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Posts Tagged ‘Sly’

Daniel Lanois: The Blacker The Dub, The Sweeter The Juice

By: Dennis Cook

Black Dub by Jake Krolick

Infusing music with soul is no easy task. And we’re not talking some stock R&B thing, this is soul in the archetypal sense – the invisible, overarching embodiment of things beyond the world we can see and taste. Soul in music is what makes it more than ditties meant to shift units and pass the time. Soul in music is what makes it breathe and leap into our hearts and minds, and yes, bodies, to live anew in our own strange ways. It’s there in the intentions of the players in a way that transcends language. And there is abundant soul, in this wonderful, fully fleshed sense, inside Black Dub, the boffo new project from celebrated “studio rat” Daniel Lanois.

In Black Dub, whose raw, thickly conjured self-titled debut arrived on November 2, Lanois is joined by highly regarded studio bassist Daryl Johnson, drummer extraordinaire Brian Blade (Wayne Shorter, Joshua Redman, Joni Mitchell) and vocalist-songwriter Trixie Whitley, the daughter of the late, utterly great Chris Whitley. The combination is as crazy talented as one might imagine but also a good deal earthier and readily appealing than such high tone combos often turn out to be. The burn of the blues, the raised hand exultation of gospel and irresistible shuffle of vintage rhythm ‘n’ blues swirls within their future-forward energy and gutbucket, immediate rock feel. Whitley is a force of nature and one of the few young singers that might have joined the roster of Atlantic Records or Stax-Volt back in the day. And the instrumental vets sound looser and more engaged than at almost anytime in their past. That’s not a dig against their worthy pedigrees but the interplay and atmosphere of Black Dub suggests a giving way to a bubbling group-think that’s really intoxicating. The songs rock, from the minimalist “Ring The Alarm” to the more structured pieces like “Nomad” and “Canaan,” and allowed time to really seep into one’s consciousness, Black Dub is a quintessential grower that hints at amazing live incarnations to come from these initial seeds and a wide open studio landscape for the quartet down the road.

JamBase was fortunate to snag a few minutes of Lanois’ time and found him to be a straight shooter of the first order with pretty much the best attitude about making music one could find.

JamBase: One of my favorite things about any new band is when you get a sense of their personalities and how the music was made just from listening to their debut. I get a strong sense of that listening to Black Dub.

Daniel Lanois: It’s quite a blend of spontaneous elements – as is the case with “Surely,” which is live off-the-floor, vocal and all, and we’re quite proud of that one because it’s quite classically written and performed – and without a doubt the people in the band are good improv artists. We have Brian Blade on the drums and I’ve never heard him play the same way twice.

Lanois & Trixie Whitley
By Jake Krolick

JamBase: How did you guys come together? This combination of individuals seem to have an intuitive empathy for one another as players.

It came together in my head originally. There’s a lot that comes to me as I play guitar and sing but I also love to just play guitar and let someone else sing. And when I ran into Trixie Whitley in Belgium, I had not seen her in a good few years and she told me she was playing drums and writing songs and singing. When I heard her I thought there was something really clear and honest about her position. I recorded a couple of songs including “I Believe In You,” which is on the Black Dub record. She got it in one take and I thought, “Whoa, there’s something going on here.” I’ve only ever responded to invitation or natural chemistry, so I thought maybe it was time to huddle up and form this little band.

I can’t really recall you being in a proper band for a very long time. You’re an active musician who usually plays on the records you produce but this seems like something fairly new for you.

Exactly. It’s all new. I was in a few little bands in the beginning, playing on the rooftop of my mother’s house and such. I made a bunch of records with bands no one has ever heard of and never rose in popularity, but I have to say I appreciate the camaraderie. Maybe those feelings never go away, like falling in love for the first time. Even in midlife you don’t want those feelings to ever stop [laughs]. Some feelings you don’t want to ever go away.

There’s a sense of excitement about making music together in Black Dub that’s palpable. You don’t need to be told that something cool is happening in this band. It’s there in the music. You all seem very turned on by what’s happening together.

I think that’s true and it’s a compliment hearing it from you. We’re not industry driven or force-fed. We’re happy to be associated with Jive Records, who bring us to their arena, but the inception of this was driven by chemicals – not the ones you take but the ones that already exist in your body.

The core of this is you and the rhythm section with Trixie riding on top. There’s something cool about the trio configuration. No one can hide in that setting and everyone just has to throw in.

