Back in the early 1990s as Acid Jazz began a period of extraordinary
commercial success where acts like the Brand New Heavies and Jamiroquai
sold millions of records, and US groups such as A Tribe Called Quest,
The Roots and Digable Planets were actively influenced by what was being
played in London, the whole scene was being fuelled by a small number
of clubs, led by Gilles Peterson’s Sunday afternoons at Dingwalls but
taking in nights in Leeds, Bari, Munich, Tokyo, Stockholm and New York.
In those clubs funky jazz, latin boogaloo and 70s soul soundracks
competed for time on the dance floor with import records from New York,
and the latest sounds coming out of bedrooms and makeshift basement
studios that created contemporary sounds out of the past.
Acid Jazz’s Eddie Piller and Dean Rudland have put together this
compilation of the sort of sounds that we were playing at the time. They
are releases on Acid Jazz and other label’s that surrounded the scene
and they were mainly made by people we knew from either around the club
scene, behind the counters of our favourite record shops, or from trips
to New York or Europe. They range from The Ballistic Brother anthem
‘Blacker’ to the jazz house of A-Zel
- a Roger Sanchez mix that still sounds fresh today. We have the Humble
Soul’s instrumental version of ‘Beads Things And Flowers’ which at the
time was only available as a DJ special on Acetate. There is the
presence of A Man Called Adam before they went to Ibiza, and the early
Mo’ Wax (before they went Trip Hop) single by Marden Hill ‘Come On’.
These records could fill a dance floor in seconds and we feel that they
are today largely forgotten, as they were non-album, underground club
records. It’s time to celebrate them!
Tracklist:
1. The Ballistic Brothers & The Eccentic Afros - Blacker
2. Humble Souls - Beads, Things & Flowers
3. Marden Hill - Come On
4. The Subterraneans - Last Night Beats
5. A Man Called Adam - APB
6. The Quiet Boys - Modal
7. A-Zel - Jazz Jupiter
8. Dhama B & Ace of Clubs - Everything Is Going To The Beat (Strictly Speaking Mix)