DJ RAP
Learning Curve (Columbia / Higher Ground)
Reviewed by Steve Marshall
I want to set something straight from the start--this is not a rap album.
The major label debut from DJ Rap (real name Charissa Saverio) is best
classified as a futuristic pop/dance album, but there's much more bubbling
just beneath the surface. In the UK, she's best known as one of the best
jungle DJs around, responsible for a decade's worth of seminal dance hits.
Here in the US, she's pretty much an unknown, sitting poised to make a
major breakthrough.
Learning Curve is the ambitious new album from DJ Rap. There's hardly any
trace of the drum'n'bass that made here so successful. Instead, this
classically trained pianist dabbles in a wide variety of musical styles,
ranging from the seething first single, "Bad Girl" to the acoustic
"Ordinary Day." Vocally, Rap sounds like a cross between Tori Amos and Kate
Bush, with a tinge of evil thrown in. Musically, this CD is all over the
place.
Trance fans will love "You Get Around." This is one of those tracks that
catches you unaware and then sucks you in when you're not expecting it. The
song features great drumming in the second half, then ends abruptly with a
big rock ending. Starting with "Human Kind" and running through "Live it
for Today" and "Go," Rap really hits her stride. The guitar work from Simon
Stewart on the latter two shines.
Her band, while it's your basic lineup of guitar, keys, bass & drums, shows
real versatility. DJ Rap shows a lot of potential on Learning Curve, and
proves that there's a lot more to what she does than just spinning records.
There are a few cuts that you'll want probably to skip, but overall it's a
inspired new album with something for just about everyone.
© 1999 - Steve Marshall