I spend a lot of time "digging in the crates" for classics of all genres. With the advent of the music sampling Android/iPhone app
Shazam, my ability to find rare music on the fly has increased 10 fold. So picking my favorite vintage songs (released before 2000) was more difficult than ever, but "here it go"...
1.
No Stronger Love | The Floaters | Float On | R&B/Soul. If you dig the
Floater's 70's slow jam
Float On, then you need to pick up their love ballad
No Stronger Love from the same album. Powerful stuff.
2.
Up All Night | Boomtown Rats | V Deep | New Wave. I don't recall ever hearing
Up All Night during the 80's, but I certainly seemed to hear it everywhere in 2010--by the pool at the Mondrian in Miami, in IKEA, on 80's stations, etc. I was suddenly unable to resist singing the chorus every time I was out in the streets too late.
Boomtown Rats - Up All Night
Uploaded by epb21. - Music videos, artist interviews, concerts and more.
3.
Soul Food | Goodie Mob | Soul Food | Hip-Hop.
Soul Food's metaphor for good music is still tasty today! Totally forgot how ridiculous this track is and how talented
Cee Lo was/is even back in the 90's. Why doesn't this song get more play on DJ's old school sets?
4.
Front Door | Gregory Isaacs | Love Songs | Reggae. Many of us combed our
Gregory Isaacs collections when he passed away last year (R.I.P.), but
DJ Ms. Nix put me up on
Front Door in her shout out to the "Cool Ruler". Can't seem to stop playing this song...
5.
360 Degrees (What Goes Around) | Grand Puba | Reel To Reel | Hip-Hop. Back in the 80's and 90's, there wasn't a bigger
Grand Puba fan than me. After the
Masters of Ceremony and
Brand Nubian albums, I was so amped to hear
Grand Puba Maxwell's solo album and for a change, the product lived up to the hype. I remember staying home to watch the premier of
360 Degrees on
Yo! MTV Raps and jumping around the room like a damn psychopath! When I dug up this CD last year and played this song again, it had the same effect! Best line in the song:
You know the Flaaaaaav! Yes, I do, Puba. Yes, I do... ;-)
6.
Sunshine | Earth Wind & Fire | Gratitude | R&B/Soul.
EWF ignites memories of my early childhood, hanging out at my grandparents' house and sneaking into my aunt and uncles' house parties. I distinctly remember the older kids going crazy whenever they threw on an
EWF record and that feeling of excitement and adoration has stuck with me over the years. Everyone knows the
EWF standards, but
Sunshine is a personal favorite that blows my mind every time!
7.
Early to Rise | Nice & Smooth | Nice & Smooth | Hip-Hop. While not considered a
N&S classic,
Early to Rise invokes a memory of cracking the plastic on this CD, anxiously throwing it in the player and absolutely losing my mind when I heard the ill Fat Albert sample,
Greg Nice's simplistic and fun banter and finally,
Smooth B's lubricated flow. A perfect start to a great 90's hip-hop album! (Can we please talk about the uncomfortable exchange between N&S at the beginning of this video? Hilarious!)
8.
Pregnant (Baatin) | Slum Village | Fantastic, Vol. 1 | Hip-Hop. I finally got around to tracking down the elusive first
Slum Village album/demo
Fantastic Vol. 1 (
Vol. 2 was officially released first) and I was surprised how many songs I hadn't heard yet! Most of these songs are snippets and clock in at under 1:30, but
Pregnant (Baatin) was too dope to resist! R.I.P.
Baatin &
Dilla--
Slum Village forever.
9.
Nao Tem Nado Nao (I and II) | Marcos Valle | Previsao Do Tempo | Bossa Nova. My man
Madlib exposed me to the world of Brazilian jazz, bossa nova and funk when he teamed up with
Ivan "Mamao" Conti of the Brazilian super-group
Azymuth to form the band
Jackson Conti. I was listening to
Nao Tem Nado Nao by Jackson Conti last year and discovered that it was a cover of an old
Marcos Valle bossa nova hit from the 70's. The original, split into two parts--a vocal and an instrumental, is bananas and makes me appreciate the artistic license
Jackson Conti took with their cover.
10.
Never Stop Loving Me | Curtis Mayfield | Something To Believe In | R&B/Soul. I finally completed my
Curtis Mayfield collection last year!
Never Stop Loving Me was one of his hits that I was the least familiar with and firmly reminded me why
Curtis Mayfield is one of the silkiest, smoothest soul brothas of all time.
Click here to listen to Never Stop Loving Me
11.
Invitation | Norman Connors | Invitation | R&B/Soul. After tracking down
Mos Def's
Brown Sugar, it occurred to me that I wanted to know what song he sampled. That's when I found
Invitation, an awesome baby-making jam by
Norman Connors (of
You Are My Starship fame).
12.
