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ESG (NEW YORK/USA)
Souljazz Records
band
website . label
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It certainly wasn't by design that the South Bronx-based group ESG affected
post-punk, no wave, hip-hop, and house music. They opened for Public Image
Ltd. and A Certain Ratio, they released records on the same label as Liquid
Liquid, they had their music sampled countless times, and they became a play-list
staple at '70s dance clubs like the Paradise Garage and the Music Box. The
group's only aspiration was to play their music — simplistic in structure
and heavy on rhythm — and sell lots of records.
The four Scroggins sisters — Deborah (bass, vocals), Marie (congas,
vocals), Renee (vocals, guitar), and Valerie (drums) — formed a group
with the support of their mother, who bought instruments to keep her daughters
busy and away from trouble; at the time, each sibling was teen-aged. Basing
their sound on a mutual love for James Brown, Motown, and Latin music, the
sisters went through a number of name changes before finally settling on ESG.
"E" stood for emerald, Valerie's birthstone; "S" stood
for sapphire, Renee's birthstone; and as for "G," well, neither
Deborah nor Marie had a birthstone beginning with that letter, but they did
want their records to go gold. After permanently adding non-relative Tito
Libran to the lineup as a conga player (some male members came and went prior
to this), ESG was officially born.
The group began by learning and playing songs by the likes of Rufus and the
Rolling Stones; they also learned from watching music programs like Don Kirschner's
Rock Concert and Soul. The Scroggins' mother had barely scraped up enough
cash to buy those instruments, so she didn't have enough left to get them
music lessons. The group entered talent contests and even won a few of them.
After performing at one particular New York show that they did not win, a
judge named Ed Bahlman, the owner of 99 Records (a record shop and a label
that included Y Pants, Liquid Liquid, Bush Tetras, and Konk on its roster)
was impressed enough to take them under his wing as a manager and producer.
At this point, ESG had a few of their own songs. Figuring people would know
when they screwed up a cover, the group decided to write their own songs in
order to sidestep audience knowledge of when mistakes were being made.
Bahlman booked ESG at punk clubs. The group's sparse, heavily rhythmic, and
unpolished sound fit right into the New York scene that Bahlman's label was
a significant factor in. They debuted in 1979 at a place called the Mechanical
Hall. A four-song repertoire was all they had to work with, and after those
songs were over, the crowd asked for more. The same four songs were played
over again. At another early gig, ESG opened for the Factory label's A Certain
Ratio. ESG didn't know A Certain Ratio from A Tramp Shining, but Factory head
Tony Wilson asked the openers if they'd like to record something for his label.
This resulted in You're No Good, a three-song single produced by Martin Hannett.
The songs — "You're No Good," "UFO," and "Moody"
— remain the group's best-known material. These three songs are among
the best to have come from New York's no wave scene, a scene that ESG had
little business being part of. ESG wasn't self-consciously arty and they didn't
come from a punk background; they simply wrote and played their music without
conceptualization. None of this matched with the no wave bands, but the sound
the group made certainly did.
The three songs from the Moody 7" were issued in the States on 99 with
three live songs from a Hurrah's appearance added. A year later, 99 issued
another three-song single in the form of ESG Says Dance to the Beat of Moody.
This proved to people too dear to Factory and Hannett that the group had their
own sound down and didn't need any outside influence or manipulation. A good
debut LP, Come Away With ESG, came in 1983 and continued in the vein of the
previous releases. After that, the group went dormant for several years. One
major factor was Dahlman's decision to shut down 99. A legal battle with Sugarhill
over Grandmaster Flash's sampling of Liquid Liquid's "Optimo" caused
him financial and mental stress, with Sugarhill's fall into receivership —
and inability to award 99 their due settlement — acting as the final
straw.
ESG would soon become victims of uncleared samples as well. In fact, there
was a period during the early '90s when rap singles using the siren sound
from "UFO" seemed more common than ones that sampled James Brown.
ESG resurfaced for a number of small-label releases during this period, and
a 1993 release was pointedly titled "Sample Credits Don't Pay Our Bills."
Throughout the '90s, ESG's stature as an influential group began to rise,
with groups like the Beastie Boys and Luscious Jackson citing them as a profound
discovery. The value of the group's rare early releases responded in kind,
which was remedied somewhat by the U.K.'s Soul Jazz label. A South Bronx Story,
a compilation that included all the group's best material, was released in
2000. The renewed interest helped lead to another resurfacing that culminated
in a 2002 album, Step Off, for Soul Jazz. With a revamped lineup that included
Renee Scroggins' daughters, Nicole and Chistelle, Step Off was met with the
consensus that the group had picked up exactly where it left off.