David
Bowie once sung “Gee my life’s a funny thing, am I still too young” and I know
exactly what he means. After the last few weeks I have had I feel like I am
watching my life from a distance, I have moved house, had no internet for two
weeks, and on top of that I have been battling bureaucracy with Immigration
trying to keep my girlfriend in the country (should we fail, the next blog post
will be coming out of Tokyo). It’s now that I have discovered the great power of
music. Today’s recording is simply astounding, and as I listen to it with
headphones on I find all my troubles fade away as the real world disappears
into the background. I have written about rehearsals and soundchecks
before, and I decided that in the future I would shy away from them. This one
though is so mind-blowingly good that I find I am compelled to write about it.
A soundboard from 1985, this soundcheck has The Revolution playing an amazing
set, and within minutes of beginning to play it, I was captivated. Already
there is a lot of internet buzz about it, and I will say this – believe every
word you read, this one is one of the greats.
7th
April 1985, Soundcheck, Miami
As
soon as the recording started I wanted to talk to someone about it and share
the experience. All the elements I love are present right from the start, a
crystal clear soundboard, a pounding beat, some delicate funky guitar, and then
the sax shows up on the scene and I am mouth open and eyes bugging. The “Controversy/Mutiny”
combination is so perfect, you need to hear it to believe it. The “Controversy”
riff is full and dirty, I sweat just listening to it, and the sax playing the “Mutiny”
riff, well it’s just unfair that anything could sound so good. Add in some lead
guitar from Prince and this thing is TNT. No more writing here, I am going to
spend the next few minutes strutting around the room with this blasting.
From
funk to blues, Prince next shows his blues chops with “I Got Some Help I don’t
Know I Need.” The Revolution shows their versatility as they turn their hand to
this, in a heartbeat they go from a funky monster to a laidback deep blue’s
groove. I love the feel of it, and once the singing stops and the sax and
guitar take over it becomes something else again. Prince lets the sax play
before upping the stakes with a stellar guitar break that leaves me with my
eyes closed shaking my head, oh yes The Kid can play.
“Erotic
City” is heavy on the drums, as it should be. It’s not much more than a minute,
but in those sixty seconds, I am holding my breath hoping the packaging was
wrong and we’d get much more.
The
‘much more’ that I had hoped for comes next. I read someone commenting that “Something
In The Water” here is the best 12 minutes of your life, and they weren’t far
wrong. It's 12 minutes of brain-melting music that is The Revolution at their
very best. It’s a combination of things that make it such a standout, I don’t
know where to start, the funky guitar groove that runs for several minutes as
the song builds, the melancholy keyboard swells, or the surprising saxophone
that leaves me floored. It’s not what’s played, it’s how it is played, and I
soak all of it up, not wanting a single element to ever end. I keep coming back
to the saxophone, it’s got such a feel to it that it stays with me for hours
after I have finished listening. The guitar picks up seamlessly from where the
sax finishes, and I swear I have never heard anything so beautiful in my life.
It's a close-run thing, but I think the guitar just tops it.
The
obligatory James Brown cover (“Bodyheat” in this case) gives the saxophone
another chance to get front and center as it holds down the groove through the
song. The band is just on fire at this point, and it amazes me that they can
play such a variety of styles right after one another, and inject much life
into each one. A few minutes ago I had tears in my eyes as they played the
emotion-heavy “Something In The Water,” now they are a classic funk band,
complete with a horn section, and jamming on a groove that demands I get up and
dance. Don’t let anyone ever tell you The Revolution couldn’t do this or that,
listen here, they can do it all.
I
wonder what could possibly come after all this, and for the third time in the
evening I have to pick my jaw up off the floor as the band play “Strange
Relationship.” For real. I read it on the cover, but I don’t believe it until
the song is deep in my ears. It’s not as
funky as it would become, but asides from that it is 98% the same song that
would later be released. Did I mention it sounds good? Oh yes, it does, the
keyboard swells rather than grooves, and there is a piano solo mid-song that
pulls it all together. There is a part of me that wants to write “this is the
best thing on the recording”, that would be a lie, there are many great moments
on the recording, and this is right up there with the other ones. As a bonus
though it does have a great Eric Leeds solo that gains it a few more credits in
my book.
We
get another rare treat next as “High Fashion” is heard. What a pleasant
surprise, I smile as soon as I hear it begin. This is much more of a jam, and I
love that distinctive rumble of Brown Mark. He has a great chugging sound, and
it’s almost as unmistakable as the funky sound of Wendy’s guitar that plays
over top. It’s got an undeniable summer sound and I sing along
enthusiastically, much to my girlfriend’s dismay. As the riff plays over and
over, I find I never tire of it and I am surprised as the song comes to an end.
With
the horns playing the riff of “17 Days,” it has a different sound and leaves me
off balance. The heavy keyboards feel safer as they begin and the song takes on
its classic sound. The instrument that I pick out for special attention is
Wendy’s guitar, she is something else, and the song has plenty of her sound
that I love. The song becomes a jam, and it spins off in a direction I hadn’t
expected. The bass and drums pick up a different groove as the sax solos, and
surprisingly I like this even more.
“Groove
In A” is an even better jam, with everyone contributing something. Listening to
this, I find myself thinking that it’s a shame that The Revolution didn’t play
after shows like Prince started doing a few years later, jams like this
demonstrate to me that they would have killed it. In fact, this whole
soundcheck would have worked brilliantly as an aftershow, just close your eyes
and imagine hearing this at a small club. Groove In A has a nice funky thing
going, with a sax riff, before Prince plugs in his guitar and begins to let
loose. I say let loose, but in reality, he is playing well within the song, and
nice and tight. It’s a claustrophobic sounding jam at this point, and I am
still with it, every beat and pop, howl, and squeal. The song ends with an
exchange between Prince and Wendy that has Prince telling her “say into the
mic, “I’m weak”, which sets us up nicely for the final song which is a “Groove
In F”
It
starts fast, very fast, and Prince and Wendy have me laughing as she says “I
hate this kind of music”. The bass the cymbals hold most of the sound, with a
final appearance from the saxophone a minute into the song. Things take off at
this point, Prince responds with a quick solo, before we drop back to the
groove. It's funny guy Prince, with him talking funny before the last solo
fades out the recording.
I
have only had this recording for 24 hours, and already I know that it is one
for the ages. We will be hearing a lot more about this in the future, I am sure
over the coming days, weeks, and months everyone will be talking about it. I
don’t know how many times I have felt like a jaded fan and the excitement is
gone, only for a recording to surface that makes me just as excited as the
first time I heard Prince’s music. This is one of those recordings, and
listening to it this evening I was transported to another time and place, a
time and place where The Revolution reigned supreme. Truly amazing performance
and recording, this sounds just as fresh as the day it was recorded 31 years
ago.