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Posts Tagged ‘Lenny’

Lenny Kravitz Is A Belieber!

Even Lenny Kravitz has Bieber Fever! Check out the Grammy-winning “Fly Away” rocker showing his love for The Banged Messiah in this TwitPic uploaded on Friday.

Lenny Kravitz Remembers Teena Marie [VIDEO Tribute]

Th sudden death of R&B legend Teena Marie has generated shock and sadness among her fans and friends in the music industry, many of which took to Twitter to share memories and express condolences. “Fly Away” rocker Lenny Kravitz paid touching tribute to the “Square Biz” songstress in an online video on Monday. Kravitz 46, [...]

Running Down Miles’ Voodoo

By: Ron Hart

Bitches Brew 40th Anniversary
Collector’s Edition

2010 marks the 40th anniversary of the release of Bitches Brew, an album long considered to be one of the pivotal turning points in the history of jazz. Change was indeed in the air when Miles Davis initially incorporated electronic elements into 1968′s Miles in the Sky and 1969′s Filles De Kilimanjaro. However, when he created an album with an all-electric ensemble with In A Silent Way (also released in ’69), it was met with a staggering combination of awe and angst by both jazz and rock critics, particularly because they really didn’t know what to make of the album’s experimental nature, which was billed as Davis’s debut foray into the then still-emerging fusion movement, as well as his first collaboration with longtime producer Teo Macero.

However, when Bitches Brew was released in April of 1970, Miles had fully immersed himself into the rhythmic propulsion of the psychedelic funk and rock sounds popularized by the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Santana, James Brown and Sly and the Family Stone, most of which he was introduced to by his ex-wife, R&B sex kitten Betty Mabry-Davis, whose inspiration is all over the record. Putting together a veritable supergroup of collaborators including Wayne Shorter on soprano saxophone, keyboardists Chick Corea and the late Joe Zawinul, bassists Dave Holland and Harvey Brooks, drummers Lenny White and Jack DeJohnette, clarinetist Bennie Maupin, conga players Don Alias and Juma “Jim Riley” Santos and guitarist John McLaughlin, Miles crafted a double album that took the explorations of the outer perimeters of exposition, development and recapitulation featured on In A Silent Way and sent them even further into the freak zone, incorporating such special effects as tape looping, electro-acoustic reverberation and frequency filtering spurred by Macero’s fascination with the musique concrète movement of the late 1940s and the works of Edgar Varese and Karlheinz Stockhausen, only propelled by an acid jungle groove that would eventually become Miles’ calling card in the early-to-mid 70s on albums like (A Tribute to) Jack Johnson, Live-Evil, On The Corner, Big Fun and Get Up With It.

The end results were nothing short of a sonic revolution across the jazz landscape equal to what The Beatles were doing to the pop idiom with Revolver, Sgt. Pepper and The White Album, creating even more of a furor at the time with stuffy-shirted critics who clung to their copies of Birth of the Cool and Kind of Blue as if they were bracing themselves for a hurricane of Katrina proportions.

Original gatefold album art

In honor of this legendary album’s historic 40-year milestone, Legacy Recordings has released a gorgeous anniversary Collector’s Edition of Bitches Brew. Similar to the monster celebration for the 50th anniversary of Kind of Blue the label released in the fall of 2008, this version contains two CDs containing the original six tracks plus six more bonus cuts, a third disc containing a previously unreleased live performance of the Miles/Keith Jarrett/Chick Corea/Dave Holland/Jack DeJohnette/Airto Moreira/Gary Bartz lineup from an August 1970 concert at Tanglewood, a DVD of another unissued show from Copenhagen in November 1969 featuring the Davis/Shorter/Corea/Holland/DeJohnette quintet, plus the original album on 180-gram vinyl housed in a gorgeous double-LP replication.

JamBase was lucky enough to catch up with two key members of the Brew crew, Messrs John McLaughlin and Lenny White – both of whom would take the fusion genre to new heights of innovation with their respective groups Mahavishnu Orchestra and Return to Forever – to discuss their roles in the making of this monumental masterstroke.

John, tell us about the first time you ever met Miles Davis and how you came to join his electric ensemble for In A Silent Way?

