Sunday, December 21, 2025

Another Setting Radio: Body Rhythm #1

Photo: Potassa de Lafayette (r) and dancer at Studio 54 by Hasse Persson (1978)


Happy to be part of the Week 3 lineup of a new online community radio project here in Toronto called Another Setting Radio. When they put a call-out for contributors recently, I decided to throw my hat in the ring. So, massive thanks to Nafi and Emily for letting me contribute!

The few of you that still check this page will notice that I've been absent from posting for a while now. Needless to say, it has been a full year for me on a personal level. As a result, I've put a lot of things on the back-burner, so I've itching to make a mix for some time now.

As for the show, I'm calling it Body Rhythm and am really looking forward to putting a mix together on a regular basis again. Not to mention, it'll also provide me a good reason to dig in my own record collection and put it to work, even when I'm not playing records out in public.

Naturally, there'll be a good dose of disco, but am also hoping to keep the format somewhat loose just as an opportunity to stretch out and keep things somewhat genre-fluid, if you will.

Right now, Another Setting broadcasts on Sundays from 12:00-21:00 (Eastern Standard Time), but all episodes will be archived on Soundcloud the next day for on-demand listening. As with most of my other mixes, I'll be embedding the Soundcloud link here along with a tracklist and track notes below.

Whether you're listening live or on-demand, hope you enjoy my show as well as the other local selectors on Another Setting. Listening back to the past couple of weeks has been a lovely opportunity to delve into other people's musical worlds and discover new sounds and sensations in the process.

This first show starts off with a little more of a boogie flavour, before going into some italo, disco and funk, colouring outside those lines ever so slightly...

Click the link below to go to the Another Setting main page.


Another Setting Radio


Body Rhythm - Show #1
Tracklist
:

GL - It Could Be You
Janice Marie Johnson - Givin’ It Up
Eddie Fisher - Gigolo (Mix 1)
WG Band - Do It ('Til You're Satisfied) (Psychemagik edit)
Funk Machine - Dance On The Groove (And Do The Funk)
Georges Thurston - De ville en ville
Ernest Ranglin - Soft Touch
Danny Keith - Keep On Music (Dub)
Djosa - Botanica Obscura
La Fox - I Thought That You Liked Me
Hot Shot - Midnight Tube
The Armed Gang - Funky Fever


All the records played on show #1


Track Notes:

GL - It Could Be You: Recently picked up this modern boogie 7" by Australian duo GL on the PPU label. Originally from their 2014 debut EP Love Hexagon, I was initially taken by the A-Side, "What Ever Happened To Us," but this B-side is just as good, with the ideal feel and tempo to kick things off. Vinyl copies of their 2014 EP are unfortunately out of print and seem to fetch a pretty penny these days, so this 7" was the most accessible hard copy available.

Janice Marie Johnson - Givin' It Up: Probably my favourite song from A Taste of Honey singer/songwriter/bassist Janice Marie Johnson's 1984 solo LP One Taste of Honey. I recall hearing that her LP was recorded as a contractual obligation to Capitol Records after the dissolution of A Taste of Honey. Despite that, I find it to be a generally enjoyable album. Though this song was not a single, it probably could have/should have been!

Eddie Fisher - Gigolo (Mix 1): Not the Eddie Fisher who was married to Liz Taylor and Debbie Reynolds, but a St. Louis, MO based guitarist and producer who had been Albert King's bandleader before putting out several albums of his own. Recently picked up this quirky piece of lo-fi midwestern boogie from 1981 on Fisher's own Nentu label. Was taken by the funky beatbox and synth sounds along with the goofy little vocoder further into the song. "Mix 2" on the B-side is longer and slightly more instrumental, but I felt like this version chugged along with a little more momentum.

WG Band - Do It ('Til You're Satisfied) (Psychemagik edit): For the most part, I tend to go for originals over edits, but Psychemagik are one of the exceptions for me. An obscure 1986 German cover of BT Express' signature hit, they took all the best instrumental passages and extended them for optimal satisfaction. Simply put, this edit just hits all the right spots. Taken from the latest installment (Volume 6) of Psychemagik's ongoing Undercover Lovers series.

