The Filthy Six - Soho Filth (Vinyl EP)
The Filthy Six - Soho Filth (Vinyl EP)
Full Credits
Full Credits
Produced by Nick Etwell, Tristan Longworth
Credits:
Nick Etwell - Trumpet & Flugelhorn
Mark Brown - Tenor Saxophone
Tenor Saxophone - Guitar
Andrew Noble - Hammond C3 Organ
Daniel Drury - Bass
Simon Lea - Drums
Snowboy - Congas
Tracking Engineer - Jonny Solway
Dean St Studios
Mixing Engineer - Tristan Longworth
Mastering Engineer - Doug Krebs
Doug Krebs Mastering
Artwork - Christopher Barker
The Filthy Six were formed in a dingy Soho basement 20 years ago, with the goal of cultivating an ensemble to play classic soul-jazz tunes from the groove-laden vaults of the famed Blue Note Records. They spent their formative years writing, rehearsing and performing shows in a shabby basement club off Kingly Court, deep in the heart of London’s Soho, around the corner from Carnaby Street and the legendary Jazz and R&B clubs of the 1960s - The 41 Club, The Flamingo and Ronnie Scott’s. They eventually moved above ground into slightly more salubrious establishments and hit the road. Here they are, 20 years and several records later, coming full circle and back to creating music in a Soho basement with the release of their new EP, ‘Soho Filth.’ Recorded live at the noted Dean St Studios, the record comes straight out the gate with the Cannonball Adderley-inspired “Mr. Shmingle Bangle”, featuring renowned percussionist/DJ Snowboy on Congas. The tune serves as a warm tribute to Etwell’s old college roommate, James Bush, an astute lover of Latin-jazz music. “Swapsies” is an old-school two-chord groover that puts Hammond C3 organist Andrew Noble in the limelight to carry the melody and showcase his skills. “In Time” is up next, taking a measured and harmonically interesting approach to the Blues form. The record closes in signature Filthy Six form with a good old-fashioned Boogaloo Blues, “The Swagger Junkie,” dedicated to the fashionable denizens of Soho, strutting their stuff from the '60s right up to the present day, never quite getting enough of how damn good they look. In just 4 tracks, listeners get to sample four distinct slices of ‘Soho Filth’ and raise their glasses to celebrate the next 20 years ahead.