John McLaughlin: I met Miles on the first day I arrived in NYC from London. It was during the first few days of January 1969. I’d been invited to join Lifetime with Tony Williams and Larry Young. However, since Tony was doing his final week with Miles before leaving and devoting himself exclusively to Lifetime, that week was at Club Baron in Harlem – long since disappeared. Even though we’d never met, Miles knew about me since he was losing Tony as his drummer, and was naturally curious about what he was planning. We met that night at the club, and the following day I was with Tony at Miles’ house, and out of the blue Miles said to me, “We’re recording tomorrow. Bring your guitar to the studio.” That was it.

Lenny, when did you first meet Miles and how did you come to join the band for Bitches Brew?

Lenny White by Susan J. Weiand

Lenny White: The first time I met Miles was at The Village Gate. I took the subway from Queens into the Village and went to see Miles. I heard he called my house the same day but I had left to go see him. Miles dressed in back asked me, “Can you play fast?” I said yes and he said “When?” and I said, “Whenever I’m asked.” He then said to be down here every night this week. I got a call to be at his house on 77th St. for a rehearsal. Jack, Chick, Wayne and Dave were there and we rehearsed the beginning statement of “Bitches Brew.”

How much input did you have in the blueprints of Bitches Brew? What were your thoughts on how this new form of electric jazz could be taken to the next level?

McLaughlin: By the time Miles was ready for Bitches Brew, I’d gotten to him very well. Right after the In A Silent Way sessions he kind of took me under his wing and was inviting me to play concerts with him even though I was with Tony and Lifetime. He’d become fascinated with guitar – he loved guitar and eventually got one for himself (I played it on On the Corner). I would go over to his house several times a week and he’d ask me about this or that riff, what would I do thythmically with such and such a chord, things like that. By Bitches Brew, he was moving ahead of everyone else (like always) into the world of fusion.

White: Miles said to me, “Jack will play the beat. I want you to play all around it, like a spice in a big brew.” So, I wanted it to sound like one drummer with eight hands.

Do you have a favorite story stemming from the Bitches Brew sessions?

John McLaughlin

McLaughlin: I have a better story for Jack Johnson, but what maybe was one of the nicest things was that Miles invited sitar player Balakrishna and tabla player Badal Roy, both of whom I’d introduced to Miles.

White: Yeah, I learned a great lesson on the very first day. I had been playing all kinds of music, and R&B and funky stuff was a big part of what I did along with playing jazz. On “Miles Runs The Voodoo Down” he wanted a straight, simple funk groove. We had done a few takes that I thought were great but he wanted something simple. I played what I thought he wanted; more like Tony was playing and it wasn’t what he wanted. Don Alias, who played percussion, said, “Miles, I have a beat,” so he got on my drums and played this real simple beat. Miles loved it and I wound up playing percussion instead of drums on that track. The lesson I learned was don’t pot-think yourself by doing what you think somebody wants. Ask and find out what is needed.

Lenny, being so young going into the Bitches Brew sessions, was it intimidating to be in the room with all of these established cats?

White: It was scary. This was my first real recording session and it was with my idol. Everybody was cool, especially Miles.

What kinds of music were you listening to personally that may have influenced the direction of Bitches Brew?

original cover

White: We all were listening to Tony Williams, but along with Tony and Elvin [Jones], I was listening to Clyde Stubberfield and Jabo Starks with James Brown’s band and John Bonham.

McLaughlin: At that time I was listening to the heroes of my youth – Miles, Coltrane, Bill Evans, etc. – but also I was listening to Bartok, Webern, Jimi Hendrix, Sly & the Family Stone, The Beatles and The Eagles, amongst others. I guess they all played a greater or lesser role. An anecdote about Jimi: One day I was with Miles at his house and I was telling him about Jimi and what he’d done with the electric guitar. Miles had never seen Jimi play so I looked in the Village Voice and found out that the Monterey Pop Festival movie was playing in the Village. So, I took Miles down to see the movie. It was great to see Miles watch Jimi, especially when he burns his guitar. All Miles could say was, “Damn, damn…”

Any truth to the rumor that Miles and Jimi were in talks to record and/or jam together?

White: As far as I know, this was definitely talked about, even to the point that Tony Williams and Larry Young did record a jam with Jimi. One of my big regrets is Miles asking me if I wanted to play with Jimi, and I said no because I wanted to play with [Miles].