Black Dub by Jake Krolick

Are you talking about three in a trio or threesomes [laughs]? I have to agree with you, man. I love it stripped down. I wish I’d made more records that way, but I’m starting to now. I love it when it’s hands-down, just three people and it’s just, “What’re you gonna play?” And then play every note like it’s the last note you’ll ever play. Trixie joins us on the second drum kit on a couple numbers live and she plays keyboards on “Ring The Alarm” but aside from that it’s pretty much down to the bone.

Every individual part is available to the listener in a trio. There’s no real clutter.

Yes and God bless us for having the courage to do that! I know the record’s not entirely like that but live it will be.

What was the recording process like? How did you go about adding things after the fact? One of the first words that jumped into my head with this album was “viscous.”

HmmmÂ…some things have come from me being a studio rat. There’s an instrumental on there called “Slow Baby” and that’s pretty much a studio sculpture. The guitar playing is pretty spontaneous, done in one take, but the groove and loops and all that came later. I love flirting with machines and flesh, constantly trying to combine the two. I live in the memory of my heroes who tried to pull this off. Sly and The Family Stone did a song called “In Time” on the album Fresh, and that’s a bad dog of a marriage! I love “Sexual Healing,” which is a Roland 808, one of the seeds. We’re still trying to do this now, and we have so much technology available to us. The question is: What’s the most fascinating thing you can do with that? The quest goes on.

I always find the marriage of technology and human beings music to be an interesting one. In the right hands it’s magic. Is there a better rhythm sound than Prince’s drum machine programming in some ways?

There are always people involved, so that’s one thing to keep in mind. I often reference Suicide, this band from the 70s in New York City. They probably couldn’t afford a drummer, so one guy does the music and one guy sings. You gotta love that! In my early days in New York City I got to hear The Fat Boys, just three guys with one of them doing the beats on a microphone. They got to show up to a gig with no gear. More power to them!

Daniel Lanois by Jake Krolick

You’ve used an expression called “spotting” to describe some of your approach to music, and I wanted you to elaborate on what that means. Often musicians feel undue pressure to come up with something totally new and “spotting” seems to suggest being part of a long lineage.

Spotting is really a term for remembering anything special that goes on through the day. As songwriters we’re spotters all along. You might hang around in a bar and listen to a conversation, and they might say something really profound people can relate to and you snatch it for a song. Or it can be something as simple as [sings], “I heard it through the grapevine.” A simple lyric like that can spawn a whole song. That’s what spotting is about. It’s not anything new. I think people have been using spotting all along to bring common street terminology into popular song.

As a record maker it’s my job to notice things that are special during the workday. Perhaps somebody plays a riff or little melody and they might forget it because they moved onto something else a minute later thinking that idea wasn’t absolutely fulfilled. They’re right but that doesn’t mean it couldn’t be fulfilled if you just paid attention to it. That’s what spotting is about to me – noticing what’s fantastic in any given moment.

I like all the echoes of different things on Black Dub. It’s clearly a rock record but there’s a gospel undertow to parts and a whiff of Lee “Scratch” Perry’s Black Ark years, where the production was often done on the fly and was immediate and inspired as the music unfolding around the board.

The number one rule is to get rid of all chairs. No chairs at the console and when you do your work. That way you’re not fucking around for hours. You get the job done and then go to the bathroom. That’s what I learned from Lee “Scratch” Perry [laughs]. These fat fuckers show up in these sound recording magazines and they need a $12,000 multi-pivot office chair to function. Stand up! What are you made of, man? What I got from Lee Scratch was make it lean and mean and get the fuck out of the building.

Amen is all I can say.

Having gotten that out of the way, I don’t like comfort. Comfort isn’t a very good association, right? You might want it in your waterbed but you don’t want your music to be easy, breezy and comfortable. I like to think that Black Dub has crossed the line into the discomfort zone. I don’t want to be comfortable anymore.

Rock has become like a costume that people slip on. It’s lost its danger, its middle finger in many ways.

I asked Iggy Pop how he stays so skinny, and he said, “Steak and coffee.” Then I read about a legendary [Stooges] performance in England where the set was only 42 minutes long. People would be bitchin’ now. There’d be a revolution if you only played a 42 minute set, but at the peak of that great punk era in the 70s there was no messin’ around. They delivered just what needed to be delivered. I’m not saying I’ve done that historically but it sure appeals to me now.

Even if you haven’t done it before, if the light bulb goes off in your head you can do it now. My mom always says that if something is really true it will pierce you like an arrow. It’s not always pleasant or easy to come up against genuine truth but there’s no mistaking when we have to change.

