You'll Hear It: Full Album Deep Dives with Jazz Musicians - "Voodoo" – D'Angelo
Episode Date: October 20, 2025In light of D'Angelo's passing, we're replaying our episode on Voodoo from June 2025. This Grammy-winning, genre-defying album changed the sound of R&B, soul, and hip-hop forever. And it ...has seriously influenced the playing of so many musicians, including our own Adam Maness. From Questlove’s behind-the-beat drumming to Roy Hargrove’s horn arrangements, Voodoo is packed with the kind of deep musicality that jazz musicians truly connect with.Twenty-five years later, Voodoo still hits harder than many albums of its generation. We've heard from so many of you in the comments on Spotify and YouTube about what this album, and D'Angelo's music, means to you. Tell us how D'Angelo has influenced you in the comments on Spotify or YouTube: https://youtu.be/AYqmFNF2s0U Watch Open Studio perform D'Angelo's "Spanish Joint": https://youtu.be/CG5yqmkj0G4
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey there, folks, Adam here.
And Peter.
And in lieu of our regularly scheduled episode today, we are going to pay tribute to one of our favorite artists that we lost last week.
Yes.
As I'm sure most of you know by now, DeAngelo, Mr. Michael Archer, passed along just a few days ago.
I guess it'll be about a week by the time, depending on when you hear this.
And we've been a little bit of a loss.
it's been kind of overwhelming to see the music community,
fellow musicians that work with DeAngelo, the fans,
and really just sort of the cultural zeitgeist of this country,
sort of rallying around this hole that's there now.
So we were a little bit, we've been talking,
Adam and I, just a little bit unsure of what to do.
And so we've decided that we're just going to play an episode that we did
relatively recently on his DeAngelo's masterpiece Voodoo, where we go in depth. And it was one of the
most joyous musical experiences I remember from this year. For sure. Getting to experience it with you,
Adam, in real time as we died. Did we dissect the record? We just enjoyed the record. I mean,
it's a little bit of dissecting. It's one of the most influential albums. And DiAngelo, as for all of his
albums, is one of the most influential artists of both of our lifetimes. Yeah. And yeah, like you said,
There's this big hole in the community now.
And I think everybody's kind of scrambling to find the right words.
And there really are no right words.
No, no.
There's an artist so incredible at such a young age, way too young.
Yeah.
And we thought the best way to do that was just to replay our joy.
Right, right.
And so, of course, at the time that we've recorded the episode you're about to hear now,
we had no idea that DeAngelo was even ill and that he wasn't going to be with us.
But I remember from just the comments and the feedback we got from this episode,
episode already, even before this tragedy of this last week, it was some of the most like
emotionally connected communications I felt from the listeners.
For sure.
Like there's a bond that we all have.
And of course, it's now even more prescient that he isn't with us anymore.
But his music, his output was small in terms of numbers, records.
Yeah.
But his impact was massive.
Yeah.
Please enjoy this episode.
And also just go listen to some DeAngel, as I'm sure you already are.
Go listen to Brown Sugar, listen to Black Messiah, listen to the live.
album and enjoy voodoo.
Yep. Oh, yeah. Okay.
I'm Adam Mous. And I'm Peter Martin. And you're listening to me on your podcast. Music
Explore. Explore brought today by Open Studio. Go to Open Studio jazz.com for out.
Your jazz lesson needs. And Peter, you can go to our brand new bespoke. Did you say brand new?
Brand new bespoke. Open Studio music, YouTube channel. We're posting performances from not just some of
our performances for the intros and outtros here on the show, but also some originals that you and I are writing based on the shorts and the YouTube videos we make. It's exciting, man.
We're not actually posting performances. We're actually, dare I say, posting dope performances, or at least some of them.
Wow, really go out on a limb there. Dare you may.
No, there's a couple of them that I actually have been enjoying listening to. A little bit of a soundtrack of my current life, which I don't usually do with stuff that I'm a part of.
So that's been fun.
There's some nice stuff.
We're having a great time over there.
So go check that out.
That's open studio music on YouTube.
That's right.
Dot com.
Good.
Dot org.
Is it YouTube.
org?
No.
Peter, big day.
Yes, this is a big day.
Very big day.
And I know we always say that.
These are big albums.
No, I think there's been a couple times we didn't say anything.
I know now people are going to be like, oh, how come you didn't say it for that album?
But this is a big album.
Yeah, this is a big album.
We're going to take you back to a time that I think even, you're going to take you back to a time that I think,
young Adam Manus might remember.
It's 25 years ago.
No, this is 100% in my sort of top 10 most influential albums of my life.
And I think a lot of folks of my generation, of your generation,
anybody who is sort of like aware around the year 2000s.
Yeah, older millennials to younger Gen Xers.
That's right.
And beyond.
If you were into music, you couldn't miss DeAngelo's Voodoo album.
Yes.
It was just an incredible huge hit album,
commercially, but also artistically.
Yes.
And it really has influenced the whole generation of players.
Even if you don't know, you've been,
you might be super young listening to this.
You have been influenced by this album via the players
that you listen to very long.
Are really young people now, do they look at this record
like what's going on or?
I always wonder about that.
Like when we were coming up,
we think about like a classic record.
Like we've done talking book,
what's going on.
And that was like 25 years, you know,
produced before I probably was really,
oh, no, no, I was hearing it like 15 years after.
Well, maybe this conversation
we can have towards the end about like how has this album aged yeah you know what i mean because now
we are 25 years out from it and how is it received now yeah and it was like a really
anticipated record because um he doesn't make a lot of albums de angeles made four records let's go
ahead and put that out there now in like 30 years yeah in more than 30 years but you know he's like this
record because brown sugar which came out like was that like 94 95 something like that amazing album yeah um
was was a huge hit record
And then, but this is a little bit kind of a different record.
But within the music world, and I think within the general public, the music aware public,
it was kind of known that he was working on a record and that it was not coming out and that it was going to come out and it didn't come out.
So it was definitely anticipated in a way that I think doesn't quite exist anymore because albums are still a thing.
But like people are dropping singles.
They're dropping, you know, disc tracks at midnight, you know.
That's true.
A lot of pop artists are kind of constantly releasing singles.
Yeah.
leading up to an album and in between.
Yes.
Even like right after an album that'll release a single that's like,
this might be on the next one.
We'll see how it goes.
But this was like, we heard from DeAngelo in 94, like he said, in Brown Sugar.
