Chris Joss - Monomaniacs Volume 1 (2010)
Artist: Chris Joss
Title: Monomaniacs Volume 1
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Eighteenth Street Lounge Music
Genre: Future Jazz, Funk, Electronic, Acid Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue)
Total Time: 40:03 min
Total Size: 222 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Monomaniacs Volume 1
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: Eighteenth Street Lounge Music
Genre: Future Jazz, Funk, Electronic, Acid Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue)
Total Time: 40:03 min
Total Size: 222 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. We Got Some (Part 1&2)
02. Optical
03. Kali Flowers
04. Re-Volt
05. Ford Mustard Cutter
06. Keep On Digging
07. Mo Lovin
08. Shafro
09. Backbeating
10. Highway 75
11. Within
12. Jha Mon
After his sonic journey through the Indian subcontinent on Sticks, producer and multi-instrumentalist Chris Joss has returned to the hardened, dusty, grime-covered grooves and soundscapes of the '70s with Monomaniacs, Vol. 1. The inspiration here is simple: soundtrack music from kung fu, blaxploitation, vintage porn, and grindhouse soundtracks, early-'70s discotheque dance vamps, and even some tough rockist guitar mania fill all 12 tracks. Given the vibe, it's mandatory that three elements are in the formula: breakbeats galore, rubbery, pumped up basslines, and handclaps. Hints of melodies assert themselves on tracks such as “Optical” via a funky B-3, but it's rhythm that drives this mess. Horn sections and primitive synth sounds glide in and out of the mix, as does some spaced-out reverb, but it’s the breaks and bass vamps that hold court. Indian music does make a brief appearance here in “Kali Flowers,” but the phase-shifted sitar is backed by outrageously funky wah-wah guitar, and cracking breaks. It’s got a tough, middle-four bridge that turns it inside out into a rocking soul riff before the sitar and guitars bring us back to the exotic. You can smell the incense. The cowbell breaks on “Ford Mustang Cutter” fuel a banging bassline, a tripped reverb-laden flute solo, and some outre synth sounds in a tough mix that pushes the vamp into overdrive -- naturally. The hard funk in “Mo Lovin,” could be Brother Jack McDuff and his trio with Stevie Wonder on clavinet and the Santana congueros, as it vamps on a theme derived from “Superstition.” Clocking in at under 40 minutes, this is a bangin,’ dancefloor strutting, creatively inspired set that showcases Joss at his nasty best. -- Thom Jurek