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JamBase Questionnaire: Cochemea Gastelum

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from These United States.

Whether searing the fat off jam music in Robert Walter’s 20th Congress, lighting up a Broadway stage as part of the Fela! band, keeping soul music soulful with Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, getting deep with Archie Shepp or blazing a session with the likes of Amy Winehouse and Paul Simon, NYC fixture Cochemea Gastelum is the living embodiment of “coming correct.” His crisp, lethal, adventurous sax and flute playing find the sweet spot in whatever type of music he’s involved in, and unlike many horn players, he never overstays his welcome, playing just what’s needed and leaving listeners hungry for more. Though clearly well grounded in the work of his predecessors, Gastelum synthesizes honking 50s big band rumble, 60s modal moves, 70s electricity, New Orleans slink and more in a way that simply announces a man in total command of his instrument, free of other’s fingerprints and ready to engage in whatever comes his way.

Gastelum’s long-awaited debut as bandleader, The Electric Sound of Johnny Arrow (released July 20 via MOWO! Inc.), unfurls an intoxicating array of sounds, tapping into On The Corner Miles-isms, vintage Fania salsoul, warm Brecker Brothers-esque excursions, the Latin pop of War and El Chicano, and the charged, forward thinking feel of late 60s/early 70s jazz, particularly the electric sax work of Eddie Harris and the impossible-to-place groove of Phil Woods’ European Rhythm Machine. Co-produced by Gastelum and Mocean Worker, the album rolls along layered percussion and a controlled, powered-up energy – a flowing inducement to move, to swing, to sway, aided by guest turns from Joe Russo, Brian Jordan, Zak Najor, Chris Stillwell and more.

It’s bloody sexy music, and executed so smoothly that it’s only upon further inspection that one realizes how much is actually going on. Yet, The Electric Sound of Johnny Arrow never feels overstuffed or confusingly diverse. Like Gastelum’s playing, it is exactly what it needs to be and a fantastic snapshot of a rich musical mind in full flight. (Dennis Cook)

Here’s what Gastelum had to say to our inquiries.

Cochemea Gastelum by Greg Aiello

Nickname: “Cheme” pronounced /tchem-ay/

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Listening, letting go, and in the immortal words of Fred Wesley, playing like you don’t give a fuck.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
Charlie Parker’s “Hot House

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Orchestre Poly-Rythmo De Contou’s “Echos Hypnotiques”

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
A drummer

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
A sweaty dance party

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
There are moments when I may seem detached or distant, but I just like to be quiet and watch sometimes.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
The ocean

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
Sly & The Family Stone’s There’s A Riot Going On

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Au Virage Lepic in Paris

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
Unexpected places

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
Eating late night junk food!

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
Hmmm, probably The Beatles. My mom used to play their records all the time growing up, and I always seem to go back to their songs for some inspirado. Been on a big Stones kick lately, though.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Ornette Coleman having a jam session in his apartment.

Cheme will perform perform the entire solo album in its entirety on September 10th in New York City at 92Y Tribeca with ten piece band, including members of Antibalas and Budos Band.

Cochemea Gastelum Tour Dates :: Cochemea Gastelum News :: Cochemea Gastelum Concert Reviews

JamBase | Dark City
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JFJO | 02.10 | Santa Cruz

By: Dennis Cook

Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey :: 02.10.10 :: Moe’s Alley :: Santa Cruz, CA

Wow, what a different band.

JFJO by Jeremy Charles

Tilted gently but firmly by Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey‘s fully interlocked, supremely slinky sound waves at Moe’s Alley, I couldn’t escape the feeling of newness and excitability generated by the band. But, I also couldn’t slip the feeling that I was watching an almost entirely different being from the one I encountered at my first JFJO show in 2002. Thing is, I love both bands, especially because the transformation is not cosmetic. Something profound has shifted in JFJO’s DNA, though one can still pick up the ancestral lines in their profile, feel the same tongue-deep embrace of the moment, and most especially, the phenomenal sense of burgeoning creativity that has marked every incarnation.

The mainstay of Jacob Fred’s many lineups is master keyboardist Brian Haas, and while early indications this year were Haas would be the focal point of things to come, the Moe’s Alley gig revealed a quartet beginning to find their wheelhouse. While I’ve enjoyed the band’s many metamorphoses, based on this performance, we’re at the dawn of some really special, spectacular music that will continue to reshape what folks call “jazz” or even “music.” Haas, Matt Hayes (upright bass), Chris Combs (lap steel, guitar) and Josh Raymer (drums) are carving a unique niche in the instrumental world. While definitely JFJO’s sexiest, moodiest lineup, these four also bring together a number of hitherto largely unheard strains – country, tango, bossa nova – that are complicating (in the best way) the Fred sound.

