soul – The Cultural Exposé http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk A blog from a lifestyle journo covering culture, food and style in London and beyond. Mon, 23 Jul 2018 21:50:47 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/cropped-logo_2017-32x32.jpg soul – The Cultural Exposé http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk 32 32 Five Dope Tracks is a curation of dope music, five tracks at a time. Check out the monthly playlist each month on Spotify. soul – The Cultural Exposé clean episodic soul – The Cultural Exposé megerecooper@gmail.com megerecooper@gmail.com (soul – The Cultural Exposé) The Five Dope Tracks music podcast soul – The Cultural Exposé http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/powerpress/five_dope_tracks_podcast_cover.jpg http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk Five Dope Tracks – The September 2017 Edit http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/featured/five-dope-tracks-september-2017-edit/ http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/featured/five-dope-tracks-september-2017-edit/#comments Sun, 03 Sep 2017 19:35:03 +0000 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/?p=12386 So… I wasn’t 100% sure what I wanted to do for this month’s Five Dope Tracks (as I’m actually looking forward to the October Edit which may or may not be a podcast!?!? Waaaahhhh….We’ll see). Anyway, I knew I wanted to make this month’s more artist focused. Jill Scott popped into my head as I […]

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So…
I wasn’t 100% sure what I wanted to do for this month’s Five Dope Tracks (as I’m actually looking forward to the October Edit which may or may not be a podcast!?!? Waaaahhhh….We’ll see).
Anyway, I knew I wanted to make this month’s more artist focused. Jill Scott popped into my head as I haven’t heard from her in a minute – and it turns out her third album The Real Thing: Words and Sounds Vol. 3  is officially 10 years old (!) on September 25th. Sure, it didn’t match the mega success of her first two projects, but it’s just as musically accomplished – so I’ve rounded up some of the album’s dopest moments for a mellow Sunday eve, and a couple of her other tunes for good measure.
ENJOY

(You can read about why I started this little music project  here. And feel free to follow me on Twitter here)

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The gig I’m looking forward to this week: The Internet at Koko http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/music/the-gig-im-looking-forward-to-this-week-the-internet-at-koko/ http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/music/the-gig-im-looking-forward-to-this-week-the-internet-at-koko/#comments Mon, 07 Mar 2016 13:00:11 +0000 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/?p=11335 I am notoriously bad at buying tickets for gigs before they sell out. That is how I missed those Prince gigs in 2014.  And in 2007 (but then I realised, I actually don’t love Prince that much, so the FOMO wasn’t really strong enough). But when I heard my new favourite band The Internet (real name) […]

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I am notoriously bad at buying tickets for gigs before they sell out. That is how I missed those Prince gigs in 2014.  And in 2007 (but then I realised, I actually don’t love Prince that much, so the FOMO wasn’t really strong enough). But when I heard my new favourite band The Internet (real name) were playing Koko last year and I couldn’t get a ticket, real thug tears were shed. That is, until I heard they rescheduled the shows to this year and would be adding more dates. So thanks to the media powers that be, I’m GOING TO SEE THE INTERNET THIS WEEK! If you love neo-soul and just good music full stop – look these guys up. They’re dope.

Check ’em out on Jimmy Kimmel:

Here’s my favourite song from Ego Death, their latest album that got nominated for a Grammy:

And here’s my favourite track from their previous album, Feel Good:

Gosh, I miss bands!

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Somewhere you should go… OG Lounge http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/music/somewhere-you-should-go-og-lounge/ http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/music/somewhere-you-should-go-og-lounge/#comments Thu, 20 Feb 2014 11:00:10 +0000 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/?p=8701 When Nas announced some years ago that ‘hip-hop was dead’, it was an OG (older generation) of heads who resolutely roared in agreement.  But while the music we grew up listening to may not resemble anything in the charts nowadays or  tickle the mainstream Powers that Be, at least it still exists in some format […]

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When Nas announced some years ago that ‘hip-hop was dead’, it was an OG (older generation) of heads who resolutely roared in agreement.  But while the music we grew up listening to may not resemble anything in the charts nowadays or  tickle the mainstream Powers that Be, at least it still exists in some format or other  – and the end of the month sees the launch of a new weekly lounge in the West End that’ll make sure that the golden days, though gone,  are never forgotten.  Billed as strictly for the Older Generation (you’re not old enough if you can’t remember dookie chains, Cross Colours & Travel Fox!), the OG Lounge will see an impressive line-up of resident DJs on rotation including Charlie Dark (Blacktronica), Rags and Khalil (Livin’ Proof),  CJ Beat (1Xtra) and the man behind this brilliant idea Spin Doctor, of The Doctor’s Orders.  There will also be some R&B and soul in the mix and with a venue capacity of just over 100 (Bittersweet,  Kingly Court), this is guaranteed to have those house party vibes that’ll make it quite the night.  The launch party is 28 February, so pop it in the diary people – we reckon it’s gonna be live!

