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David Hillyard & the Rocksteady 7



Last Updated: 12/21/2009

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City: NEW YORK
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Thursday, August 20, 2009 
So I want to thank everyone who has supported me on my recent spanish tours in support of GET BACK UP! (www.brixtonrecords.com).  You can pretty much get it anywhere in europe now through them.

In the next few weeks, it should be up on Itunes, Reverb Nation, and other US download services. 

And we are still waiting for the Japanese release on Disk Union. 

Plus Im selling copies at all my gigs, so come on down and pick one up.

Ah well.

Its hard to get cds out right now.  Distributors are going out of business.  Labels are weak.  And if you want to do it yourself, it involves saving up money to press it yourself, which has never been my forte. 

I need a business manager and an intern. 
Any suggestions are welcome....except.  Just dont tell me, "yeah dude...just put it out yourself..."  Its much easier said than done.

But I still got the creative bug.  
And Ive been thinking about new rocksteady 7 albums. 
(even as the album becomes more and more irrelevant in our mp3 age)

First....
Ever since I first went to Granada in 2003, Ive been thinking about how I can do an album that mixes what I do, Jazzy-Reggae-Ska with Flamenco.  I was working on this a couple of years ago.  even wrote a couple of sketches for tunes but I never quite got it together. 

But over the last couple weeks Ive been coming back to it.  Im getting this idea for an album that mixes flamenco, north african music, and fado melodies with jamaican rhythms and jazz improvisation.  Sure....its a little grandiose, but rocksteady 7 is a gradiose band.  its

My working title for this project is "Boabdil's Tears."
Boabdil was the last moorish king of Granada.

Second...
Being as Im coming up to 25 years since my first gig (1985).  I was thinking about dong a "california" album where I go and hang out with some of the musicians from my youth and make an album. 

Ive been trying to figure out what this kind of album would be.   Im guessing some rocksteady and old soul being the backbone of it. 

Its still in the conceptual phase.

Well, that's what Im up to.  Thanks for all the support.  I get to play for really great people and I get to play with really great musicians.  Special thanks to Jeb Jorba for covering the trombone position on the last festival gig.

much love and respect to all

Dave

Monday, April 13, 2009 
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Rocksteady 7 blog
So....the new Rocksteady 7 album, Get Back Up, is finally finished.

By finished, I mean the master has been finalized.  The artwork is still being tweaked.
So I can look forward to these songs finally seeing the light of day in the near future. 


Currently, the Euro release for Get Back UP! is gonna be with Brixton Records (www.brixtonrecords.com).  And the Japanese release is gonna be with Disk Union.
 
A 45 is coming out on golden singles records also out of <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />....spain.....  www.myspace.com/thegoldensingles


For the USA/Canada, Im probably gonna end up putting out the cd myself.  And then with the help of Nomadic Wax ....Ill.... get it up on the different websites (Itunes, Emusic etc etc).

Well, the point to this blog is not to just make a blatant commercial plug (or plea...Im begging you...someone buy my music!!!! hehehe).....its to talk about Jazz and Jamaican rhythms.

“You also need to more than the root, third, and fifth because that limits you.  You must spread out with the seventh, the sixth, even the ninth when called for”—Roland Alphonso



Improvising over ska beats, rocksteady beats, bingi, jump up, 60's reggae, roots reggae etc etc is something I've been working on for a long time, and its near and dear to my heart.

For whatever reason, this guy (me) who grew up in Socal suburbia and then lived in NYC for the last 17 years, has been obsessed with playing saxophone over these rhythms.  From the first time I heard Saxa of the Beat, I just cant stop listening to this stuff.

Its always amazing to me how few players try to mix jazz and Jamaican rhythms.  Afro Cuban music and Jazz have a long history.  Brazillians beats like Samba and Bossa Nova are also typical parts of a jazz bands repertory.  There are seen as “natural” things to play.  Even the occasional calypso beat pops up thanks to Sonny Rollins and his “....st. Thomas.....”
 
Ask the average jazz band to play reggae and you are gonna get cheesy grins, sarcastic “ya mons”, and some of the cheesiest lounge music you ever heard.

But in ....Jamaica.... and the Jamaican diaspora, there is a long tradition of playing Jazz and Jamaican music together.