JFJO by Greg Aiello

While one picks up on hints of what was in the older material, everything has been given a working over. It’s still JFJO but with some fresh footwork and a shiny new coat. Once Haas’ wild boy foil onstage, Raymer exhibited a steadiness and clarity of playing – a combo of New Orleans swing with the crisp clack of Art Blakey – that anchored the lot, and Hayes – joyfully wobbling head and wide hanging mouth – is the other delightful spaz in the mix. I think Haas needs at least one guy onstage who’s willing to get as silly as him, as willing to display the music on his face, in order to be his best. And B. Haas was on freakin’ fire at Moe’s. Dancing with his electric piano, blowing sweet soul into his melodica or just transmitting heavy vibrations through his thin, powerful body, Haas was more inventive, switch-on and happy than I’ve seen him in ages. For whatever reason, he’s got his groove back and one of the leading keyboard lights of his generation is again reminding so, so many others what half-talents they truly are.

Springing off Hayes and Raymer’s pinpoint hits and all-encompassing rhythmic tide was Combs’ absolutely breathtaking lap steel wizardry. It seems like hype to pack so many adjectives onto a young musician but Combs is a major find AND maybe one of the few perfect matches for Haas – as idiosyncratic and volatile a player as ever walked the earth. His ardor snags something from Jobim and Piazzolla while his more intricate, fast picking brings to mind Wes Montgomery and Jimmy Bryant. Guitar has never really been part of JFJO’s makeup, despite some past concerted efforts to make it so. Combs ties the group into another part of music’s lineage, putting humming strings and Fripp-esque spookiness in places in the catalog they’ve never been and proving a significant melodic leader within the quartet.

JFJO by Greg Aiello

Much of the new material, which provided the bulk of the setlist, was penned by Raymer, Hayes and Combs, often in combination with one another or Haas, and this may be the most significant sign that Jacob Fred is alive and well. Composition has always been the secret heart of JFJO’s success. They are – everyone who’s ever served time in their ranks – amazing improvisers, but what really separates them from all the other chop-masters afoot is tunes that stick. From the playful (“That’s a new tune about me jumping on a trampoline with friends” – Haas) to the profoundly moving, JFJO has a tradition of songwriting that’s never shallow even when it’s crazed and childlike. Today’s quartet is keeping that tradition going with real style, and doing so in tandem in a band known primarily for solo composers. “Drethoven” – offered in the best version I’ve yet heard at Moe’s – is on par with any of their past staples, and Stay Gold, their full-length debut together hitting in June, may be the most elegant, just plain lovely JFJO album ever assembled.

There’s a palpable desire to directly connect with the music and fans in JFJO right now. In other words, they’re all about getting down to it and moving forward into wherever it is they’re going. In truth, they don’t seem to really know themselves where it’s all leading, but such uncertainty has been part of every Fred-volution. They feed off it and face their fears in order to reveal what’s around the corner and the next one and the next. At one point someone in the back yelled out a question about the group’s name. Without missing a beat, Haas said, “Jacob Fred is the name I wanted my parents to give my baby brother when I was three, and Jazz Odyssey is, of course, from Spinal Tap.” No goofing, no subterfuge, just a clear response. And the whole enterprise is functioning with this sort of clarity and forward motion.

Just as many actors have played Estragon and Vladimir in Samuel Beckett’s tale of existential blue balls Waiting For Godot, it occurred to me, lost in the second set’s rapturous exploration, that maybe “Jacob Fred” is an entity for many players to inhabit. He’s waiting, impatiently perhaps, to be animated into jigs, waltzes and Sufi-style whirls, and many spirits, many hands are required to lift his limbs and give him expression. At present, he’s cavorting in a way that’s got to be seen and heard to really comprehend. Words – even for someone who’s wrestled for nearly a decade to capture them in prose – only scratch the surface when music is this alive, present and inspiring.

JamBase | Tulsa
Go See Live Music!

JFJO Tour Dates :: JFJO News :: JFJO Concert Reviews


Charlie Hunter: A New Beginning

By: Jarrod Dicker

Charlie Hunter by Greg Aiello

Charlie Hunter can do it all. Creating an instrument that translates all his musical desires, Hunter simultaneously plays bass lines, rhythm guitar and lead with incredible ease; making him one of the most exceptional jazz players currently on the circuit.

Recently departing from the group he co-founded, Garage A Trois, Hunter went right back to work on a new album and tour to be introduced and carried out in the New Year.

