factor in the restless urge for visibility and productivity over patient craft and wilful withdrawal. But standing for something and having a higher purpose are still critical. If that’s you, we need you now. Oops. So much for writing a short covering note 🤦🏽‍♂️ I took my time, as I did with this show, in the spirit of D. So over the next four hours, I am going to present the many dimensions of a remarkable artist. It will be more thematic than chronological. Travelling back and forth feels appropriate for a star so in their own orbit. There will be demos, outtakes, c

    4h 4m
  8. 06/10/2025

    Moonbeam Levels – Sept>Oct 2025

    Ello you, How’s things? I am still chasing my dog’s tail while dealing with death admin and the grief of it all. Meanwhile, Winter is coming in fast and there I am being yanked around a soggy London park at 7.30am in shorts and sodden shoes. A man at odds with the world and out of season. On Friday, I returned to Dad’s place to continue the clearout and was overwhelmed by an avalanche of food tubs, plastic bags, ancient tissues, compression stockings, mobility equipment… I can’t be the only one who stands there in such moments, paralysed by the enormity of the task ahead and wishing you could just f*ck it all off and run away. It feels like a punishment, to be honest. Then you stumble on a handwritten card to your absent father from their neighbours’ kids, saying, “We made you a rainbow for your window. We hope it makes you smile.” Or their YMCA card featuring that (rare) smile above the words “Positive Placements Mentor” (the first I’d heard of it). Or a note with the word “Antidisestablishmentarianism” scrawled on it because… Why? I wonder what other curios I’ll find in all his clutter and what they will trigger? In the midst of my ennui [the struggle feels more gallant en français], doing live radio might have felt like a chore. And in the early stages, it often is. Trying to reflect my world in sound over the past month, gathering unusual music that feels meaningful to me and presenting it in a personal way. On air and in words. But into the second hour of this meandering and introspective show, I began to feel calmer and more present. Out to Alyssa for the encouragement in the studio. Perhaps these two hours will offer you a release of some kind. Come along. I am hoping to have a few quests in the upcoming months, including artist feeo (see below) and a special on the club night I used to help run in Brighton. We must document these rights of passage. They are our culture. In other news, I’m planning a hike around Snowdon with my best mate and the little monster, and a youth music project in Lewisham featuring a few local legends. More on all that soon. 👋🏾 RYUICHI SAKAMOTO/ALVA NOTO – The Sheltering Sky (Alva Noto Remodel) [Milan] Let’s reset the room with a gently sweeping, chiming tribute to Ryuichi Sakamoto by collaborator Alva Noto (Carsten Nicolai). A cover of the great man’s theme to Bertolucci’s 1990 film of the same name. Sakamoto san is never far from my thoughts. A guiding spirit who was a humble and devoted artist that embraced change and evolved through time. To The Moon & Back, a compilation from a few years ago, also features interpretations by David Sylvian, Thundercat, Cinematic Orchestra, Fennesz… JOHN MARTYN & DANNY THOMPSON – Solid Air (Transatlantic Sessions) [Iona] [4m 57s] It was through John Martyn’s music that I first heard Danny Thompson – this track, in fact – and he almost stole the show. I was transfixed by his expressive bass playing. The virtuoso, who worked with Kate Bush, Richard Thompson, Nick Drake and Toumani Diabate among countless others, passed recently and I wanted to pay tribute with a few selections. This rendition of a Martyn standard was captured as part of a BBC Scotland programme called the Transatlantic Sessions. There were two series but only the second resulted in music being released. ‘Solid Air’ isn’t on either of those CDs – but it’s out there on film. Watch the chemistry rekindled between two old friends who hadn’t seen each other in years after a fallout. A poignant reconciliation happening before our eyes at the Montgreenan Mansion House Hotel in Kilwinning, Ayrshire. Thompson described this as the most satisfying musical moment of his career and John as his most important collaborator. “If John Martyn had been the only person that I worked with, it would have given me everything out of music that I could ever want.” 💜 Danny was also a geezer, who had stories for days. PENTANGLE – Reflection (live) [11m 38s] As insidious as Google can be with its all-seeing eye, the behemoth did give us YouTube and the platform continues to unearth gems that have me time-travelling wide-eyed in the middle of the night. While searching for Danny Thompson, I came across this 1972 Belgian TV special with Pentangle, one of his first bands. What a mighty intro. No wonder several of his bandmates are grinning along. Pentangle’s fusion of folk, jazz, blues and rock remains unique and unmatched on these shores. The five points of light were Thompson on bass, Terry Cox on drums, Bert Jansch and John Renbourn on guitars and Jacqui McShee on vocals. Her phrasing is so beguiling. Not too familiar with Pentangle? Then start with their 1969 album Basket