I've written about the music of Pandit Pam Pam several times previously. Pandit Pam Pam is the name Eduardo Ramos sues for his music a style he describes as 'unsettling punky ambience' but it goes way beyond whatever you might think that sounds like.
Eduardo lives in Sao Paulo, is inspired by European electronic music but is also obviously very much affected by Brazilian and south American music- those two influences combine to give his music very distinct sound and flavour. At the start of January he released a two minute track called Pause Rafraichissant, a soundscape that fades in with some ambient drones and synth FX, a very subtle and detailed track that you can listen to in two ways- you can let it wash over you as a background ambiance, a calming audio presence or really listen to it, paying attention to the small changes in pitch and tone and the static that replaces it at the end. It's at Bandcamp here.
It has recently been carnival in Brazil, the Mardi Gras celebration that marks the beginning of Lent. Eduardo's wife Bianca and young children developed a love for an old song by Olodum, Farao Divindade Do Egito, a song about ancient Egyptian pharaohs and spirits. Eduardo took the song his family were dancing to and did an edit, turning it into 'a dark, Balearic, dubby dream'- his words and I can't find any better way to describe it. The Pandit Pam Pam Deep Into The Bowel Of A Dub is at Bandcamp here. It's an infectious and affecting listen and a bit of a groover too.
Eduardo's on a roll at the moment- out tomorrow is a new track he's done as Pandit Pam Pam together with Darkinari, a cover of a Colourbox song, Tarantula. The Pandit Pam Pam/ Darkinari version is a treat, a deep dub bassline and wandering trumpet doing a dance, entwined and interlocked, the bassline descending, the trumpet weaving. Eduardo says that it was inspired by Andrew Weatherall, that he keeps making tracks that he'd like to have played for him, hoping for some kind of cosmic validation from the man. I think that if Andrew were alive, he'd have played Tarantula on his much missed NTS show. Find it at Bandcamp- I love it, it's highly recommended.
There's another new one, Familinea, lined up for a March release, a six minute ambient beauty but we'll come back to that nearer the time.
Colourbox's original version of Tarantula came out in 1982, their debut single along with Breakdown on the A- side, on 4AD. It was reworked the following year with producer Mick Glossop. Vocals on both versions were by Debian Currie who left in '83, replaced by Lorita Grahame. Tarantula is post- punk/ synthpop, drawing from their love of reggae and dub and also industrial synth music, dystopic dub disco with a numbed out vocal from Debian. It was later covered by 4AD supergroup This Mortal Coil.
Colourbox went onto make a load of great records- their 1986 dub/ soul single Baby I Love You So and it's B-side Looks Like We're Shy One Horse are 80s peaks (and both much loved by Mr Weatherall), their 12" Official World Cup Theme/ Philip Glass single is a good one. Their self titled album, a 1983 mini- album and a 1985 full length one, both contain much to enjoy and in 1987 they joined forces with AR Kane for a one off single as M/A/R/R/S, Pump Up The Volume, a seminal moment in UK sample/ dance music culture.

1 comment:
Thanks for the Pandit Pam Pam tip off, I really enjoy Eduardo’s music, so this is bound to hit the spot. His Christmas EPs always go down a treat, too!
I’m looking forward to hearing a fresh take on Tarantula. I fell in love with Colourbox after hearing Sex Gun (aka Just Give ‘Em Whisky) on a Vertigo sampler in the mid-80s, though I was simultaneously getting deep into 4AD so I would have found them either way.
The first Colourbox 12” I found was Tarantula (Second Version) and this remains my favourite. I love the TMC cover too and, although Beck’s relatively recent go fell short, I was glad it brought the song to a wider audience.
I’ll be poised to listen to Pandit Pam Pam & Darkinari’s version tomorrow, I think it’ll be great.
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