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Arts

Issue — September 12, 2007

November 16; First Avenue; 612.332.1775

Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings

By Nate Patrin

Image by Dulce Pinzon

Five years ago, a friend of mine directed me toward the damnedest cover of Janet Jackson's "What Have You Done for Me Lately": It dialed the mid-'80s Jam/Lewis sleekness back two decades until it sounded like it belonged on a King seven-inch with the words "A James Brown Production" emblazoned on the label. The singer traded Ms. Jackson's icy cool for a sweltering harangue that unwound itself until the springs went straight. That cover was courtesy of Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, an old-school funk revival outfit fronted by a 40-something (now 50-something) former correctional officer born in—where else—Augusta, Georgia, and backed by a crew of airtight New Yorkers who played like they were hermetically sealed during the Johnson administration, before funk went on to incorporate things like Moogs and vocoders. While their 2002 debut Dap Dippin' With...Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings established what they could do, it was 2005's Naturally—with its sinuous cover of Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land," the comedic romance of the Lee Fields duet "Stranded in Your Love," and the slick, hip-shakingly conflicted "How Do You Let a Good Man Down?"—that put them on the bigger public radar. Next thing you know, you're hearing "Pick It Up, Lay It in the Cut" in Kraft commercials, and the Dap-Kings are doing side gigs blasting out horn charts for Mark Ronson and touring with Amy Winehouse. But with Amy in (yes) rehab and Sharon done filming a singing role in the upcoming Denzel Washington film The Great Debaters, the band's back together to tour behind their latest, 100 Days, 100 Nights—which, like their other records, sounds like one of the best albums of the year. (It's up to you as to whether that year's 2007 or 1968.)

From the Author Archive
Nate Patrin
Capaciti & A-Scratch: The Blind Cinema Sessions — Minnesota Mix (Sep 5, 2007)
UGK: UGK (Underground Kingz) — (Aug 29, 2007)
Mark Ronson: Version — (Aug 1, 2007)
More Fall Arts Articles
Graffiti artist 27 steps out of the shadows and into the galleries (Sep 12, 2007)
For 30 years, Lou Bellamy has run the nation’s preeminent African American theater. But what a theater critic really wants to know is: How’s his golf game? (Sep 12, 2007)
After a life-changing accident, performer and author Kevin Kling will never tell another tale the same way again (Sep 12, 2007)
After 15 years, James Sewell Ballet still thrives on the unexpected (Sep 12, 2007)
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October 2; Walker Art Center; 612.375.7600. (Sep 12, 2007)
November 16; First Avenue; 612.332.1775 (Sep 12, 2007)
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