Hunter is celebrating the release of the new album Gentlemen, I Neglected To Inform You You Will Not Be Getting Paid, with a residency at Rose Live Music in Brooklyn now. The album was released on January 12, 2010 through Hunter’s own Spire Artist Media and digitally through reapandsow.

On this record, Hunter is accompanied by a new set of artistically endowed musicians to compliment his always radiant and unique guitar work. Joining Hunter is a new horn section composed of trombonists’ Curtis Fowlkes, Alan Ferber and trumpeter Eric Biondo. Grounding the rhythm section is a familiar “jam scene” friend, the improvisational drummer Eric Kalb, who’s toured with Deep Banana Blackout, Sharon Jones and The Dap Kings and many more. Biondo and Fowlkes will be joining Hunter for the Rose Live Music residency.

JamBase spoke with Charlie Hunter about the new album, his upcoming tour, the talented musicians that currently surround him and the explanation behind his departure from Garage A Trois.

JamBase: You have a new album, Gentlemen, I Neglected To Inform You You Will Not Be Getting Paid. What inspiration did you draw from musically for this new record? Is it a collection of random songs or does the entire album carry a familiar theme?

Charlie Hunter: Well, I wanted to make a record with a brass type sound. Some of the songs were already written previous to creating the record, but then I wrote others with the brass theme in mind. And on this record I added a new brass section.

JamBase: What approach do you take when entering the studio to lay down a new record? Do you cut it live or is it dubbed, re-recorded and more of a procedure?

Charlie Hunter: There was no dubbing on this album at all. It’s cut entirely live. This album was recorded to two-inch analog tape, mono, with no overdubs at all. It was just mixed on the fly. Everything was live.

Throughout the month of January you’ve scheduled a residency at Rose Live Music in Brooklyn. Why did you opt to do the residency at this particular venue?

Charlie Hunter by Bay Taper

I live in New Jersey so it’s not terribly far from me. I really like playing at Rose Live Brooklyn as well. It’s a smaller more portable kind of scene, you know? But I guess just like anywhere else there are people that will be interested in the music, and you go set up and play and just hope that they come to the gig.

How is this album unlike your previous releases? What makes Gentlemen, I Neglected To Inform You You Will Not Be Getting Paid unique?

They’re all unique. All have their own individual kind of thing. I try to never make the same record twice. I mean, if I had to name a common thread running through all of my albums it would be that my “instrument” is always used on them. However, I don’t always play it the same way. It’s always a little different depending on the vibe, so this is definitely a different record than anything I’ve done previously. Also it’s in mono; first record I’ve done in mono, as well as two trombones and a trumpet. I’ve never had that configuration before.

Fans associate “Charlie Hunter” with your live and in-studio utilization of custom seven and eight string guitars. How did you come to ascertain this technique, making yourself an innovator as well as a player in the field?

It just formed from a natural-type progression. I created the concept by being involved with drums, guitar and bass all at once. If you put those instruments together, then you create this thing I use. From there you just try to evolve that concept and make it better and more effective.

Which guitars were used on this album?

I just used one on this album. It was a custom-made seven string created by Jeff Traugott.

Continue reading for more on Charlie Hunter…

 


The issue is with their audience. They’re sort of really bossy and demanding and always too high or too drunk, constantly bossing you around. They tell you what they want to hear by screaming and yelling at you onstage… I just couldn’t do that anymore.

-Hunter on Garage A Trois

 

Photo by: Susan J. Weiand


Besides adding Curtis, Alan and Eric to the group, you also invited Deep Banana Blackout drummer Eric Kalb. How did this relationship materialize?

Charlie Hunter

I first saw him in Chinatown. He was working as a busboy in a Chinese restaurant. I just thought, wow this guy is so good and nobody gives him the time, place or gig. He has a volatile temper, a history that shows so, and I guess he had a few problems with prior bandleaders. I just figured I’d have to give the guy a gig and see if it worked out. It was kind of rocky at first, but he understood that that kind of behavior would not be tolerated. Now he’s really risen to the challenge and he sounds great.

Why are you so adamant about doing things grass-root style as opposed to having a big media machine behind you? For someone who has been on a label before, what are the advantages and perks you find by doing it on your own?

As far as putting out my own records, it just came to a point where it made the most sense to put out my own records. It didn’t make any sense to do it with a label. Like why would you want to sink a bunch of money into a guy like me that’s going to sell only five thousand records? I can make my own records and sell two thousand and make enough money to pay for the next record. So clearly, it makes more sense for me to be doing it on my own.