Basically, the roots of this go back to ....Jamaica.... in the 40s/50s (at least).  The Jamaicans had big bands for hotels, or for different schools and niteclubs, or for the military, and the guys educated in this music started playing over the mento and other rhythms that were the folk music of ....Jamaica.....

At the same time they started hearing Jump Blues and other music from the american south.  So you start getting some pretty good improvisers who have a unique sound.

Some of the early guys like Bobby Gayanair and Val Bennet you can check out on Laurel Aitken’s early tracks - check out "Laurel Aitken - The Pioneer of Jamaican Music" on the Reggae Retro label.

Add the burru and bingi rhythms of Count Ossie's percussion centered group. Guys like Rico Rodriguez and Don Drummond would hang out with this group of hand drummers and they rhythms (and Rastafarian ideas) ended up in Ska and later Reggae.  Check out “Remembering Count Ossie” a retrospective cd to hear how this stuff started.  Or Prince Buster’s productions of “Oh Carolina” and “Chubby” also feature Count Ossie.

 Later, the ska sound gets codified around a cadre of musicians that is known as the Skatalites.  Their drummer, Lloyd Knibb, sets the standard for the Jamaican ska beat and it becomes its own thing, very distinctive from its influences.  There is the basic ska beat and then he also did a ska bossa, burru, and some swingier beats that were more similar to the Jump Blues roots of ska.

The Skatalites also improvised.  They played covers of songs by Mongo Santemaria, Lee Morgan, and Sonny Rollins.  They basically grabbed musical themes from all over the place and would give them a different name.  For example, Sidewinder became Malcolm X.  Hammerhead became ....Phoenix.. ..City.....

There were also a couple of originals, mostly written by Don Drummond.

For a short time in the mid-60s instrumental music reigned supreme in ....Jamaica.... but this ended with the Rocksteady era.  

So far, for me, at least this is a pretty boilerplate history of Jamaican music.

I guess what is less know what happens to the improvisers after ska.  Although instrumentals become secondary

.. ..

In the second half of the sixties, in the rocksteady era and early Reggae era there were

lots of organ instrumentals by Jackie Mittoo, Glen Adams,  Winston Wright, Lloyd Charmers and others.  Jackie Mittoo’s Evening Time is a personal favorite.

.. ..

A lot of these songs were “versions.”  With the event of multi-tracking, a producer like Coxsonne Dodd could do a lot of versions of the same rhythm.  Different vocals.  Organ versions.  Saxophone versions.  Percussion versions.  Whatever.

.. ..

Unfortunately, this led to less stretching out and less songwriting specially for improvising.

.. ..

There are some exceptions.  The most influential for me is Cedric Brooks who made a bunch of  great albums in the late 60s through the mid-1970s as musical director of Count Ossie’s Mystic Revelations of Rastafari and then later with his own Light of Saba group.  These albums like “Tales of Mozambique” and “Groundation”

.. ..

Another guy who never gave up on jazz-reggae hybrids is Rico Rodriguez.  His blue note Lp, “Man from Wareika” is fantastic.  It only has short solos but they are powerful.  The themes are fantastic and the rhythm section is a serious reggae section.

.. ..

With the rise of Dub and Roots Reggae in the 70s you get a new Reggae instrumental style centered around the melodica.  This minimalist but brilliant style is best exemplified by Augustus Pablo.

.. ..

Yeah, so to this day there are still a fair amount of instrumental reggae records.  Dean Frasier is probably the best known saxophone player after the Roland Al/Tommy Mc era.   He gots huge chops and big sound but like a lot of guys of his generation this “smooth jazz” influence starts to creep in.  A lot of contemporary reggae instrumental albums are very easy listening music that is great for a dentist chair.

.. ..

In addition to the guys improvising over Ska, Reggae, etc., there have been a fair amount of Jamaican musicians who played American style jazz with varying degrees of success like Roy Burrowes, Dizzy Reece, and Joe Harriot.  Joe Harriot is very experimental.  Played a sort of strange parallel style to Ornette Coleman with a little bit of a calypso sensibility. Pretty cool stuff.

.. ..

Later on you have Monty Alexander and Ernest Ranglin.  They did a lot of straight ahead jazz  but they have also messed around reggae rhythms. Ernest Ranglin’s “Below the Bassline” is one of my favorites.  Monty’s stuff is infuriating to me cause it can be so great one song, for example, his version of Exodus (film theme) into Exodus (Bob Marley) is brilliant.  But then he can do the cheesiest lounge reggae with steel drums the next.