Did Miles have a favorite Jimi Hendrix song or album that was crucial in inspiring the Bitches Brew sound?

White: I know he loved “Machine Gun” and around that time the version we were all listening to was from the Band of Gypsys recording.

What is your personal favorite track on Bitches Brew and why?

Lenny White by Lynn Goldsmith

White: “Spanish Key” because it was the first song of the second day after my big mistake with the direction on “Miles Runs The Voodoo Down” and I no longer had any fear. I went into it all the way.

John, how did your name become the title of a song on the album, and why was it that Miles didn’t play on “John McLaughlin”?

McLaughlin: This was and remains to this day a mystery to me. I was kind of shocked when I saw the album. We, most times, never knew the titles during Miles’ recordings. I really don’t know the why of anything about his decision to give the tune my name.

How much did the music you created with Tony Williams and Larry Young in Emergency come into play with your role in the Bitches Brew sessions?

McLaughlin: Playing with Tony and Lifetime was a different creative environment for me. Tony encouraged me from the start to write music for Lifetime. Miles never did this, and I was very happy with this situation, too. Miles would pick my brain for riffs and stuff like that and then adapt it in his inimitable way. This was a really deep learning process for me. I should say that a tremendous amount of Mahavishnu music was born during my tenure with Lifetime. Miles has had a profound impact on me since I discovered him in 1958, and even more so when I had the opportunity to play with him. It really is impossible to quantify or qualify the degree of influence Miles had on me, musically and personally. It’s just enormous.

Lenny, how much of an influence did your time in Miles’ electric ensemble have on your work in Return to Forever, Azteca and Twennynine?

White: It didn’t just shape my attitude in playing in those music projects it changed EVERYBODY’S attitude. After this you were obligated to take chances, try new directions.

In listening to new music now in 2010, where do you most hear the influence of Bitches Brew

White: I hear the influence in the jam bands. I think they have taken the spirit of what we did and brought it to a present day audience.

JamBase | Steeped
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New Universe Music Fest: McLaughlin, Herring, Lenny White

HUMAN ELEMENT, WAYNE KRANTZ, ALEX MACHACEK, RANJIT BAROT ALSO ADDED TO THE
LINEUP


John McLaughlin

Abstract Logix is proud to announce its first-ever festival event, The New Universe Music
Festival
, to take place at the Lincoln Theatre in Raleigh North Carolina on November 20 and 21, 2010.

A schedule and how to order tickets can be found here. Tickets for
both nights are $90. Tickets for November 20 are $37 advance and $45 day of show. Tickets for November 21 are
$57 advance and $65 day of show. The lineup for the New Universe Music Festival is a music lovers’ dream, boasting
a roster of artists who handily defy genre categorization in favor if unbridled expression – all of whom seamlessly
mingle compositional ingenuity and improvisational grace and fervor.

Confirmed performers:

John McLaughlin and 4th Dimension

Jimmy Herring
The Lenny White Group (featuring
Jimmy Herring)
Human Element

Wayne Krantz

Alex Machacek
Ranjit Barot

Check out the JamBase interviews with Jimmy Herring and Lenny White here and here.


Robert Randolph: Shot of Love

By: Dennis Cook

Robert Randolph

As Robert Randolph & The Family Band approach their first decade together, all evidence is their game is tighter than ever. Boldly emerging from the gospel community, Randolph – easily the greatest innovator on his weapon of choice, pedal steel guitar, since Red Rhodes reshaped the instrument with Michael Nesmith in the ’70s – has always hummed with abundant spirit and Holy Ghost energy. This has never been clearer or more finely etched than third studio album, We Walk This Road (released June 21 on Warner Bros.). Produced with a sure hand and great sonic curiosity by T-Bone Burnett, this set nails the Sly & The Family Stone vibe Randolph has been hovering near for years. Less slick and more sharply drawn than 2006′s Colorblind, the new album mingles the voices of the past with a decidedly modern edge. This is gospel music for people who like life to be rowdy and lil’ freaky.

JamBase got to sit down with Randolph to discuss tackling Dylan, the roots of this album in the last Presidential election and more.