What propelled your decision to leave Garage A Trois and embark on another solo record?

Well, we were actually hanging out with Garage A Trois the other night in Seattle. I love those guys; I think they’re great players. But the issue is with their audience. They’re sort of really bossy and demanding and always too high or too drunk, constantly bossing you around. They tell you what they want to hear by screaming and yelling at you onstage. If you don’t play as loud as you can all the time and close your eyes, so you don’t see them dancing, then you just can’t get through the gig. And I just couldn’t do that anymore.

Charlie Hunter

Was there a particular incident that occurred that made you feel this way or has it been building for quite some time?

Both. I had a thing happen where somebody was dancing; he was so off-time and the audience was bossing us around, telling us to play the FUNK or do this, rock out, man, blah, blah, blah. I guess I had some type of a seizure, and the guy was dancing so out of rhythm that it took me weeks to finally feel whole again. It was a serious, scary episode for me, and I felt like I really had to do my own thing and get out of there; regroup so to speak. I still LOVE those guys. I just really couldn’t handle that kind of scene anymore.

In the digital age we’re currently in, what’s your stance on the rise of singles and the slow diminution of the concept of a record? It seems people are beginning to lose the overall concept of a record, in that it is a collection of work meant to be listened to all together.

It really doesn’t matter to me because I never sell singles anyway. People usually just want my music for the whole record. I don’t have any “hits.” So people will just buy the whole record because that’s the strength of it. It’s not like popular music where you’re selling one thing; you’re kind of selling a concept. Generally, if you’re selling a strong record they’re going to want the whole record anyway.

You’ve collaborated with a lot of artists, producing more than 16 albums already in your career. Who else would you like to work with in the near future?

I’ve been pretty lucky throughout my career. I’ve been able to work with a lot of amazing musicians. I pretty much have been working with the people that I want to work with. But if something cool came up then I would definitely be interested in it.

What besides the residency and the album should fans expect from you in 2010?

I’m just going to be doing more of the same thing, pretty much getting into a car and driving around. Like usual, going from place to place, playing music and that’s pretty much the story.

You can download free MP3s from the new album at charliehunter.com.

Charlie Hunter tour dates available here.

JamBase | Real Gentleman
Go See Live Music!


Garage A Trois 2.0

By: Court Scott

Garage A Trois

When a member of a music group decides to leave and the remaining band continues, it can be risky and the results can be unpredictable. Fortunately, though, Garage A Trois is a band built on risk taking, unpredictability, and capricious malleability. When guitarist and founding member, Charlie Hunter, decided to pursue other projects, the group added keyboardist Marco Benevento, seeing it as an opportunity to prolong the vision and embrace new chemistry and sound. The latest incarnation of Garage A Trois is still a genre-bending juggernaut. With the release of their new album, Power Patriot (10/26/09 via The Royal Potato Family), drummer Stanton Moore (Galactic), keyboardist Benevento, vibraphone player and percussionist Mike Dillon (Les Claypool), and saxophonist Skerik each took the time to share their impressions with JamBase about the revamped lineup, the new disc, the December tour, and their vision of Garage A Trois’ future.

Garage A Trois formed in 1998 around the recording of Moore’s All Kooked Out! album and was indeed a trio born from an impromptu jam session with Moore, Hunter, and Skerik. In 2000, Dillon joined the group adding softness and warmth – showcasing his vibraphone and percussive skills. He became a high-energy brother-in-arms whose percussive trickery is often point-counterpoint to Skerik’s punchy squonks, hypnotic loops, and reedy squeedles. Yet Moore and Hunter, too, shared a symbiotic relationship.

“The chemistry between Stanton and Charlie was beyond deep,” Dillon says. “Charlie had studied organ trios, jazz, Afro-Cuban, and other styles; he was not messing around. And Stanton’s got years of New Orleans knowledge and experience.”

The sound was instrumentally driven jazz-funk-rock; New Orleans strut, swagger and groove with alternately tropical melodies and fuzzed-out, looped saxophone riffs swirled with vibraphone and cross-cultural percussive elements.

Original Garage A Trois by Zack Smith

A favorite band during Jazz Fest and other party-centric celebrations, due to the members’ beyond-busy schedules, Garage A Trois’ tours were few and far between, and in 2007 Hunter decided to move on.

“He’d completed what he wanted to do [with Garage A Trois],” says Dillon. Moore echoes this sentiment, “He wanted to focus on his trio [The Charlie Hunter Trio] and his family.” “It was like if he was gonna tour, it would be with his band,” agrees Skerik.