Lanois & Whitley
by Jake Krolick

Your mother told you that? Let’s bring her onboard. As the truth bites and stings, I remember just what we were [a lyric from Lanois' song "Blackhawk"]. Iggy Pop once sang, “Here comes success/ Here comes my Chinese rug.” You end up looking at rugs and drapes instead of making fuckin’ rock ‘n’ roll. Come on!

I was discussing how vocals sound these days with a friend recently. You’d never get an Aretha Franklin or most of the Muscle Shoals soul and rock artists from the 60s & 70s today. They all pushed the meters into the red and distortion and spontaneity were keys to their sound and appeal. That unpremeditated roughness has been sanded away by Pro-Tools, etc. now. I catch a bit of that classic vibe in Trixie.

We don’t use auto-tuning or anything like it. I look her in the eye while I’m playing guitar and we deliver for the moment. But I have to say I quite like the auto-tuning thing when it’s taken to an extreme, where Cher has a hit with it or hip-hop records where it’s clearly radical auto-tuning. If you’re going to plug in the fuzzbox, then go for it. But the easy, breezy mid-zone of it is unappealing. I don’t like to fool people with anything. Why not just tell it like it is? It’s okay. Life is short [laughs].

Just in talking to you for a few minutes, I get the sense that Black Dub has freed you up in some ways, that something cool has cracked inside you in discovering this band.

A studio rat needs a balancing act. I love the studio and I’ve come up with a lot of things that’ve never been heard before. I’ll always go there when I need isolation from the big, bad world. But, without a doubt, the challenge of living this band is to line ‘em up, pants down and see who can deliver. Oh heavens, I think I’ve slipped into arrogance [laughs].

Black Dub Tour Dates :: Black Dub News :: Black Dub Concert Reviews

JamBase | Close To Canaan
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Sly’s porn film set to resurface

The softcore porn film which marked Sylvester Stallone”s onscreen debut is set to resurface. Strapped for cash, the star actually made his debut in 1970 porn flick The Party At Kitty And Stud”s. The film was renamed ‘The Italian Stallion’ six years later, hitting shelves after the actor shot to prominence in break-out hit ‘Rocky’. [...]

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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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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Sly is devastated as ‘The Expendables’ bomber is destroyed

Sylvester Stallone wanted to feature vintage bomber as a prop on the red carpet of ‘The Expendables’, but was devastated when he realised the craft had been turned into a heap of rusting metal. Co-star Jason Statham wasn”t surprised – because the 60-year-old plane shouldn”t really have been in the sky for the film. “We [...]

When Sly auditioned for ‘Star Wars’

Sylvester Stallone has revealed that he did try out for the part of ‘Star Wars’ hero Han Solo but failed to impress the director. The Rambo star, 64, auditioned to play the lovable rogue before hitting the Hollywood big time. But Sly – known for his mumbling – failed to impress director George Lucas, who [...]

Sylvester Stallone renames himself ‘Sly-enstein’ after neck surgery

Hollywood star Sylvester Stallone has renamed himself ‘Sly-enstein’ after having his neck rebuilt. The 64-year-old star had a neck surgery after an accident while he was filming the ‘Expendables.’ “I could have been left quadriplegic. My neck has now been rebuilt,” the Daily Star quoted Stallone as saying. “I’ve got steel bolts, you name it. [...]

Tough guy Sly is scared of Dolph Lundgren

‘Rambo’ star Sylvester Stallone has revealed that he is scared of fellow action hero Dolph Lundgren. Stallone, 64, says he is afraid to write a fight scene between himself and Lundgren, 52, in his new film ‘The Expendables’, because of a previous experience. He revealed that he is still haunted by a fight scene with [...]

Hollywood Bowl Reggae Night: Jimmy Cliff; Sly & Robbie

REGGAE UNDER THE STARS RETURNS TO HOLLYWOOD BOWL JULY 25

Reggae Night IX returns to the Hollywood Bowl on July 25 for reggae under the stars with roots legend Jimmy Cliff and his hits “Wild
World”
and “Many Rivers To Cross,” plus the irrepressible rhythms of Sly & Robbie, and upcoming reggae
sensation Tarrus Riley.
Click here
for tickets.

Event Line Up:

Jimmy Cliff
Sly & Robbie and The Taxi Gang
Tarrus Riley
Jeremy Sole, Host

And here’s a bit of Jimmy Cliff to get you in the right mood for this show:


Michael Franti & Spearhead: Album Preview

SOUND OF SUNSHINE OUT AUGUST 24

Below are two videos previewing the making of the upcoming album by Michael Franti & Spearhead,
The Sound Of Sunshine, out August 24. The first is a snippet of Franti fine-tuning
“Gloria” from the upcoming release, the second is Franti discussing producer Sly Dunbar, who co-produced as part
of the legendary Sly & Robbie prodution team.

