JAMES BROWN, Startime
Melody Maker, June 15th 1991
by Simon Reynolds
This
four-CD mega-anthology reveals that there are actually two James
Browns. The first is JB the patrician and patriarch: the disciplinarian
who fined his musicians for the most miniscule misdemeanors; the black
Statesman whose august presence could quell a ghetto riot; the black
capitalist who monitored every last minutiae of his business affairs;
the righteous role model with his anti-drug, pro-education songs ('King
Heroin', 'Don't Be A Drop-Out'). This "hardest working man in
showbiz"/"Say it Loud I'm Black And I'm Proud" JB is possibly the single
biggest factor behind that particularly white/male version of soul that
sees it as the music of spiritual fortitude. I recall one NME soulboy
scribe declaring (having just slagged off some 'decadent' Goth group)
that if he ever got to be Prime Minister, he'd make it compulsory for
schoolkids to listen to JB for 3 hours a day, so that they could learn
all about pride, passion and dignity. Totalitarian of passion, or what?!
But
there's another JB that's worth digging through the R&B
Reaganisms to recover: the JB that wasn't about being a control freak,
but about freaked-out loss-of-control, voodoo possession, delirium,
enslavement by the rhythm. The first disc, Mr. Dynamite, is
unsalvageably antiquated, all huff'n'puff, horn vamps, hoary old showbiz
dynamics. But from about 1966's "Bring It Up" onwards, Brown's music
gets progressively more African and 'avant-garde': songs devolve into
closed grooves, minimal, mantric, mind-exterminating and interminable.
'Cold Sweat' remains the definitive JB title, capturing the frigid
feverishness of the sound. Tracks like 'I Can't Stand Myself (When You
Touch Me)' and 'Ain't It Funky Now' are coition-combustion engines,
"desiring machines", offering a stern, oppressive, exhausting brand of
bliss.
On Seventies trax like 'Funky Drummer', 'Sex
Machine', 'Superbad', 'I Got Ants In My Pants', 'Doing It To Death' and
'Hot' (the basis of Bowie's 'Fame'), almost every other guitar tic, bass
palpitation and drum lick sounds déjà vu. But that's because
they've been sampled by a thousand rap groups. If JB and Kraftwerk were
the twin godfathers of hip hop, it's because there's an affinity between
the coldblooded Teutonic technocrats and the fiery human volcano that
would scandalize many a soulboy: a certain arid, clinical, maniacal
precision of sound. Afrika Bambaata understood the 'Man Machine'/'Sex
Machine' connection; that's why the Pharoah Of Electro persuaded the
King Of Soul to collaborate on the 1984 single 'Unity'.
Madness, machismo, magnificent monotony: get up, get into it, and get involved.
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