Yet, due to the eight-stringed prowess he displayed on his Novax, a signature instrument that allowed him to simultaneously play bass lines and lead guitar, Hunter’s departure effectively left the band without a bass and another instrument to define chord structure.

Knowing that they didn’t want to disband fully – “We really liked playing music together,” Skerik says – the remaining members played gigs with Robert Walter, John Medeski, and, says Dillon, “a bunch of other freaks.”

“But we were not playing our own material; it was mostly stuff Charlie had written. Marco was used to playing bass a lot with The Duo [Benevento and Joe Russo], and they played great music, so we thought it was a perfect fit,” says Skerik. “We didn’t want someone who wrote in any one genre, and Marco even takes it a step further. He’s such a great writer and does these lush, super-cool chord progressions.”

Marco Benevento

“There was great chemistry and it quickly became apparent this was our guy,” Stanton agrees. “We’d known each other for so long and knew each others’ playing styles. During that first session with Marco, we all felt really comfortable, like this was the next step.”

“We all got along well from the beginning” says Benevento, who’d previously played with Skerik, Dillon, and Joe Russo in Coxygen and had opened for Critters Buggin’ on the East Coast. “I like to think I create freshness; the change in style is heavy. With Charlie, there was more funk and groove oriented stuff.”

“There was no preconceived change in direction,” says Moore, “but the darker, more aggressive sound we feel works well.”

While not as loose limbed and easy to slip into as previous endeavors, Power Patriot is a cohesive, deeply textured effort. Tunes are atmospheric with the melodies painted in strong, broad strokes. A couple of the tracks are angular and contracted like a muscle, others tender and warm. The blend of organic instrumentation and synthetic electronic sounds creates an interesting, unpredictable balance. While Moore’s playing sways from highly excitable rock drummer to deep in the pocket jazz, he drives each track with casual certainty. Skerik says of Moore, “Man, he’s so great. He can take you to New Orleans and other places with just one song.”

“Electric Door Bell Machine,” one of the strongest tunes on the album finds Moore laying down a slick beat, building the skeleton for Dillon’s fantastic, imaginative mallet-work, which adds shimmer and light. Benevento’s playing and effects – swirlies, video arcade effects, and quirky sonics – create layers of interest and add to the compositions’ musculature. Similarly, Skerik’s playing is as cerebral as it is wild, and he often seems most focused in the middle of a Benevento-Dillon electrical storm. The more hardcore, low-end-electro-jazz-meets-stratospheric-rock vibe is undeniably fun, and this writer quickly found Power Patriot on heavy rotation. But this change in their sound doesn’t sit well with all fans.

“People have said to me, ‘You’re trying to turn Stanton into a rock drummer,’” says Benevento, “but that’s not the case. We’re just trying new things and it’s an interesting blend of half swing.”

Garage A Trois by Greg Aiello

While Hunter’s melodic, mellifluous playing was often in contrast to the rhythm section, Benevento’s playing, though sometimes raw, better compliments the rest of the group and is in sync with Dillon and Skerik’s penchant for less warm, minor chords and expanded use of the saxophone.

“I try to stay out of the way,” says Skerik. “I want to play a less traditional role. I love playing chords and not a straight melody. I don’t want to be obvious. I’ve tried to redefine the role of the sax. I never want there to be an overemphasis on obviousness!”

Indeed, the saxophone’s presence has been dialed down and the minimalism is used to create atmosphere and texture with layered effects and captured loops. “People want more saxophone, but I want them to leave a show wanting more,” Skerik explains. “You should never play everything you know. You’ve got to hold back. It’s all part of the tension and release.”

With Power Patriot the lineup, sound, and style are not only different, but the approach to recording the album differs from previous Garage A Trois efforts. The initial band’s debut, Mysteryfunk, was comprised of spontaneous Moore, Hunter, and Skerik jam sessions. In 2003 GAT released Emphasizer, and in 2005 they recorded the may-or-may-not-have-been-a-soundtrack, Outre Mer, which was both live and acoustic. Power Patriot was recorded over two sessions at two different studios, and prior to its release was tweaked and massaged by Benevento.

Continue reading for more on Garage A Trois…

 


[Next time] you steal music, I’ll be there, while you sleep, pissing on your face. But seriously, that’s evil. That’s taking money from me and other musicians.

-Skerik

 

Photo by: Michael Weintrob


Initial recording was done in New Orleans at Galactic’s studio space, Number C, over two days in December 2007. When the material was in the can, Benevento explains, “We sat with it for a while. We weren’t sure we had enough material and we didn’t have a label to put it on.”

