

ROLLING
STONE
April 24, 2003
By LAUREN HARRIS
In the
reddened eyes of many stoners, it's the perfect pairing: Pink Floyd's
sacred Seventies landmark Dark Side of the Moon reworked by reggae
collaborators Easy Star All-Stars, an army of dub royalty that includes
dancehall singer Frankie Paul, former Wailers singer Gary "Nesta"
Pine and blues guitarist Corey Harris. The result, Dub Side of the
Moon , recently released from reggae label Easy Star Records, infuses
the prog-rock opus with the meandering bass, melodic organ, electronic
effects and the unmistakable spirit of reggae.
Work began on the project over three years ago, after co-founder
of the All-Stars Lem Oppenheimer came up with the idea after listening
to The Dark Side of the Moon while walking around Manhattan. Oppenheimer
grew up a devoted fan of the album, spinning Side Two each morning
before junior high school for six consecutive months, and he brought
his idea to producers/musicians Michael Goldwasser (a.k.a. Michael
G.) and Victor Axelrod (a.k.a. Ticklah), collaborators and friends
since high school.
At first, the idea didn't move Goldwasser. "I'm always looking
to do completely original things," he says, "so to do
a cover of a whole album didn't really appeal to me. But then I
realized there was so much interesting musical work just to do in
arranging it."
Of course, the album's legend and storied sales success also worried
him. "It's a classic work," Goldwasser says. "If
you don't do right, people are going to pan. But once we gave it
a few listens and became more familiar with it, I thought we could
really do it."
The All-Stars then approached the members of Pink Floyd and eventually
received their blessing, though they haven't spoken personally to
the band. "Roger Waters sent us a fax," Goldwasser says,
"and he said 'I received the CD, I read the liner notes, but
it's my policy not to endorse any covers of my material.' He didn't
say if he liked it or not, which was kind of weird."
Several of the musicians who appear on the record were familiar
with Dark Side , but some of the singers, Jamaican ex-patriots now
living in New York, had never heard of Pink Floyd, let alone heard
the album. "It was an interesting challenge for these singers,"
Goldwasser says, "who are used to singing more standard reggae,
to get into these lyrics that Roger Waters wrote thirty years ago
about his take on life and death and all that."
The idea was to remain as true to the record's original concepts
as possible, retaining the sequencing and even the cover art. But
each of the songs has been slightly altered in favor of reggae traditions.
For example, "Great Gig in the Sky" was re-christened
"Great Dub in the Sky" and treated to an entirely new
bassline that becomes a new focal point for the song. "We really
took that to a different place," says Goldwasser. "There's
parts of it that are really just mellow piano and vocals."
And for "Money," the guitar part for was traded for a
trombone. Goldwasser felt the rock guitar didn't fit over the "reggae
vibe."
Dub Side arrives as a recent wave of reggae and dancehall is enjoying
success on the pop charts. "We're hoping a lot of non-reggae
fans will be listening to this," Goldwasser says, "and
will learn something about reggae and come to appreciate it."
-ROLLING STONE
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