Funk Machine - Dance On The Groove (And Do The Funk): Recently picked up this Canadian cover of French act Love International's 1981 single, released the year after on the Montreal Neige label. Though it didn't exactly change things up too much, it seems to have made some waves on its own given how many countries also released this one. I love the spare synth funk groove of this song in both versions, though this one has just a slightly rougher edge to it that also appeals to me.

Georges Thurston - De ville en ville: Continuing the Can-Con section here with this single from the artist also known as Boule Noire. Picked this up recently, initially charmed by the English version on the other side ("Town to Town"). While the order and selection of towns and cities differ slightly, both sides are a funky roll-call of Canadian, American and even Mexican, Caribbean and Central American cities many of whom not normally referenced in songs like these. Stand up, Rivière-du-Loup, Sudbury and Chicoutimi!

Ernest Ranglin - Soft Touch: One of my favourite disco reissues in the past several years would have to be Emotional Rescue's 2019 reissue of Jamaican guitarist Ernest Ranglin's 1983 album Be What You Want To Be. Produced by Noel Williams AKA King Sporty and originally released on his Konduko label, it's a lovely gem of Miami disco, with all of its Caribbean and R&B influences in perfect balance. "Soft Touch," is one of the major earworms on offer, but the whole thing is great.

Danny Keith - Keep On Music (Dub): Changing gears to some straight-ahead Italo disco that I picked up earlier this year. Produced by Mauro Farina, Giuliano Crivellente and Ides Zanet, the instrumental "dub" here is my preferred version.

Djosa - Botanica Obscura: Picked up this 7" on the Rush Hour Store Jams label a couple of years ago. Listened to a quick sample on Juno and it immediately checked all the boxes for me. Lovely, warm synth sounds and some of that "I Feel Love" bassline, and I was sold.

La Fox - I Thought That You Liked Me: A friend turned me on to this one a couple of years back. He had asked me if I would be able to ID a this song on a mix he had heard. Turns out, I didn't know what it was either but was similarly intrigued. A quick Google search revealed what it was though and I sprung for a copy straight away. Sung by a one Merrilyn Fox and released on La Elton's Rocket Records label, this song has a misty, melancholy quality that really stuck with me. I took one of the online suggestions and played this here at a slower speed - 33+6 for a little extra mistiness.

Hot Shot - Midnight Tube: I initially got this 12" for the very, very ABBA-esque A-side "Love is to Love a Lover's Love." So much so, it has a prime place on my ongoing "Trying to be ABBA" playlist. Given that producer Patric Perquee would eventually produce an album of ABBA songs by the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra, it's probably not a stretch to suggest that he followed closely on their heels. Flipping the record over however, I was taken by the B-side in a very different way. A song about urban danger and decay - "if you don't wear a gun, you'd better run" it seemed to call forth Bowie & Eno as much as much as the A-side recalled ABBA. All of whom represented sounds at the top of the zeitgeist at the time (and in some ways still do?). Though it is a single B-side, "Midnight Tube" would also be the title track to Hot Shot's 1981 LP with both these songs.

The Armed Gang - Funky Fever: One of many Italo or Italian disco (there is a distinction) groups calling themselves "gangs," original copies of their album remained elusive for me until a couple of reissues came out a few years back. The Armed Gang was assembled by producer Maurizio Sangineto (AKA Sangy) and American GI vocalists (hence, 'armed') James Otis White, Jr., Kenny Claiborne (given top billing on their lone album) and Joe Beach. A common assemblage at the time, Black American GIs moonlighting as singers for Italian producers, even achieving a modicum of fame from their music at the time. Clearly Sangineto was trying to achieve something a little more street, a little more funky than the typical Italian disco production and this track kind of encapsulates that. Basically an extended jam revolving around the guys smoking blunts while cruising women on the streets. I thought this would be a good one to close things out here, building on the "urban streets" theme of the last selection, albeit with a lighter touch.

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