Rating:
Melbourne-based Deep Street Soul‘s brand of garage-rock tinged funky soul has been a firm MB favourite since the band’s classic cover of the MC5’s Kick Out The Jams rocked up in the monkey’s inbox all the way back in 2009. In the intervening years they’ve put out two LPs, acquired themselves a full-time soul queen singer in the form of Mighty May Johson and been
…MORE
Tag Archives: Deep Street Soul
DEEP STREET SOUL: Come Alive! (2016)
DEEP STREET SOUL: Souls Come Alive (2016)
Rating:
If you like your funk raw, it’s always worth checking out Deep Street Soul who keep it dirty, down on the floor. Originally a blistering four-piece live experience occasionally joined by a vocalist, they netted themselves a full-time singer in the form of ‘Mighty May’ Johnston for last LP Look Out Watch Out and single Souls Come Alive is their long overdue return in the run-
…MORE
DEEP STREET SOUL: Hold On Me (2012)
Rating:
It’s deep funk death match time to see who can do the stankest slice of raw-ass funky sister soul action this year. Meaning? Nothing less than Melbourne’s Deep Street Soul dropping a new single hot on the heels of Brighton’s The Grits’ Strychnine/ (I’d Walk A) Funky Mile 45. On the A-side is Hold On Me (the Mighty May Johnson
…MORE
MONKEYBOXING.COM presents: Filthy Rhythm, Dirty Soul Vol. 2 (2012) Free download
The mighty sequel to last year’s wildly successful free monkeyboxing LP finally arrives: the even filthier and even dirtier Filthy Rhythm, Dirty Soul: Vol. 2 which once more features a selection of the biggest FUNK, SOUL, HIP-HOP, PARTY BREAKS, and REGGAE bangers from 2011 plus a number of unbelievably hot exclusives and rarities from the likes of BADBOE & PROSPER, THE FUNK LEAGUE feat. DIAMOND D & SADAT X, KRASH SLAUGHTA
…MORE
DEEP STREET SOUL: ‘Look Out, Watch Out’ LP (2011) + tracklist + EPK video
Rating:
Look Out, Watch Out is the second LP from Oz band Deep Street Soul and – well – it’s pretty much the main shit when it comes to twenty-first century funk with the dirty soul of sixties grooves. It’s all about the grit see? And just as with the raw original rnb and northern soul of The Excitements LP in the spring and the chunky grooves of T Bird & The Breaks’ second album
…MORE
DEEP STREET SOUL: Look Out, Watch Out (2011)
Rating:
Whoop, whoop! Australia’s Deep Street Soul return with even more fuzz in their funk than before with this double whammy. The A side is a funky-ass slice of uptempo garage-soul featuring the band’s new vocalist – the appropriately raucous-voiced May Johnston who lets rip on the uptempo title track of the DSS’ forthcoming second LP Look Out, Watch Out. As with their last 45
…MORE
MONKEYBOXING PRESENTS: Filthy Rhythm, Dirty Soul Vol. 1 (2011) Free download
Monkeyboxing.com is proud to present Filthy Rhythm, Dirty Soul featuring the dopest cuts from some of the finest current purveyors of FUNK, SOUL, HIP-HOP, NUFUNK, GHETTOFUNK and REGGAE. Includes EXCLUSIVE tracks from SMOOVE (Jalepeno/ Wack), ANDY TAYLOR (Resense/ Wack), and THE HAWK (Record Kicks) along with ALDO VANUCCI, FEATURECAST and THA ‘LIKS massive hip-hop banger from last year, a remix from reggae-remix legend JSTAR and more
…MORE
DEEP STREET SOUL: Straighten Out feat. Randa Khamis 12” – 2010 – Single review
Rating:
Australia’s garage funkers take the final cut from recent LP Deep Street Soul (which comes on like a kind like a garage-ey Meters) and invite Randa Khamis (of Randa And The Soul Kingdom fame) to get all vocal on their ass. There’s no doubting that Ms Khamis’ pipes are in full working order and she’s got all the requisite scream and power although her style’s a bit too warbly for me. Good to hear another vocal cut from this lot but hard not to compare with their genius cover of Kick Out The Jams featuring Tia Hunter. Serves them right for being so dope in the first place. I’ve got no sympathy. Still, if you’re less fussy than me about the vocal style of your soul sisters and looking for something that sounds straight outta Muscle Shoals – welcome home!
