Song Of The Day 8/17/2015: Wilbur "Bad" Bascomb – “Black Grass”
Everyday, DJs would head out into the streets of New York to find beats. They would look for thrift shops with large collections of used records. The major record stores were next, to find the latest radio hits. However, the best stores were the small mom and pop record shops throughout the five boroughs of the city. Unlike the bigger commercial stores, the mom and pop record shops would have the old and the new. There wasn't any place that the hip-hop DJ wouldn't dig for beats. It could be mom's, dad's, aunt's, uncle's, cousin's, neighbor's or friend's. No one's record collection was excluded. If there were mountains with caves full of vinyl, you would find a DJ mining for hip-hop gold.That kind of prospector's gold rush isn't much in fashion these days, now that we can all
Then you find something as crazy and great as Wilbur "Bad" Bascomb's "Black Grass," a miracle of '70s physics. Bascomb was a session bassist who played for a million big names and projects: Roy Ayers' Ubiquity, Jeff Beck (the Wired album), Grace Jones, Bo Diddley, and the soundtracks for the 1979 movie version of Hair and the attempted movie version of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. (A gig's a gig.) "Black Grass", the second song on the first volume of Octopus Breaks, which in turn was reissued as Vol. 1 of UBB, is an eminently logical pairing of funk beats with banjo. Given that the gulf between country and black music of the early 20th century is way, way narrower than you might think (just ask Jimmie Rodgers when he comes back to life), it's really a sort of naturalism on wax.