Ben Wa (band) explained

Ben Wa
Origin:USA
Genre:Electronic, Dub
Years Active:1998 - 2001
Label:Black Hole Records, Malvado Records, Stray Records
Associated Acts:Limbomaniacs, Big Janitor, MCM & the Monster
Past Members:Anthony "House" Chaba, Eric Ware

Ben Wa was an American electronic band from Oakland, California comprising Anthony "House" Chaba (programming and bass guitar) and Eric Ware (programming and keyboards), who had worked together before in bands such as Limbomaniacs, Big Janitor, and MCM & the Monster.[1]

After releasing a four track EP 1 full of breaks and electro in 1998 they began recording their debut album Devil Dub featuring guest musicians such as guitarists Buckethead and M.I.R.V., drummer Bryan "Brain" Mantia and turntablist DJ Disk, plus Scientist live on stage for the release party[1] in January 1999. Chaba and Ware had met Scientist when opening for Bill Laswell's Praxis in San Francisco.[2]

Reviews for Devil Dub were positive with URB calling it "one of the most crucial records of any genre released this year"[2] and Michelle Goldberg of Metro Silicon Valley stating: "The lazy pace is lulling, but like Tricky's music, it's more edgy and creepy than ethereal."[2] Rick Anderson of Allmusic gave 4,5 out of 5 stars, writing: "This is remarkably pleasant stuff."[3] Noah Wayne of online music magazine Splendid wrote: "It's campy, it's twisted, it's dub!"[4]

Two of their tracks, "Re-Dub" and "Ephedream", were included on Laswell's releases Reanimator: Black Market Science and Tetragrammaton - Submerge.[5] [6] They also contributed tracks to a few other dub compilations.[7]

Another EP called Elektro-Krazy followed in 2000, again concentrating on breaks and electro and described on Epitonic as "the gap between Detroit techno and funky dance floor breaks in a most ingenious way".[8] Their next album Disciples Of Retro-Tech was released in 2001 as a double vinyl and single compact disc, featuring explorations of pure electro and synth-pop terrain. Stephen Cook of Allmusic wrote: "The hybrid mix is so inventive that suspect pastiche and old-school chic absolutely do not figure into it". He gave the album 4 out of 5 stars.[9] Daiv Whaley of music newspaper Hear/Say concluded his review: "This is cool, accessible music for every child of man and machine. File under 'electro-funk,' file under 'fantastic.'"[10]

Discography

Devil Dub

Italic Title:no
Devil Dub
Type:studio
Artist:Ben Wa
Cover:devildub.jpg
Released:January 13, 1999
Recorded:1998
Genre:Dub music, experimental rock
Length:65:42
Label:Black Hole
Producer:Ben Wa
Next Title:Disciples of Retro-Tech
Next Year:2001

Devil Dub is the 1999 debut album by San Francisco Bay Area band Ben Wa consisting of "Dr. Ware" and "House"(Limbomaniacs, Tommy Guerrero, Buckethead's Giant Robot, MCM & the Monster).[11]

After forming in 1997, contributing to several compilations and releasing an EP in 1998, Devil Dub was the first full-length release by the duo. House sums up:

Guest musicians finally included avant-garde guitarist Buckethead, drummer Brain (with Primus at this time) and DJ Disk (from the Invisibl Skratch Piklz).

A critics from URB magazine called it "one of the most crucial records of any genre released this year".[12] [13]

Personnel

Notes

Ben wa humbly acknowledged the following for inspiration: Scientist, Mad Professor, Lee 'Scratch' Perry, King Tubby, Sly and Robbie, Bill Laswell and Kraftwerk.[15]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/ben-wa-mn0000169230/biography Ben Wa
  2. Michelle Goldberg: Ben Wa's debut CD, 'Devil Dub,' offers classic old-school dub. In: Metro Silicon Valley, January 7, 1999.
  3. Rock Anderson: Review of Devil Dub on Allmusic.
  4. Noah Wayne: Review of Devil Dub . In: Splendid, November 9, 1998.
  5. Reanimator - Black Market Science on Discogs.
  6. Tetragramaton - Submerge on Discogs.
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20080922135726/http://www.benwa.net/releases.html Releases page
  8. http://www.epitonic.com/#/artists/ben-wa/ Ben Wa
  9. Stephen Cook: Review of Disciples Of Retro-Tech on Allmusic.
  10. Daiv Whaley: Review of Disciples of Retro-Tech. In Hear/Say, November 2001.
  11. Web site: Spano . Charles . [{{Allmusic|class=artist |id=p485306 |pure_url=yes}} Ben Wa - Music Biography, Credits and Discography ]. AllMusic . 2001-08-21 . 2012-06-26.
  12. Web site: Metroactive Music | Ben Wa . Metroactive.com . 2012-02-13.
  13. Web site: Chris Baty . Ben There, Done That - Page 1 - Music - San Francisco . SF Weekly . 2001-10-17 . 2012-02-13 . 2014-10-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141025072539/http://www.sfweekly.com/2001-10-17/music/ben-there-done-that/ . dead .
  14. Web site: Devil Dub . Bingeandgrab.com . 2012-02-13.
  15. Web site: Ben Wa - Devil Dub (CD, Album) at Discogs . Discogs.com . 2012-02-13.