JamBase: We Walk This Road is your most together studio work to date. This feels like a classic album rather than a bunch of songs thrown together. There’s a through-line and intelligence to the sequencing, song choices, etc.

Robert Randolph: That’s what we set out to do with T-Bone, just come together and make this sort of thematic record of all sorts of inspirational songs and a lot of very cool sounds, and lyrically just trying to uplift people. And then going back and going back and finding all these old gospel and blues songs – which is really the roots of what I do anyway coming from the church – and taking them and making them into this new sort of Robert Randolph sound with new lyrics that relate to today.

JamBase: For many, gospel music is something of the past and not exactly relevant to today. I think it has the potential to be modern and relevant but often isn’t.

Robert Randolph: In one of the first conversations I had with T-Bone we talked about really digging into these songs, because this is all the same stuff that made Zeppelin become Zeppelin, Dylan become Dylan. They listened to all these old recordings and realized they needed to dive into these things because this is where the roots of American music come from. Whether it’s rewriting or rearranging these old songs, it’s just putting your own music stamp on this but using the bones of it.

For instance, take “Dry Bones” off the record – “Them bones, them bones, them dry bones.” It’s really just an old field recording we took and just looped to it and had like a 30-minute jam. There was a lot of stuff going on all over the place, but we started to think about what they were really talking about with “them dry bones,” and we figured out some new lyrics that addressed the bones of a thousand generations laughing in our messed up midst. And this was before BP blew up in the Gulf!

Randolph and The Family Band

A lot of older material is heard but not actually comprehended. By inserting a contemporary twist you make this stuff live.

Of course! And that’s what we set out to do [with this album]; make this music relevant to everybody. And regardless of what songs are recorded, when we play live this song will some sort of 12-minute anyway!

You’ve never obeyed rules about time limits or staying within any one genre throughout your career.

That’s what happens, and really the magic of playing shows. When these things happen, the crowd is smiling and the next minute the bass or guitar does something else that sparks something else emotionally. And that’s the vibe we went after on this album, by way of exploring the bones and roots of gospel music and try to find a way for this music to relate to people today.

You made some great choices of the material. A lot of people, including the man himself, shy away from Dylan’s Christian period, but you guys murder “Shot of Love.”

Thanks! What was strange about that was one day we were sitting in the studio with T-Bone trying to find just one big, strong song we could just lay down the guitar heavy on and deliver a message. And I finally said, “There’s got to be a Dylan song that nobody did before that I can do what Hendrix did to ‘Watchtower.’” And T-Bone was like, “Yeah, everybody tries that but there’s only one Hendrix. But let’s see.” We chose this one because it had this powerful message in there, and we all sat around and jammed to it.

We started this record coming out of the Bush Administration. Every break we’d watch the 2008 Presidential debates because T-Bone is a big Obama fan, and one of the other guys was a McCain fan. So, we’d sit there just watching & watching and we just realized how screwed up everything is! All the messages on this record, particularly “Shot of Love,” well, we ALL need a shot of love right now. People are hurting with all the lying that’s been going on. The song “Keep On Talking” (“Keep on talking, I’m not listening”) was written as a direct result of that campaign. We were sort of afraid that the song might not age well with all the negative stuff in it, but there’s still plenty more liars and crooks.

Oh, I don’t think we’ve even begun to turn over the rocks in this country [laughs]!

Robert Randolph by Rod Snyder

Oh yeah. We really wanted to make a strong statement without pissing too many people off and hopefully uplifting most of them.

Speaking truth is always a little uncomfortable, but if you can do it in a way that makes people want to raise their hands and get into it and actually work on this stuff, well that’s the way to do it, not just sit there and bitch and moan.

Look at Wall Street and BP, and then you look at this Tea Party stuff. Geez, where we going in this country?

We can’t seem to join hands and do things together as a country like we used to. You don’t pick your neighbors; you just happen to live near each other. But, you can pick the relationship you have with your neighbors.

We can do that, and we’re really trying to tell people that in this record. Don’t forget the word ‘gospel’ means the good word. So, we’re ALWAYS trying to spread the good word. And the fact that we were able to tie all these different themes together, with segues from these old songs going into brand new ones, we’ve made Robert Randolph and the Family Band songs we’ll be playing for the next 40 years. It’s cool!