Franti & Spearhead will be touring throughout the summer. Click below for dates

Michael Franti & Spearhead
Tour Dates

::
Michael Franti &
Spearhead News
::
Michael Franti & Spearhead
Concert
Reviews


Sylvester Stallone Declares “Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot” Worst Film Ever Made

Sylvester Stallone has made some terrible movies during his nearly four decades on the silver screen, but if the 64-year-old actor had to select a feature that qualifies as most humiliating, Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot would take top honors.The 1992 action-comedy starred Stallone as a bumbling Los Angeles cop and late Golden Girls [...]

Sly Stallone For John Gotti Biopic?

Rambo star Sylvester Stallone has been tipped for the lead role in a forthcoming movie based on the life of murderous mobster John Gotti, TMZ.com reports.Gotti — dubbed the “Teflon Don” and “Dapper Don” by the New York press – was the head of the Gambino crime family in the 1980s. After a series of [...]

Sly to play mobster John Gotti in movie?

Rambo star Sylvester Stallone may soon play the lead in a movie based on the life of late mobster John Gotti. According to TMZ, Sly is in talks with ”Junior” John Gotti about making the movie, reports the New York Post. The movie is reportedly based on the son”s revelations of his relationship with his [...]

Michael Franti & Spearhead: New Album in August

MICHAEL FRANTI & SPEARHEAD SET TO RELEASE THE SOUND OF SUNSHINE ON AUGUST
24


Michael Franti & Spearhead

Michael Franti & Spearhead
return with The Sound Of Sunshine on August 24. The Sound Of Sunshine is Michael Franti & Spearhead’s seventh studio
album and the follow-up to 2008′s All Rebel Rockers.

The Sound Of Sunshine was conceived after Franti was hospitalized for a ruptured appendix in August
2009. “Music is sunshine. It gives us new energy and a stronger sense of purpose. You can’t hold it in your hands,
smell it, taste it or even see it, yet somehow just coming together and feeling these little vibrations that tickle our
eardrums can somehow lift us all up out of our most difficult moments in life to unimaginable heights,” says
Franti.

The band began recording in Jamaica with legendary producers Sly & Robbie as well as in Franti’s home in
Bali and hometown of San Francisco. With the record still not complete, Franti decided to bring a mobile studio on
the road with him while he toured with John Mayer this past winter. The album was finished in dressing rooms and
hotel rooms along the way with Franti playing songs he had recorded earlier in the day to the audience that evening.

Franti & Spearhead will be touring throughout the summer.

Michael Franti & Spearhead
Tour Dates

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Michael Franti &
Spearhead News
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Michael Franti & Spearhead
Concert
Reviews


Wanee Festival | 04.15-04.17 | Florida

Words by: Frank Etheridge | Images by: Ian Rawn

Wanee Festival :: 04.15.10-04.17.10 :: Spirit of the Suwanee Music Park :: Live Oak, FL


Herring & Bell – Widespread Panic at Wanee 2010

The instantaneous and non-sourced information available to us in our constantly chattering culture should, of course, be taken with a grain of salt.

Just one week ago, in the more hysterical corners of social-media networks, Wanee 2010 was deemed a disaster in the making. Anonymous histrionics and hypochondriacs matter-of-factly declared that the addition of Widespread Panic and the aggressive marketing of promoter Live Nation had bludgeoned this once sere scene into an oversold clusterfuck of brown-acid-at-Woodstock proportion.

In reality, Wanee 2010 was far removed from these dire predictions. Yes, this year was bigger, no doubt; younger and rowdier, too. Feeling the shoulder-to-shoulder squeeze at George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic Thursday night at the Mushroom Stage, or a simple glance at the sprawling crowd covering the entire Peach Stage field, was proof enough that the crowd was roughly double the size of last year.

Yet, blessed with beautiful spring weather, graced with an incredible lineup and handled with superb logistical skill that kept big-crowd headaches and hassles to a minimum, Wanee 2010 was a success on all fronts. Inseparable from the festival experience was a long weekend of camping in one of the most beautiful places on Earth and partying with the festival circuit’s most eclectic mix of like-minds, a crazed commune that is equal parts biker rally and magic carpet ride, camo and tie-dye, Bud tall boy and heady green tea.

So, if you don’t have fun at Wanee, you just ain’t doing it right.


Wanee 2010

In light of all the superlatives that could apply, this year’s festival will be summed up by a “Best of Wanee” approach, and we encourage you to post your own favorites!