And then we don't hear from him again, really, until this drops in 2000.
I think is this when this came out?
This came out in 2000, February 2000, but they were working on it like, you know, 96, 97, I mean
97, 98, 99, I guess, mainly 98, 99.
He did have a great record that came out, which is Live at the Jazz Cafe.
A lot of people don't know about this record.
It came out everywhere, but it was especially big in Japan.
I remember I picked that up.
That came out like 98.
And it was recorded with his touring band,
and it's like a lot of the brown sugar material
and a couple of covers as well.
It's killing.
Incredible record.
It's killing.
So that was a little bit of a bridge between those things.
I remember getting the CD in Japan that had bonus tracks
that they used to do, great versions of that.
So this was officially actually his third record.
But for most people, this was kind of like his second record.
It's a pretty hipster run you just went on.
there. This is a record most people don't know about. It's really big in Japan. No, no, no, when I tell
people, I was it only released? I had to look it up. It was released everywhere. Incredible record,
actually, live at the London Jazz Cafe. So let's talk a little bit more about DeAngelo himself,
the man himself. So, born in 1974, in Richmond, Virginia. Richmond, Virginia, VA. His father was a
Pentecostal minister, came up in the church, played a lot of gospel music, played the organ, played the
piano, sang, played the drums.
And it's all over his music.
It's all over his music.
And then interestingly, his mother was described as a jazz
officianto, if not a jazz musician, but a listener, very much into the church, too,
but loved Miles Davis and a bunch of the classic records and exposed her son to that.
So he had that kind of magical upbringing of, you know, kind of almost like that
trinity of like soul music, you know, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gay, really steeped in that.
of course, Prince, Michael Jackson, that whole tradition, but also gospel.
He talks about the Hawkins family, like those recordings, once he heard that just changed
his whole, his whole thing, a lot of musical references and all of his recordings to that.
Jazz, you know, he was very jazz aware.
Roy Hargrove, who we're going to talk about a lot, who was a huge influence on this record,
a huge presence on many of the tracks on this, somebody that DiAngelo, even before he got
to New York had been listening to and sort of tracking.
Roy was a couple years older than him.
So, interesting influences.
Every jazz musician that I was friends with at this time, I had just moved to New York when this came out.
And all of my musical friends there were obsessed with this album.
This is definitely like catnip for jazz musicians.
Yes.
It's got Roy on it, of course.
But more than that, it's just there's a feeling of it that you can hear he's steeped in several different genres of music that.
A lot of minor nines.
A lot of minor nines.
Yeah.
I mean, I felt the connection from Brown Sugar.
Yeah.
Just like immediately.
Like, this feels very familiar.
Yeah.
And I mean, I remember Brown Sugar, like that was before that record even came out.
I remember Mark Whitfield who played on a couple tracks on there.
Friend of the show.
Friend of the show.
Dear friend of mine for many years.
Larry Grenadier is playing some on that.
It was a bunch of jazz, like, little influences on that record.
But that, you know, Brown Sugar maybe was seen even by DeAngelo himself as more of like,
a R&B type of record.
And I'm going to put it out there now.
Oh, boy.
My first thing on this.
I think this is not an R&B record.
Okay, we're going to get into this and listen.
I think this is a straight up soul record, whatever that means.
You're going to have to define some genres here and then give us some reasons.
You can't just throw this out there without any thing to back it up.
Well, brown sugar is definitely more.
I know that they were talking about, you know, Neo Soul and that whole thing,
which is like a very sloppy term in a way.
But it was definitely, you know, a trend.
But I think that this record is just,
It's almost a reaction to sort of that 90s R&B sound, which, you know, really started in the late 80s.
You got a problem with Jodacy? What's up?
Jodacy, SWV, TLC, a lot of acronyms, a lot of initials, boys to men.
And really like Whitney Houston, even a lot of kind of pop crossover.
Can we just have a 90s R&B episode now that you're saying all these names?
No, I love all that stuff.
But this kind of sound, okay, yes, it's at the end of the decade.
But it's very much a 90s record, actually.
It came out in February of 2000.
But all this stuff was made in the 90s.
And all this recording, I mean, like baby face, Janet Jackson, you know, Terry Lewis, Jimmy Jam.
Like that all sound, which was like a lot of stuff I listened to when I was young.
This was something different.
And I think there was definitely an appetite for it.
Obviously, it's very connected with, you know, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gay, George Clinton,
Cool in the gang.
Yeah.
With like Prince and Michael Jackson is sort of a connector.
A lot of Prince.
A lot of Prince.
We're going to get into that.
So. But it's got some great personalities on here.
Why don't we listen first to the first track?
Is that a good way to get into it?
It definitely is.
Playa, playa.
So you already know this is a different kind of record, right?
High hat.
Yeah, from the first cross stick.
Yeah.
It sounds different.
Yeah.
The dry-ass cross stick.
Amirah Thompson, of course, Questlove, commonly known as drums, production, input all over this record.
So this almost choir-like layering of DeAngel's voice,
You're going to hear throughout the record some of the genius I think that really
connects the musicality of this this album.
Very talking bookish.
Yes.
The Pino Palladino?
Pino Palladino on bass.
The syncopation.
Of course, the laid back, the offset.
How does this groove feel to you?
I mean, for me, it feels pretty awesome.
It feels awesome.
It's still startling how behind the beat some of those vocals.
Right.
Layback.
Yeah, and we're going to talk about it.
I have actually Amir talking about this sum about how that came about.
Obviously, the Jay Dillon influence is huge on this record,
although he's not listed anywhere on the liner notes or anything famously.
But with that interpretation,
Dexter Gordon-ish.
Yeah, but if you think about, like,
if Pino is right there at the beat,
and then Questlove is maybe just, he's a little bit behind,
and then DiAngelo is much behind it, you know.
Sometimes, sometimes floating way behind, sometimes on it.
The guitar is Dino Campbell.
But I think Pino and Amir's hookup on this is...
Can you understand one word that...
No, I can't understand anything.
But, you know, to me, one of the striking things is from the opening track.
I think all of the hallmarks of Voodoo are here.
Yes.
What we're going to hear for the rest, which is there's such a distinct sound between Pino,
Palladino and Questlove, right?
The sound of the drums and the sound of the bass.
I can't actually think of, I mean,
it is the sound of voodoo.
Yes, that's sound, right?