.. ..

As ska and reggae went around the globe, you get more and more non-Jamaicans experimenting with these rhythms with varying degrees of success.

.. ..

Georgie Fame, the british Rnb artist, had several Carribean musicians in his band and messed around with ska themes occasionally.

.. ..

Herbie Mann famous for his mix of jazz, latin, and brazillian music also did a Reggae album.  It has a lot of good Jamaican musicians playing on it but I cant recommend it as an album.  Its just lightweight material.  Fluff a rama.

.. ..

Plus in the ....UK.... there were a fair amount of 1st and 2nd generation carribean musicians like Courtney Pine who mostly play straight ahead jazz or funk but will also work in reggae themes.

.. ..

When the Two Tone movement hit the ....UK...., guys from the older generation like Rico got a lease on life.  None of the younger generation of two tone guys really tried to mix jazz with ska seriously. They were coming out of Punk, Pub Rock, and british pop music. The one exception to this is the Jama Rico album, featuring Rico Rodriguez again, that was put out by Two Tone after the main wave had crested.

.. ..

Since the early 90s, you have a lot of non-Jamaican musicians messing around with Ska & Jazz.  They are a mix of guys who came out of the Ska scene and wanted to play instrumental music and guys coming out of Jazz who end up in Ska bands.

.. ..

Since the 90s, in addition to my own Rocksteady 7, there have been a lot of musicians, mostly outside of ....Jamaica.... who have been messing around with different mixes.   ....New York.... Ska-Jazz Ensemble.  Skazz.  Jazz ....Jamaica.....  ....Rotterdam.... Ska Jazz Foundation. ....Tokyo.... Ska Paradise Orchestra.  St Petersburg Ska Jazz Collective (You might notice a naming trend for these groups!).  The Articles.  The Oldians. (finally, some bands without ska, rocksteady, or jazz in their name!).

.. ..

My favorite is Joey Altruda’s, Jump with Joey.  Their Generations United album done with Roland Alphonso is a great album.  It has old ska and reggae mixed with latin and swing.  He is one of the main templates for the “neo” traditional bands that have constituted an outcast minority of the Ska movement for the last 15 years.

Its funny.  The first time I played “Confucius” (by Don Drummond) for my high school band music teacher he laughed at it.  He had asked me to bring in a song that I was listening to.  He wanted to hear what the kids in his band were listening to.  He laughed at my song.  Its just “one chord” he exclaimed!

He couldn’t hear it as serious music because of that.  That guy was just one in a long line of people I had to prove the musical validity of the music that I loved.

.. ..

Like I said it’s a common prejudice that Im always fighting against that reggae music is simple music played by inferior musicians.  Herbie Mann referred to it as “folk music” that is “simple melodically but complex rhythmically.”  He went on to say how he preferred Brazillian music because it was also complex harmonically.  Another, ....Ill.... leave unnamed member of an influential Ska-Jazz group proclaimed,

“the Harmonic structure is so simple in ska.”

.. ..

You see, Im of a different opinion.  I remember a certain Jazz musician named Miles Davis.   He shocked the Jazz world by writing 2 chord jazz tunes like “So What.”  Because of his simplification of the basic harmonies, the soloists were then freed up for more melodic experimentations that often began to use even more complex harmonic concepts.

.. ..

A tune like Confucius opens you up to do so much.  The repeated riff creates a trance and its up to the soloist to take you to the next level.  Obviously you can use a Cminor scale, but you can also play different minor modes, harmonic minor scales, play major riffs against the chords, play blues scales.. the possibilities are only limited by your imagination.  As long as you have a strong tone and strong rhythmic statement you can do anything.

.. ..

I tried to do a couple different modal things on my first album, Playtime.  Specifically the title track which except for the bridge is only two chords,  Fmin(9) and Ebmin(9).

.. ..

..(pleae forgive me when I write out the chords.  These are off the top of my head, so yes, Im gonna make some mistakes! But you should get the idea.)..

.... 

To take issue with Herbie Mann, there is no reason why you cant slip more chord progressions into reggae music and still have it maintain its rhythmic force.  Shit, you could play Desafinado and any other bossa standard easily in a reggae style and it would sound great.  An example of adding some chords to a standard is rolf’s version of Another You on United Front.

.. ..

Here are the chords underneath the solos for the second chorus, 

.. ..

