
Light In The Attic
Eddie Chacon - Pleasure, Joy & Happiness
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Eddie
Chacon
experienced
proper,
peak-nineties
acclaim
in
the
soul
duo
Charles
and
Eddie:
they
scored
a
global
No.
1
in
1992
with
“Would
I
Lie
To
You,”
appeared
three
times
on
Top
of
the
Pops,
and
featured
on
soundtracks
from
True
Romance
to
Super
Mario
Bros..
Their
crooning
style
was
clearly
pop-ready,
but
undeniably
reverent:
the
pair
first
met
when
Eddie
noticed
Charles
carrying
a
vinyl
copy
of
Marvin
Gaye’s
"Trouble
Man”
on
a
New
York
subway
train.
By
that
time,
Chacon
had
already
been
navigating
music
in
interesting
ways,
all
the
way
back
to
his
teen
garage
rock
band
with
the
late
Cliff
Burton
(Metallica)
and
Mike
Bordin
(Faith
No
More).
In
the
late
’80s,
he
released
a
full-length
on
Uncle
Luke
from
2
Live
Crew’s
label
and
signed
to
Columbia
as
a
solo
act.
He
was
a
working
artist,
always
popping
up
in
unexpected
places:
through
the
course
of
his
career,
Chacon
would
write,
sing,
or
produce
ten
Top
40
hits
around
the
globe.
In
the
words
of
Mac
DeMarco:
“Eddie
Chacon
is
planet
earth’s
number
one
musician.
Yesterday,
today,
and
forever.”
Years
ago,
Chacon
retired
from
music
for
a
second
calling
as
a
fashion
photographer
and
creative
director.
In
an
interview
at
the
time,
he
said,
“I
was
fortunate
to
have
a
35-year
music
career
and
felt
that
there
wasn’t
that
much
more
for
me
to
say
or
achieve.”
Very
thankfully,
that’s
no
longer
the
case.
Private
experiments,
far
from
the
major-label
center
he
once
frequented,
began
to
feel
urgent
and
new.
“There’s
nothing
more
exciting
for
me
than
getting
to
start
from
the
beginning
again,”
he
says
today.
“Pleasure,
Joy
and
Happiness”
will
be
available
July
of
2020
on
the
boutique
Los
Angeles-based
label
Day
End
Records.
This
is
a
thoughtfully
considered
album
of
quiet,
confident
R&B:
it
doesn’t
jump
out
at
you,
but
rather
gets
in
you.
Produced
by
John
Carroll
Kirby,
the
like-minded
artist
and
collaborator
with
Frank
Ocean
and
Solange
Knowles,
it
features
restrained
percussion
from
Kanye
West’s
Sunday
Service
drummer
Lamar
Carter.
Celestial
soul
as
a
break
from
chaos,
these
are
quietly
challenging
songs
as
timeless
as
they
are
contemporary.
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