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Monday, January 25, 2010
The Dust Brothers: OVERDOSE!
Not a real overdose of course, but I figured I might as well hit you with all of this in one shot as there is a lot here and I don't want to drag this out over a week.
I feel kinda bad for the Dust Brothers as they are clearly great producers but seem to get hired for lots of odd stuff that doesn't really utilize their abilities. There are a lot of their remixes that never really blew my mind but it seems like some of them were simply quick jobs for labels they may have been contractually obligated to produce. I can't wrong them for making money and their productions are always quality, it's just they seem occasionally rushed and don't get to feature a lot of their creativity. On the other hand, the labels may limit their work by not allowing them to use excessive samples or stray from certain defined genres. Whatever the reason, it's a shame because when they're hot, they're simply amazing! With that, I'm posting a collection of their remixes and productions as well as three rare albums they produced. A little information on each one will be provided below.
The Dust Brothers - Productions, Remixes & Other Things
NOTES: Some of these tracks appear in my previous Dust Brothers related post entitled dusted. Sorry for the repetition, but I like those tracks so much and think they're of such high quality that I couldn't help but re-post them. Also, the quality is low on this one (128kbps) so it would be an easy download, hope that doesn't disappoint anyone. One more thing, if anyone is wondering why tracks like the Offspring, Technotronic and other various remixes aren't included here, I either didn't think they were that hot or there simply wasn't enough space. I know, I know, what makes me qualified to judge? It's my site after all, isn't it? That said, if enough people want to hear the other stuff, let me know and I'll do another post with more remixes and such.
NOTE 2: This has been reuploaded in hope that it repairs problems with the previous version. Please let me know if anyone has any problems opening this version.
01 Mellow Man Ace - Hip Hop Creature
02 Machines Of Loving Grace - Richest Junkie Still Alive (Cherry Valley Mix)
03 Eels - Susan's Apartment (Mike Simpson Remix)
As the title implies, this remix is the sole work of EZ Mike. Also, it's actually a remix of the Eels' track Susan's House from their debut album, Beautiful Freak.
04 White Zombie - Grease Paint and Monkey Brains (Sin Centers Of Suburbia Mix)
05 Searchin'
A Dust Brothers instrumental contributed to Mo'Wax's Headz 2 compilations.
06 Def Jef - God Made Me Funky
The Dust Brothers actually contributed four tracks to Def Jef's Just A Poet With Soul album. This is my favorite.
07 Money Mark - Cry (Dust Brothers Remix)
This is a really great remix. Just sayin'.
08 The Folk Implosion - Insinuation (Dust Brothers Remix)
09 Nitzer Ebb - Fun To Be Had (Dust Mix)
10 Hanson - Mmm Bop (Radio Version)
If you're not familiar with this one, I want to know what year you were born! But seriously, I know this one is super-ubiquitous, but it's a great track and kind of important to the whole run-down of their productions.
11 Filter - Hey Man Nice Shot (Nickel Bag)
12 Smash Mouth - Virgin Girl (feat. Chopper)
Ooh, how I LOVE to mock Smash Mouth! Their first album was pretty good and their second wasn't too shabby, but it's not like anyone should expect anything earth shattering from these guys. That said, this is a really funky reggae-esque track from the Half Baked soundtrack which is, as you'd expect, all about getting stoned. I guess if you want records about getting stoned, you contact people with a name like the Dust Brothers. I'd say to contact Tricky too, but the producers of that soundtrack did, so they clearly knew their musical demographic.
13 They Might Be Giants - Snail Dust (Dust Brothers Remix)
Dust Brothers remix of Snail Shell.
14 Fluke - Bullet (Afro Funk Remix)
15 Squirrel Nut Zippers - Suits Are Picking Up The Bill (Dust Brothers Remix)
Another favorite of mine, this is a simple enough remix but it's a ton of fun.
16 The Chemical Brothers - Elektrobank (Dust Brothers Remix)
Chemicals vs. Dust! Short but sweet remix for which the favor was later returned when the Chems remixed a Dust track for the Dead Man On Campus soundtrack. As good as that track, named Realize, is, I'd really like to hear the original version, but it remains unreleased.
17 The Groomsman
Another Dust instrumental from the Headz 2 compilations.
18 Creeper Lagoon - Empty Ships
King Gizmo aka John King gets the production credit on this track. This and the album it's taken from was released on the Dust Brothers then label, Ideal Records, which was distributed via Mammoth. Sadly, it's out of print, which may give merit to a post eventually. It's worth it for more than the Dust Brothers connection.
19 The X-Files Theme
Not bad, but certainly nothing incredible, this was recorded for the soundtrack to the X-Files: Fight The Future movie. I don't think it was actually in the film though, although I don't believe much of anything on the soundtrack was. That's the worst type of soundtrack, but it was the mid-nineties and there was a lot of that going on.
20 Wesley Willis - The Dust Brothers
The Dust Brothers actually received the production credit for this, which even they acknowledged was kind of ridiculous, although Wesley's people insisted on it since they engineered the sessions at their PCP Labs studio. For more info on Wesley, check here.
And on to the albums! First up is Vince Neil's second solo outing, the Carved In Stone album. I haven't found much about this one online but I assume by it's non-availability that it bombed. That said, the production is top notch and the Brothers sound totally into it, although the songwriting, mostly courtesy of Neil and Marti Fredrickson, is a bit lacking.
The Dust Brothers got production credit on all tracks but one, Skylar's Song, which I believe is a tribute to one of Neil's children. There were also two bonus tracks released in Europe and Japan which aren't featured here that are assumed to be Dust Brothers productions as well.
Vince Neil - Carved In Stone
Next up is Sugartooth's The Sounds Of Solid, and this one is kinda painful to listen to. Sugartooth is probably best remembered for their song Sold My Fortune which was featured in an episode of Beavis and Butthead where they assumed the song was named Sold My Futon. That song sounded a lot better there than it did in my car stereo, so I kinda wrote them off rather quickly, but they released this follow-up in 1997. Apparently, their drummer left the band (I believe it was the excellent Joey Castillo, who has since played with Queens Of The Stone Age) and, rather than hire a new one, they decided to hire producers who knew their way around drum machines and samplers. Having just produced Beck's Odelay which was also released on DGC/Geffen, it probably made a ton of sense to get them on board, and the production is indeed excellent, but the songs are practically non-existent, kind of like Silverchair but even more boring. There is only so much the producer can do in a situation like this, and the Dust Brothers clearly did everything they could, but if the songwriting is weak it simply can't be salvaged, and at around a half-hour there wasn't much to begin with.
Sugartooth - The Sounds Of Solid
Last up is Buggin' Out by 10¢, a full-on Dust production on their own short-lived Hi-Ho/Ideal labels. This one has an oddball charm to it, being rather short at around a half-hour and kinda childish, but it's still a lot of fun. I can't promise that everyone will enjoy this, but at least half the album is truly winning and charming with the other half being subliminal growers. This one is really worth your time as it's truly a diamond in the rough. I don't know anything about what happened to 10¢ since but I know they had at least one other release prior to this with no Dust influence. This is also still available for purchase digitally via iTunes and Amazon, and while I don't normally post things that are still available, I'd feel bad for anyone paying ten dollars for an album this short if they didn't know what they were getting themselves into, so if you enjoy this please buy a download, as I'm sure the folks from 10¢ would appreciate it.
10¢ - Buggin' Out
Labels:
10¢,
Dust Brothers,
production,
Remixes,
Sugartooth,
Vince Neil
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