And it's one of the more distinctive drum and bass hookups,
I think, in music history.
Yes, yeah.
It's fantastic.
You play that sound and you're like, that's voodoo.
Exactly.
And it was so influential on so many people,
I mean, when this came out,
even though, again, like,
if we look at maybe J.
Dilla, the great Detroit
producer
drum on the MPC
you know
just force of nature
he really kind of
conceptualized this and had
demonstrated this and had
produced this sound already so it was
very much picking up on that
but I think they were doing it in a way
on this record that was like a lot
of these are like just live takes
going through and then the vocals would get layered
and the horns would get layered but everything else was played live
very like organic
in the studio, you've talked about the cross stick,
you know, that Questlove is doing.
There's almost no snare drum on, I mean, actual like,
snare drum on this record.
It's so much cross stick.
In fact, when the snare comes, I think it's kind of stomach.
I mean, when your cross stick sounds that great,
it makes a lot of sense.
But for those you that are like,
what the hell are you guys talking about behind the beat?
It just sounds like it's grooving.
It absolutely sounds like it's, it is grooving.
It's a great fear.
But this is Questlove, Amir,
a little bit about this drag time.
You know, by the time that DeAngelo and I started,
the voodoo record,
which was like mid-96.
That was the hardest thing ever
because he constantly,
like, he wanted me to drag the beat,
but then he dragged the beat behind me.
And so now I've got to program my mind
to think, okay, this is the metronome,
and now he wants me to play,
which is, you know,
I started having issues,
like, well, what if other drummers,
like the musician community is going to laugh at me?
like, no, man, trust me.
Use the force.
That's, he used all these Star Wars analogies with me.
Like, use the force, man.
And I'd never seen Star Wars, so.
Yeah.
So that's kind of, you know, where that came from.
There was definitely some tension.
This took several years, like, to go through this.
And then I think Pino Pino Palladino was really sort of the connector because he would
bridge that, like, between the actual time and that drag time.
He was kind of right in there, wouldn't you say?
Yeah.
you know, was really like locked in with the bass,
but then there was a lot of,
we're gonna hear like,
especially on chicken grease,
where there's almost like a contrapuntal thing,
rhythmically happening between like the bass drum,
certainly the cross stick, the guitar riffs,
and what Pino's playing on there.
That's really, really interesting
and creates a very unique kind of syncopation.
Yeah, it's so funny because I feel like it's only been
maybe in the last 10 years that we started to,
in at least popular black American music,
started to weave out of sort of the Dilla beat style
that you hear a lot of young musicians playing
and we can, especially in the last maybe five years,
get a really glimpse of it now from slightly ahead of it.
I guess behind it, where we are in history.
But now you can look back at it
and this album is definitely one of the like,
oh, this can be very, very popular.
Just sort of like the drag time beat
and then it would take over
a lot of styles of music from here on out
for like 10, 15 years.
Yeah, and the thing is, it's not on every track on here so acutely.
Yeah.
You know, it kind of comes and goes and I think it's very, I think it's been exaggerated that
like, oh, everybody's always playing behind.
I'm like, if everybody's playing behind the beat, then they're all playing together.
There's almost like this looseness to it.
Like, that's part of the feel of like how it doesn't fit into the grid.
And I think that a lot of this was either conscious or unconscious reaction to that very, what R&B music and pop and hip hop.
like everything was tight to the grid, digital.
This whole record was recorded analog.
Like to tape at a time when like Pro Tools was always...
It's a comment back on the computers that had taken over
and the drum machines that had taken over.
And like we're gonna...
And it's so funny because it all comes out of Jay Dilla
who's using...
Yeah, exactly.
In this way.
But it's...
If you want proof of the sort of ubiquitousness of this beat,
next time you're on a gig with any millennial drummer,
just shout Dilla beat!
Yeah, and watch what happens.
Because they can all do it.
And they can all...
This weird look.
They can change their posture.
they can all do it.
Yeah, yeah.
And I mean, I think, too, like, there's,
it's interesting you say about the Dilla being on the machine,
Questlove, he sounds, there's parts of this
that he's playing so specific
and like no fills or anything
in exactly some way that it sounds like it's looped.
I think there might have been some looping on this,
but I always thought this record had a bunch of loops.
But hearing them talk about it, they're like, no,
they recorded everything live together in the room.
I mean, I'm not surprised at all.
He's the drummer for the roots.
Right, exactly.
That's what he does.
No, he's incredible.
And obviously, there's no click track or anything.
But the grid is there, but it's like they're dancing all around it.
Okay, so once, so basically I think DeAngel coming out of Brown Sugar was really, for his next record, wanted to do, he had a sound in mind.
And he really wanted to, like, do his own music and do stuff in a way and also just create in the studio.
So him and Quest Love were already connected and some other folks.
and actually Charlie Hunter
We're going to get to Charlie Hunter
A huge influence on this.
It already recorded some stuff with them
where he was playing bass and guitar.
But around that time there was a Bibi King record
and this was kind of one of these records
This was kind of having one of his big revivals
and then a bunch of different guests
and DiAngelo was going to be guesting on one track
and Pino Paladino
bassist from
where are you from if you're from if you're well?
Wales. Wales. There you go.
I was trying. I was like, he's from Welsh. No, he is Welsh.
He's from Wales.
He's from Wales.
Legendary basis. It wasn't like super well known, but I mean, he was like a session cat and played with some also huge tracks and stuff.
I don't know that he'd done a lot of this kind of stuff that people were aware of.
But he was on this B.B. King session. And apparently when DeAngelo got there and before B.B. King came in, he kind of went over to the piano was playing like some Marvin Gay stuff or whatever.
And Pino started playing with him. And DeAngel was like,
And then he was asking, like, wait, who was that?
I like that kind of sound.
He went into some of his James Chambers and stuff.
Well, let's hear a Pinole talk about it, actually.
But, you know, there was an immediate connection.
As soon as we literally, the second verse of that song,
where Dee took the lead, he was playing, I think he was playing piano and took the lead.
And he took the lead, and I'm playing, and I'm like, damn, he sounds so good.
And it kind of informed me, you know, like, all of a sudden I was like, man, I can do, yeah.
And I just went for some shit, you know?
Hearing his voice inspired me to try some Jamison-style, you know, walking around a little bit more, playing some busy, busy bass stuff.
And I felt him react to that immediately.
