THE BETA BAND Hot Shots II
(Regal)
Uncut, 2001
What I
like most about The Beta Band is that they're head-in-the-clouds,
barefoot-in-the-grass, tie-dyed-in-the-wool hippies. Circa The Three EPs, the
group's sonic laxness offered a welcome relief from Britpop's straight-and-narrow,
reminding me of all the disparate stuff excluded from the latter's restrictive
mod/New Wave canon---Roy Harper, Traffic, Family, Caravan, Kevin Ayers. Without
ever sounding like any of those bands, Beta Band seem plugged into their
entirely other realm of "quintessential Englishness": folkadelic
whimsy and meander, dappled epiphanies, drowsy meadow bliss. But it was all
filtered through a tune-full and rhythm-conscious post-Madchester/Screamadelica
sensibility, banishing the spectre of retro.
Mind you, what's irritating about the Beta Band is, of course, that they're such fucking hippies. Perhaps you concurred with the band's own verdict, that 1999's self-titled debacle--sorry, debut--was somewhat unfocused? But you probably never heard the infamous second disc of the original planned double album, briefly circulated to journalists by their American record company. I did, and we're talking Gong-like levels of let-it-all-hang-out plot-loss.
Hot Shots II sees Beta Band once more "on point"--R&B/rap slang for having your shit together. Which is not inappropriate, because R&B producer C-Swing worked on this album. So Hot Shots is sharply produced in a fully contemporary sense--ultra-glossy, big-sounding, with huge bottom end and tuff beats. There's even some interesting fusion between modern black urban sounds and Beta Band's psych-rock tradition. Hold on, don't cum in your pants, we're not talking Timbaland-meets-Tago Mago or anything. But killertoon "Broke" shifts rhythmically from 2steppy beats'n'bass into full-on dancehall ragga, while closer track "Won" (a Nilsson cover?) is a bizarre and brilliant composite of Hollies-like chorus, floor-trembling reggaematic funk groove, ace rhyming from an unidentified MC, and a lick nicked from "Rhythm Stick" by Dury & the Blockheads.
C-Swing's haze-less production actually suits The Beta Band's neo-psychedelic premise--the brightness and separation of sound creates that slightly disorienting sensation of perceptual crispness that accompanies putting on your first pair of glasses, having your ears syringed, or being high as a kite. "Quiet" is awesome: echoes of Piper At the Gates of Dawn or long-lost Brit-psych outfits like Tintern Abbey, but with a massive, tub-thumping groove as powerful as The Chemical Brother's own freakbeat-meets-bigbeat classic "Setting Sun". On this track especially, but throughout the album, the monk-like close harmonies seem sculpted in three dimensions: the way they soar, arc, cluster and braid is breathtaking.
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