of Light. DANNY THOMPSON – Minor Escapade [Hannibal] [23m 45s] Between 1987 and 2012, Thompson also recorded six solo albums. This is my pick from his 1987 release Whatever, featuring Tony Roberts on reeds and Bernie Holland on guitar. BIZIMUNGU DIEUDONNE – Inyange Ibarusha Kwera [Mississippi] [29m 02s] Vintage tape vibes out of 80’s Rwanda here. Bizimungu Dieudonne with wife Agnes Umbibizi plus family and friends. Praise songs and extended electric jams sit comfortably alongside one another on Inzovu Y’Imirindi. The story behind this release is tinged with sadness as everyone on the record lost their lives during the genocide and because of the savagery of the Hutu militia. But Bizimungu and Agnes’ daughter Noella was left with one treasured artefact – the masters for this album. Out to Mississippi Records for the cultural preservation and celebration. TOM SKINNER – The Maxim (featuring Meshell Ndegeocello) [Brownswood] [36m 50s] The Smile, Sons of Kemet, Wildflower, Hello Skinny, Owini Sigoma Band… How many projects and guises can you squeeze into one still fresh-faced career? Kaleidoscopic Visions, the second album under his own name, sees Tom Skinner reflecting on his journey thus far and finding interesting passages down the way. Coming along on this expedition are Tom Herbert on bass, Chelsea Carmichael on tenor sax and flute and Kareem Dayes on cello. I share his adoration for Meshell Ndegeocello, a collaborator on this track who he first encountered at Glastonbury in 1994. Now his friend and the artist I have seen more than any other in my life. “The Maxim is a 10-minute meditation on time,” Skinner tells us. “An incantation and exploration of human existence ­– addressing birth, life and death in one breath.” You can feel that depth of inquiry between the notes as they loop around us in a gentle spiral. I recommend watching the accompanying video by Sam Blair, which is constructed from Super 8 footage shot by Skinner’s grandfather around the UK and California in the 1960s and 1970s. Blair intuited the significance of ‘The Maxim’, saying, “There was a sense of Tom crossing a personal and musical threshold. ‘The Maxim’ itself is so ambitious and sweeping as a piece of music, so delicate and defiant and rich with meaning, I didn’t dare to make a literal interpretation of it, but instead we made a video that’s in a kind of parallel dance with the track.” FEEO – Requiem [AD93] [45m 10s] FEEO – Here [AD93] [51m 23s] Sam Akpro, who I did a special with earlier in the year, put me on to feeo, one of the featured artists on his debut Evenfall. The experimental singer-songwriter and producer has followed up her 2024 EP Run Over with an audacious album called Goodness, which brings together elements of the organic, electronic, ambient and drone. The result is a very intricate and elusive body of work, its beauty lying far beyond surface consumption. A bold move for a debut solo album. In feeo’s words, it’s “an exploration of simultaneous yet opposing states of being: darkness and lightness, obscurity and visibility and most fundamentally, solitude and togetherness.” Goodness was mixed by feeo, who also created the artwork. A truly personal offering. I need the lyric sheets – words to be unravelled. feeo plays Café Oto on 10 October. If her state51 set is anything to go by, that one will be very live and in the moment. JAY ELECTRONICA – Letter to Mars [Roc Nation] [58m 32s] From A Written Testimony: Mars, The Inhabited Planet, this is my pick of the flurry of unreleased music shared by the enigmatic Jay Electronica. A poetic monologue over a beatless mood piece, where we can appreciate his mic control and imperious diction. Three albums dropped in seven days or whatever. Is it Christmas already? THOUGHT LEADERSHIP – XX [Be With] [1m 3m 10s] Thanks to Rob at Be With for sending this over at the 11th hour. Diggers and collectors will know this label for reissuing in-demand yet hard-to-get albums across the sound spectrum, from Ian Carr with Nucleus to Bahamadia and Lewis Taylor. Immaculate too. Here is the first-ever vinyl pressing of a twanging instrumentals cassette tape by Thought Leadership. I can see the waves rolling up to the shore as the sun takes its sweet time to set. Coming on 14 November but you can pre-order now. A limited run of 300. RN HARRIS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL BAND – Portrait of Tracy [1h 7m 00s] I approach Instagram browsing with caution and usually bounce within five minutes or so. But thanks to my friend Miguel, who swears he’s barely on there, I found out about the RN Harris Elementary School Band, directed by a teacher called Tim Lorelli, in Durham, North Carolina. Joyous, beautiful, often very heavy covers of hip-hop tracks and sample sources. Erykah Badu’s ‘The Healer’ and De La Soul’s ‘Stakes Is High’ come to mind. Check out the archive and donate to keep these lessons bangin’ out across the world and putting instruments in young hands. KEIYAA – Take It [XL] [1h 8m 35s] Playing this one for anyone who owns Forever, Ya Girl – a life preserver from 2020 and a modern classic that I’ve been falling in love with all o

    2 hr

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Mixtape x record club™️ 🤯 music selections and conversations. amarofpatel.substack.com