Nas-04

For more info, visit: www.thedoctorsorders.com/v2/every-friday

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What we’ve been up to… D’Angelo at Brixton Academy (February 3rd and 4th) http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/music/what-weve-been-up-to-dangelo-at-brixton-academy/ http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/music/what-weve-been-up-to-dangelo-at-brixton-academy/#comments Mon, 06 Feb 2012 11:00:38 +0000 http://www.theculturalexpose.co.uk/?p=3312 If, like me, you were among the generation of music-savvy teens in the late 90s who analysed album sleeve notes for production credits and could spot a sample in a heartbeat, then you probably welcomed the arrival of “neo soul” with open arms. This progressive genre and its experimental mesh of classic soul, funk, et. […]

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If, like me, you were among the generation of music-savvy teens in the late 90s who analysed album sleeve notes for production credits and could spot a sample in a heartbeat, then you probably welcomed the arrival of “neo soul” with open arms. This progressive genre and its experimental mesh of classic soul, funk, et. al  wasn’t mundane like the whiny R&B that prevailed at the time (“bump and grind” anyone?) and would ultimately be defined by the music of a certain  Michael ‘D’Angelo’ Archer.

This  church-reared multi-instrumentalist presented Brown Sugar in 1995,  a ground-breaking debut not only because it sounded remarkable, but the mastermind behind those complex piano chords, that Rick James-inspired double-entrendre (“I gets high off your love, I don’t know how to behave”) and buttery falsetto was not long out of his teens. The young buck then took a break to follow-up with the Grammy-winning Voodoo five years later in 2000,  and just as musos had more reason to celebrate the singer’s musical genius (and distinct references to Jimi Hendrix, Fela Kuti, Marvin Gaye and Prince), the risqué video for the song Untitled earned him a new fanbase more inspired by his pecs, leading to a suspected breakdown over his new pinup status (or so his buddy Questlove said recently) and a 12 year absence from the limelight, except for a few dodgy run-ins with the law and the odd musical cameo for artists like Q-Tip, Common, Raphael Saadiq and Mark Ronson.

So, much credit has been laid on the singer for his ability to randomly re-appear this year for an 11-date European tour – without so much as an EP to justify the hiatus – and remind all who attended  why he’s earned his acclaim, and that he’s evolved into an artist with more depth and dimensions a lesser fan might be surprised to see. Performing with a nine-piece band named “The Testimony”, he looks great – if not over-styled in eyeliner and a gothic “All Saints” get-up – sounds great,  and after over a decade away, keeps things creative by avoiding the simple route of delivering his classics and calling it a day.   Like a true musician with a jazz heritage, songs are remixed, funked up, taken to church and rocked out – with a nearly 20-minute version of Sh*t, Damn, Motherf****r being the erratic centrepiece of the show. This, of course, doesn’t make it the easiest of gigs (critics might write it off as a near 3-hour jam session with a few moments of magnificence and very little, albeit friendly small talk) , but nor does it make it a terrible one. Instead, D’Angelo presents a solid display of a musical prowess reminiscent of Prince (one minute he’s jamming on the guitar, the next he’s killing it on the keys – and his vocal range is beyond supreme), and new songs from a rumoured album like Another Life, The Charade and Sugar Daddy are performed brilliantly and in full, while fan faves like Brown Sugar, One Mo’ Gin, Spanish Joint and Untitled are crammed together in a quick melody, that obviously goes down a treat.

Friday’s crowd might have felt robbed by the fact that the 37-year-old  failed to play the original Brown Sugar (or even his hit Lady), so seeing as both made brief appearances the next night, a remixed version of the former makes for a truly raucous, and well-received finale for his brief spell in capital. But reviews have been mixed (one friend in particular called Friday night “good but mediocre”) and  while some might say this tour has nothing on his 2000 gigs in the same venue, what it does confirm is that D’Angelo hasn’t let the passage of time work against him; rather, it’s seen him mature into a more funkier artist who’s clearly got his groove back. (Words: Matilda Egere-Cooper) 

 

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