Best Surprise Shredding: Godfather to the Southern jam scene, Col. Bruce Hampton fittingly held court Thursday afternoon on the Mushroom Stage as Wanee kicked into high gear. Yet, Quark Alliance guitarist Perry Osborn stole the show, ripping his way through the improvised madness typical of a Hampton show, shining especially brightly on “I’m So Glad.”

Best Reason to Put a Moratorium on Grateful Dead Covers: Though this is clearly an Allman Brothers festival, the Grateful Dead’s spirit and music permeated everything, and covers of the band were performed by seemingly every act. But, is this a good thing? Anyone that endured the cringe-inducing vocals of Papa Mali on “Wharf Rat” would argue it is not.

Best Way to Shake a Hangover: Jumping in the beautiful, brisk black water of the Suwanee River mid-morning will take one’s headache – and breath! – away.

Best Song Sandwich: Gov’t Mule‘s late night set closing sequence of “Mule” > “Whole Lotta Love” > “Mule” was a thrill, and Panic‘s flawless segues in “Chilly” > “Pleas” > “Chilly” were pure sickness, but when considering that the Allman Brothers opened their festival with “Mountain Jam” Friday AND finished the classic marathon instrumental on Saturday night, we have to give top honors to the Brothers.


Ivan Neville & JoJo Hermann at Wanee 2010

Best Black Crowe Sighting: Has Luther Dickinson morphed into Chris Robinson?

Best Tease: The aforementioned Mule medley also included a deft touch of “Loser,” but this Wanee award goes to ABB/Rolling Stones/Sea Level alum Chuck Leavell, a Southern gentleman and leading conservationist to boot. In a rollicking set featuring Randall Bramblett on horns, Leavell moved his band through “Dead Flowers,” “Rip This Joint” and “Here Comes the Sun” (dedicated to “Brother George”) before sailing into “Southbound,” where he worked the 88s for a few rolls of the Allmans’ instrumental “Jessica.”

Best Buckeye Shout-Out: Seemingly lost in a land of Gators, ‘Noles and Bulldawgs, a pasty fellow in an Ohio State cap, fists raised, shouted, “Akron, Ohio, baby!” during The Black Keys‘ set. While the connotation (and location) of Akron was unclear to most in attendance, and despite the fact that the town’s best-known musical act plays a hyper-modern blend of the blues that is a bit jolting contrasted to the Allmans’ innate grace, these Wanee newcomers delivered a well-received set, closing with a blistering “Till I Get My Way.”

Best Sit-In: Stiff competition in this category included WSP’s JoJo Hermann (keys) and NMA‘s Cody Dickinson (washboard) joining The Funky Meters for Professor Longhair’s “Red Beans” and Warren Haynes manhandling “North” during Panic’s Saturday set closer. But, sentimentality and craftsmanship win out in a nod to blues legend and longtime Allmans runnin’ partner Johnny Winter, who joined the ABB Saturday night for a haunting take on Elmore James’ “The Sky Is Crying.”


Gregg Allman – The Allman Brothers at Wanee 2010

Best Vocal Harmonies: Performing a set of hits by Sly and the Family Stone, one of their primary influences, Dumpstaphunk‘s Ivan Neville and Tony Hall became perfectly in sync as they nailed the vocal bass rhythm that is the defining groove on the classic Sly hit “Dance to the Music.”

Best Jam: Coming out of “Black Hearted Woman” on Friday night, the Allmans wove in the Dead’s “The Other One” jam. Building on the primal, driving rhythms of Jaimoe and Butch Trucks, the scream, wail and twirl of Haynes and Derek Trucks‘ guitars created an epic crescendo to close this set.

Best Moment: Trading verses with Haynes, WSP frontman John Bell sweetly sang of a scene sketched by one of his heroes, Van Morrison, during “And It Stoned Me” on Saturday night during ABB’s set. With imagery evocative of rainstorms, pickup trucks and fishin’ poles, the verse was perfectly set against Wanee’s magical backdrop. Add in the lines, “There were bottles, too/ One for me and you/ And he said, ‘Hey, there you are!’” and there’s no denying the soul-stirring feeling of good friends sharing great times. And for fans of Panic and the Allmans, there’s an element of unrestrained bliss that only music can create in knowing that the union between these two cherished bands is now sealed forever.