DEEP STREET SOUL: Deep Street Soul – 2009 – Album review
Rating:
At the risk of repeating comments made elsewhere about Melbourne’s Deep Street Soul, I’ll mention again that this LP is dirtier than a night with your favourite porn star. This is just as well, for while the deep funk scene is one that seems particularly crammed with technically gifted musicians they are not always as inspired as you might hope. In other words it’s also a scene weighed down by pastiche where the Meters cast a particularly long shadow and if this LP is one where yet again the influence of New Orleans’ favourite funky sons is very much in evidence, it’s testament to Deep Street Soul’s approach that their debut stands out among the crowd.
Where Deep Street demonstrate a bit of an edge over their competition on this is in the fact that they have a real edge – a rocky one even – especially in their guitar sound and also the heavy, filthy production. First off the starting blocks is Crate Diggin which embodies this edge and recalls Live Funk Jam by that other great funky jam band – The Propositions. Album highlight Kick Out The Jams follows and anyone who says this isn’t the best new funk track all year wants workin’ on. It could all have gone terribly wrong in less capable hands but there’s no pussying around here whatsoever. Between them the band and guest vocalist, New York soul sister Tia Hunter, completely own the MC5’s proto-punk anthem and morph it into something that’s probably about as heavy as funky soul can get without actually being garage rock. The other vocal cut is Greenbacks which features London’s Shirley Davis who is every bit the equal of Hunter on an excellent band-penned track. Such is the presence of these two vocal tracks that you wish that there were a whole lot more whereas the remaining nine are all instrumentals and, while excellent, if there’s one thing Deep Street Soul might want to put on their Crimbo list it’s to get a vocalist or at least drop a few more vocal cuts next time around.
As mentioned, by far the larger part of Deep Street Soul is deep funk instrumentals but compare it to something produced at the zenith of the late sixties/ early seventies scene and you’ll realise that Deep Street Soul are subtly heavier. MC5 covers aside, try taking the monstrous riff that forms the basis of Red Raw if you want further proof. You’ll also realise that Monique Boggia plays a mean set of keys whether it be in the form Hammond chops or, in the case of the intro to Now Dig This, nasty clavinet riffs, that Matt Green sure plays a mean guitar and that it’s all rhythm in PJ and Sol Loco’s section. Thus if by the time they get to final cut Straighten Out and it has more than a few shades of the Meters’ version of Simple Song and the Meters own Yeah, You’re Right, they’ve kind of paid in full for the right to indulge in a little bit of pastiche. Not the only good deep funk LP of the year by a long way but easily one of the best.
(Out now on Freestyle)
DEEP STREET SOUL: Kick Out The Jams (feat. Tia Hunter) b/w Greenbacks (feat. Shirley Davis) – 2009 – 7” review
Rating:
Dirtier and grittier than sex in a gravel pit, this inspired cover of The MC5’s seminal garage rock anthem has to be contender for best new soul/funk 45 of the year. The lead single from Melbourne funk band Deep Street Soul’s self-titled LP due November (yes, another world class funk band from the city that’s already given us The Bamboos and Cookin On Three Burners), it comes with sassy sister-funk vocals from New York‘s Tia Hunter and pays homage to Wayne Kramer and co. by lacing the funk guitar with the subtlest of garage-rock inflections. Then, before your bad self is even close to recovering from that one, there’s another dope sister-funk cut on the B-side – the Shirley Davis featuring, Hammond-toting, hip-shaking Greenbacks. All of which shenanigans should convince you beyond doubt that they most definitely done kicked ‘em out. Check the full album review HERE
Released 12 October on Freestyle