news | artists | reviews | columns | downloads | links | contact | shop

News from the darkest corners of the musical universe:

◦ Monday, February 28, 2005 ◦
Pam Bricker, 50, an eclectic singer whose repertoire ranged from playful jazz interpretations to her ethereal vocals for the electronica group Thievery Corporation, was pronounced dead Feb. 21 at her home in Takoma Park.

A spokeswoman for the Maryland medical examiner's office said that Ms. Bricker hanged herself and that the death was ruled a suicide. Ms. Bricker's husband, Gareth Branwyn, said his wife struggled with clinical depression.

Pam Bricker's acclaim grew with Thievery Corporation, which was on the "Garden State" soundtrack.

Pam Bricker was a presence in the Washington music scene since the early 1980s, when she joined the swing vocal group Mad Romance. That provided an enduring musical partnership with founder Rick Harris and led to several well-reviewed albums.

She played at clubs with such notable musicians as guitarist Charlie Byrd, taught at George Washington University's jazz department and, in recent years, joined Thievery Corporation. Her best-known Thievery recording was "Lebanese Blonde," which appeared on the Grammy Award-winning soundtrack for the 2004 film "Garden State."

◦ Monday, February 21, 2005 ◦
New release on WM Recordings available now:
D'r Sjaak - Meatje [WM011]

◦ Sunday, February 13, 2005 ◦
There's a new release at our sister site WM Recordings:
Datapanik - Unknown questions [WM010]
And yes, it's free!

◦ Friday, February 11, 2005 ◦
WAITIKI PRESENTS AN EVENING OF ESQUIVEL & EXOTICA!

WHEN: Friday, 3/4/2005 at 9pm
WHERE: The Lizard Lounge (Cambridge, MA) - 1667 Massachusetts Ave.
TICKETS: $7 in advance (will be available soon at www.virtuous.com) or $10 at the door

Venture out beyond the moon with WAITIKI and their Orchestrotica as they present the supersonic "space-age bachelor pad" sounds of the late great Juan Garcia Esquivel - often referred to as Mexico's equivalent of Duke Ellington.

Whether you know Esquivel as the King of Lounge or as a contemporary to George Gershwin, what matters most is the artfulness of his music. While filled with zany antics and wild instruments, the essence of Esquivel's writing remains rich and provocative on the inside and frenetically frosted on the outside - a perfect pairing for WAITIKI and the WAITIKI Orchestrotica.

When WAITIKI learned that the original manuscripts for these works had been destroyed many years ago, they decided to transcribe a selection of their favorite Esquivel works (by ear!) off of the recordings. Minimal arranging has been done in order to respect Esquivel's reputation as a perfectionist.

Known as Boston's premiere purveyors of exotic lounge and tiki music, WAITIKI has invited 15 of Boston's best musicians to comprise the WAITIKI Orchestrotica, who will perform this rare live performance of Esquivel's music.

This special event will also feature WAITIKI's unique performance of exotic tiki entertainment — complete with special drinks, hula, and more! Opening the evening will be the Gato Malo Orchestra. Jetset or aloha attire welcome!

Tickets are $7 in advance (virtuous.com) or $10 at the door. Learn more about WAITIKI at their website, www.waitiki.com!

◦ Thursday, February 10, 2005 ◦
The world has lost one of its greatest musical innovators. Widely considered "the world's greatest jazz organist," Jimmy Smith died Tues, Feb. 8 of natural causes in his Phoenix home. He was 76.

Although Smith wasn't the first to play jazz on the Hammond B3 organ, his virtuosity over the instrument combined with his brilliant infusion of gospel, blues and R&B riffs and melodies into bebop-inspired improvisations place him alongside other jazz pioneers, such as Charlie Parker, Art Tatum and John Coltrane - artists who revolutionized the way their respective instruments were played and who are continuing to have a profound influence of other instrumentalists.

"Jimmy was the consummate artist and innovator," says guitarist Jimmy Ponder, who worked with Smith over the years. "He was ahead of his time on the Hammond B3.'

Starting off as a pianist, Smith attended the Hamilton School of Music in 1948 and later Philadelphia's Ornstein School of Music the following year. In 1951, he switched to the Hammond B3 organ and made a name for himself in Philly as an outstanding live performer. He eventually moved to New York City, where he debuted at the Café Bohemia. But it was a Birdland date that he caught the attention of Alfred Lions and Francis Wolff, founders of Blue Note Records.

Born, James Oscar Smith, in Norristown, Pa. on Dec. 8, 1925, Smith helped usher in the soul-jazz movement with his galvanizing 1956 Blue Note debut album, A New Sound, A New Star: Jimmy Smith at the Organ, vol. 1. The long-winded title couldn't be farther from the truth in that it indeed introduced a new jazz sound and star. Older innovators such as Fats Waller and Count Basie had fiddled with the organ, Smith made giant steps with the approach of the instrument, stomping out walking bass lines with the pedals, bolstering the music with blues and gospel chords on his left-hand all while hammering out blistering, intricate improvisations with his right-hand, creating an intoxicating sound that was fat, funky and highly sophisticated.

