
With the release of their sixth album, From the Corner
to the Block, the five-man group GALACTIC - drummer
Stanton Moore, bassist Robert Mercurio, saxophonist/harmonica
player Ben Ellman, keyboardist Richard Vogel, and guitarist
Jeff Raines - reaffirms their standing as one of the
funkiest outfits in the known universe. Featuring a
cherry-picked guest list of some of hip-hop's most
dynamic lyricists - including Juvenile, Gift of Gab
(Blackalicious), Lyrics Born, Ladybug Mecca (Digable
Planets), Mr. Lif, Chali 2na (Jurrasic 5), Vursatyl
(Lifesavas), and Boots Riley (The Coup), From the Corner
to the Block exposes GALACTIC's organic grooves to
an urban ear while still maintaining their essential
funk aesthetic.
The band started out over a decade ago as an instrumental
act in the tradition of the Meters, the JB's, and Booker
T. & the MG's - bands equally comfortable recording
their own material or working with vocalists. From
the Corner to the Block grew out of GALACTIC's experiences
touring with artists like the Roots, Jurassic 5, Triple
Threat DJ's and Gift of Gab. Though it features cameos
from a "wish list" of fan-favorite MCs, this
isn't a typical hip-hop album per se, but a contemporary
funk record that just happens to feature hip-hop vocalists. "We
never set out to make a rap record," explains
Ellman, who produced the record with assistance from
engineer extraordinaire Count (Halou, Quannum, DJ Shadow). "We
wanted to kinda modernize the New Orleans sound," adds
Mercurio.
The New Orleans legacy echoes throughout the album,
indeed. The brassy "Bounce Baby" (featuring
DJ Z-Trip) stirs up wah-wah guitar, a horn-driven melody,
syncopated beats, and turntable wizardry into a potent
rhythmic instrumental. "Tuff Love" (featuring
Trombone Shorty) offers a taste of some of New Orleans'
hottest young talent. "Second and Dryades," (featuring
Big Chief Monk Boudreau), evokes the spirit of the
Wild Magnolias - it's a percussion-laced Mardi Gras
anthem for the digi generation, on which Boudreau relates
the story of being an Indian on Mardi Gras day. The
song sure to raise eyebrows though is the title track
and first single, featuring the Soul Rebels Brass Band
and platinum rapper Juvenile (who tapped GALACTIC to
back him on the "Jimmy Kimmel Show"). Mercurio,
for one, is happy with the outcome. "It sounds
like it was all supposed to be there, this track was
meant to happen" he says.
The rest of the album features a diverse array of
funky arrangements, vocal deliveries, and musical expressions,
from sexy downtempo jams like "Squarebiz," featuring
the ever-delectable Ladybug Mecca and singer Nino Moschella;
to uptempo party-starters like "What You Need" with
Lyrics Born, and "Hustle Up" with Boots Riley
(which Mercurio calls "a total rock tune" dressed
in funky threads); to semi-autobiographical tales of
urban street life by Mr. Lif (".And I'm Out"),
Vursatyl & Ohmega Watts ("Find My Home"),
Lateef the Truth Seeker ("No Way"), Gift
of Gab ("The Corner"), and Chali 2na ("Think
Back").
Even with all the different vocalists, the songs maintain
a sense of thematic consistency. As Ellman explains,
this was by design: the rappers were each asked to
write about a corner. "It could have been any
corner," he says. "Everyone had a different
perspective." Many contemporary all-star collaborations
are purely commercial exercises, yet From the Corner
to the Block stands as a labor of love, connecting
GALACTIC's hip-hop jones and their guests' fervor for
funk aesthetics. The result isn't just the grooviest,
funkiest record of 2007, but perhaps the finest post-Katrina
album to come out of New Orleans. |