Ebmaj  / Ebmaj  / D-   / G7   / C-   /  C-   / Eb7   / Abmaj  / Db7    / Eb maj / F7 F#dim /

G- Ab7 / G- C7 / F- Bb7 / Ebmaj  /

.. ..

.. ..

On my United Front album, I also wrote some tunes like “Baby” and “Come and Get Me” that were decidedly influenced by Miles Davis tunes like “Four” and “Tune Up.”  To me they just sound natural.  Here are the chords to Baby for example,

.. ..

Ebmaj / Eb maj / Eb maj / Eb-7  Ab7 /  F-   / F- Dbmaj / E 7   /  E7    /

G-7   / F#7      /   F-7     /   Bb7          / G-    / F#7 /  F-7   / Bb  7        /

.. ..

Anyways, I guess this is what is at the heart of the Rocksteady 7’s style.  We start with heavy Jamaican rhythms but then we expand upon it.  Not to make folk music more “sophisticated” but to take the music we’ve heard before and try to make something that expounds upon it.

.. ..

We can take a bingi and swing it, making it a “swingi” and bring out the 6/8 hiding within.  We can play a straight ska beat but mess around with a whole tone progression on top of it.  And you can also play the blues and that never gets old!

.. ..

For me, its all about creating that “trance” state where you are really into the rhythm of the music and then you can fuck around with it by pushing limits while you solo.

.. ..

For example, Change of Plans has a whole tone pattern in it but its also a weird blues variation.

.. ..

Bb   C  /  D    E   /  Bb7   /  Bb7     /

Eb   F  / G     A   /  Bb7   /  Bb7     /

Bb  C  /  Eb  F   / Bb C  / Eb F      /

Bb C  /   Eb F   /  Bb7   /  Bb7     /

.. ..

I have a pretty homemade technique.  I had a sax teacher analyze my fingering style once.  There is a “French” fingering style which is light and fast.  A german style which is heavier and harder (surprise surprise).  I was diagnosed as having a harder than German style which is somewhere around a caveman style of playing saxophone.

.. ..

It should also be music that’s fun to play.  I like to honk and squawk and make funny noises on the saxophone.  Sometimes I really like just hanging out on the pentatonic scales.  I learned a lot about this from listening to Fela Kuti.  He has a certain technique that is not virtuoso like Dexter Gordon, but its so individual and works so well with his music that technique is the last thing you think about when you listen to him.

.. ..

Shit, Dexter Gordon was definitely not “above” letting out the odd squank on the bottom of his horn for that matter! 

.. ..

I really look at the harmonics of R7 tunes as different color combinations.  Certain chords lend themselves to this, other ones to that.  But you can still mix them up.  (of course, Im colorblind!)

.. ..

Musically, ska, jazz, reggae, afro-cuban, bossa, afro-beat, and Rnb have so much in common I often just think of them as the same music with a common connection…hmmm….to where?...hehehe.

.. ..

Anyways, now that Im done with my bluster and bravado, I hope you guys will listen to the new r7 album and enjoy it.  Me and the band really went for it.  We are trying to make something that is not “new” or “retro” but timeless.  Something you will want to keep listening to, again and again.


If you’ve reached this point of the blog, thanks for reading the whole thing.

Friday, January 09, 2009 

Category: Music
Hi everyone,

How you doing?

I decided to put up 3 of the new rocksteady 7 recordings.

Im still working on the final mixes and would appreciate any of your comments.

About the tunes:

RNA is short for "Rocksteady National Anthem."  It was my opening theme music for a european tour and I worked into a full song version.  Its horns around a straight binghi rhythm.  Direct influences are obviously Count Ossie and Cedric Brooks.

Change of Plans is a phrase you hear all the time on the road.  "We were supposed to play at 8 but there's been a CHANGE OF PLANS."  The song is supposed to have a slightly chaotic sound.   For the music nerds, yes, it is built around whole tone scales.

Greedy is a modal type tune.  It has a swingi beat, that is its a swung binghi beat that is 4/4 and 6/8 depending on how you look at it.  And yes to add to the indulgence I play soprano on it.

All songs were recorded live with no overdubs at seaside studio in brooklyn.
Im trying to make these recordings as "timeless" sounding as possible.  So let me know what you guys think!


p.s. Im also trying to find a good label (or self produced substitute) to release the whole 12 song package on.  So any advice on this would also be appreciated.
Wednesday, December 10, 2008 

My last blog was so negative I feel that I need to atone for it a little bit.