Best Performance: The Allman Brothers on Saturday night. The music was superb, from Gregg‘s powerful pipes on “Ain’t My Cross To Bear” to the frenzied guitar jams of “Nobody Left To Run With Anymore” to the surreal spaces created in “Dreams.” Yet, this set encapsulated so much more. Taking the stage twice after Widespread Panic, a headlining act that most bands would never follow, the Allmans firmly planted their flag in the quasi-terra firma of the Spirit of the Suwanee Music Park, staking their claim to a growing festival they fathered, a scene they created and a legacy they have earned. Truly, the land and the kings are one.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”83″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=28″);}); Wanee Festival 2010 | Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park | Live Oak, FL The JamBase 2010 Wanee Photo Gallery features The Allman Brothers Band, Widespread Panic, Gov’t Mule, 7 Walkers, The Lee Boys, Chuck Leavell, Randall Bramblett, Col. Bruce Hampton, George Clinton, Particle, The Word , The Black Keys, Dr. John, Derek Trucks, Susan Tedeschi Band, Dumpstaphunk, The Funky Meters and more… View Photos

JamBase | Sunshine State
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Coachella | 04.18.10 | Day 3 Photo Gallery

Images by: Steven Walter & Scott Dudelson

Coachella Day 3

04.18.10 :: Sunday :: Empire Polo Grounds :: Indio, CA

The final day of Coachella 2010 featured Gorillaz, the freshly reunited Pavement, Thom Yorke/Atoms For Peace, French hot shots Phoenix, Spoon, The Strokes’ Julian Casablancas, Florence And The Machine, Sly & the Family Stone, The Big Pink, Yo La Tengo, Sunny Day Real Estate, B.o.B. and many more. Here’s a look at what went down.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”1″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=26″);}); Coachella Music Festival Day 3 | Empire Polo Grounds | Indio, CA The JamBase photo gallery from the third and final day of Coachella 2010 features Gorillaz, Thom Yorke / Atoms For Peace, Pavement, The Big Pink, Phoenix, Deerhunter, Bradford Cox, Matt /&/g Kim, Florence And The Machine, Julian Casablancas, Yo La Tengo, B.o.B, Charlotte Gainsbourg, De La Soul, Jonsi, Mayer Hawthorne & The County, MuteMath, Spoon, Sunny Day Real Estate, Yann Tiersen and more… View Photos

See JamBase’s “9 Must-See Band At Coachella” here.

See photos from Friday at Coachella here.

See photos from Saturday at Coachella here.

JamBase | California

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Reggae on the River Lineup

HEADLINERS INCLUDE SLY & ROBBIE, DON CARLOS, SUGAR MINOTT, PABLO MOSES, ANTIBALAS

Sly & Robbie

Mateel Community Center is proud to present the 26th Annual Reggae On The River. Set for Saturday & Sunday, July 17 & 18 at Benbow Lake State Recreation Area in Southern Humboldt County, CA, Reggae on the River is universally acclaimed as the “Best Reggae Music Festival in the World.” Set on the banks of the beautiful Eel River in northern California, surrounded by majestic redwood forests, extraordinary performers gather for a music festival
of unprecedented quality. Reggae on the River is more than a music festival; it is a cultural idea that encompasses
environmental and community awareness. For 26 years, Reggae On The River stage has been graced by powerful
musical performances from the most influential superstars of the reggae, roots and world music genres. Over the
years, more than 1,000,000 people have attended this festival. The festival began as a community fundraiser in
1984 and has grown to one of the most attended and loved reggae festivals in the world.

This year’s festival will include a diverse mix of top name reggae and world music talent including Sly & Robbie with The Taxi Gang, Don Carlos, Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra,
Dezarie, Sugar Minott, Rootz Underground, Sister Carol, Pablo Moses, Ricardo Lemvo & Makina Loca,
Fire Pashon, Messenjah Selah, Rob Symeonn, Quinto Sol, Tchiya Amet & The Lighthouse
Band
, and Seed N Soil, plus more artists TBA.

2-day tickets for the 26th annual Reggae On The River are on sale now at local outlets and online at HERE for a price of $85. Current MCC members receive a $5
discount when purchased in advance at the Mateel office in Redway. Other local outlets include The Works
(Eureka/Arcata), Fortuna Music Mart, Redway Liquor, The Peg House (Leggett), Main Street Music (Willits), Ukiah
Natural Foods, and Tangents (Ft. Bragg). If the event is not sold out prior to June 1, single day tickets will go on sale
at this point for a price of $50 per day. Buying the advance 2-day pass is strongly encouraged.

For camping, parking, artist updates, and other pertinent festival information, visit
www.reggaeontheriver.com or call the Mateel office
at (707) 923-3368 and make your plans to today to be at the 26th annual Reggae On The River on July 17 and 18.