Someone happened on that tune, but that was Beebe King, too.
Wow.
You know, Bibi made that happen.
So here's the track.
This is going into the second verse with DiAngelo.
Start to go down.
It's actually great to hear DiAngelo on such a straight-ahead track like this.
It's really awesome.
To hear him on, first of all, I'm such a sucker for those slickly produced artist,
legend at the end of their career, making an album with a bunch of young upstarts.
I dig in every time.
I like it so much.
But to hear DeAngelo with like a slickly produced session musician heavy, it's very fun.
Yeah, it's great, great.
So that was 97.
I came out in 97.
I think they recorded 97 too.
So that's where Pino and DeAngelo first connected
and then DeAngel invited him in to the session.
And so they had already recorded a couple of tunes with Charlie Hunter
and maybe we'll wait to get to that.
Or do we want to jump in that already.
Let's jump in.
Let's jump in already.
I like it.
Look at that.
Yeah.
And so probably the most famous,
I think he did three tracks on here.
And Charlie Hunter, if you're not aware of him, check him out.
He's amazing jazz and beyond guitarist.
But he was playing an eight-string.
I think he plays a seven-string now.
I've seen him play a seven-string.
But he was playing eight-string then,
which was like basically it's a bass and a guitar.
And he's playing with his thumb, the bass parts.
And what a guitar is, he's doing two jobs.
It's especially made guitar.
You're getting two musicians for the price of one with it.
And he's by far one of the greatest in the world at that.
Yeah.
Truly, like a special, special person.
Yeah.
And so how DiAngelo became aware of Charlie Hunter apparently was
he was watching, this is of course, like pre-internet day,
or at least, yeah, I guess pre-internet, very much internet.
There used to be a cable station.
Do you know what cable is?
You remember cable, right?
I do.
Okay.
A cable station called Bet on Jazz.
There was BET, too, which was huge at the time.
Yeah, yeah.
Talking about 90s R&B.
Yeah, yeah.
And so they had started this jazz station, Bet on Jazz,
and they didn't have a lot of content.
But it was a 24-hour.
You had to be 24 hours because it was cable television, right?
Not enough jazz?
Right.
Exactly.
Well, because they would only use stuff that was, like,
recorded in their studios in D.C.
I actually played on a cup. I did a thing with Mark Whitfield, quartet.
But if you went into the studio and did stuff for them, they would play at old people,
but like, oh, I saw you on bed on jazz. I saw you again.
Oh, I saw you. And like so many people would see it because they would just loop the stuff
all night long. So Charlie Hunter had done something with his band, and DiAngelo heard him
late at night watching in the hotel room and was like, oh man, who is that?
And so then he went out and got all those records like, listen. And apparently this is how
DeAngelo does it. When he gets, he did the same thing with Roy
When he hears something he likes, he just becomes like encyclopedic knowledge of it.
And it's like absorbs the whole thing.
Because Charlie Hunter said when he got into the studio with him, it was like, he knew all his stuff.
And it's like, man, can you do this?
And I heard you do it on this.
It's like, I don't know.
He's like, no, no, you played it in the fourth bar of that thing on your record.
No, it doesn't surprise me that the guy that takes eight years, 10 years to make an album.
It's super detailed with his research and everything.
Right.
So first, I want to play you the demo that this has been passed around a lot.
So I don't think I'm out of turn by playing this year.
This is all over the internet, I believe.
But this is DeAngela actually at the piano with the demo for Spanish Joint.
It's interesting to hear how, because it ended up, it was actually co-written, they said, by DiAngelo and Roy Hargrove.
So Roy definitely had some stuff that he put on it.
And I know we're going to hear Charlie Harder put something on it.
But here's DiAngelo, the demo.
Okay, I'll come on.
This joy, I wrote called Spanish Joint.
It's a new voodoo album.
Joint I wrote called Spanish joint.
I've heard this before.
Minor 6.
F. Miner 6.
Better put this one on you.
I know.
Just like this.
The vibe was.
And then, you know, there's these different sections and stuff.
Russ Elevado, who was the engineer.
He produced some of these tracks.
Was a huge influence on this record.
One of the huge personalities was there with DeAngel, like, all the time.
He later went on to produce the R.H. Factor record to Roy Hargrove, incredible engineer.
He's the one who really pushed them to do.
everything analog, nothing digital, no pro tools and stuff.
But this is him talking about how this came about the Spanish joint track.
Where did Spanish joint come out?
Actually he played that song for me on the piano and he was saying that he should probably
get Charlie Hunter on it or something.
And Charlie's last day he was about to leave and D came up to me and said, you know, is there
anything I'm forgetting is that there's a song we should try to do.
And I was like, well, how about Spanish joint?
And he's like, Spanish joint, oh, shit.
So he played it for Charlie and they did it pretty much.
We got the first take, that's the first take you hear, within like an hour or something.
They kind of put the arrangement together and that was it.
It's so funny because it's, and we'll play the Charlie Hunter version that made the album.
Yeah.
But hearing that demo, it's major Stevie vibes.
on the demo.
For sure.
Like there's,
when he comes in
with the melody,
singing the melody,
you get a much more
Stevie sense of the song
like a Stevie Wonder influence
than you do on the one
that made the record.
Right, right.
And that piano
is at Electric Lady Studio,
which we should mention
was another personality
in this record.
For sure.
Jimmy Hendrits is bespoke
built studio for him
from the early 70s.
That's where this whole record
was recorded.
And he was actually
playing on the keyboards
and the piano
that Stevie.
Stevie recorded their talking book.
So there's a lot of direct connections with that, of course, with that room.
So here's the track, the actual track, and then we're going to break it down because I got some
isolation on it too.
One take.
A little phase on his voice.
Very talking bookish.
Is that snare?
I think he's sneaking some snare.
It's still cross-stick in it.
Yeah, snare.
Yeah.
But all those details you already heard in the demo.
It's all there, yeah.
The Roy Chorus.
Yeah, Roy Hargrove made everything he was ever on better.
Yeah.
By magnitudes.
This bridge.
And apparently each of the sections, there was no set form.
There was just the three sections.
And they were tracking it live, you know, in one take.
We're going to listen to some more, some isolation.
They were tracking it live, so, because Charlie Hunter
had talked about, like, he's like, I didn't really know
when I was supposed to go to the next part, but DeAngelo would just be like,
and then we'd go to that.
