Dani
Siciliano
Slappers
(!K7 Records)
"If you speak, then speak your mind. Use
your head, not your behind…"
Following the critical success of her 2004 solo debut, Likes...,
Dani Siciliano’s new album, Slappers, solidifies her
position as one of the most passionate and original voices
today. Gliding through house, disco, blues, pop, electronica,
soul, and even a little country, with wit, verve and honesty,
Slappers is an album that captures you with its melody
before teasing you with its meaning. While Slappers
knows its history, it is definitely an album that could only
have been made today – one capable of making heads dance
and feet think.
This isn’t a techno record or a dance record. Slappers
is comparable to a singer– songwriter record written
on the strings of a guitar, but like innovators before her,
Dani prefers the 0s and 1s of electronics to balance out her
voice and give the album a singular feel. Informed by Dani’s
own past, Slappers is full of songs of dislocation.
After all, Dani started in Arizona, then spent a long period
in California before finally moving to England to work with
Matthew Herbert. Her voice is very much caught somewhere in
the mid-Atlantic stream. The electronic backdrop articulates
that state, but at its core, Slappers is essentially
about songs. Like her debut, Likes..., this new album is about
intimate situations and the politics of emotion between people.
Primarily through her work with Matthew Herbert, Dani Siciliano
has become one of electronic music's most recognizable voices.
However, Dani's voice has also largely influenced Herbert's
sound, helping to make his music more accessible as she has
put the "sing" into "singular" on all
the Herbert albums from 1998's Around The House to
2001's Bodily Functions, 2003's big band outing,
Goodbye Swingtime and this year's Scale.
On Slappers, Dani did much of the production herself,
but in return for her many contributions to his work, Herbert
shared some of the production duties. This dynamic is explored
with some humor on Dani’s self-produced, self-sampling
tongue-in-cheek song “Be My Producer” (a 100%
all-Siciliano outing with beats sampled from that distinctive
voice). Though they have worked together on many releases,
Dani Siciliano and Matthew Herbert are two individual artists
with individual ideas. She’s got her own bag of tricks
and Slappers is Dani’s quest to find a musical
realm of her own.
Stand-out tracks on this all-killer, no-filler album include
the clipped funk of "Didn't Anybody Tell You" (built
on the beat-boxing talents of Neil Thomas); the brooding,
electronic soul of "They Can Wait" (where Dani built
a percussion kit for drummer Leo Taylor sampled from American
high school "True Love Waits" promise rings); "Why
Can't I Make You High?" (featuring Ingrid and Kitty from
cult teen band Kitty, Daisy And Lewis) — a brilliantly
catchy digital-goes-country song that'll soundtrack campfire
sing-a-longs for years to come; and the title track, a stomping
call-to-arms where you'll find instruments made out of the
sound of women's voices collected during a little soiree in
Dani's kitchen one night - as well as the percussive sound
of asses being slapped!
As a DJ who has played everywhere from Berlin to Sydney, Dani's
deep love and playful knowledge of music is clear in her sets:
obscure 12"s, classic cuts you forgot you loved and fresh
mixes you're surprised no-one's thought of before. Disco,
house, soul, a cheeky nod to acid, electro and techno —
everything and nothing is sacred in Dani's box of party tricks.
Singer, producer, songwriter, DJ…Slappers confirms
Dani Siciliano's place as one of the most exciting artists
today.
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