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Vocal Discord: Carried away with dance culture's adoration of them, some DJs push aside the vocalists who give their productions an identity: Music Reviews : MW/ Metro Weekly Magazine - weekly Washington DC gay and lesbian entertainment - films, theater, and music.
It's
the most amazing thing: DJ Roger Sanchez can sing like Gene Simmons
and Beyoncé. Heck, even Ciara. Don't believe it? Well,
just listen to the first 20 minutes or so of his new artist album
Come With Me. And then look at the listings for the four
tracks you just heard: ''1. Turn on the Music 2. Take A Chance 3. Not
Enough 4. Lost.'' See any vocalists listed?
Tribal-flavored trackster: Sanchez (Photo by Eva Mueller)
DJs
Andy Caldwell and Ferry Corsten pull the same trick on their new
studio albums. If you didn't know better, you might think there's an
emerging class of gender-bending singing male DJs. But, of course,
you know better. Super-straight Sanchez would not sing like Beyoncé
on record, even if he could. And Caldwell and Corsten don't sound
like women.
Today's
DJs, not content with club- and compilation-based recognition, are
becoming artists. That is, writers and producers of actual
songs, for which they take sole credit, in the process slighting the
vocalists they obviously see as expendable but whose voices give
their productions an identity. How much does it matter? Results are
what count, right?
Well,
it does matter. But the fact is Sanchez and Caldwell have each
created an accomplished set of pop music that could and should find
mass appeal.
Sanchez,
a New Yorker of Dominican descent, is a DJ held in high regard by the
cognoscenti in the house music meccas of New York and Ibiza, the
Spanish resort. He impresses with fervor, producing a banging
tribal-flavored track, such as album opener and first single ''Turn
on the Music,'' with GTO on vocal duties. He serves up a passionate,
bittersweet song right up Deborah Cox's alley, the new dance single
''Lost,'' with the Ciara-esque Lisa Pure on vocals. Sanchez also
creates two breezy, Latin-pop tracks, for which he breaks tradition
and actually gives feature credit to his vocalists -- Latin pop stars
Omar and Alejandro Sanz are too popular to slight.
Like
Sanchez, Caldwell is well-regarded among a subset of dance-music
followers, in this case the even smaller category of soul house. But
instead of the more churchy sounds, the San Francisco-based Caldwell
creates an updated dance version of the secular music popular 15 and
20 years ago, from new wave to disco-colored pop/rock to uptempo-R&B.
Universal Truth is an exceptionally solid collection of
chunky, melodic songs that charm with strong guitar work, courtesy of
Philippo Franchini and Gabriel Rene, and strong vocals from a
rotating cast of female vocalists -- Omega, Gina Rene, Latrice
Barnett, Amma and Lisa Shaw, credited only in the album's liner
notes.
Meanwhile,
the DJ with perhaps the biggest ego in the business, Paul Oakenfold,
bucks the trend and gives credit where credit is due on his new
studio album, A Lively Mind. He identifies every vocalist, and
not just those that are well known (Pharrell Williams, Grandmaster
Flash). Of course, two of the newcomers he features, Spitfire and Bad
Apples, are signed to his own Perfecto label, so he has a vested
interest in giving them recognition.
Again,
it's the results that matter, right? In that case, Oakenfold focused
on the wrong thing. A Lively Mind suffers from serious A.D.D.
Oakenfold got his start remixing rockers (New Order, and especially
U2), but he's worked with hip-hop artists, including Salt N' Pepa and
Ice Cube. As a result, his style -- also heavily influenced by
pretty, fast-paced trance -- has always been a little scattered.
That's never been more apparent than on A Lively Mind, a
cluttered, unfocused collection of hard rock, hip-hop and trance. It
could have been so much better, had he simply followed the template
of first single ''Faster Kill Pussycat,'' featuring actress Brittany
Murphy.
Ultimately,
the problem isn't just that DJs rarely give their singers the credit
they deserve, even though that's shameful enough. The practice also
hinders dance music's success, since only those willing and able can
identify and then seek out the songs they like. A true classic song,
of which many of today's DJs are proving themselves capable of
composing, is generally remembered, and identified, by its singer,
not its writer or producer. Do today's non-singing songwriting DJs
really deserve more credit than that received back in the day by such
pop master-crafters Burt Bacharach and Hal David? Bacharach and David
knew better than to take outward credit -- and yet, with time,
they've gotten plenty of credit. It's possible we wouldn't even
remember or know ''Walk On By'' if the songwriting team stole the
spotlight away from Dionne Warwick, the song's signature vocalist.
Unfortunately, carried away with dance culture's adoration of them,
DJs are doing just that.