Showing posts with label Jazz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jazz. Show all posts

Friday, June 7, 2013

Stuff-Live at Montreux '76


Whatever you're doing today, whether it's counting down the minutes at work while the weekend beckons or hurtling your way through a paper which should have been written a week ago, it's never bad to have something that helps you carry that load. Let today's Bastaixo for you be the funky sounds of the band Stuff. A work buddy of mine (and a gnarly bass player himself) passed me along this video of a live set of them playing at the Montreux (Switzerland) Jazz Festival in 1976 and it's the perfect way to make an hour fly by today. Based in NYC, Stuff were great musicians in their own rights and had five albums go Gold in the US (and one went Platinum in Japan!). They were also sought after backing musicians and played with artists from Paul Simon to Aretha Franklin and John Lennon.

Stuff show off their incredible musical range and dabble in classical jazz to funk to jamband while sounding amazing the entire time. While you listen along, keep track of the audience. The frigid Swiss at first appear to be a hostile crowd yet eventually find themselves unable to deny the funk. And finally, it doesn't hurt that their drummer reminds me of this guy when he gets going.

Friday, August 19, 2011

Miles Davis-Old Folks


Sometimes I post songs because they're classics. Sometimes I post jams that I'm vibing to at the moment. Other times I post because I got a really fu%king cool picture. This is one of those times.

It's also an excuse to highlight the illustrious career of Miles Davis, the coolest cat that ever lived. Take a walk with the musical giant on this Friday night and start your weekend off right with this eternal song, "Old Foks"

Click here to download

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Hypnotic Brass Ensemble -War


There are a few songs that you know are going to be jams the moment they come on. This is one of them. The last show we caught on Saturday night was the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble from Chicago. The nine member band right away has a mindblowing fact-eight of the nine are brothers. What? Yea. But other than quickly pondering how that was possible, I spent the rest of the concert just spent moving. Right away they let the know the crowd what they were in for, and came out the gates trying to make sure that everyone spent their last reservoirs of energy grooving the last night away. Framed by a beautiful old church tucked away among the back alleys of Caceres, the walls did their best to echo the beautiful, energetic symphony created by the Chicago crew. While a brass band obviously poses its own sonical limitations, their sound never lost its freshness throughout the concert, and mixing in crowd checks, rapping, and solos, the band kept the audience ready to hear what was next. With recent features with Mos Def and the Gorillaz, this band has been recently getting the love they deserve. And with shows as alive as the one on Saturday, and with jamandahalfs like "War" they will be making more fans like myself the world over.



Friday, November 12, 2010

Louis Armstrong-(What Did I Do To Be So) Black and Blue


Nat Hentoff, American historian, writer, and music critic, once asked Billie Holiday who had most influenced her musically. Her answer was Louis Armstrong. "He didn't say words," she said, "but somehow it just moved me so. It sounded like he was making love to me. That's how I wanted to sing." This coming from one of the most moving singers in American musical history is a testament to Armstrong's music. But lucky for us, Louis did say words, and had a unique and riveting voice that shines alongside  his virtuoso trumpet in this jamandahalf.

"(What Did I Do To Be So) Black and Blue" is one of the most powerful songs of the 20th century. Although not originally written by Louis himself (written instead by Andy Razaf), Louis makes every word, every syllable, of the song his own. More so, on his two trumpet solos Armstrong charges each beat, each warble, each improvised note with an energy that manages to impress and shock me each time I hear it. Musically, the song is defined by these solos which are both an expression of Armstrong's talent, and a continuation of painful lyrics of the song. Armstrong's gravely voice is the perfect personification of his trumpet, and the solos are verses in their own right, capable of just as much emotion and story-telling as any written words.

The lyrics of "Black and Blue" extend the gravity of the first solo. The song's first four lines start off like many jazz/blues songs do, as a lament against the against the troubles of the world. Louis's voice reflects the mood of the beaten narrator, singing with dejection about being so low that "even the mouse/ran from my house." It is after the fourth line that "Black and Blue" becomes a fascinating look into Louis Armstrong as a person, especially in the context of the civil rights movement. Switching from a general, "what did I do" to the plural and less clear "they laugh at you," Louis begins to change the narrative of this jam. The next couplet is possibly the song's most hard-hitting, and also controversial. Louis sings:

I'm white...inside...but that don't help my case
Cuz I...can't hide...what is in my face

which can be interpreted as two ways. One view, as I look at it, is that Armstrong is saying that we are all one, regardless of what we look like. That the Jim Crow era United States  limited the rights of people based only on something that we have no control over: our skin color. Another view could see the lines as Armstrong flatly rejecting his ethnicity. While both views can be strengthened by the repeated line in the next two verses: "my only sin/is in my skin," in context with Armstrong's history regarding the Civil Rights movement, the lines seem to hold a greater meaning of our oneness. 

Placing the song in context, it was released in a especially turbulent time of our history, coming eleven months after the landmark Brown vs Board of Education which desegregated schools. Armstrong later severely criticized President Eisenhower's reluctance to act when African American teenagers were banned from attending high school in Little Rock Arkansas, saying publicly that "The way they are treating people in the South, the government can go to hell," and "The President has no guts." In this light, the message of the song becomes more clear. Rather than a denouncement of his ethnicity, the song becomes a protest song, an attack on American society for seeing people for their color of their skin rather than their character. His only "sin," sings Louis with an understated sarcasm, is that he was born with dark skin. 

