Music:
A striking first for reggaeton
The all-star CD "Lightning & Thunder"
says as much about reggaeton's popularity as it does about
the Twin Cities' diversity.
By CHRIS RIEMENSCHNEIDER, Star Tribune
Just as lightning arrives before thunder, the reggaeton craze
that flashed through Twin Cities nightclubs a couple years
ago is now being rolled into something unique by local musicmakers.
The first major all-local reggaeton compilation CD, "Lightning
& Thunder, Vol. 1," arrives with an all-star
release party tonight at the Varsity Theater. The show's lineup
(like the disc) includes known reggaeton purveyors Maria
Isa and the Kamillion,
rappers Truthmaze, Unicus
(of Kanser), St. Paul Slim (Guardians of
Balance) and Buss One (ex-Leroy
Smokes), plus reggae stars Innocent, Prince
Jabba and Dred I Dread's Pee Wee Dread.
"Until now, people's perception of reggaeton was that
it was a club genre -- it was only about shaking your butt,"
said E.G. Bailey, spoken-word artist and
proprietor of the label behind the CD, Tru Ruts. "I think
we've made it more of a conscientious thing."
Indeed, many of the 14 songs on "Lightning & Thunder"
-- including Truthmaze's "No Time ... " and Innocent's
"Brighter Day" -- are as lyrical and thought-provoking
as they are rhythmic. There's more meaning in one of these
songs than in all the dopey hits by reggaeton kingpins Sean
Kingston or Daddy Yankee. (Reggaeton, for those who don't
know, is a lively melding of hip-hop, reggae and other Latino
and Caribbean music styles.)
Perhaps the strongest statement in "Lightning &
Thunder" is the mix of artists. Their backgrounds range
from Puerto Rican and Dominican to Jamaican to north Minneapolitan
and even Duluthian.
"The CD is a testament to the diversity of the Twin
Cities," said Kyle Brochert, the Duluth
native and Leroy Smokes trumpeter/producer
who was the project's unlikely driving force.
Better known by his poorly devised hip-hop alias High
Style Kyle, Brochert, 32, befriended local reggae
players like Innocent and Jabba when he tended bar at the
Blue Nile between Leroy Smokes tours. He and the Smokes players
also started performing as Maria Isa's backing band last year.
"The different scenes were all kind of related; they
just needed a common thread to tie them together," Brochert
said. "I guess that was me."
He and the other Leroy Smokes instrumentalists invited all
the vocalists to their Dinkytown studio last year. Their musical
backing helped make it a cohesive CD. Other highlights on
the album include Maria Isa's snarling "Tres Preguntas,"
the tasteful party-starter "Zoom Dale" by Latino
wunderkind Chino Fino (who has since moved to Miami) and "Fuego
Candela," a smoky gem by hip-hop duo Don Xaba and Backup
Plomo.
"I think the CD pretty accurately captures a movement,"
Bailey said.
Brochert believes things will keep moving from here.
"We've already started on Volume 2," he boasted. |