Shawn Lee dons his
Ping Pong Orchestra cap to pay tribute not so much to the orchestral classics of the classical canon, but more to the Hooked on Classics series of albums that were so popular in the early 1980s. On those records,
Louis Clark of the
Electric Light Orchestra arranged the most famous themes by the great composers, so as to be simpatico with a generation of listeners who were readily acquainted with classical music, but who were in the mood for something more contemporary.
Clark used the popular production techniques of the day and fused them to disco beats. In the process, he created a kitschy craze.
Lee's look at
Clark takes his idea and stretches it very close to the breaking point, with requisite humor. His reading of the 1812 Overture is redubbed out --
Augustus Pablo meets
Lee Perry -- with the main lyric theme played on a melodica. Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy employs a subtle snare breakbeat, a Japanese koto, and electric guitars on the crescendos, adding a nice electronic fantasia for a cadenza. Ride of the Valkyries gets a full
Deodato-esque treatment with deft, funky basslines added to orchestral harmonics. In further reference,
Lee also gets his
Ping Pong machine to put the
Deodato freak on Also Sprach Zarathustra while actually checking the musical arrangement by
Clark. The driving bassline and the popping hand- and kit-looped percussion overdrive the melody as layers of psych guitars and funky keys add a trace of
Isaac Hayes' "Theme from Shaft" to the proceedings. Then there's the beach blanket bong-out surf workout of
Maurice Ravel's Bolero.You get the idea. After his collaborations with vocalists on
Sing a Song and Into the Wind -- an outing with Chinese classical guzheng player
Bei Bei --
Hooked Up Classics is a pleasant return to
Lee's love of library music and is at least as kitschy as the records he's paying tribute to. ~ Thom Jurek