I like that you tap Prince on this album [a cover of "Walk Don't Walk" from Diamonds & Pearls]. People know all the songs about sex and dancing but spirituality and social conscience are reoccurring themes in his music, too.

By me knowing him and talking to him and being around him, I know he’s a real spiritual dude. His spirituality is in his music and his lyrics in songs like “The Cross.” We actually did a version of that one with the Blind Boys of Alabama that didn’t make it onto a record and we thought about doing it again for this one. But then Lenny Waronker, the guy who signed Prince and did a bunch of records with him, came by towards the end of this record and suggested “Walk Don’t Walk” as a way to tie this whole record together. I heard it one time and said, “Let’s go! Let’s record this NOW!” We just knew we could do this whole Family Band version of this song.

T-Bone is the man. He’s just all about capturing the recording and getting the message across. And he told us, “I guarantee you just by me telling people we’re recording together that people are going to want to come down.” Next thing you know Jim Keltner saying, “Hey, let me play on some tracks.” You got Robbie Robertson coming down just to sit in the studio, and Bob Dylan calling in on the phone. You got Robert Plant, Elton John and Leon Russell just hanging out playing piano. And all this stuff came out of inviting people to just come and hang, having an event they were welcome to. They knew we’d have great things to eat, and they just wanted to be part of it in some way.

That fits in with the general spirit of the record, which sort of says, “We’re all in this together. We’re all on the same block. WE walk this road. Not YOU walk this road. It’s WE.”

Robert Randolph

We walk this road together. We ARE all in this together. That’s basically what it is.

One of the best stories of this record was capturing our version of Blind Willie Johnson’s original version of “If I Had My Way.” T-Bone had given me this CD with all these old songs and he had this one on it. One day we took a shot at it and it turned into this 40-minute jam, guitars everywhere and this, that and the other thing. At one point we even had two different songs; one was a country song and the other was very different. I wasn’t sure it was gonna work, so we left it alone for 5 or 6 months. Then, Ben Harper comes in and we start jamming on guitars. We had a cool little thing already but he says, “Let me hear something you don’t have finished yet.” I put on “If I Had My Way,” and he said, “Is this like the Blind Willie Johnson thing?” and he went right into the vocal booth and started singing those choruses – “If I had my way, I’d tear the building down.” And everybody was like, “Well, well, let’s dive into this thing now!” It became this great, soulful song where we swapped out this story of Sampson & Delilah for the one of Daniel in the lion’s den. T-Bone and I went into the lounge with the Daniel lyrical concept while Ben was knocking out the choruses, and it turned out to be a great night.

You’re coming up on 10 years with the Family Band, and now more than ever, you’re one of the few modern equivalents to Sly & The Family Stone.

Don’t forget, Sly came out of the church, too. But I’d only barely heard Sly & The Family Stone, and then I saw an interview with Sly back in 2002 that made me think, “Well, we’re doing the same thing!” He said they were using all the sounds they grew up with in church but Sly said he just had more of a whacky, rock ‘n’ roll mind to tie all this stuff together. And I thought, “That’s me, too,” without even really trying to be like that. It’s just one of those natural things with me going from sitting in church and then going out to play those early shows at the Lakeside Lounge and Mercury Lounge in New York and places all over Boston and Philly. I realized this was a whole different universe to Planet Church. There’s people out here that want a good message, that want to be inspired and uplifted, and that will always be in us.

Robert Randolph & The Family Band Tour Dates :: Robert Randolph & The Family Band News :: Robert Randolph & The Family Band Concert Reviews

JamBase | In The Spirit
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Lenny Kravitz On Michael Jackson Collaboration

A previously unreleased duet between the late Michael Jackson and singer Lenny Kravitz made the rounds online Monday. Sony has since removed the single, entitled “Another Day,” from YouTube over copyright infringement claims, but Lenny hit Twitter to explain the history of the track and express his hope that it can be released for fans [...]

Michael Jackson Lenny Kravitz Duet “Another Day” Leaks To The ‘Net

A unreleased song, alleged to be a duet between the late King of Pop Michael Jackson and singer Lenny Kravitz, is making rounds on the Interwebs this first Monday of 2010.

The song, called “Another Day”, features a versus performed by the “Thriller” crooner and seems to be inspired by an older Kravitz song called “Storm.”
In [...]

Stanley Clarke Trio | 10.05 | Minneapolis

Words by: Joe Lang | Images by: Woody Wolfe

Stanley Clarke Trio :: 10.05.09 :: Dakota Jazz Club & Restaurant :: Minneapolis, MN

Stanley Clarke Trio | 10.05 | MN

Hiromi is the future of jazz. A personification of youth, sex appeal, charisma, accessibility, femininity, humility and humor, the five-foot-nothing Amazon woman seems to exhibit everything that the connotation of jazz is not. This type of expectation defying excitement is just what jazz is lacking and needs more of. For her second appearance at the Dakota this year, this time with the Return to Forever rhythm section of Stanley Clarke and Lenny White (billed as the Stanley Clarke Trio in support of Clarke’s 2009 Jazz in the Garden – see JamBase review here), Hiromi brought every aspect of her persona and musicianship to put on a master class that simultaneously created a cohesive musical statement and overshadowed her bandmates. In contrast to her primary influence, Chick Corea, who appeared with the rhythm section the previous month (see the review here), Hiromi used her dynamism and chops not as an end in themselves, but as a mean to cultivate a transcendent musical impact that tore the house down.

The trio opened with a piece which made its live premiere at the venue the previous month, Clarke’s “Three Wrong Notes.” On the frantic swinger, Clarke and White allowed Hiromi out of the gate with a stream of machine gun lines and a vocabulary and cohesion of ideas that dwarfs players three times her age. While her solo was unbelievable in and of itself, her comping behind Clarke after her solo concluded was what cemented her maturity as a player. Unlike Corea in his performance the month before, Hiromi played very sparse and supportive lines behind Clarke’s rapid fire solo, exhibiting a willingness and desire to not command the performance but to serve the music as a whole. Clarke set up a groove not unlike James Singleton’s playing on Robert Walter’s “Parts and Holes,” and the group was into the traditional “Sakura Sakura.” Again, the dynamic emotive range of the trio was on full display as Hiromi conjured up the spirit of maestros like McCoy Tyner and Ahmad Jamal in her chordal fragments and light-as-a-feather touch.

Clarke & Hiromi | 10.05 | MN

The highlight of the night came next as the trio took on Chick Corea’s “No Mystery.” With dazzling unison lines, the piece was a dynamic roller coaster with an endless supply of energy and a sense of melody and counterpoint that transcended the original version. They garnered a standing ovation from many of the club’s patrons (myself included). Hiromi stood with an enormous smile as Clarke took the microphone and facetiously talked about the history of the song. “That was one of our easier pieces of the night. Lenny and I were on the original recording, some time back in the 1800′s,” Clarke said provoking a laugh from the audience. “We still look good though.”

The band then took on two unannounced ballads. The first was a melancholy tone poem that found Clarke drawing his bow while Hiromi conjured up rainy day soundscapes and ethereal colors on her instrument. The second ballad would be hard to chart as it started as a chipper, standard sounding piece and proceeded to deconstruct itself in an improvised excursion into the unexpected. The group then took on White’s “Paradigm Shift,” where the drummer took a solo between Clarke and Hiromi’s playful and quirky melodies and accelerated, unison sixteenth note triplets. After retreating to a standing ovation, the trio returned in triumph to take on the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ “Under the Bridge.” On the reharmonized tune, Clarke picked up his acoustic bass guitar and plunked out the vocal melody as Hiromi repainted the harmonic climate before launching head first (no pun intended) into a head banging, piano pounding thrash solo that had her looking more like a Muppet than a piano virtuoso. After revisiting the melody, the trio bowed and returned to the green room in triumph.

The only drawback of Clarke’s new trio was the same downfall present when Corea occupied the piano bench. Rather than play as a unison machine greater than the sum of its parts, White and Clarke are more content to play sparsely behind Hiromi as she burns up the keys. While Hiromi’s musical maturity and execution in the lineup showed greater acuity than her forefather Corea, it would be refreshing to see the unit function as more of a singular entity. That said, Hiromi’s playing is worth the price of admission all by itself. It is hard to overstate her musicality or importance to the future of jazz. While some might try to dismiss her playing as overbearing in the technique department, ignoring her sensitivity to the musical situation at hand would be to court ignorance, at best. And for any lingering doubts (if there were any to begin with) about her ability to play straight ahead acoustic jazz, her delivery as a side woman (or frontwoman, depending on how you care to look at it) to one of jazz’s most potent rhythm sections quickly dispatches any such ridiculous notion. If the Minneapolis show was any indication, the upcoming dates are sure to be some of the best shows of the year.

Hiromi tour dates available here.

JamBase | Forefront
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Lenny Kravitz:Let Love Rule: 20th Anniversary Edition

By: Ron Hart

“Too black for rock radio, too white for urban radio” was the albatross around the neck of Lenny Kravitz when he first burst onto the scene with his soulful voice and hippie wardrobe back in 1989. However, by refusing to fall in line with the demographics and blaze his own unique path of biracial sonic bliss, the son of late sitcom star Roxie Roker found the world catching up with his John Lennon-cum-Prince style in the 1990s, rendering him one of the most popular acts in the world with both rock and R&B fans for the last two decades. Time has been good to Let Love Rule, Kravitz’s moderately popular debut originally released in September of ’89. And the album’s flowery fusion of funk, rock and soul vibes has never sounded better as they do on EMI’s 20th Anniversary Deluxe Edition. In addition to a beautiful remastering job, this two-disc set adds some home demos of such key album cuts as the hit title tune and “Mr. Cab Driver” and an exceptional live radio broadcast from 1990. Let Love Rule remains high amongst Kravitz’s finest works, even 20 years later, especially that amazing title track, which really starts to cook once a young Karl Denson kicks out the finest sax solo of 1989.

JamBase | Loved
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Lenny Kravitz: ‘Let Love Rule’ Tour

Lenny Kravitz Announces Exclusive U.S. Tour to Commemorate

20th Anniversary of his Classic Release LET LOVE RULE


Lenny Kravitz

“Virtually every song is a classic… They’re all a testament to how much talent young Lenny possessed beneath his dreaded main. All Kravitz ever wanted to do was make good music and pay homage to the greats who inspired him; he did his heroes proud on this one.” —American Songwriter

Lenny Kravitz, one of the preeminent rock musicians of our time, has announced he will be kicking off an exclusive run of intimate shows in the U.S. to commemorate the 20th anniversary of his classic debut release Let Love Rule. The 15-city tour will culminate in Kravitz headlining the Voodoo Experience Festival in New Orleans, LA on November 1. The writer, producer and multi-instrumentalist’s tour is bound to captivate audiences with his signature style – music carrying echoes of past eras, combining classic rock, old-school soul, gritty funk and confectionary ’60s pop, yet always boasting an urgency and craftsmanship reflective of modern times. With close to 40 million records sold worldwide, Kravitz’s exclusive U.S. tour will include material from throughout his over 20 year career.

20 years ago, Lenny Kravitz wrote, recorded and produced his iconic debut album, Let Love Rule, striking a chord around the world and propelling him to international stardom. The title song’s signature line, “It’s time to take a stand, Brothers and Sisters join hands” is a theme Kravitz feels is still relevant to this day, and he is harnessing this message of hope, taking it on tour with him.

To commemorate the 20th Anniversary of his incendiary, Kravitz and Virgin/EMI collaborated to create an expanded 2 CD and digital reissue featuring a newly remastered original album, plus 18 bonus tracks, including 13 previously unreleased demos, rare B-sides, and live recordings. The special set was released in May of 2009. In support of the release, Kravitz launched his “LLR 20 (09) Tour,” a massive 54 city tour of Europe. Along the way, the tour hit 17 countries across the continent.

Kravitz will now be taking his LLR 20 (09) stateside for this exclusive run of U.S. club dates.

Lenny Kravitz ‘Let Love Rule’ Tour Dates

10/11/09 Sun The Fillmore at Irving Plaza New York, NY

10/12/09 Mon The Fillmore at Irving Plaza New York, NY

10/14/09 Wed The Fillmore at Irving Plaza New York, NY

10/15/09 Thu The Fillmore at Irving Plaza New York, NY

10/17/09 Sat MGM Grand Theatre at Foxwoods Mashantucket, CT

10/18/09 Sun The Fillmore at Irving Plaza New York, NY

10/20/09 Tue Warner Theatre Washington, DC

10/23/09 Fri The Wellmont Theatre Montclair, NJ

10/24/09 Sat The Borgata Hotel Casino and Spa Atlantic City, NJ

10/27/09 Tue The Fillmore Charlotte, NC

10/29/09 Thu The Tabernacle Atlanta, GA

10/30/09 Fri Harrah’s Casino Tunica, MS

11/01/09 Sun City Park New Orleans, LA


Why?: Eskimo Snow

Why? To Release New Album Eskimo Snow


Why?