During his 10-year run with Blue Note, Smith released a slew of albums that have become the bedrock of soul-jazz and major signifiers for today's jam band and acid jazz scenes. Albums such as The Sermon (1958), Prayer Meetin' (1960) and Back at the Chicken Shack (1960) all forged hit jukebox singles: a rarity for many jazz artists.

Smith continued to blaze after he left Blue Note for Verve in 1963, which marked a point of stylistic departure for him in terms of repertoire and instrumentation. Prior to Verve, Smith was mostly featured in burning small ensembles, many of his Verve Records found him surrounded in larger orchestral settings, arranged by Oliver Nelson and Lalo Schifrin. Some critics quipped that the orchestral arrangements somewhat drowned out Smith's flinty organ excursions. Nevertheless, big-band albums, such as Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf (1964), The Cat (1964) and Peter and the Wolf (1966) became jazz classics.

Smith's tenure with Verve concluded in 1972. Like many other jazz musicians in the '70s, his recording career suffered once record companies started ignoring jazz in favor of rock and R&B. His output on the Decca, Milestone and Elektra labels throughout the late-'70s and '80s is noticeably smaller than his extensive discography in the '60s. Luckily, he was just as mesmerizing on stage as he was on record, allowing him to thrive on the live music circuit. In the mid-'70s, he and his wife, even opened the Jazz Super Club in Los Angeles.

Once the nascent acid-jazz scene took off in London in 1987, Smith experienced a major renaissance. His older albums from the '50s and '60s were being heavily sampled by DJs and rappers. And by the time, the acid-jazz movement made its way to the United States, a rejuvenated Verve was quick to nab him.

In 1995, Verve released Smith's sizzling Damn!, which was followed by the softer-hued Angel Eyes: Ballads & Slow Jams later that year. To illustrate jazz's connection to '90s hip hop and acid-jazz, Verve released a compilation series: Talkin' Verve: Roots of Acid-Jazz, one of which devoted entirely to Smith's older recordings for the label. His last CD for Verve, Dot com Blues came out in 2001.

Earlier this year, the National Endowment for the Arts awarded Smith with the prestigious Jazz Masters Fellowship Award.

Scheduled to be released by Concord Records, in mid-February of this year is Legacy, a new collaborative effort between Smith and fellow organist Joey DeFrancesco. "Jimmy was one of the greatest and most innovative musicians of our time. I loved the man and I love the music. He was my idol, my mentor and my friend," says DeFrancesco.

(source: Bet.com)

◦ Wednesday, February 09, 2005 ◦
Jazz organist Jimmy Smith has died, says Soulfuldetroit. There is no official confirmation yet.

◦ Sunday, February 06, 2005 ◦
Sicilian composer Franco Mannino died on february 1st of complications following surgery at age 80. Mannino was a frequent collaborator with film director Luchino Visconti. Mannino published over 600 musical compositions. That does not include his over 100 film scores. He won the David de Donatekko Award for Best Score for his work on Visconti's 1976 film "L'Innocente."
In addition to his long collaboration with Visconti, Franco Mannino worked with such directors as John Huston, Antonio Margheriti and Ricardo Freda. Among the many films of Visconti that Mannino either scored or orchestrated are "Death in Venice", "Ludwig", "Bellissima" and "Conversation Piece". He was also the music consultant for the documentary "Luchino Visconti."

◦ Thursday, February 03, 2005 ◦
On 7th of March 2005 Asphalt Tango Records will release the fourth CD of FANFARE CIOCARLIA entitled "GILI GARABDI".
When the enslavement of Romania's Gypsies officially ended in 1864 tens of thousand fled the nation for new horizons. Several thousand landed in the United States, often settling in the black ghettoes of the Southern US states, where they continued to make music. Ioan, Fanfare Ciocarlia's oldest member and group historian, once answered when asked if jazz was a big influence on the Fanfare, "Who´s to say our cousins who went to the US didn´t help Invent jazz?" On "GILI GARABDI" this matter and other mysteries of Gypsy magic are set forth.

More info here.

◦ Wednesday, February 02, 2005 ◦
New releases in the essential Sublime Frequencies series:

SF016 Streets of Lhasa
SF017 Harmika Yab-Yum: Folk Sounds From Nepal
SF018 Folk and Pop Sounds of Sumatra Vol 2
SF019 Molam: Thai Country Groove From Isan
SF020 Radio Phnom Penh
SF021 Radio Sumatra: The Indonesian FM Experience

"SUBLIME FREQUENCIES is a collective of explorers dedicated to acquiring and exposing obscure sights and sounds from modern and traditional urban and rural frontiers via film and video, field recordings, radio and short wave transmissions, international folk and pop music, sound anomalies, and other forms of human and natural expression not documented sufficiently through all channels of academic research, the modern recording industry, media, or corporate foundations."



Live the Dream at Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy Camp!

© WM Digital 2001-2008
artwork: BlueHipster