Garage A Trois at Bear Creek 2009 by Amada Kaschkarow

“We shopped it around for over a year. It was frustrating because there are no more labels because everyone uses BitTorrent and people no longer go to record stores. [Next time] you steal music, I’ll be there, while you sleep, pissing on your face,” laughs Skerik. “But seriously, that’s evil. That’s taking money from me and other musicians.”

Frustrated but not deterred, Marco and publicist Kevin Calabro decided to put Power Patriot – an album, according to Skerik, named after a sexually aggressive bull once owned by Dillon’s dad – out on their home-cooked label, The Royal Potato Family. In order to have enough material for the release, the band went back into the studio for a secondary session to record the coruscating ’70s synth-rock track “Computer Crimes.”

“I think records shouldn’t be too long. Vinyl had built-in limitations, but CDs had 74 minutes to work with and it created a bad precedent,” says Skerik of the roughly 48-minute disc. “We subscribed to the ‘less is more’ school of thought.”

Garage A Trois finished the final track at the Studio in the Country, a recording industry relic in Louisiana.

“It was such a badass studio,” says Benevento, “It’s where Stevie Wonder, Kansas, and Willie Nelson have recorded. They had all this pimped out gear and over the day we recorded a bunch of extra tape.”

Mike Dillon

“As soon as you walk through the doors, it’s 1976,” adds Skerik. “It is one of my favorite studios in the world.”

After that session, the group again let the material marinate a bit as they hammered out the release plan. Benevento, ever the tinkerer, would later go back in his “Bat Cave” and fiddle with the final mix and track order. “A couple of the tunes, like ‘Rescue Spreaders,’ were sketches and didn’t feel finished, so I finished them after the fact at home,” says Benevento.

Given the different approach to this album and the different roster and new dynamic, how did the songwriting duties and process break down?

“Most of the songs came to the studio pretty fully realized so the initial process was pretty straightforward and easy,” says Moore of the ten tunes on the album. “The compositions were really strong; all instrumentally driven.”

“Not all the songs were written specifically for Garage A Trois. Actually ‘Dugout’ was a Go-Go [Jungle] tune and “Germs” was originally for the [Hairy] Apes,” says Dillon. And it’s fortunate that “Dugout” was brought to Garage A Trois’ table because Benevento absolutely kills it. “You know, it’s easier to write in New Orleans,” Dillon continues. “It’s pretty simple. I make a cup of coffee, go for a run, and play music all day. The songs just come up. With ‘Computer Crimes’ and ‘[Electric] Door Bell Machine,’ they were already written and I was hoping they’d work.”

Garage A Trois at Bear Creek 2009 by Amada Kaschkarow

Skerik is of a similar school of thought. “If I know a certain band is going into the studio, whenever I’m practicing at home – if I’m working on a certain scale or time signature – during that process, I’ll be flushing out every variable and I’ll record what I think has promise, what could be the base of a song,” he says. Skerik is perhaps most effective on this album in the creation of the standout title track; a futuristic romp with glitchy effects and a punchy, syncopated beat interspersed with dense squall. My only concern is Skerik and Dillon’s synergistic creativity is evident not only with Garage A Trois, but in Critters Buggin’ and Dead Kenny Gs, and though not redundant, the style can be a touch specific.

Benevento says of his contributions, “Hearing The Duo gives you a pretty good idea of my go-to song style. Lately I’ve been into epic rock like the Arcade Fire, My Morning Jacket, and [David] Bowie. I’m into lots of melodic songwriting.”

A fantastic example of this is “Fragile,” featuring a low-end fuzz and lovely melody reminiscent of Morphine. “Radiohead and Grizzly Bear are using interesting harmonies and expanded instrumentation, which I like,” offer Skerik.

The compositions on Power Patriot, for the most part, reflect this ethos. While I immensely enjoyed and appreciated the Garage A Trois from the first half of this decade, I honestly feel this lineup and sound is what Garage A Trois was meant to be and what will take them to the next level. While the former Garage A Trois’ sound felt more rooted in cross-cultural, past musical traditions, the new sound feels current and even futuristic. Even with Hunter, recent albums had incorporated more studio effects and experimentation with technology, and not technologies designed to make a mediocre artist sound good but those designed to make great music sound awesome.

So what can fans expect now that the band has found the collective time to tour?

Garage A Trois by Greg Aiello

“Oh man, the shows have been off the hook!” says an excited Skerik about the first three shows in Louisiana and Texas in mid-November. “The new songs are just so much fun to play. It’s great to get in the process of perfecting them and to get it out there.”

