Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

24→24 Music

1981 album by Arthur Russell From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

24→24 Music
Remove ads

24→24 Music is a 1981 album by Dinosaur L, the disco project of American musician Arthur Russell.[1] Enlisting a variety of musicians, Russell recorded the album in 1979 primarily at Blank Tapes studio in New York.[2] It was released on Sleeping Bag Records, the label started by Russell and Will Socolov, and accompanied by the single "Go Bang! #5."

Quick facts Studio album by Dinosaur L, Released ...
Remove ads

Background

The album is an improvised composition grounded in disco but characterized by rhythmic shifts every 24 bars, with Russell running the recordings through two 24-track tape recorders set up by producer Bob Blank.[1] The recording featured a large number of musicians, including the Ingram Brothers band.[2] It was recorded at Blank Tapes studio in June 1979, with the exception of "#7," recorded in April at the New York avant-garde venue The Kitchen,[3] where the material was initially performed.[4] Steven Hall later described its first performance: "it was like really hot dance music and no one got it. The idea that Arthur would turn around and bring that music into their venue and present it as serious music was really very challenging to them, and very threatening to them."[4]

Remove ads

Release

The first limited pressing of this record had a hand-made silk-screened cover.[4] Tracks from the album received significant airtime at New York clubs thanks to DJ Larry Levan, a friend of Russell.[5]

The album was reissued on CD in 2007 with bonus tracks, and again as a box-set in 2011 featuring rare full-length remixes.[5]

Reception

More information Review scores, Source ...

AllMusic called the album Russell's "most delightful" work, and described it as exploring "the blurry hinterlands where disco, downtown avant improv, new music, and funk meet no wave playfulness."[1] Following its reissue, Pitchfork stated that the album "falls in a long line of deserved reissues" of Russell's work, and called it "disco at its loosest, warmest, and weirdest".[2] Melody Maker called it "a fluid, constantly shifting piece of music that’s intensely danceable and spacially disorientating at the same time."[7]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Arthur Russell.

More information No., Title ...
More information No., Title ...
Remove ads

Personnel

Credits adapted from liner notes.[8]

  • Arthur Russell – cello (pizz), vocals
  • Wilbur Bascomb – bass
  • Mustafa Ahmed – congas (track 4)
  • Jeff Berman – drums (track 4)
  • Rik Albani – trumpet
  • Julius Eastman – vocals, keyboards
  • Peter Gordon – tenor saxophone
  • Kent Goshorn – vocals
  • Butch Ingram – bass
  • Jimmy Ingram – keyboards
  • John Ingram – drums
  • Timmy Ingram – congas
  • William Ingram – guitar
  • Jill Kroesen – vocals
  • Marie-Chantal Martin – vocals
  • Denise Mercedes – guitar
  • Rome Neal – percussion, vocals
  • Larry Saltzman – guitar (track 4)
  • Ed Tomney – guitar
  • Peter Zummo – trombone

Production

  • Arthur Russell – production
  • Peter Gordon – production (track 1)
  • Ray Janos – mastering
  • Mark Grafe – engineer
  • Janos – lacquer cut
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads