Bombay the Hard Way plays like the soundtrack to some imaginary 1970s B-films with names like Shaft's Bad-Ass Pilgrimage To India or Ganges Ghetto Payback. Featuring the music of Indian composers (and brothers) Anandji and Kalyanji Shah, who wrote and produced soundtracks for the so-called "Brownsploitation" films made in India's "Bollywood" during the 60s and 70s, this saffron-funk project is the brain-child of Dan "The Automator" Nakamura, Bay Area producer / remixer of Dr. Octagon fame, with additional beats provided by the immensely talented DJ Shadow. The end product is a potent cross-pollination of Secret-Agent-Man guitar themes, Blaxploitation grooves, jazzy horn and flute riffs, hip-hop beats and loops, and traditional Indian instrumentation. While this East meets West mixture is incredibly funky, there are few innovations or surprises within. Beyond the sweeping and intense orchestrations of the opening track, "Bombay 405 Miles," the album tends to value mood and groove over tunes.
That said, there are still some particularly strong standouts. "The Good, The Bad, And The Chutney" and "Inspector Jay From Dehli" are mysterious Spy-thriller grooves, loaded with sitars, spacey synths, orchestral breaks, and DJ Shadow's laid back beats. Like much of the album, these two songs are heavily spiced Indian approximations of the cinematic funk found on Blaxploitation soundtracks by Curtis Mayfield, Isaac Hayes, and Willie Hutch. "Professor Pyarelal" is a deliciously slow Barry White-styled groove that blends funky flute, bass, and drums with atmospheric synthesizer and jazz piano. The album's only song with lyrics, "Ganges A Go-Go," features a sound straight out of the Indian quarter of London's "swinging 60s" scene. Over a driving Go-Go beat and Eastern-flavored horn arrangements, a handful of male and female singers (with cute Indian accents) belt out the lines, "I got no time to think / Cuz' I need somebody to love / Yeah! / Baby, I love you so / But you can't love me more / Why don't you hold me closer / And I'll give you more / Yeah!" With lyrics like that, this song is destined to wind up on one of my more kitchy MustHear.com mixes. Throughout the album, there are fun snatches of dialogue lifted straight out of vintage "brownsploitation" films. These digressions add to the overall enjoyment, helping to make Bombay the Hard Way a classic party record for the new millennium.
--John Ballon (email)
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Tracks:
1. Bombay 405 Miles (Anandji/Kalyanji)
2. The Good, the Bad and the Chutney (Anandji/Kalyanji)
3. My Guru (Anandji/Kalyanji)
4. Ganges a Go-Go (Anandji/Kalyanji)
5. The Great Gambler (Anandji/Kalyanji)
6. Professor Pyarelal (Anandji/Kalyanji)
7. Fists of Curry (Anandji/Kalyanji)
8. Punjabis, Pimps & Players (Anandji/Kalyanji)
9. Inspector Jay from Dehli (Anandji/Kalyanji)
10. Satchidananda (Anandji/Kalyanji)
11. Theme from Don (Anandji/Kalyanji)
12. Fear of a Brown Planet (Anandji/Kalyanji)
13. Uptown Bollywood Nights (Anandji/Kalyanji)
14. Kundans Hideout (Anandji/Kalyanji)
15. Swami Safari (Anandji/Kalyanji)
Players:
All music composed, arranged, and conducted by Kalyanji & Anandji Shah Nana Simopoulos - Sitar
Dan "The Automator" Nakamura - Producer / Remixer
Josh "DJ Shadow" Davis - Additional Drums
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