I got to watch writing when Ive drunk too much wine.  I get all melancholy.

This time Im good and sober.

So Im gonna try a different tack, Im gonna big up all the people out there who have been doing jazz after 1970 that I really dig.  (Only in jazz could post 1970 be seen as CURRENT! - hehehehe.)

By talking about the artists I like, maybe I can figure out what is missing to me in the current scene.

Anyways.   A lot of people feel that with the death of John Coltrane that jazz died soon after.

But I think that a lot of Coltrane's acolytes kept on making pretty cool music.  I usually like Pharaoh Saunder's releases.  For example, "Live at the East" from the early 1970s featuring Marvin "Hannibal" Peterson on trumpet is fucking amazing.  

Saunders as he matured as he got older.  His honks and squeals began to be tethered to earth by counterpointing them against funky riff bass lines.  Saunders still rocks.  His 1990s album with Mahmoud Ghania from the Gnauwa tribe of Morrocco is incredible. Big tunes. Big influence on my music.

Hannibal is another motherfucker who really has some great moments in the 70s. He is featured on this great album that I listen to all the time.   Its 2 songs.  On one side is "now's the time", the other is "epistrophy."  The band on the album is led by bass player Richard Davis who is also amazing.

Another player who began with 60's guys like Mingus and obviously loved Coltrane was George Adams.  But he really came into his own in the 70s and early 80s.  (He died in the mid-80s I believe).  For some serious bad ass saxophone playing that is hard to label check out "Paradise Space Shuttle."  Its mind blowing how much power the guy has but its tempered by serious taste and never goes over board.  What a great tone.

Im not so big on the Fusion stuff that came out on the 70s.  Im not listening to Mahavishnu Orchestra or Weather Report or whatever.  I do really like Freddie Hubbards first couple cds on CTI.  "Red Clay" is my jam.  As the Slackers will attest, I listen to that song all time.  First Light is also pretty cool but starts to schlock out about half way through.

There were lots of cool experimenters out there in the 70s.  Bands like the Art Ensemble of Chicago.  What a group.  They take the free stuff of the 60s and start re-rooting it again in New Orleans, the blues, and swing.  What a brilliant collective.  Guys from this group seem like they just had a vision. They had no problems being original.  Lester Bowie, the trumpet player, passed away in the 1990s I think.  But other guys like Roscoe Mitchell, Joseph Jarman, and Malachi Favors are still out there. 

Lester Bowie's brother, Joseph, a trombone player went to form Defunkt.  Which is pretty much like it sounds.

A man who is incredible original and someone whom I admire greatly is Anthony Braxton.  He plays everything from flute to contra bass clarinet.  Somehow he does it all well.  He calls his songs, "compisitions" and has classical airs about him, but I think he's good enough to pull it off.

My favorite Braxton is a cd called, "Sounds of the 70s."  I listen to that whenever I feel like my playing is getting stale and predictable.

For me though, my favorite saxophone player who starts in the 70s and has continued up to today is David Murray.  His stuff with the World Saxophone Quartet is sublime (, the other original members of the quartet are amazing too - julius hemphill, oliver lake, and Hammiett Bluett.  I studied for a little while with John Purcell who was Hemphill's replacement in the quartet.)

A series of David Murray recordings that are now forgotten for the most part but that I love are from the 1980s.  They were done with an octet.  "Flowers for Albert" is a huge tune.  But my favorite album of his (and one of my favorites of all time) is "Home" from 1982.  With a band of bad asses like Henry Threadgill and Steve McCall he makes a masterpiece.

The melodies on these 1980 albums are so original.  They are not jarring like free jazz but they are not bop cliches either.  In fact its hard to find a single cliche on this album, its just fucking beautiful.  Songs like "last of the hipmen" are close to being perfect. 

Finally, there is his big band conducted by Butch Morris.  All I can say about this is wow!  It takes Ellington to a whole another level.  Big bad mean and swinging.  It swaggers.  Drunk on its own power. 

Murray is still active to this day.  He moved to France cause of tax problems I heard.  But he still comes back to the east coast regularly and still releases albums.  His 2000 release, "octet plays trane" is really interesting and fun.