Like to know more about Reggae on the River? Subscribe to the Official Reggae on the River Newsletter by clicking
HERE.


New Mastersounds/Trombone Shorty | 03.13

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Susan J Weiand

The New Mastersounds/Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave/Salvador Santana
03.13.10 :: The Fillmore :: San Francisco, CA

The New Mastersounds :: 03.13 :: San Francisco

Once music is stuffed under the “funk/soul” umbrella there’s often little wiggle room. A certain tempo, energy, style, etc. is expected by the people putting cash on the barrelhead. This frequently leads to a homogeneous sound that’s predictable, down to the frenetic, wide-open soloing and sanctioned sources covered (James Brown, The Meters, Prince, Sly, Al Green, Dr. John, Motown, Stax). Even regional differences blur in the sameness not just expected but tacitly demanded of “funk/soul” purveyors, whose core audiences come to dance and savor flavors already dear to them. So, it’s a narrow tightrope to traverse if bands want to serve groove music’s basic instincts AND push the boundaries a bit. At The Fillmore we got three bands located at fairly divergent spots on this spectrum, with the evening’s headliner showing how one pirouettes on the high wire without missing a beat.

Salvador Santana and his tight, polished band kicked off the evening, and like his recent, quite winning solo album Keyboard City (JamBase review), their short set was summer afternoon warm and easy to like. However, the crispness and immediacy of the album wasn’t quite matched by Santana’s live presentation. His current mood recalls the crossover soul-rock of War, Donny Hathaway and even the bumpin’ side of early Doobie Brothers – like I said, easy to like stuff. What gelled in the studio hasn’t quite made its way to the stage, and things weren’t helped much, outside of a little residual star power, by a forgettable guest appearance by Salvador’s pop Carlos Santana, who just strummed along with one tune without setting off any fireworks.

One thing about Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave. is they put on a reliably exciting, musically robust show. In the half dozen sets I’ve caught they’ve never been less than satisfying, but the dance floor igniters were especially on and particularly charismatic this night. There’s an awful lot of talent stuffed into this band, and while Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews – just 24 and looking likely to conquer any mountain he sets his strong mind to – is the name upfront, he’s gracious in sharing the spotlight and exudes real enthusiasm for this band’s gifts. However, when the focus swings back his way his chops, talent and naked personal appeal is gripping. He kills on his brass instruments and he’s got a strong, flexible voice, but this gig also featured some tasty Hammond organ action, which surprised some folks coming from a dude whose trombone skills suggest we’re looking at this generation’s Fred Wesley. The other standout onstage, as per usual, was guitarist Pete Murano, whose feel and tone instincts mark him as an emerging great. Plenty of assholes can shred their way into Guitar Player transcription notoriety, but Murano works it in a way you can feel in your limbs.

Trombone Shorty :: 03.13 :: San Francisco

However, the one wrinkle in an otherwise pretty amazing bit of musical entertainment is a similarity in setlist construction from show to show, which bubbled up again at The Fillmore despite the exceeding pleasure their performance engendered. Hearing them switchback between a spot-on cover of Marvin Gaye’s “Let’s Get It On” and a melange that married ’50s Miles Davis-like bop to an oversized marching beat AND a strong dose of quality new jack swing and Cab Calloway, I felt sure that there’s music outside the hometown New Orleans comfort zone that shapes the boundaries of their set. This is largely a young band and there’s some very cool, original music lurking on the edges. Their newer originals, which will get a full airing on Shorty’s new album Backatown (arriving April 20), suggest they’re beginning to explore their own sound beyond the second line, James Brown and Meters moves they’ve gotten down very well already. Don’t get me wrong, I was still wiggling like I got happily tasered during their set, and there’s not many working the rich New Orleans traditions quite like Shorty and his boys. I’d just like to see where they’d go if they really took the brakes off and got as fearless as their music and potent drive suggests they might be.

I simply can’t rave enough about The New Mastersounds, who have steadily risen to my top spot for a largely instrumental soul/funk band over the past few years. It would be SO easy for a quartet with such traditional instrumentation for this genre – Eddie Roberts (guitar, tambourine),
Pete Shand (electric bass), Joe Tatton (Hammond organ, Fender Rhodes) and Simon Allen (drums) – to sound like a straight Meters knockoff or some derivative of any horn-less James Brown configuration – despite the fact they’re from England. But they don’t; they sound both classically grounded in the deepest roots of their chosen field – extending out to the most fiery, positive examples from ’70s electric jazz, ’90s acid jazz and contemporary dance music – and utterly their own men. From the opener onward, there was an inescapable sense of distinct personality to The New Mastersounds’ music, rising both from their individual touches and their absolutely dead solid compositions – the latter aspect being one of the chief ways NMS differentiate themselves from the competition.

