Sunday, September 28, 2008

Mandrill funks up the Clambake

How was I not hip to Mandrill? Sure, I'd heard the name spoken reverently by fans of old-school funk and soul and had passing familiarity with hits such as "Fencewalk" and "Mango Meat," but somehow I'd missed out on the snap-tight, brass-fueled 10-tet led by the Dominican-born, Brooklyn-raised Wilson brothers. Last night on Hollywood Beach, headlining the weekend's seventh annual Clambake, the mega-influential, monkey-monikered multiculturists put on a two-hour master's class in rhythm and groove that marks them as more than than a match for better-known contemporaries such as War, Tower of Power, Chicago and Rare Earth. It was hardly an exercise in nostalgia, either; the band sounds fresh and timeless, not only thanks to the addition of a (very unobtrusive) turntablist, as well as a rap performance by Lou Wilson's son, One Sun Lion Ra, but also because these cats were ahead of their time, pioneers of world-music and funk, and they play it like they still mean it.

The Wilson brothers, who formed the band in 1968, remain on the front line and cut quite a figure: Carlos dancing around the stage with his trombone slung over his shoulder; zebra-shirted Lou handling most of the lead vocals, blasting trumpet and trilling flute; Ric with a spray of gray dreadlocks cascading from a topknot blowing sax; and the cigar-chomping Wilfredo bopping away on congas and percussion. The ecstatic horns upped the excitement with unison lines, and vocal harmonies were as tight as you'd expect from a band of brothers, especially on the close-sung "House of Wood," which they dedicated to their granddad, and even an a cappella novelty ditty about a housefly gleefully shitting on everyone and everything.

A superb band, including original guitarist Omar Mesa, lent dynamic support, with particularly energetic drumming and Hammond B3 helping drive the action. Tunes such as the above-mentioned "Fencewalk" and "Mango Meat," as well as stone-cold acid-funk workouts on "Peace and Love," "Rollin' On" and "Polk Street Carnival" kept audiences smiling and dancing in the sand and on the dance floor in front of the stage.

For more on the band, check out Mandrillis.com. And for sure, next time they come to town, be sure to be in the house.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Farewell to Nappy Brown

One of the great voices in blues and R&B was lost this Saturday with the passing of Nappy Brown. Even at an advanced age — he would have turned 79 in October — Brown was still singing beautifully, his deep blues shout drawing raves on last year's Long Time Coming for the Blind Pig label.

As anyone who saw him perform can attest, Brown was also one hell of an entertainer. When he'd hit the floor on a tune like the raunchy "I'm a Lemon Squeezin' Daddy," he was connecting with generations of great blues and R&B showmen before him, from Howlin' Wolf to Big Jay McNeely. I spoke with Brown, who was born Napoleon Culp Brown in Charlotte, N.C., several years ago before he was set to perform at the Bamboo Room, about his stage antics, as well as his authorship of "Night Time," which became a smash for Ray Charles (as "Night Time Is the Right Time"), and his lack of both credit and royalties for same. Here are some excerpts from that interview.

On "Night Time": "After I wrote and recorded it [in 1957], that was a hit for a long time. And then after it cooled off, it ceased a little, and then Ray Charles picked it up. Only my ‘Night Time’ was slow, slow-like tempo, drop a beat behind it. His was fast-tempoed, with the Raelettes. That’s what pushed it over. Because he had everything note for note from mine, everything.”

On Savoy Records president Herman Lubinsky, who put his name as author of "Night Time": “Yeahhh. He was one of the biggest crooks there was [cracks up]. You see, when I recorded it, it was under my name, Napoleon [Culp], and that was in the studio. So, it was a long time before I knew it. So when it left out the studio, it had Herman Lubinsky and Arthur Kadina and N.C., that was me. Arthur Kadina he was the jazz band there."

On his laying down on-stage during performances: “I’ll tell you what. When I was a little boy, I used to go to a place where they used to have the dances, they would call it the I’m Not a Tourist dance. And they’d have different ones, you know, and we’d pay to go in and see different ones, like teenagers do. And, so, where I got that from, Roy Brown started that [chuckles]. And I been doin’ that every since. Except when I was in gospel, I come up in gospel, I started walking all up in the audience, but that layin’ down? That really come from Roy Brown. And Big Jay McNeely, when he laid down and blow his sax. Uh huh.

“If you got a good show, it takes you a long ways. Something that they’re not doing today. See, they don’t do that stuff now. When I come on the stage, doing this dancing and all this stuff, see, they don’t do that now. All that stuff was back in the '50s. Singing, dancing, acting and everything else. Really, it’s just one of those things."

On raunchy songs like "I'm a Lemon Squeezin' Daddy," which got him discovered and signed to Savoy after he sang it in a talent show: “Back in those days, you couldn’t record it. It was a little too, what I call, a little too vulgar-like. You couldn’t record like you record now. Everything had to be clean. And Roy Hamilton, he was on the talent show, and he won first place with ‘You Never Walk Alone.’ And I won second place with ‘Lemon Squeezin’ Daddy.’ In fact, they wanted me, the two managers trying to choose between me and Roy about ‘You Never Walk Alone.’ So, I told them that wasn’t in my vein, that was for Roy. ‘Lemon Squeezin' Daddy’ was for me. Roy was a ballad singer.”

"Savoy didn’t have a problem with that. The only problem was they wouldn’t let me record it. It’s not too long ago that I started to record it. Back then, everything had to been clean and polished. Today you can use words such as ‘fonky this’ and ‘fonky that.’ In fact, you can say anything you want these days. You couldn’t say that back then."