While David Murray was pushing boundaries in the 80s, the media became focused around the "young lions" and the neo-con bop pushed by Wynton Marsalis.  For the most part, I can skip this stuff and dig my old Blue Note lps.  A big exception for me is James Carter.  James has the big tenor tone of a Coleman Hawkins or Ben Webster and has done albums like "Jurrassic Classics" that pay tribute to old Swing.  But for me his playing is parralell to David Murray.  It has humor.  Strange runs and ellipses.  And his chops.  He can hold his own with Josh Redman or Javon Jackson no problem.

I wish I could play like James Carter.  I think sometimes he needs better material though.  He goes for cute theme albums. Maybe he would let me pick songs for him next time! hehehe.

In the 70s there was a whole Downtown art-jazz scene.  My favorite scion of this scene is my friend, trumpeter Roy Campbell.  I really like the stuff he did recently with his "pyramid trio" and a little while back with his free group, "other dimensions of music."  I think that he is hugely underappreciated by the New York scene.

A guy that is more appreciated is bassist William Parker.  He has an interesting style that is powerful and swinging but still manages to seem free.

And of course, there is the king of downtown, John Zorn.  I think sometimes he can get a little blustery but I got to say his album, "Spy vs. Spy" is a fucking classic.

I have a funny John Zorn story.  Roy Campbell told me that Zorn was curating a concert series and told me I should get Rocksteady 7 on it.  He gave me Zorns' number.  So I called him a couple of times leaving messages on his machine.  I can be very persistent.  So I got a phone call a couple of weeks later.  My roommate at the time, Matt Scanlon answered it, "Dave....its John Zorn!" he said excitedly.  So I picked up the phone.  This little voice asked me,  "is this Dave Hillyard?..." "Yeah", I said. The voice got firm, "STOP CALLING ME...JUST STOP CALLING ME." 

That being said, I dont hold any personal animosity towards Zorn.  I think he's pretty bad ass. And yeah, he should actually listen to my music one of these days! hehehehehe.

The only master I know of the slide trumpet is Steve Bernstein.  He has been involved in a lot of groups.  I once heard him and Michael Blake play an incredible show at the Chelse Commons on the westside around 1995.  He is a bad ass.  I really like his different "Sex Mob" projects.  They have the fun aspect of Mingus without being too derivative.

One of the big stories though about Jazz post1970 is how its spread all over the world and developed indigenous versions in the strangest places.  There is tons of different kinds of African Jazz. This is something Im just starting to get into.  Check out any of the Ethiopique series for great ethio-jazz. 

Abdullah Ibrahim (formerly Dollar Brand) put out some great music.  I have two favorite albums, "African Space Program" and "Ekaya."  The last one has almost calypso like melodies.

Of course there are many little known Reggae-Jazz fusions.  Some of the best are Rico Rodriguez's blue note album, Man From Wareika (I still dont know why Blue Note put it out, but Im glad they did!).  Another is Cedric Brook's band, Light of Saba, whose music was just re-released as a comp.

And there are universes of Latin Jazz and Brazillian Jazz artists.  People like Willie Colon, Eddie Palmieri, Beto, and Ray Barretto to name a few.  Unfortunately though this area seems to have been infiltrated by bad synths, clever fusion riffs, rat tails, mullets, and blue tank tops.  Definitely had problems during the 1980s.

I guess the tougher question for me to answer next? which new jazz cd released in 2008 do I like?

Maybe somebody can hip me to some.  I could use some new music to listen to. 

Sunday, September 14, 2008 

It really pains me to admit it but jazz, America's art form par excellance is dead. 

Its been moldering for a long time.  Like John Brown's body in the grave but now its dead.

Why is that?  Improvisation is a hard thing to explain.  You spend a lot of time honing your skills.  Its much like martial arts.  You practice your moves.  If the piano or guitar play does this...what do you do?  What are the advantages and disadvantges of using this or that scale?  Is a 11 really necessary or is it better to just rhythmically play around with the root?

But when you are actually doing it.  At least for me. You forget about this stuff.  Not all the time. You have your days when you think, "hmmm...maybe I could impose a whole tone scale and just not worry about that chord change." But when you are really doing it.  You arent thinking about that shit.  You are telling a story.

You're thinking about moods.  You're thinking about your life.  Your family. Your friends.  The state of the world. 

My whole life I've heard things.  The whistling of trees is a note.  Getting in trouble at school.  That was a note.  More like a drone with melodies being improvised off of them.