This jamandahalf also holds an important place in the literary masterpiece, The Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison. The book itself is often compared to a jazz song with its various movements, its improvisation, and how it, like jazz, takes an often depressing story and makes it art. In the prologue, the unnamed narrator alludes to this very jam, and it appears two more times throughout the story. Both the song and the novel look at the juxtaposition between how an individual sees himself compared to how they are seen by society, and in some ways, the novel could be seen as a lengthy elaboration of this song, but thematically and artistically.  

The weight of this jam, its unique place as one of the first popular songs to look at race relations in the US, its connection to one of the greatest novels of all time, and the sublime trumpet playing and singing of Louis Armstrong have me convinced that this is one of the greatest songs of the 20th century. Let me know what you think in our new comments system. 


Awesome video-Louis Armstrong in Ghana singing to Nkrumah

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Album Review: J.Nolan-Broken Dreams


The beats are infused with jazz and soul. The lyrics, with a maturity far beyond his 21 years. The flow is polished yet never dull. J.Nolan’s most recent project, Broken Dreams, is bursting with a hunger for more, but marks a serious step towards the goal that all rappers have, making it. J. Nolan is on track to do something big, as he says himself, “I’m just a young man trying to make history,” and he’s doing it the right way.
The flow and subject matter reflect a mixture of his North-Eastern roots, a few years spent in San Jose, and an Atlanta upbringing. At times sounding like a young Nas, Consequence, and Talib rolled into one, while still never losing his uniqueness, J.Nolan lyrics are a reflection of a young man growing up, and are a snapshot of a young rapper at this time of his life. Broken Dreams is heavy with situations and settings that most people our age are dealing with: pressures of growing up, decisions we make now which have lasting impacts, and young dreams.
Broken Dreams follows in a long line of hip hop albums that are influenced and guided by jazz. Like Guru’s Jazzmattazz series (RIP), Broken Dreams is heavy on jazz samples, a sound that J.Nolan has developed for the past year, with the help of a growing production team. Rare for a relatively unknown rapper, most of the beats on the album are on point, and producer No Alias makes beats on which J.Nolan’s super smooth flow finds a natural home. A student of delivery, rhyme schemes and patterns, J delivers quick-witted metaphors with ease while drawing on personal experiences and childhood memories.
J.Nolan contacted us while releasing his project, and I had the chance to talk to him about himself and his music.
Do you feel like you have made it? If not, at what point do you feel like you have made it?

I definitely have not made it, whatever "it" really is. I think I've done relatively well for someone that does all of my own promotion with little or no help from even my closest friends. I don't have a team behind me or any hot new clothing lines sponsoring my project, but there's people in every region of the world that know who I am. When I look at it that way, I've done something that many don't get a chance to do. However, I understand that I'm far from where I plan to take it. And that's what the people get from my music as well.

You mention your brother, your family, and being a role model to the kids. How important is family to you and your music?

Huge. My mother and I had a conversation when I told her I didn't plan on going to college to pursue music. I assured her that I had a plan to do it a certain way, which is the way I currently make my music. I don't curse in my lyrics, I don't speak on anything degrading towards women, I ultimately am the same person in music that my family knows me to be. I want all of my family to be completely proud of what I put out into the world to where they don't have to be ashamed to share it with others. 

On "Real or Not" you talk about how you liked Michael Jordan because of his jumpshot, nowadays the kids just like him for his money. Could you explain this line a little more. Is it because the kids don't know about his history? Or that they do, but now just admire him for his money, and not what he did on the court?

Indeed. Growing up, my friends and I were fans of sports for the sports themselves. It wasn't until we got older that we understood athletes were paid to play them. When we talked about Michael Jordan, it was about his skill set and statistics...athletic superiority in a nutshell. When kids talk about Jordan or someone like a Lebron James now, they can only talk about basketball for so long before they mention how much money they have. And I feel like it's affected the world in general. It's at a point where individual worth is determined by income. I don't know about anyone else, but my family and the people around me are valuable regardless of how much money they make. And the fact that kids can think that way makes me afraid of the future, because their parents are the ones teaching them these things. Whether it's directly or indirectly. Morals, principles, and ethics seem to have lost their luster.

Broken Dreams is real. From Track 1 to 18, J.Nolan raps about what he knows, his story, his life, his dreams. Support this young artist, this is music being made right. 

Download Album Here

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Miles Davis-It Never Entered My Mind


Music is used to convey emotions, tell stories, brag, lie, proclaim one’s love, express anger, and on and on. Lyrics express how a person is feeling at a specific time or what message they want the world to know. That message might be as simple as T-Pain letting you know that he wants to buy you a drink (oooweeee), or it could be as deep as our old friend Sam Cooke letting the world know that a change is coming. 

The universality of music, and the emotions that can be conveyed through music, transcends languages and cultures. The hope and joy that is found in Louis Armstrong’s “What A Wonderful World” is identical to the version song by the big Hawaiian, Israel Kamakawiwo'ole, despite the very different histories and backgrounds of the two men. But sometimes words aren’t enough; sometimes the truest of feelings can only be rightly expressed with only instruments.

Miles Davis, one of the preeminent jazz musicians of all time, sings his soul in this jam and a half without saying a single world. Conveying power, confusion. strength, and passion, all at the same time, “It Never Entered My Mind” combines an easy piano backing up a powerful trumpet. The interplay is at the heart of what makes “It Never Entered My Mind” so amazing. The coolness of the piano melds perfectly with the strength of the trumpet, both making up for the weaknesses of the other, creating a jam and a half that is as close to perfect as any out there. Lacking words, but speaking a language that all of us can understand, this jam is a cover of an old show tune. You would never know. Miles and his quintet make this song their own, and give it something that can never be truly replicated again.