And so, like, he showed him the three parts,
and then he's like, I'll show you when we're going to it.
And you can hear at the end, it gets, we're going to go all the way to the end
because it's got like some really cool stuff where it feels like it's,
and then they go up a half, you know, they transpose it.
It's cool.
Okay, so let's go over to our new secret,
bespoke system.
And, okay, so what you were hearing
what you just heard
is like very,
it sounds like there's a bass.
Well, check this out.
So if we listen to Just,
that's just the guitar part, right?
And now I'm going to add in the bass.
And then we're going to go to Just the Bass.
But this is all happening on the same
instance.
This is all happening on the same instance.
At the same time.
This is the set.
Yeah.
So he's doing.
Yeah.
you see Charlie Hunter live?
Yeah, this isn't even like by far the most impressive stuff you can do.
When you see him live, he usually has two amps on stage, a bass amp and a guitar amp.
And he's got two outputs from this guitar, even though it's all right here on the guitar.
And then we can add in.
That's all you need.
Killing drum group.
Add a little Roy hard grab on top of that.
Oh, you want a little Roy?
So Roy added the more parts after everything else track live.
And I love this here.
Yeah, I mean.
And he voiced all that stuff out of those open doors.
Of course he did.
First of all, Roy is a melodic genius, as we both know.
But what you get, when you get Roy, is you get this, like, instant arranger as well.
It's so good.
Like, all those little clusters, that's not something that most people just hear.
And Roy's hearing that stuff so easily.
It's really cool.
So this is without drums.
Incredible voice.
The counterpoint between the guitar line and Roy's stuff.
And the clown to find out of fire.
Don't you can really hear the Virginia.
Yeah.
And he can just isolate the voice.
That bass line.
If you don't know Charlie Hunter, he is playing bass and soloing at the same time.
Yeah, this is all.
So let me just take it back because this solo, I'm going to give you just, just Charlie Hunter.
Let me make sure I do this right here.
Charlie Hunter and Roy, because Roy added these horns after.
So one take, Charlie Hunter's playing the bass part, he's soloing.
Roy puts so much stuff in there, but it just works somehow because it's a pretty busy solo, right?
Check it out.
This is just Roy and Charlie.
And then Roy's getting even more stuff.
Yeah, Roy's being a part of the rhythm section.
He's comping.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's like he's playing the right hand of an organ or something.
Right, right.
And then check out this stuff.
That's just Roy and DeAngelo.
All that layered voices.
Killing.
Isn't that killing?
Everybody back in.
This is where it's kind of unsure what they were going to do.
Yeah, I mean, it's so funny because the album took so long.
But one of the most...
That's such a Roy, like,
that's the way he improvised.
One of the most charming parts about an album that took this long is that it still feels so loose.
Yes.
And like everything was on the day.
Yeah.
You know, they didn't get too precious with like, we got to really make sure that it sounds like someone produced this.
Like it just sounds like musicians letting what's happening happen.
This is my favorite music.
Giovanni Hildargo on Cungas I should add to as well.
That's the other music.
And this is all just like, you know, they didn't know what section they were.
going to like that's the way we always have when we're not sure what's going to happen
man so just check out I just want to play one more part of this with just the vocals
because like Diangelo is just killing it with this stuff
that's the way it is
Wow.
That's all DeAngelo layered.
So that's fun.
That's a good track.
That's a good track.
You like that one?
Yeah, I like that one.
Yeah, so that's kind of like the, you know, it's in the middle of the record.
Well, I guess it's getting a little bit more.
It's sort of in the meat.
And, you know, Charlie Hunter, he's on three tracks and he just really, with the bass and the guitar, he just brings such a special thing to it.
Well, you want to get into some.
Oh, you know what?
I've got a couple other tracks.
I want to get on before we get to our categories.
Send it on.
Like this is one of my favorite tracks on here
And now I found out what the inspiration for this
This is kind of interesting
Before I play it, I'm going to play you this
See if Tranquilly by Cooling the Gang
Yeah
That's great
What's a Cool In the Gang episode happening in?
I know exactly
Now here's DeAngel, different song
I never would have put that together
It's fantastic
Of course
Okay Pino on
This is Pinot on this mixture.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, killing it.
Amir with the bass drum.
Stuck on the grid either, right?
Maybe a little bit, but it's natural, right?
No, this is, this feels pretty straightforward.
Man, I love these Roy lines.
This is Roy playing flugolorn mostly on this.
And I want to just jump a little bit towards the end
because there's some fun stuff with Roy.
This is getting towards the end.
Cross stick.
Cross stick is king on this one.
Pino starts to stretch out.
Oh, DiAngelo.
A lot of vamps on this record, and I like them.
It's just like a little different each time.
He's going to hit a harmonic in a second.
Just letting him play.
It's such a vibe.
Let him play.
And I mean, you know, DeAngelo set this whole thing up.
Like, you can just feel it like with his vocals, with his leadership on this.
I mean, to be able to pull that kind of, like to create the platter for the chakuterie of soul.
I mean, it's just incredible.
Say it again?
I don't know what the hell I'm saying.
I'm just saying like Roy was a bad boy.
Pino was a bad boy.
But like together at that stuff, booboo-dipidoo-diff,
like messing around with that pentatonic stuff
after they've been vamping
for like two minutes on the same progression
and for it to be even more humane
and just grooving and just feel right, you know.
I know Peter, I know we're not in flex categories yet,
but we're not in, sorry.
I know we're not in categories yet,
but I have a flex category.
Okay.
That I want to throw out here.
right? There is a song in this album
that is a cover song and my flex category
is. There's only one cover right, so I know what that is. Is the cover
better than the original? And I think in this case
this cover is better than the original. And I love the original
don't get me wrong. Is the original the Roberta Flack? That's the one that I
know that when I first heard. That's the original hit version. Do I have that on here?
Do I have it? Do I have it? Well we have it on the
Roberta Flack episode board. Oh no, I got it right here. Sorry.
Oh, you're like, hey.
We've already done that album.
Oh, feel like making love.
Yeah, we got it here.
Yeah, so if that's the, I mean, that's an incredible version of Roberto, but this is a great version.
This is a, I think this is a better version of the song.
I go back to this one again and again and again.
I probably listen to this once a month.
There we got some stand.
Oh, no, we still crore.
I think both.
I think there's both happening.
Yeah, like the feel of this one.