   Whatever songs I was hearing.  I heard melodies.  I remember once when I was camping with my parents.  I played different songs for them on twigs by the campfire.  They looked at me like I was crazy but I was hearing songs.

Jazz nowadays is about learning a repetoire.  Learn some standards.  Learn some of the classic patterns of the past.  Pick an idol.  Try to mimic his style. Hopefully you will become as close a carbon copy to the original as you can.

I recently went to Minton's for the 1st time.  For those of you who dont know Minton's is the place where bebop was born.  I went there around 9 p.m. at night. 

Its in Harlem.  Me and my wife walked in.  It seemed like a neighborhood bar.  Mostly black with an occasional white person here and there.   The music being played on the jukebox was 80s funk. 

Around 10 p.m. a band started playing.  It was an organ trio.  Fronted by Bill Saxton on tenor, a  name player in New York circles.  Within 15 minutes all the black people at the bar had left.  They were replaced by a busload of french tourists.  Around 20. 

They were a mix of black and white french people.  I think the drummer of the trio was confused by this.  He kept trying to talk to the black people in the group in english but was confused by how they couldnt completely understand him.  At one point he asked where they were really from.

So I was listening to jazz at mintons.  And I was realizing it was a museum.  It was divorced from America.  Where were the stories?

For the last couple weeks Ive been listening to Lester Young's "the Alladin Sessions" douple Lp.  I bought it for 5 bucks used.  Its vinyl.

Its more vital than anything Ive heard recently.  lester Young was supposedly past his primed by the time they made these recordings.  He was a drunk.  A mess. Angry.

Every song is amazing.  His tone on saxophone says more than any clever pattern he could play.

And he misses notes.  even cracks a few.  But the thing is.  He keeps going.  He doesnt just have it fixed in protools.  He lives with it.

Tone is supreme.  Lester young's tone is amazing.  It vibrates so much it almost fries out my little record player.

Tone has become secondary in jazz.  Its all about succesfully completing the patterns. 

to be continued. 

 

Friday, September 12, 2008 

Hi everyone,

on sept 20/21, Im gonna make some new Rocksteady 7 recordings.

We're gonna try to do it as live as possible at seaside studios on 18th street in brooklyn.

we're gonna record the following tunes;

sunny - 60s tune

greedy - original swinghi

change of plans  - original strange

get back up - original reggae

esta tarde - armando manzanero

rna - original binghi

death ride - the hippy boys

morning ya ya - fela kuti

soul thing - original ska and soul

7 years of plenty - lino trujillo

ca pulange - brazillian song

swing no 7 - old new orleans standard

 

Tuesday, November 06, 2007 

Im working on a little mini-tour of california.

It would involve me playing several nights in Los Angeles and each one having a different theme/different music.

1/8 - Blue Beat Lounge - "rocksteady 7 west" - Dave plays rocksteady 7 material backed up by members of the Chris Murray Combo and other guest musicians

1/9 - Dub Club - "roots 7" - Dave plays reggae oriented rocksteady 7 material backed up by the expanders

1/10 -1/12 more dates to come

Tuesday, November 06, 2007 

If you want to get a Rocksteady 7 tshirt in europe, check out rudeboy corner.

Its a site run by Gigi aka. Mr. Tbone.

www.rudeboycorner.com

Tuesday, June 05, 2007 

Hey everybody,

so the Rocksteady 7 is slowly making progress towards a new recording session.

Right now I have several new songs into the gig rotation;

Death Ride - cover of a song by the hippy boys; they probably jacked it from tears on my pillow

Get Back UP! - original reggae tune with a pharaonic twist

Soul Thing  - original ska/soul tune - a tribute to ray charles

Sunny - cover of mid-60's classic.

Swing #7 - cover of new orleans' classic by lee allen

RNA - original binghi fanfare

In a mellow tone - ska cover of duke ellington classic

Squantch's swing - original tune by trombonist Mr. Sears

I also have on deck a couple of more tunes that still need a little tweaking;  My goal is to have 20 songs ready to record by the end of September.

Im trying to find a good place to record a 7-8 piece band live in the New York City area.  If anyone has any suggestions let me know.

 

Tuesday, May 08, 2007 
A reminder that the new rocksteady 7 live cd, "way out east" is out now on brixton records based out of spain.  www.brixtonrecords.com  to check it out.