Gilles
Peterson & Patrick Forge present "Sunday Afternoon
At Dingwalls”
contributed by Rephlektor
“Talkin Loud and Saying Something” or “Dingwalls”
as it was more commonly known was the session that shaped
a generation, in sound, style and attitude - its influence
spread far and wide. It was the counterpoint to the rave
generation’s acid revolution, taking that same spirit
and optimism and applying it to a very different music.
It became the touchstone for everything that followed in
it’s wake, acquiring near legendary status, tempting
folk to later claim that “I was there” whether
they were or not. It was inspirational, revolutionary, celebrator
and radical. It was a family, it was a congregation. It
was our Paradise Garage.” – Patrick Forge, August
2006
Celebrating 20 years since the now legendary "Talkin’
Loud" Sunday Sessions first commenced at Camden, UK
club Dingwalls, Ether Music is proud to present the definitive
tribute CD collection “Sunday Afternoon At Dingwalls.”
Running each Sunday from lunchtime until 6.30pm Dingwalls
featured a live act almost every week. During the first
hour or so Patrick Forge played less obvious music, spiritual
jazz, mellow vibes, modal tunes, stuff that strayed from
the obvious 500mph fusion and Latin bangers that the dancers
traditionally loved. Different groups of dancers preferred
different styles so it was important to mix up the rhythms,
and contrast the mad percussive work-outs with more melodic
material, mixing rhythmic and harmonic intensity.
Then the band would come on. For some this may have been
the highlight of the afternoon, but whenever a live act
failed to ignite the atmosphere it was obvious that for
the majority, it was the records that really mattered. However
some of those live shows were unforgettable: The JB’s,
Roy Ayers, Dave Valentin, Poncho Sanchez, the eternally
hip Mark Murphy, the mighty Mongo Santamaria to name some
of the U.S based artists who performed at the party. Then
there was the acid jazz generation of home grown talent,
The Brand New Heavies, Galliano, JTQ, et al. Dingwalls also
brought about the renaissance of British jazz-funk pioneers
Incognito, and it provided a platform to a generation of
U.K. jazz talent, Courtney Pine, Cleveland Watkiss, Ed Jones,
Orphy Robinson and many more.
Gilles Peterson would follow the band, often building his
set from a whisper to a scream, starting with a record so
subtle or minimal it seemed more designed to clear the floor
than build the vibe, but it worked, allowing the drinkers
to get to the bar and the dancers to set the tone for what
would follow on the floor. What did follow was musically
adventurous, diverse in style and tempo, and more often
than not totally inspired. Gilles gave his all to those
sessions and the crowd loved him for it. He was brave, dropping
hip-hop and house tunes which upset the purists, but he
was on a mission to present this music in a new way. Gilles
could make an old Latin tune sound like the most relevant,
modern thing you’d ever heard just by the way he dropped
it; he had a great way of blending and making the unexpected
work. The session would always wind down into a more soulful
vibe, it’s one thing to leave a crowd wanting more,
to leave them smiling and wanting more because they’ve
just shared a few special tunes with some wicked people,
that was Gilles at Dingwalls. At the end everyone would
roll out of there happy, delirious, sweaty, and intoxicated,
in love with the music.
The last ever session on a Sunday afternoon at Dingwalls
produced a queue that snaked from inside the market to half-way
down the high street. Incognito provided the finale with
Jocelyn Brown singing “Always There” and bringing
the house down, setting the vibe for a session that maintained
a fever pitch of emotional intensity until the last bars
of “Family Affair” faded into eternity. “Sunday
Afternoon At Dingwalls” is a CD collection filled
with the music that inspired this “Talkin’ Loud”
generation.
For more information visit EtherMusic.net
or GillesPeterson.net