A year and a half after releasing the acclaimed LP Alopecia, Why? returns with their fourth album, Eskimo Snow (out September 22). The two records are each other’s perfect foil: while last year’s release found Yoni Wolf and the gang delivering a tight set of intricate rhymes, live loops, slurred hooks and acerbic wit, Eskimo Snow offers a sung, sobering take on mortality that unfurls in lush waves of Americana and pop-infused psych-folk. Pre-mixed in Nashville by Lambchop‘s Mark Nevers (Silver Jews, Bonnie Prince Billy, Calexico), this album is Why?’s most live-sounding yet – a shadowy and sprawling piece as intimate in subject matter as it is handsome in timbre.

This record presents a band uninhibited and evermore accomplished at imbuing sound with mood. “On Rose Walk, Insomniac” rolls forth on a tempestuous din, with hard drumming through the chorus, with Yoni’s voice sounding like its running through a Leslie speaker. “Berkeley By Hearseback” comes in so soft, the guitar tones feel like waves of grain next to the splashy cymbals and a cowboy croon ricocheting through the background. “This Blackest Purse” weaves a melancholy that shirks dourness for a curious smile. And when the titular song brings the album to a hushed close, Eskimo Snow‘s place in the narrative becomes clear. Rather than spit at death or threaten it with suicide, Yoni stops bucking against the inevitable. In the process, the band discovers a rich place that the rest of us can happily live within.

Eskimo Snow Track List:

1. These Hands
2. January Twenty Something
3. Against Me
4. Even The Good Wood Gone
5. Into The Shadows of My Embrace
6. One Rose
7. On Rose Walk, Insomniac
8. Berkeley By Hearseback
9. This Blackest Purse
10. Eskimo Snow

WHY? Tour Dates:

09/24/09 Thu Northside Tavern Cincinnati, OH

09/26/09 Sat Le Poisson Rouge New York, NY

10/01/09 Thu The Middle East Cambridge, MA

10/02/09 Fri First Unitarian Church Philadelphia, PA

10/03/09 Sat William Pitt Union Pittsburgh, PA

10/04/09 Sun The Blind Pig Ann Arbor, MI

10/05/09 Mon The Bottom Lounge Chicago, IL

10/06/09 Tue Memorial Union Terrace Madison, WI

10/07/09 Wed Triple Rock Social Club Minneapolis, MN

10/09/09 Fri Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

10/10/09 Sat In The Venue Salt Lake City, UT

10/13/09 Tue Department of Safety Anacortes, WA

10/14/09 Wed Vera Project Seattle, WA

10/15/09 Thu Wonder Ballroom Portland, OR

10/17/09 Sat Great American Music Hall San Francisco, CA

10/20/09 Tue Echoplex Los Angeles, CA

10/23/09 Fri Modified Phoenix, AZ

10/24/09 Sat Club Congress Tucson, AZ

10/26/09 Mon Hailey’s Denton, TX

10/28/09 Wed BottleTree Birmingham, AL

10/29/09 Thu Grey Eagle Asheville, NC

10/30/09 Fri Cat’s Cradle Carrboro, NC

10/31/09 Sat Lenny’s Atlanta, GA

11/02/09 Mon The Social Orlando, FL

11/03/09 Tue Common Grounds Gainesville, FL

11/04/09 Wed Club Downunder Tallahassee, FL

11/06/09 Fri Spanish Moon Baton Rouge, LA

11/07/09 Sat Walter’s On Washington Houston, TX

11/08/09 Sun Fun Fun Fun Fest Austin, TX

11/10/09 Tue Jackpot Music Hall Lawrence, KS

11/11/09 Wed Firebird St. Louis, MO

11/13/09 Fri Rhino’s Bloomington, IN