So everything on it, this is Pino on bass, Amir on drums, everything else, guitar,
keys vocals is DeAnglo.
Come on.
But it's got a connection to that original, right?
All those like little envelope filters that are happening.
Russ Elavado, man.
Bad boy.
Right here.
Perfect.
Perfect.
De Angelo's vocal, like his intonation and his ingenuity,
that combination of him.
Man.
Oh, come on.
The harmonies through here.
The vibe of this.
man. It's the sum of all these
parts. Yes, it is. On this one, there's just
there's so much magic on this whole album.
This is right in the pocket, man.
And I think because of the way Amir is playing...
It's very sexy.
The way of Mir is playing, like,
it gives Pino the chance to
do all this interesting, like, bass.
And DiAngelo's voice in the mix
is super low. Yeah, super low.
Like, so many layers of it, but
it's like right in the middle. It's wild.
That's why you can't understand anything
he's saying. I know these words because of Roberta.
Who is that they called it?
This is bad.
Okay, we can just sit here and listen to this all day.
I'm saying, man.
You want to go for drinks together and just listen to this all day, man?
It's crazy.
So good.
In the liner notes, whoever wrote the liners described,
I think this is actually in the liner notes,
that it's very hard to understand.
That's why they put all the lyrics in there.
It was described as DiAngelo as Bobby McFerrean on opium.
I don't know if I like that.
I don't know if I like it either, but that's what it says.
Okay, just to jump back,
because we mentioned like brown sugar, 1995.
So this is really 96, 97, 98, 99, right?
This is his first record.
Oh, we didn't listen to Brown Sugar.
No.
This is 95.
But you hear the drums.
Now we're on the grid, right?
Killing, though.
I love this.
This is a killer.
Such a deep bass on this one.
Yeah.
DeAngelo likes a bass.
Yeah.
He likes it.
And I mean that in the mix.
Like he likes a low-end heavy.
Low mid-heavy mix.
But in terms of like the keys.
You know, the way he would layer his voice, sing along to the...
Yeah.
That's kind of the vibe of that, but that's how different, like, hey, the evolution from this to Voodoo is big.
Voodoo is a little bit, I think, a little bit better.
It's like a sounding album.
Like, it's like he hit his strive with Voodoo.
Like, he took whatever...
I mean, Brown Sugar's amazing, but I think he probably learned some stuff from that.
And, man, we are all benefiting from the results of that.
Yep. Okay. And so one connector besides DiAngelo from that, especially that track, that's written by or co-written by Raphael Sadieck, who's going to have an influence on a track that we're going to listen to shortly.
Underrated musician Raphael Sadieke. Of course, Tony, Tony, Tony, and of his own incredible solo career, but is behind a lot of your favorite tracks.
Absolutely. Yeah. And also really connected with DeAngelo going way back before, well, like back to Brown Sugar days when they've,
first met, I think it was like their manager or the publisher or something connected them.
Instead, I think you guys would hit it off. And they bonded over Hawkins family recordings,
how they had like an encyclopedic knowledge and Raphael's older, kind of almost like half
generate. Yeah, I guess he's like eight, nine, ten years older than him. But like they really
bonded on that. You hear it deeply in their music and the way that they would put stuff together.
But before we get to that, of course, we're talking about how does it feel? I'm thinking a little chicken
grease might be in...
You know, actually, since you mentioned
Raphael Siddique and you...
In brown sugar, if this...
Does Voodoo...
Is Tony, Tony, Tony, like a...
kind of a precursor to this?
I think so.
Yeah.
I think that there's...
I mean, that's definitely, like, part of that 90s
R&B sound, but, like, that's...
I think there's a bunch...
But a little more on this side of the fence
than the others, you mentioned.
For sure.
Like, there's a little bit more...
There's more gospel.
There's a little bit more gospel.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But also, like, there's, you know,
Tri-Pro Quest.
We got to talk about that.
We got to talk about a little bit about hip hop and how,
because there's a little bit of like, I mean,
Red Man and Method Man on the second track on this.
Joshua Redman?
Joshua Redman, exactly.
DJ Premier produced one of the tracks on here.
So there's a little bit of that here.
But if you think about some of the, like,
where kind of 90s R&B was going,
there was definitely that lane
where it was just like killer hip hop beats right on the grid,
quantized with like great R&B glossy,
vocals on top of it. That was really much
becoming the sound, you know.
And a lot of folks had great success with that. But this
is so different from that, and you already hear the
beginning of it with
Brown Sugar. Actually, so we talked about the live
at Jazz Cafe, the kind of unknown or lesser known
record. That came out in 98, but they recorded
it, Braun Sugar came out in 95.
He went on tour immediately, and with
his band, which was a killing band,
they
recorded in 95 in London
this. And this is actually Brown Sugar
but from the live record,
just for folks that don't know about this.
You already hear.
So this is a great, great record.
A lot of, like, extended cuts, imprals,
great background vocals, Angie Stones on.
I mean, it's a lot of really, really killer stuff there.
Cool.
So we were talking about, oh, yeah,
should we do a little chicken grease?
This is, like, this was definitely,
you know, like a known popular, whatever,
track from here like all these was, right?
Yeah.
I actually don't know what the singles were.
I mean, I know untitled, which I'm sure we're getting to, was the single.
But I don't remember what the other singles were because I was just listening to the whole album all year long.
Right.
James Poyser on Keys, shot out.
Yeah.
Incredible.
From the roots.
Incredible musician.
But the rhythmic stuff the DeAngelo is doing.
The lyrics, you understand what's happening.
right the story he's telling
he's almost doing some of that
dizzy Gillespie shit
I just
I just connect with the title chicken grease so much
yeah just means so much to do
yeah
apparently that was a prince
term there was a chord that he called
it was close to this it wasn't exactly what they're playing
on guitar
He's like, give me the chicken grease.
But it's like the rhythmic thing.
It's almost like a hip-hop.
I mean, Tribe called Quest, big influencer, you hear that.
But check this out.
Just listen rhythmically.
I just want to put you down
I just want y'all
to get down
everybody come late down
and then
give a little bit of that chick green
and
a-huh
a-huh
a-huh-huh
I love
that's focus
and then check it out
when he comes back in
it's so great
school
Everybody that's fake in the phone
But take a lesson
From the blessings of our
I got the music and the instruments
And then my weapon's the head
Everybody on the floor
That's a piece
Got the head
With this
That's just
Diageo and Pino of course
I just want to put you down.
