SONG OF THE DAY: France Joli – “Hallelujah”

Canadian singer France Joli is best known for her much-loved disco hit “Come To Me.” The classic gained notoriety when she performed it on Fire Island at the age of 16 and eventually topped the Billboard Disco chart for three weeks. A few more club hits followed (“Don’t Stop Dancing,” “Gonna Get Over You”) as did a few club records in the late 90s (“Touch,” “Breakaway”). Recently a UK number 1 for The X Factor’s Alexandra Burke and used in the movie Shrek, Leonard Cohen’s song “Hallelujah” is an interesting choice for a cover. Not that dance music doesn’t have ties to spiritual and church music, as classic disco singers like Donna Summer and Candi Staton got their starts singing in church or recording religious music, and for a time in the late 90s, it often felt like Church on the dance floor with uplifting songs by Kim English and Vernessa Mitchell in heavy rotation. With a sweeping gospel choir in the background, France Joli sounds remarkable- though the original production sounds a little dated. The Julian Marsh remix is more energetic, with an uplifting Hi-NRG feel that is perfect for Sunday tea dances (after going to Church, of course).

Continue reading SONG OF THE DAY: France Joli – “Hallelujah”

Song of the Day: Teesa – “Follow Your Heart” / “Drug”

One good thing about the electronic dance music is the ease of procuring a basic setup to produce a track. Of course this means we all have to wade through a bunch of crap to find the gems but it also means that you can often find an incredible new talent with a story to be told. Everyone meet Teesa, a Japanese born pop singer who rocks the guitar as well as the dance floor. She is making her name in Bay area thanks to club performances and some hot tracks. “Follow Your Heart” is an uplifting, inspirational song about.. well, you can figure it out by the title. The video shows her journey trying to make it in the entertainment world. “Drug” could easily be the lead single from Ke$ha’s next album if of course, she adds dirty electro and guitar work to her playbook. Both tracks show a lot of promise and are definitely worth an add to your digital music player.

“Follow Your Heart”

“Drug”

Continue reading Song of the Day: Teesa – “Follow Your Heart” / “Drug”

SONG OF THE DAY: Olly Murs – “Heart Skips a Beat (Smash Mode Remix)”

Here’s a nice trend – US remixes being better than UK remixes… The career of Olly Murs launched from X-Factor in the UK and he has gone on to top the UK pop charts several times. “Heart Skips a Beat,” a ska-based ode to bittersweet love with reggae beats, was his fifth UK single and is now his debut single in the US. The UK mixes by MNEK and P okerface were okay, but neither was as strong as the original version – never a good sign for a remix. In the hands of US commercial remixers Smash Mode, the song is truly elevated to a new level. A subdued progressive pop groove draws you in as it drops down to a dramatic, eerie breakdown reminiscent of a Faithless classic. The beat slams back in with a tastefully glitchy electro beat. The vocals are perfectly stretched, and the Smash Mode remix actually sounds like an original production rather than an afterthought or paint-by-number formulaic retread. Of special note is the dramatic pause before the last chorus in the extended mix – similar to the dramatic silence of “Cant Stop Me” by Afrojack and Shermanology – it elevates the song to a new level, making it stick out (in a good way) on the dance floor. Look for the version the eliminates the rap by Chiddy Bang; no offense, but the song is about Olly Murs’ performance and Smash Mode’s production rather than the featured rap tossed in seemingly as an afterthought (either Chiddy in US version or Rizzle Kicks in the UK version). Here’s hoping Smash Mode or another gifted US remixer gets their hand on Olly’s hopefully-next US single “Dance With Me Tonight.”



Image courtesy of Epic.