Monday, September 15, 2008

Moore better funk

Stanton Moore couldn't stop smiling. And who could blame him? On-stage at a packed City Limits, the New Orleans funk drummer was in the cat-bird's seat, displaying huge chops and on-the-spot creativity alongside comrades Robert Walter on the Hammond B3 and Will Bernard on guitar. The all-star trio lived up to its rep over two crackling sets, as Walter trilled and filled and added bottom, Bernard scratched out rhythmic funk and went to the slide on stabbing solos and the bespectacled Moore drummed up a parade ground of shuffles and added color and swing and booty-shaking percussive propulsion. (For a taste, dig Emphasis! (on Parenthesis), the threesome's most-recent slab.)

Booking agent Jackie Bressler was able to snag Moore and co. on the fly, as the trio was wrapping its tour and the drummer was headed back to N.O. to rejoin his bandmates in Galactic for an upcoming East Coaster. While Moore may have moaned a bit about having to trek this far down the peninsula, gas prices being what they are, he didn't look or sound like he regretted the sidetrip in the least, finishing up a lenghty second set on a joyous note with the Blue Note-era-sounding "(Late Night at the) Maple Leaf," a tribute to the famed Carrollton nightspot.

This well-attended Sunday-night party represents one of the first big shows at the new City Limits, which recently reopened just across the railroad tracks (and across the street from its longtime former location) on Atlantic Avenue in Delray Beach. Brick-walled and high-ceilinged, the location apparently once was a warehouse. While it's handsomely appointed, the venue's vibe is casual (though drinks ain't cheap; I shelled out $8 a pop for VO and Sevens.) And it's plenty roomy, with two wall-length bars running along the main performance space, a smaller bar off to one side behind it, and yet another in the comfortable upstairs space.

Bressler, who formerly booked bands at Revolution, has some exciting upcoming acts. On Friday (Sept. 19), Big Sam's Funky Nation (also playing at Hollywood's Clambake the following week) joins up with Miami's own Spam Allstars for what's sure to be one helluva fun double-bill. And on Oct. 4, Bressler pulled off a real coup in booking soul-blues legend Bobby "Blue" Bland. Check out newcitylimits.com or Myspace.com/citylimitsdelray for more. And look for more dispatches right here, as I know I'll be trekking up there again in the very near future.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Found my MOJO

I've been trying to get my office into some semblance of order for about, oh, six months now. I just managed to sort through 10 years' worth of City Link magazines that had formed along one wall, and I'm now delving into the boxes that contain at least that many years' worth of accumulated notes, press releases, CDs, cassettes (remember them?) and old magazines.

While excavating last night, I came across an old issue of MOJO, the Brit music mag, and stayed up way too late reading in-depth articles about Tusk era Fleetwood Mac and the glory days of Gil Scott Heron. Anyway, MOJO also ran a short feature in which they asked performers as diverse as Siouxsie Sioux and Dr. Ralph Stanley a handful of questions that I found quite revealing about their musical tastes. It also got me to thinking that as a journalist, I often ask these types of questions in interviews, but I never get to answer them. (Yeah, yeah, poor me. No forum except a column that ran for eight years in City Link and another one that appears monthly in Jazziz.) So, here are my responses to the MOJO quiz, as reported by, well, me:

What music are you currently grooving to?

Ah, thanks for asking! The Talking House label has just released the first three volumes of its excellent Blueprints of Jazz series, which have been in heavy rotation here in the jazz and blues bunker. Killer straight-ahead jams by drummer Mike Clark's sextet, with Christian McBride on bass and Donald Harrison on alto (Vol. 1); tenor saxophonist Billy Harper's octet, featuring the brilliant spoken-word artistry of Amiri Baraka, who traces the roots of black music from its African origins to 52nd Street and beyond (Vol. 2); and drummer Donald Bailey's quintet grooving high on the hardbop with a couple of heavy cats in tenor man Odean Pope and trumpeter Charles Tolliver (Vol. 3).

What, if push came to shove, is your all-time favourite album?

Again, great question, even if you are resorting to British spellings. I'd have to say John Coltrane's A Love Supreme is one of a few albums I can return to again and again and never get tired of hearing it. The suite of songs is so rich and beautiful, played by one of the best ensembles in jazz (Trane, McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones), and deeply moving. Trane's playing reveals his utter confidence in a higher power but also seems to be searching for answers to existential questions.

What was the first record you ever bought? And where did you buy it?

The first records I remember picking out on my own were 45s of "Welcome Back, Kotter" and the theme to "Happy Days." I had just turned 10, and my next door neighbor's dad ran a record store. So, for my birthday, he invited me to the store to select my gift. I had no idea at the time that John Sebastian had been the lead singer of Lovin' Spoonful, but I liked his voice and the urban vibe of the opening "Kotter" credits. Also, I was really into the '50s doo-wop sound, which seemed to have a resurgence in the early to mid '70s with groups like Sha-Na-Na, who even had their own TV show. Certainly, "Happy Days" did its share to boost nostalgia for that era. I also remember thinking boy, that Potsie sure could sing!

Which musician have you ever wanted to be?

Keith Richards.

What do you sing in the shower?

Well, this morning, I worked through an early Dylan medley. But depending on my mood, I like to belt out tunes by Chicago, Little River Band, The Commodores, Steely Dan, The Doobie Bros., Poco, John Prine, Chris Smither, Ted Hawkins and all manner of blues, jump swing and R&B. It's a great act, really. You should catch it sometime. (Bring your own soap.)

What is your favourite Saturday night record?

Miles Davis' Kind of Blue has that slinky, nocturnal energy that gets me going and anticipating what the night will bring.

And your favourite Sunday morning record?

Charlie Parker With Strings. Sunday paper, big ol' mug of coffee and Bird caressing "Just Friends" and "Autumn in New York" with that sumptuous orchestra behind him. About as good as it gets.