“You know, we’re still high energy!” Moore assures us.

“We’ll play songs off the record and call tunes as we play them – some of our older repertoire, new sounds, different song types. It’ll be less monochromatic [than the album] with more colors,” adds Benevento. “Last weekend at Bear Creek [Music Festival], we did cover tunes and improv. There was a lot of room for changes.”

“You know, the songs are just a jumping off point,” says Dillon. “Sometimes Skerik and Marco have gone to another planet with a song and there’s no coming back. That’s just how it goes.”

“Skerik is fearless,” Moore concurs, “but those are large risks that often pay off musically. It’s fresh.”

It is ultimately the chemistry of the players and the sonic vision of the band that determine its success. Forced to risk altering their sound with new players, Garage A Trois has succeeded by using less traditional approaches to an instrument’s role and technology to excite the instrumentation. Strong compositional skill and understanding of one another’s strengths has been paramount and a firm belief in exploring the unknown a prerequisite. You can see them on both coasts through the end of the year and Japan at the end of January.

Garage A Trois is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Greased Up
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Living Colour | 10.30 | NYC

Words by: Matt Draper | Images by: Greg Aiello

Living Colour :: 10.30.09 :: Highline Ballroom :: New York, NY

Living Colour :: 10.30 :: New York

When thinking about Living Colour, most music fans remember a funk-metal foursome who was a regular fixture on MTV in the early ’90s. Sporting enough neon to guide an airplane in, their outfits matched their sound: a loud, explosive force comprised of many flavors.

26 years after forming in New York City, Living Colour returned to Manhattan’s Highline Ballroom as part of a world tour in support of its fifth album, The Chair in the Doorway.

To be clear, this was not a reunion tour. Frontman Corey Glover has gone on record to say that despite each member’s side projects, Living Colour has been together for nearly a decade following its eight-year hiatus. These side projects included Glover playing the role of Judas in Jesus Christ Superstar, bassist Doug Wimbish and drummer Will Calhoun forming the drum and bass group Head>>Fake, and guitarist Vernon Reid playing with a range of artists, including forming the Yohimbe Brothers with DJ Logic. However, with the new album and massive tour, the band has a feel of reinvention. Better put, this latest incarnation of Living Colour features the same blistering metal-funk rockers who, as we found out at the Highline, have an even greater arsenal of sounds.

From his first words (“We’re baaaaaack!”), Glover commanded a vice grip on the sold out crowd, who was already fist-pumping during the first few lines of the band’s opener, “Burning Bridges,” an aggressive rock song that opens the new album. Glover led the way with his signature halting vocals, made all the more mesmerizing by his night-before-Halloween butcher costume, complete with goggles and leather apron. Calhoun and Wimbish drove the beat while Reid joined the fray to send the song home with his trademark wailing, dizzying guitar.

Vernon Reid :: 10.30 :: New York

A pair of new songs, “The Chair” and “Decadance,” followed next. “Chair,” which, according to a recent JamBase interview served as the album’s key metaphor, evoked a dark, hardcore feel with shouting vocals and deep, dripping bass lines, while “Decadance’s” hard-charging metal sound echoed early Metallica.

Reid stepped to the forefront in the next song, fan-favorite “Middle Man” from the band’s first album, Vivid. As Reid made a flourish of short solos, Glover showed off his vocal range, moving from powerful chorus shouts to flying falsettos. Riding a fired-up crowd hanging on every lyric, Glover unleashed his snarl, which built up to an exploding guitar solo by Reid.

“Time’s Up” followed, featuring Calhoun’s pulsating, rapid-fire drums before moving into “Go Away,” another dark, metal-tinged song. Mirroring many of the politically charged tunes from the Stain album, “Go Away” saw Glover twisting and lunging while belting out stinging lyrics on the topics of suffering and starvation. Reid was again let off his leash for a frenzied solo that seemed to climb higher with Glover’s final chorus shout of “Go awaaaaaaay!” Exhausted, Glover stuck out his tongue as if to pant after the full-body workout.

Shifting gears, Calhoun laid down delicate drums to a sampled backing beat that led to “Method.” The manufactured beats sandwiched between Living Colour’s heavy live sound built a layered effect, adding a new – and welcome – contemporary element to the band’s repertoire.

Corey Glover :: 10.30 :: New York

And then it was time for church. Summoning every ounce of gospel and soul, Glover took over the room with an extended vocal introduction to “Open Letter to a Landlord,” Vivid‘s housing-project anthem. Standing at the mic, bathed in a yellow spotlight, it was hard not to be blown away by Glover’s vocal command. As loud as it was beautiful, Glover hung onto the final word, “memories,” for what seemed like 15 seconds before letting it vanish into Reid’s ripping guitar. A large video screen behind Calhoun served as a visual of the lyrics, displaying dilapidated houses surrounded by flames.