The New Mastersounds with Trombone Shorty :: 03.13

“We’re at the bloody Fillmore!” whooped Eddie Roberts, who always looks a touch cooler than I’ll ever be on my best day and seemed ridiculously at ease on the fabled stage. “Ease” is an appropriate word for this group, who rarely whomp one over the head with obvious moves or overly showy soloing. Like this show, they just seem to divine the sweet spot of each number and stroke it until it purrs. There’s an unrushed charm to them, too, as if they’d all sipped of whatever nectar has fueled Charlie Watts endlessly unruffled demeanor all these years in the Rolling Stones. Taken together, they come across as a class act that’s always playing precisely what they want to and has real empathy for what will swerve an audience in the right ways at the right times. Shuffling contentedly in front of the soundboard, it took mere minutes before I’d caught their current, which took me with a sureness I genuinely appreciate when trying to get my funk on.

Another way they move away from their peers is in being satisfying on a cerebral as well as, shall we say, a tactile level. Moving and feeling are swell, but for a giant sized music nerd like myself there’s a great deal to parse and explore in their sound – the way each instrument is speaking and interacting with the others and the melody, all the texture and intelligent nuances they inject. Eyes closed below the lavender hued chandeliers, I felt a zing in my brain akin to the first time I encountered Miles Davis’ post-Hendrix, post-Sly work, and particularly his many ’70s live recordings. There’s something irrepressibly alive about the Mastersounds’ music, and though there’s greater discipline and less of a wild hair than Miles’ last great outpouring, this band stokes some of the same fires as the master.

It’s as if they’ve spent the last 10-plus years together pondering and then executing ALL the possibilities of their configuration they can figure out. While they do well incorporating guest vocalists and other high-end musicians, they’re usually at their best with the four of them, playing hot potato with their solos or gliding collectively into the curves of their songs. As this Fillmore show testified, NMS is always fun, never less than highly stimulating and living proof that, despite the perceived limitations of the genre, there are some artists capable of teaching old dogs new tricks.

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”17″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=4″);}); The New Mastersounds and Trombone Shorty | The Fillmore | San Francisco, CA | 03.13.10 The New Mastersounds, Trombone Shorty and Orleans Ave., along with Salvador Santana bring the deep funk and NOLA grooves to San Francisco’s Fillmore. View Photos

The New Mastersounds Tour Dates :: The New Mastersounds News :: The New Mastersounds Concert Reviews

JamBase | By The Bay
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10 Celebrities Who Named Their Children When They Were High

Maybe they really were high at the time, or maybe they simply held too high an opinion of themselves: the sort of arrogance that leads people to believe they’re above messing up the lives of their children – that the little celebrity mini-me’s couldn’t possibly have their school years ruined by an unrelenting barrage of [...]

Mo’Fone Plays The Meters 02/10 in San Francisco

Mo’Fone Plays The Meters at SFJAZZ

The Meters

Hotplate is a new concept from SFJAZZ that features a different Bay Area artist each month, interpreting the music of their favorite jazz legend. This month, Mo’Fone pays tribute to The Meters for a pre-Mardi Gras bash.

Mo’Fone’s unique instrumentation and lively sound has made them something of a local gem. Featuring a bari sax/alto sax/drums lineup with special guest horn section, Mo’Fone will pay tribute to The Meters, a band that has greatly influenced them and countless other musicians. The trio will augment their sound with an organ, guitar and electric bass for this show, but there will definitely be some stage time with the core members only.

When it comes to funk’s founding fathers, everybody can cite names like James Brown and George Clinton. True scholars of the genre, however, would give just as much credit to the four musicians from New Orleans called The Meters. Combining influences such as soul, jazz and R&B, they developed a distinctly New Orleans style of funk that was unlike any other band playing at the time. While not jazz musicians themselves, The Meters were key players in the burgeoning funk scene of mid to late 60s that, along with greats like James Brown, Tower of Power and Sly and the Family Stone, inspired a paradigm shift. When the likes of Miles Davis, Tony Williams and Herbie Hancock heard the new sounds of these artists, they incorporated funky rhythms and forms into jazz.

Thursday, February 10, 2010, 9:00 p.m.
Cover charge is $5.00 and doors open at 8:00 p.m. with DJ Vinnie Esparza
Amnesia, 853 Valencia Street
San Francisco