Shawn
Lee's Ping Pong Orchestra Voices and Choices
(URCD/LP207)
Release date: January 30th 2007
In Shawn Lee’s world Ennio Morricone dances with Esquivel
and Serge Gainsbourg as spaghetti western guitars and harmonicas
ride fat drum breaks accompanied
by vibes, lush strings, and piano. On Voices and Choices Lee's
signature style moody instrumentals are accompanied by vocals
for the first time in the four albums he has recorded for Ubiquity.
In addition to a handful of full songs, instrumental tracks are
decorated with vocal textures in a nod to classic producers David
Axelrod and Charles Stepney who used choir-like walls of vocal
to create their big productions.
Ubiquity label mate Nino Moschella joins Lee on the rock n’soul
epic “Kiss The Sky”, while Ohmega Watts waxes positive
lyrical on “The Glass Hour Effect.” Instrumentals
“JW” and “Song For David” are just begging
for an accompanying movie to match the cinematic sounds, while
“Tense Bossa” and “Glass Act” feature
subtle vocal parts to heighten the spy-theme tension.
Releases by Shawn Lee’s Ping Pong Orchestra started off
as an experiment. Multi-instrumentalist and record collector Lee
was obsessed by vintage library records and wanted to see if he
could recreate their soundtrack-worthy sounds in his curio-shop-like
London studio. Library records were originally produced to provide
instrumental musical backing for TV, film, radio and advertising.
Specific library records have become highly collectable, and are
favored by DJs and producers for the occasional drum break, sample,
or funk track.
Lee’s idea was to make full-length library albums that were
good from start to finish and equally listenable at home as they
might also be DJ friendly. Lee’s studio is insanely overpopulated,
instruments at hand include a 1940's early proto-synth called
a Clavioline, a 100 year old Marxophone zither, a 1950's Virginal
Harpsichord, a 1950's Xylophone, a rare 1967 Vox guitar that has
Fuzz, Tremelo and wah-wah built in, a 1930's Double Bass and an
early 1900's keyboard called a Dulcetone. So finding the right
instruments and noises to create a specific sound was not going
to be a problem.
Unsure of how commercially successful these records would be,
the first three albums were released in limited pressings and
with only a very minor publicity push. However, not only did Lee
succeed in recreating the vibe of classic library records, he
also attracted the interest of advertisers and producers with
tracks being used in commercials for BMW and Jaguar, in TV shows
like Malcolm in the Middle, Lost, Desperate Housewives, and Boston
Legal, in the trailer for the forthcoming Oceans 13 movie, and
the soundtrack to The Break Up. He was also asked to score the
entire soundtrack to the highly controversial Rock Star video
game Bully (nominated for game Best Original Score) and Save Angel
Hope, a movie which will be released in 2007.
"The albums have really surprised me. I never imagined that
they would work in the many ways that they have," says Lee.
"The tracks have become longer in length and more fleshed
out. I'm constantly incorporating new instruments and I feel like
my writing has really improved over the four albums," he
adds
Inspired by the success of the Ping Pong Orchestra releases, Lee
raises the stakes on Voices and Choices, which follows the release
of the Shawn Lee1s Ping Pong Orchestra vs. Nino Moschella EP (featuring
collaborations and remixes from both artists and a remix by Mark
Pritchard.) Lee is planning on taking the Ping Pong Orchestra
live in 2007 and is already working on a new album of all pop
song cover versions.
As a multi-instrumentalist and singer Shawn Lee has played and
recorded with a diverse range of artists including Psapp, Coldcut,
Leeann Rhimes, Martina Mcbride, UNKLE, Tony Joe White, Chateau
Flight, The Dust Brothers, St. Etienne, Jeff Buckley, Bomb the
Bass, The Spice Girls, and Natasha Atlas not to mention solo records
for Talkin Loud, Wall of Sound imprint We Love You and BBE. He
is also known to breaks n'beats collectors as the man behind "The
Ape Breaks" and "Planet of the Breaks" series which
were sampled by everyone from Guru to The Gorillaz.
|