The Slew are not so much a working band or even a hip-hop crew as they are an ad hoc duo consisting of turntablist
Kid Koala and producer Dynomite D., who were approached to create the soundtrack for a documentary film. They invested quite a bit of work in the soundtrack, and when the film project fell apart, decided to keep moving forward with the music.
100% is the result, and while its strange (and not always fully digested) blend of rockish guitars, obscure vocal samples, and hip-hop turntable scratching at first comes across as something of a half-formed musical concept, by the end of the album it has long since begun to feel like an organic whole. The most obvious sonic referent here is, strangely enough, the
Skip McDonald vehicle
Little Axe, a similarly twisted blues-rock-dub project -- except that where
McDonald references reggae,
the Slew have classic rock and hip-hop in mind, and where
McDonald has
Adrian Sherwood to deepen and complicate the soundscape,
the Slew keep things dark but dry. The title track is an oddly fascinating blend of funky samples and vintage rockism; "It's All Over" brings more turntablism to the mix along with weird spoken word samples; "You Turn Me Cold" minimizes the vocals in favor of more (and wankier) guitar. The vocals are consistently the most mysterious aspect of this project: credits are nonexistent, but these singers are pretty clearly neither
Kid Koala nor Dynomite D., so who are they? Are the Delta bluesy vocals on "Wrong Side of the Tracks" by a Delta blues singer, or a modern interpreter? And how about that great vocalist on "Shackled Soul"? The line between salutary mysteriousness and irritating obfuscation is blurred here, but there's no questioning the consistently high quality of the music. ~ Rick Anderson