Fat Freddy's Drop release new album and live video for "Dig Deep"
- Publish Date
- Friday, 20 August 2021, 11:59AM
As the lock-down impacts Aotearoa, Fat Freddy's Drop has released "Dig Deep" a new live video from their 'Wairunag' album which is dropping digitally today.
It’s a timely message for Freddys fans here and worldwide to continue to dig deep and a celebration of the release of the new bush-alchemy album.
"Dig Deep"' is the album feature track, a loose-limbed rhythmic experiment of broken beats smashing into subterranean bass and twisted-up melodies. Freddy's love playing this stuff.
'Wairunga', a bush-alchemy album and concert film like no other.
'Wairunga' finds the Freddy juggernaut digging deep to debut five songs and revisit two classics captured in an outdoor performance sans audience with wild weather elements playing an important creative role.
In lieu of international touring, Freddys have been exiled to their 'Bays' studio using the time to jam and boil up songs at their leisure. Freddy trumpet alchemist Tony Chang says that "with a swag of fresh material ready for road testing all the group needed was the right space to perform and record. 'Wairunga', high above Waimarama Beach, got the nod."
Wairunga, deep in Ngāti Kahungunu country, is a place etched into the DNA of Fat Freddy’s Drop who’ve roamed here for over 20 years; to party, relax between tours, make a song 'Wairunga Blues' in its honour, and even to get married. Farmed by the Parker family for a century, Wairunga is an oasis of green pasture and native tree-filled valleys that fall away to the ocean below.
Throwing caution to the trade winds, literally, Freddys and their sound and visual recording crews set up on a grass tennis court surrounded by a bush backdrop. The weather was calm but as the performance progressed into night, the elements turned with tempest-like bursts of rain and chill winds. Freddys dug deep to finish the session, nothing could stop the bush energy and music.
“We were definitely at the mercy of the elements there and the elements let us get away with it”, Tony Chang says.
In Freddy's inimitable fashion the new tunes run a gamut of genre-busting styles. "Coffee Black" is layered with cosmic hot buttered soul and cinematic wigged out psyche-blues while 'Shady' continues Freddy's Afro-Acid adventures with Fitchie’s beat-making tapping into a South African township brand of techno Freddys experienced on tour.
"Bush Telegraph" is a reggae classic featuring MC Slave aka Mark Williams on the mic with freshly minted yum char spiced rhymes of hope. The other new tracks, "Leave Your Window Open" and "Dig Deep", are loose rhythmic experiments that the band have been working on for a long time. Versions were developed, rehearsed, but then set aside – dismissed, demonised - only to be revived with new energy in some future moment of creative cohesion. The results are loose-limbed; broken and bruised beats smashing into subterranean bass and twisted up melodies. Freddys love playing this stuff.
"Bones" and "Wairunga Blues" are the two classics from Freddy's vast back catalogue. Off the Blackbird album, "Bones" has aged beautifully - like a fine wine - the song’s component parts matured and melded together in harmony and balance. DJ Fitchie rates this 2021 vintage superior to the 2013 original. "Wairunga Blues" has been a work-in-progress since it was released on Bays in 2015. Kuki dials up some appropriately off-kilter keys to match the wonky-funk laid down by Fitchie’s bass line and the horns. It’s a mighty comeback – and a fitting tribute to this magical place.
The new album is available now on digital platforms with limited edition vinyl to follow. The 'Wairunga' session was recorded by Freddy's long time sound engineer Richard McMenamin of Western Audio. Freddy’s beatmaker and master producer Fitchie aka MU processed and crafted the live 'Wairunga' audio recordings at Bays studio while Calyx Studio in Berlin nailed the final mastering.
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