Record Racks

A flip through our bins will bring the outside sounds in.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

SUPER BOWL SUNDAY



Sunday marks one of the biggest television days of the year. In honor of the big game, here are a few selections of songs from or about the three cities involved: New Orleans and Indianapolis, the two participants, and Miami, the host city.

While New Orleans may be underdogs per the oddsmakers, their city's musical history needs no introduction and has a considerably strong edge over Indianapolis. From zydeco, funk, early rock n roll, they have the bases covered.

Indianapolis, though, is no slouch when it comes to musical history. It has produced jazz legends such as Freddie Hubbard and Wes Montgomery as well as pop/R&B icon Babyface who has had considerable success as a writer, producer, and performer.

Huey Piano Smith And His Clowns: High Blood Pressure
From Having A Good Time: The Very Best Of Volume 1 (Westside, 1999)

Starting with the away team's city, Huey Piano Smith and crew present some classic New Orleans music. While not the song they're primarily associated with (that would be “Rockin Pneumonia And The Boogie Woogie Flu”), “High Blood Pressure” comes from the group's highest charting single that is led primarily by a busy horn section and a simple chord change on piano.

If this Super Bowl is the shootout that many analysts are predicting, high blood pressure may be symptomatic for the viewing audience.

Diplomatics: Hum Bug (Pts 1 and 2)
From Live At The South Dallas Pop Festival 1970 Bonus Disc (Now Again, 2003)

In the mid-60s, high school bands cutting records was not uncommon. In Indianapolis, friends who attended Crispus Attucks and Shortridge High Schools, cut their only work (under this moniker, at least) for Lamp Records. They were striving for a dance-based tune, which funny enough has a kind of New Orleans-ish sound a la The Meters.

Catch the drum break toward the end that's by... a teenager. Mean stuff! Soon, I'm supposed to be meeting with Rodney Stepp, who was the leader of the band, to get more inside info about this track and numerous others he worked on throughout his career for a release that's still in the works.

Will Smith: Miami (Miami Sound Machine Remix)
From Miami (CD Single) (Columbia, 1999)

The last of the bunch is an ode to the host city. Will Smith, unless you've been living under a rock, needs no introduction. This isn't the version you'll be likely to hear on the TV going into commercial break, although you may remember a clip of this version from the official music video. While it lacks the familiar Whispers sample, it more than makes up for it with energy from the Emilio Estefan-overseen remix.

The BPMs are cranked compared to the original, and given the content of the song I have always found the music in this version to be more congruent to the subject matter than the original offers, especially with the Latin music history that Miami is known for.

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