Bankrobber | The Clash | Clash on Broadway | Punk | Punk. One of my favorite British gangster movies is
RocknRolla and I always wondered:
What the hell is that sick reggae-punk song that young Johnny is listening to just before his gangster daddy comes to his room to beat his ass? Ah,
The Clash's
Bankrobber. That explains it...
13.
Similak Child | Black Sheep | A Wolf In Sheep's Clothing | Hip-Hop. I dug out
A Wolf In Sheep's Clothing to see if that album was as hot as I remember. Oh, it was. I actually think the classic
The Choice Is Yours is average compared to the rest of the album!
Similak Child,
Black Sheep's ode to shapely women, used to be a favorite of mine back in the day.
14.
(Lay Your Head On My) Pillow | Tony! Toni! Tone! | Sons of Soul | R&B/Soul. I always
liked Tony! Toni! Tone!, but never quite
loved them--except for when they sang
(Lay Your Head On My) Pillow. This is the song that began my devotion to
Raphael Saadiq's work.
15.
Ex Girl to Next Girl | Gang Starr | Daily Operation | Hip-Hop. Like most of you, when
Guru passed away, I started diggin' through entire my
Gang Starr collection. While
Guru blessed many of my favorite songs in my collection,
Ex Girl to Next Girl is that
Gang Starr classic that I can still recite from start to finish. Perfect lyrics, perfect delivery, perfect production. R.I.P.
Keith Elam aka
Guru.
16.
Oh Bumbo Klaat | Peter Tosh | Wanted Dread And Alive | Reggae. I actually had this strange idea at the beginning of 2010 that maybe
Peter Tosh wasn't as great as I remembered. Wrong again. Listening to
Oh Bumbo Klaat was like a shock to the system!
17.
Baby Be Mine | Michael Jackson | Thriller | R&B/Pop. MJ's
Thriller had 9 songs and all 9 are indisputable classics.
DJ Ms. Nix reminded me during one her DJ sets that
Baby Be Mine was the sleeper on the album!
18.
Starálfur | Sigur Rós | Ágætis Byrjun | Electronica/Downtempo. I stumbled onto
Starálfur (translation:
Staring Elf) while surfing the web and fell in love with it. Sure, they are singing in Icelandic, so I have no idea what
Sigur Rós are saying. But it's undeniably beautiful and you should feel free to play this at my funeral.
19.
Thorn In My Pride | The Black Crowes | The Southern Harmony And Musical Companion | Rock. I remember listening to the
Black Crowes in the 90's and being taken back to my days of living in the Panama Canal Zone, hanging out with the older military kids, and listening to
Creedence Clearwater Revival.
Thorn In My Pride is a sweet, Southern rock song that still touches my soul.
20.
When The World Is Running Down, You Make The Best Of What's Still Around | Police | Message In A Box | Rock. I was completing my
Police collection in 2010 when I ran across
When The World is Running Down. While by no means the best
Police song, it was a lot funkier than I remember. But could they have come up with a shorter song title?
21.
Seedy Films | Soft Cell | Non Stop Erotic Cabaret | New Wave. I thought
Soft Cell was a one-hit wonder with
Tainted Love, but I was mistaken. They were a
two-hit wonder because
Seedy Films was fire! I don't remember hearing this song at all as a kid, but I'm glad I finally found it...
22.
Trippin' | Adriana Evans | Adriana Evans | R&B/Soul. I remember thinking in 1996 that
Adriana Evans was going to be a huge star and I was going to marry her one day. Strangely, neither happened. (She did put out a couple of solid albums after, but without much fanfare.)
Trippin' was one of many great songs from her debut album.
23.
Nao Vem Que Nao Tem | Wilson Simonal | Samba Soul 70! | Bossa Nova. Another great Brazilian bossa nova discovery by
Madlib from his
Madlib Medicine Show #2: Flight to Brazil compilation,
Nao Vem Que Nao Tem is sexy and irresistible. Is it just me or can you hear this song being played on an Austin Powers' movie soundtrack?
24.
Smokey Room | Max Romeo | War Ina Babylon | Reggae. I've had
Max Romeo's
I Chase the Devil in the iPod since
Kanye sampled it for
Jay-Z's
Lucifer, but never bothered to listen to the rest of the
War Ina Babylon album. This is yet another one of my life's many mistakes. Lots of crucial reggae sounds on this album, but
Smokey Room was so damn good that I almost ordered a few pounds of Dutch spacecakes!
25.
One of These Things First | Nick Drake | Five Leaves Left | Folk. While watching
Seven Pounds for the 20th time, I fell in love with a song from the soundtrack called
One of These Things First by
Nick Drake.
Nick's story is a tragic and familiar one and his genius is only being realized today. I would highly advise you to grab all of his albums--they will become treasured items in your music collection.
And with the next article, we will conclude with my favorite dance, electronica, jazz and another other miscellaneous stuff from 2010.