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OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: Deltics ()
Date: December 27, 2012 20:33

Rescue Me had one of THE greatest bass lines.





[www.guardian.co.uk]


"As we say in England, it can get a bit trainspottery"



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2012-12-27 20:33 by Deltics.

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: latebloomer ()
Date: December 27, 2012 20:38

Forgive me for this, but my first thought was that she belongs here.

[www.iorr.org]

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: Big Al ()
Date: December 27, 2012 20:40

Just checked my i-Pod and realized this classic 60's recording is absent. Will have to download it!

Rest In Peace, Fontella Bass

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: tomk ()
Date: December 27, 2012 20:51

Rescue Me recorded at Chess in Chicago (which I did not know until recently).
RIP.

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: Silver Dagger ()
Date: December 27, 2012 21:06

Killer diller tune. One of the great soul hits of the 60s. RIP Fontella.

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: tomcasagranda ()
Date: December 27, 2012 22:07

She did a great soundtrack album with the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Les Stances Au Sophie.

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: tomcasagranda ()
Date: December 27, 2012 22:24

Les Stances A Sophie, I mean.

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: NICOS ()
Date: December 28, 2012 03:13

R.I.P................ Fontella Bass

__________________________

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: stonesrule ()
Date: December 28, 2012 06:08

Sorry to hear of her passing. After hearing "Rescue Me" it was impossible to forget the name of Fontella Bass.

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: Floorbird ()
Date: December 28, 2012 14:30

Great song, one that brings back lots of memories. RIP: Fontella.

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: loog droog ()
Date: December 28, 2012 18:51

[www.latimes.com]

[www.latimes.com]

Fontella Bass: An appreciation




By Randall Roberts, Los Angeles Times Pop Music Critic
December 28, 2012, 10:09 a.m.
There are two works that illustrate the range of Fontella Bass' singing power.

One is a gut-busting soul cry, “Rescue Me,” a propellant R&B banger from 1965 that became Bass' signature.

The other, equally vital, is a nine-minute thrill ride, “Theme de Yoyo,” which drives funk and boundary-busting jazz through one instrumental climax after another on the classic 1970 album “Les Stances a Sophie” from the Art Ensemble of Chicago.

Any appreciation of Bass, who died at 72 in her hometown of St. Louis on Wednesday, must first acknowledge these two pieces of music.

Bass never achieved the fame that fellow belters Aretha Franklin or Etta James did, but she charted an arguably more fascinating course through her musical life. Her stubborn vocal insistence in her early soul hits — “Rescue Me,” “Leave It in the Hands of Love” and “Our Day Will Come” — was mirrored in her artistic temperament. She chose aesthetic expansion over chart success at nearly every turn.

That independent spirit can be seen in the musicians with whom she chose to collaborate, including the Art Ensemble (the free-jazz collective that featured her then husband, the trumpeter Lester Bowie), the World Saxophone Quartet and David Murray in the 1970s and 1980s, and the Cinematic Orchestra in the 2000s.

Her early 1970s solo gem “Free” harnessed the power of the funk and soul music by Sly & the Family Stone, the Staple Singers and James Brown, and although that album wasn't a hit at the time, it's one of the overlooked pleasures of the era.

Like much of her music after the late '60s, “Free” showcased a spirit that preferred loose, spatial structures to the constraints of pop songs. In that role, in fact, Bass' voice and lyrics often were the structure, especially when anchoring instrumental chaos.

Bass was musical royalty in St. Louis, a city whose essential soul tradition is often overshadowed by neighbors Memphis to the south and Chicago to the north. Along with East St. Louis across the Mississippi River, the city had a vital R&B and jazz scene that spawned artists such as Miles Davis, Ike & Tina Turner, Chuck Berry, Ann Peebles, Oliver Sain and Julius Hemphill.

Like fellow St. Louisian Josephine Baker in the '20s, Bass relocated to Paris, where in the '70s opportunities for American jazz and soul musicians were often more bankable than in America. The essential document of that period is “Theme de Yoyo,” which, like the rest of “Les Stances,” was recorded for a French film of the same name. It's a heaving, bawdy sexual romp set on the Champs-Elysees used in the film to score a scene in a French discotheque.

The Ensemble specialized in brass-heavy breakdowns that showcased Bowie and sax players Joseph Jarman and Roscoe Mitchell, as well as bassist Malachi Favors and percussionist Don Moye's hard rhythms. “Yoyo” is vital evidence of its success.

Above a groove that suggests a collision between Ornette Coleman and James Brown, Bass describes a passion in Paris that's sweaty and messy. “Your head is like a Yoyo/Your neck is like the string/Your body's like a Camembert/ Oozing from its skin.”

The full-throated Bass delivers such couplets patiently over the course of the nine minutes, each offered amid a screeching soul-funk-jazz groove that occasionally collapses into a structureless mess like a plane in a tailspin, only to recover the groove just in time.

It's an art that Bass perfected over her artistic life. Though she only occasionally released albums, in the mid-'90s she put out three acclaimed soul records that confirmed a powerful voice. And when she teamed with British jazz/EDM fusion group the Cinematic Orchestra for studio work in 2002, an enduring voice was introduced to a new generation.

Bass might have been considered to be a one-hit wonder in most of the world, but in her city she offered a model by which to mark a path. For her, “Rescue Me” was a ticket out, and she took full advantage.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2012-12-28 21:18 by loog droog.

Re: OT: RIP Fontella Bass
Posted by: satisfaction2 ()
Date: December 28, 2012 19:18

RIP Fontella

Thank you!



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