The band then launched into “Bi,” a standard funk-rock tune that quickly became a set highlight when a ferocious Wimbish, now wielding a tiger-patterned bass, hopped down into the crowd and launched into a raging solo that featured him playing with fingers and, yes, his teeth.

“Y’all ain’t ready,” said Glover to the frenzied crowd, which included a packed floor section and second level of seated diners, many of whom had abandoned their chairs. And we weren’t ready, as Calhoun proceeded to slay the crowd with an eye-popping drum solo that made those played by Widespread Panic or The Dead seem like yawners in comparison. Clocking in at more than 10 minutes, Calhoun unleashed an onslaught of sonic weapons, manipulating drum-machines, smashing gongs, and hammering techno-triggered cymbals with neon-tipped drumsticks that made him look like the conductor of a firework show.

Doug Wimbish :: 10.30

With all four members returning to the stage, the band moved back in time with a cover of The Temptations‘ “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone,” that quickly moved into the old-school hit “Glamour Boys.” Next was new one “Behind the Sun” followed by “Hard Times,” a funky blues number, and “Out of Mind,” a primal, stripped-down metal song warmly greeted by a few head-bangers in the front row.

And just when the band appeared ready to turn it up another level, things took an unusual turn. While Glover spoke to the crowd between songs, he couldn’t seem to take his eyes off Reid. What seemed like funny interplay between the two became a bit awkward, with Glover calling Reid a “crack head” several times (maybe for good reason – though Reid was killing it on guitar, he was shouting a steady stream of gibberish and at one point delayed a song when he didn’t realize his axe wasn’t plugged in).

A forgettable “Elvis is Dead” came next. Played at hyper-speed and featuring saxophone work by Jeff Smith, the song seemed to meander throughout. While impressive, Smith’s solo never hit the song’s high note and, with Reid looking a bit lost, the song came undone before transitioning to a short rendition of Elvis‘ “Hound Dog.”

“Type,” another crowd favorite, kicked the energy back up. The band sped up the studio version, striking a harder, faster tone before stopping on a dime to float into the tune’s “children of concrete and steel” chorus. With the song changing tempos, Glover’s vocals ebbed and flowed over Reid’s crunching guitar licks, and the song melted into a soaring, reggae-inspired finish.

With the band hitting its stride – and with the brief drama behind it – a familiar voice boomed over the speakers. It was Malcolm X, whose soundbite, “And during the few moments that we have left…,” serves as the introduction to “Cult of Personality,” the band’s biggest song that still, 20 years and a million worn-out cassette tapes later, carries an absolutely infectious hook. The crowd erupted with Reid’s first guitar lick and ended up providing, via Glover’s direction, back-up vocals through most of the song, including belting the last stanza at the top of its collective lungs.

Living Colour :: 10.30 :: New York

The band returned for an encore, with Glover informing the crowd he and Reid were bickering backstage over the final song. After mentioning the options – “Love Rears Its Ugly Head” or “Asshole” – Reid piped up, “Why not both?”

And that’s what they did. “Love” came out tight and super funky, and “Asshole” added a melodic touch to finish the show.

The crowd was beyond satiated and the band left the stage to a sea of clapping hands and full-throttle screams. A long line waited to buy merchandise, and the post-show crowd spilling onto 16th Street sung high praise. Living Colour delivered a rollicking two hours of metal, rock, punk, funk, and even a bit of dance music with Calhoun’s drum-circus solo. Minus a couple thrash-heavy metal tunes and Reid’s end-of-show aloofness, they threw down. Simply put, the band came roaring out of the gate, mowing through old and new material with balance while adding some new flavors. While things have drastically changed in both New York (the Highline Ballroom didn’t exist the last time the band put out an album) and the music industry (songs are now purchased electronically) since its beginnings, Living Colour continues to deliver a downright gripping live experience.

Living Colour :: 10.30.09 :: Highline Ballroom :: New York, NY

Burning Bridges, The Chair, Decadance, Middleman, Time’s Up, Go Away, Method, Open Letter to a Landlord, Bi, Drum Solo, Papa was a Rollin’ Stone, Glamour Boys, Behind the Sun, Hard Times, Out of Mind, Elvis is Dead, Hound Dog, Type, Cult of Personality

Encore: Love Rears Its Ugly Head, Asshole

JamBase | Colourful
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