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It may seem a long while
since "Very Mercenary" showcased both The Herbalisers
way with the beat-heavy blended hip hop , but the dynamic
duo have been busy.
First there was a tour with
full band which covered 21 countries, took their gig tally
to well over 350 shows and included highlights such as the
Glastonbury Festival, Montreal Jazz Festival Paleo Festival,
Axiom Beach Festival, Montreaux, , Drum Rhythm, and Essential.
During this epic journey they took time to dive into the studio
with the band and record the critically acclaimed "Session
One" a widescreen, epic and beautifully produced
version of what crowds were hearing live on stage.
Once they got back to their
Traintrax Studio, Jake and Ollie then began work on a number
of commissions, from contributing production for MCs from
T-Love to Princess Superstar, to remixing acts like Push Button
Objects (a hip hop supergroup featuring Del Tha Funky Homosapien),
to soundtracking Odeon Pictures "Pimp Of The Year,"
to recording and compiling music for EA Sports Playstation
title "NBA Street" and even contributing music to
Guy Ritchies "Snatch" (apparently Madonna
brought their music to his attention!
Then, at last it was down to
business the creation of their fourth and most ambitious
album for Ninja Tune. As Jake says, the Herbaliser always
"start off with a concept". The idea this time was
to combine what the band had been doing live with what Jake
and Ollie were capable of creating in the studio. As Ollie
explains, "for ages people have been approaching us at
our shows and saying Why does your live show sound so
different to the records? so we decided to use more
actual instruments in the process, making our own samples
rather than only using bits of other peoples music.
We would still construct tracks along the same lines, with
a good strong sample idea as a foundation then building along
with that. Although on several occasions we would remove the
original sample at a later stage and develop the remaining
music."
Jake expands: "With Something
Wicked we had such strong ideas about what we wanted to hear
that it was simply easier to play the stuff ourselves, or
in the case of our horn and string arrangements, get it done
by either Chris Bowden or The Easy Access Orchestra (our horn
section). I played bass and guitar on most of the tunes and
even played keyboards for the first time since I learnt as
a10 year old!"
Collaborations with US rappers,
Raaka Iriscience (Dilated Peoples) and MF Doom (formerly of
KMD), UKs herbal favourite, Blade, the exotic and mind-blowing
singer Seaming To, sparkling street gal Wildflower and Gorillaz
touranauts Phi Life Cypher all show that the boys can produce
blistering vocal productions that firmly establish them as
beatmeisters par excellence. The guests are for the most part
people they have met and grown to know over their years of
making music and traveling, the collaborations sounding natural
rather than forced.
But just as there are two meanings
to the word wicked, so there are two sides to
the record. The other aspect of this album has been to develop
and further explore their cinematic production techniques
on a series of instrumental tours des forces, which is where
the writing skills of The Easy Access Orchestra and Chris
Bowden with the string performances of Echo Strings and the
keyboard extravagance of West London funk gurus Kaidi Tatham
and Ollie Parfitt have all come into their own. Nodding back
to the horror-funk of classic DeWolfe and forward to a psychedelic
soul movie that may never be made, Herbaliser can get the
hairs standing up on the back of your neck as well as setting
you spinning on your head
Something wicked, indeed. As
Ollie says, "we feel that musically this is the pinnacle
of our achievements so far." Dont get confused,
though this is hip hop done in another way. "Its
the same but different," laughs Jake. "We aren't
trying to change, we just try and get better as producers,
and keep on challenging ourselves. Hopefully the masses of
stuff we did live will still meld with our sample based ideas
but people will be able to appreciate the fact that it was
done live in a room in Twickenham... "
www.herbaliser.com
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