Just together pretty good, huh?
My old millennial heart just shines through with that.
Not a millennial.
Okay.
All right.
All right.
You're like, it's not even sound right.
I'm not going to do it.
All right, are we there?
How does it feel to you?
It feels, the chicken grease is, I'm hung up on the chicken grease because I am, I am an older
millennial and it's not good for my cholesterol.
And it's catching me up because I want it.
All right.
This was a really important track, notwithstanding or withstanding the video, the stellar video
that goes, if you haven't seen this.
The naked video.
The naked video.
If you haven't seen this, what would you be under the age of?
well I did play it for my 22 year old son
did he have any reference he knew the he knew the record of it
he'd never seen the video and so I was like oh you got to check out this video and he saw it
he was like wait is that Arkelly that was the first thing he said really
anyway I mean this was on VH1 for like every day 10 times a day for like a year
and a half right especially when the what's the hours when the ladies are more likely to watch
it's a stunning thing I mean it's it's an amazing video one of the most iconic
music videos of all time.
This is one of the great...
Controversial in that it was sexually
exploitive? We didn't know.
But it was very, very interesting.
But this is such a great track.
So we talked about Raphael Sadiq.
This is...
Was this written?
Yeah, it was written by DeAngelo and Raphael Sadiq.
And Raphael Sadiq played guitar and bass on here.
Awesome.
And produced the thing.
And, you know, so it's just them,
DeAngelo,
Quest on Drum.
And I love the way this track starts.
It starts. I actually will never...
I will never forget the first time I heard this song.
Because I was in like this like really dark, red, cushioned New York City, lower Manhattan lounge.
Damn.
This is the vibe.
And it...
A brothel?
No.
What are you talking?
The way you're describing it.
Well, I'm thinking about the song.
Where's your head at?
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
But, uh, no.
just like hanging out all night, late night.
You know what I mean?
Like one of those nights.
It's like, you know, 21 years old.
Yeah.
And then this came on.
The DJ put this on.
And it was this great sound system in this like loungy atmosphere place.
And I'll just never forget getting hit in the chest by the production on this.
Oh, and like, I just couldn't stop being distracted by the song and what was going on.
It's so good.
It's so good.
Let's just check it out.
And just pay attention to the way this starts because I don't know if they, if this was as,
obvious with the video and with the radio.
But for being such like a powerful ballad,
it starts in a very disjointed way
that I think is super effective.
Now this is where the time is going to sway a little bit.
But DeAngelo's, that gospel piano stuff is what bridges it together,
rhythmically.
Great key for D major.
That octave, come on.
Raphael Sadiq.
Incredible.
Just like four masters.
Laying it down.
Yeah.
Incredible.
This is straight-up gospel chords right here.
It's fairly simple.
It's one of the more simple songs on the whole album.
Very simple.
And it's one of the most...
It's harmonically simple, but super interesting.
Starting on, like, backdoor fake 2-5.
I mean, back-door 2-5.
And it's like two to the four chord
To the seven
All right, we're gonna jump up to
What are you doing?
Sorry.
What are you going to jump where?
I just caught away.
Oh, did you hear that?
Prince.
Prince's hands.
His little hands are all over this track for sure.
Especially that guitar player.
Okay, we can.
No, no, no, no.
Because there's some apex moments
I want to talk about.
My apex moment is,
when it goes to the bridge, which is like,
what is it, like four minutes into this,
which to me is incredible that they waited that long.
So let's, maybe let's get to your desert island track, which is this.
Yeah.
Right?
Is this your desert island?
No, Spanish joint.
Spanish joint, no.
But let's just keep playing until we get to the bridge,
because some people may be like, well, the bridge is just whatever,
but when you hear it building up, I mean,
vocal, background, counter melody, mastercloth.
class all over this track.
I mean, from Dianzra.
You want to learn how to harmonize a melody?
Wait, is this Raphael Cidique on the bass as well?
Yeah, bass and guitar.
Yeah.
All these years, I thought this was Pino.
No, I know. Everybody does.
Bridge is killing.
Yeah.
I feel kind of blown away by that.
It's a great bridge.
Music interlude.
So patient.
That's why that's my apex, because you go through that,
you don't even need that, but it's, and then this.
Also, the entire vocal performance.
There's like six of these guys.
They're all the encelo.
Yeah.
Yeah, you feel the presence of Prince on this.
It's just chill for a minute.
So my Apex moment is about to happen.
They're going to build this up.
And then they actually change the chord progression.
Yeah.
At the end.
It's very, very subtle.
Yeah.
But it makes a huge difference.
It's like the sun coming through.
Going from A minor to G minor originally,
but they'll go to A minor to C here.
Prince score.
It's very Prince.
Appropriately so.
And that cut off.
because they ran out of tape.
You're kidding.
No, that's exactly what happened.
The tape was...
The tape.
This was all...
Russ Elavado, the engineer,
insisted on this all being done
on analog tape,
even though digital process
because he loved the sound.
I know I'm going to get
audio engineer nerds being like,
it doesn't make a difference.
It makes a big.
Yeah, you just heard the difference.
But the tape ran out
because they apparently went through like
150 reels and they were expensive.
They were like $200 per reel
at the time.
And I guess they looked at it
and he knew he had like seven minutes left
on it.
he's like, oh, well, this song's not going to be more than seven minutes,
but they got to vamping, they got to do it and all that,
and they ran out. So,
that's why it ends abruptly. And there's one more
track after this, and it's called
Africa. It's one of my favorite tracks, but I realize
Peter, I don't think it's my,
I don't think it's my desert island. Because you have it
down as your desert island. That's okay. Yeah, Africa
is actually my second favorite track on the whole
album. I like this Africa, but it's only my second
favorite song called Africa. I like the meter's
Africa. A little better. What about Toto's
Africa? Do you enjoy that one? I like that one's
good. This one's better, actually. De Angelo's better than both of
Songs written after continents.
But I think actually the cover of Feel Like Making Love is my favorite track.
It's a desert-on-a-track for me.
What about up next?
What do you got after this ends on your music streaming service?
Up next.
I've got live at the London Jazz Cafe just because even though it's before it's,
I think it's such a cool record.
Once I get into the DeAngelo mode, I want to stay there.
And then also the R.H. Factor, Roy Hargiver, which was inspired from this,
he recorded it right after Voodoo came out with the same Russ Elavado co-producing
and a lot of the same kind of vibe
and has that same Roy Hager of stamp
that you hear all over this record.
What about you for Up Next?
I have either, I have two choices.
I have either Purple Rain,
which I think would be a great up next after that.
Or, and this is just a personal thing,
I have Radiohead's Kid A,
because it came out the same year.
And I remember I had my Manhattan Portage bag
and I had my disc man.
Yes.
A red disc man.
Nice.
And I'd have this, I'd have voodoo.
I'd have Kid A.
I'd have some, I'd probably have some coal train
in there, of course, but I would be walking
around New York City listening to those two albums
next to each other all the time. Man, music is
about, like, that
time. It's like going back, like, I could tell
for you, I know for me, like, I'm thinking
about all the things with that song, the different
experiences I had, it takes you back.
Like, we think it's about like chord
changes and like how the
vocalist's harm out. No, no, it's the whole package
but when you can put together a
masterpiece like DeAngelo did
like this on Voodoo, man, it's such a gift, right?
It's a gift because, it's just, and it's
does take you back to that. It's a gift because it'll be with us our whole lives. Yeah.
And there's even listening to it with you here today, I'm learning a bunch of new stuff that I thought
I knew everything about this. It turns out I'm ignorant to a lot of things. And it's just like you hear
new things every time with this music, especially music like this where everybody is like S-tier
level player or producer or songwriter and you just get to hear them play, right? Like DeAngelo let
people play and you get to hear like hearing those
details from Roy that you just
stemmed out for us here was so cool
and I will be thinking about that and
going back to that for a while. So great.
What about, uh, bespoke Spotify playlists.
Yeah, you're bespoke Spotify playlist. What do you got?
So I've got, uh, soul,
songs, R&B. What? I know a little controversial. I think this is
like the ultimate like late 90s
soul record. You could say Neo Soul, whatever.
I get it. But I think that this is more soul.
less R&B.
So there's other records
I will put in here
in terms of listening
to it as well
on the Spotify playlist.
Not that there's anything
wrong with R&B.
I think he won
or it was nominated
for Grammy for R&B
so maybe I'm wrong.
But anyway,
it just reminds me
a sole record.
I got two ideas here.
I got one
Spotify playlist
called cross-sticking.
Cross-sticking.
It's just a lot of tracks
with cross-sticks.
Yeah,
what else?
Yeah, there could be
some cool stuff on that.
And I got another one
that could be for like,
for special times.
called maybe like...
For Centauri Times.
Want to make out? That's the thing of the playlist.
Want to make out? Wow. That's not what I thought you were going to say.
It's the direct path.
Back to that red red velvet brothel in New York.
Got it.
What about my quibble bits? My only quibble bits is with your red velvet brothel.
That's it. That's all I got. What are your quibble bits?
Okay. The base,
sonically, in certain situations, the base, can the base be too booming?
I mean, in here, it sounds incredible.
With headphones sometimes in my car, it's just so, it's like a gut punch.
And like you say, like if you're in the right situation, there's nothing like it.
But I mean, the base is like, like you got to have great system.
You got to have, you know, some subwoof.
Okay.
Hard pass.
Okay.
And then a quibble bit, you can't understand anything DeAngelo says on the entire record.
Yeah, you know, and again, I would like to.
But that's part of the vibe.
I would like to bring Radiohead and Kid A into this situation because it's a very similar thing.
I don't think I know, I mentioned those two albums that I listened to at the same time on the same year.
I don't think I know more than 10 words from both of them combined, but that's okay.
But that's similar to this, but then it's not like when we talked about Steely Dan, like on Asia and like a lot of the right, like you can hear what words they're saying, but a lot of it doesn't make sense to me.
This is different.
He's just like, it's so.
The lyrics are probably pretty good.
Yeah.
And there's some of them that you can hear, but it's like, I mean, I know play a play is.
There's all this like basketball stuff.
He's so low in the mix.
Yeah.
And then it's usually got like, like, mold.
multiple chords.
He's like an instrument on this.
Like the vocals are always,
but I think this is such an instrumental vocal record for him.
Yeah.
And then also there's a lot of vamps.
That's a quibble bit,
but I love all the bamps.
Snobometer, what do you got?
Okay.
Is it a one or a ten?
It's a one or a ten.
Do you think it's super snobby?
I think it's kind of a snobby record, right?
Is it?
No.
It was a huge hit.
We're going five.
Five?
I have like, it's a one or two.
It was a major hit record.
Yeah, okay.
Four.
The snobometer confuses me.
We've talked about that.
No, but snobs love this record.
Like, this is a record that even if you're not like...
But it's a 10 if only snobs like it.
Oh.
So what would a 10 be like, like giant steps?
No, not giant.
Would be like the shape of jazz to come.
Would be like near 10.
No, but that's on like Desert Island jazz lists all the time.
Yeah, but it's for snobby jazz musicians.
We're talking about people who are just...
This is for snobby soul lovers.
Yeah, but a lot of people like this album.
You know what I mean?
Like, yeah, okay.
But is it brown sugar is less snobb?
This is more snobby than brown sugar.
This is less accessible than brown sugar.
No, this was way bigger hit than brown sugar.
Okay, okay.
Beg to differ.
Let's move on.
It wasn't, I think it was objectively.
I've got a, I've got to know a new category for you.
We talked about there's four DeAngelo records.
I think there was some, maybe some EP, some other things.
Four that I'm aware of that I've listened to,
that I've listened to a lot.
What is your favorite?
favorite.
This one.
Okay.
This one's very good.
I'm going to say this is my second favorite.
Okay.
I'm going to rank them.
Live at Jazz Cafe number one.
This is number two.
Black Messiah, maybe three.
That's a great record.
We might have to do that and then brown sugar, which is great too.
I mean, honestly, I'm going to go
voodoo,
Black Messiah, Brown Sugar, Live at Jazz Cafe.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
Is it better than K-O-B?
No.
I say it's different.
it's not about better
he cannot
this is a great record man
every week it's like
it's maybe
no sometimes
I said different maybe
okay okay
accrued your malls
nine yeah I said nine too
could almost be a 10
really really good
there's nothing wrong with it
it's great incredible
video is incredible
all of it
man leave us a comment
yeah
on the on the YouTube
we get in some great comments
yeah
we're having fun here
thank you for this man
thank you Pete
this is good
until next time
you'll hear
