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Thermal And A Quarter (TAAQ)



Last Updated: 10/30/2009

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Status: Single
City: Bangalore
Country: IN
Signup Date: 8/26/2004

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Wednesday, July 22, 2009 

Category: Music



Thermal And A Quarter presents a night of brand new originals and fantastic Thermalized covers - including Pink Floyd, the Beatles, Cat Stevens et cetera. Served hot.

Bruce, Rajeev and Rzhude will be joined by special guests Tony Das, Jason Zachariah, Divya Joseph and Shalini Subramanian.
Thursday, June 18, 2009 

Current mood:  awake
Fête de la Musique, celebrated every year by Alliance Francaise, is a great get-together for Bangalore musicians. We got some of our best opportunities here, especially in the late 1990s, when we were a band with more teething troubles than teeth.
This year, the festivities are spread over the weekend, and we have a fantastic slot on an evening otherwise reserved for classical music. This is the second episode of our Jazz Yuppies Double Bill, after that fantastic evening at B Flat. And, yes, we will be joined by Nate Linkon and his slinky sax.
Friday, June 19. 9 pm onwards.
Rendez-vous du vendredi soir!

Friday, June 12, 2009 

Current mood:  chill
Category: Quiz/Survey
If you haven’t received the latest issue of ThermalAndAQuarterly, our no-spam newsletter, view it here.

In every issue, we carry a sort of quiz question under ‘That Day This Morning’. This month’s question: Which TAAQ song opens by celebrating a little bird that is becoming increasingly rare in Bangalore?

Send us your answer by midnight on June 16 along with your terrestrial coordinates.

Thursday, June 11, 2009 

Current mood:  adventurous
Category: Music

How about spending Sunday night with a saxy, horn-y blond?
Now that we have your ever-so-fleeting attention, here’s an invitation. Our good friend Nate Linkon (he of the smokin sax) is breezing by just in time to play a sensational double bill with Thermal And A Quarter. We will be reheating some microwaveable goodies and performing some smoking new ones at the Jazz Yuppies Reunion Tour with Nate.
Sunday June 14: Bb (B Flat) 100 ft Road, Indiranagar, Bangalore.
TAAQ featuring Nate Lincoln and Arathi Rao. 8 pm onwards.
Friday June 19: Fete de la Musique, Alliance Francaise de Bangalore 9 pm onwards. TAAQ featuring Nate Linkon.
Jazz be there. And bring along your grooviest state of mind.

Read more

TAAQin - the official TAAQ blog >>
Tuesday, June 09, 2009 
Long trek. 500-buck tickets. Rain. Famous names, but fresh contexts. A few hundred denizens of our fair city added all that up and found some (sum?) reason to make it to Fireflies on May 30 to watch the Guitar Gurus play. Happy to say I was one of those, for it was some gig!
Got there (Fireflies is quite a ways out of town) just in time for the first Guru of the night, John Anthony. The Fireflies amphitheater was already looking pretty full, and despite the ubiquitous blue tarps over the stage, sound console and speaker stacks, the ambience was everything Fireflies is known for. The old Ficus religiosa that forms the stage backdrop was as entrancing as ever, dreaming quietly in the intermittent drizzle.
I’ve heard John play before (he’s even guested on an early-Rzhude acoustic album called 4/4). On stage with him that night was Fayaz Khan on Sarangi, and Darbuka Shiva on percussion; everything else was coming from some sort of computer/groovebox/sampler/gizmo. It’s always great to watch John play, his Carnatic-twisted licks blurring with rock distraction, but somehow the mechanical rhythms and loops over which he played diluted things a bit for me. He also seemed to be having some small trouble with his tone, which tended towards muddy on the faster passages. The compositions were quite fun though, and I liked the gentle acoustic pieces best.
Ran up to get some local chow before settling down again to watch Amit Heri and Sanjay Divecha. Had heard so much about the latter, and was really looking forward to this. Two guys, two Godin nylon-strings (which brand caused a pal some confusion – “hey look, they’re playing Go… Go… Goblin guitars!”) and some great chops – couldn’t be better. Starting with a truly elegant version of Eleanor Rigby, the duo proceeded to defy the damp (it had begun to pour) and pick their way through each other’s tunes with a real sense of joy. That’s the only word I can use. I’ve seldom seen Amit happier on stage, as each egged the other on to greater heights. It was, for the most part, a wonderfully restrained, thoughtful set. Another Beatle track showed up delightfully mangled - Get Back. Sanjay is a really expressive, lyrical player, and I’m glad I finally got to see him play. Amit showed off some his famous non-linear licks, but I somehow preferred his more restrained playing that night.
Up next was the first ‘band’ of the night, with axeman Derek Julien at the helm. Playing an unabashedly 80s Carvin, Derek had Dwight Pattison on bass and I’m sorry I didn’t catch the names of anyone else in the band. Nice tone, decent instrumentals, but it was that time of the night when the sandman gets busy, and I was having some trouble staying fully alert. Decided to walk about a bit, and bumped into various friends and bookends.
Got back in just as Vikramjit ‘Tuki’ Bannerjee was getting on; with Jeff Rikh (Jeff Rocks! Er, Jeff Rikhs!) on drums and others from the Krosswindz line-up, I figured this would be the real band of the night and was not mistaken. From the first note, you could tell this was a bunch that had been playing together for donkey’s years, and that rhythm section was just magic. Tuki – well, he had the best tone of the night, a singing, stinging, growling, jangling, mangling Strat sound that had me riveted. He’s a bold bold player, always out front, effortless bashing away, and with a charmingly sloppy stage act to boot. ‘Tuki’ is just such an apt name, I thought… he’d be in the midst of a blazing solo, step over his beloved GT-5 – and into a spot not covered by stage lighting (resulting in a mild scatter of strange notes); step back, get his cable stuck under his effects and yank it out of the guitar - twice I think – and still stay completely sanguine! His version of Jeff Beck’s Cause We Ended as Lovers was stellar. Overall, his performance was, well, ‘incendiary’ (remember Almost Famous?).
Decided to split (it was 3 am) before the big jam at the end. A great night. Should do it again sometime…
Tuesday, June 09, 2009 
Great Scotts!
It’s an 18-year-old drummer!
It’s a Piano Player!
It’s an upright Bassist!
It’s the Branford Marsalis Quartet!
The stars coordinated my good fortune to attend this gig at the legendary Ronnie Scotts. Thanks to a certain saxophonist who once graced our sound: the good Nate Linkon who’d caught his idol with the same quartet in Frankfurt and had blocked two tickets at the legendary Ronnie Scotts in Soho, London.
One for me…
I found my way through the well-planned maze of the London Over-and-Underground to reach this beautifully envisioned idea just in time to catch the first set of the Ronnie Scott all stars, a fantastic bunch of musicians to warm the stage up for the main set. A beer and a happy reunion with Nate our ‘ol mate later found us giving up our side-row seats for the center view (standing room only) at the bar. A setting perfect for Live Jazz.
The club opened on October 30, 1959 in a basement at 39 Gerrard Street in London’s Soho district. It was managed by musicians Ronnie Scott and Pete King. In 1965 it moved to the current place at 47 Frith Street. The original venue continued in operation as the “Old Place” until the lease ran out in 1967, and was used for performances by the up-and-coming generation of musicians.
Zoot Sims was the club’s first transatlantic visitor in 1962, and was succeeded by many others (often saxophonists whom Scott and King, tenor saxophonists themselves, admired, such as Johnny Griffin, Lee Konitz, Sonny Rollins, Sonny Stitt) in the years that followed. Many UK jazz musicians were also regularly featured, including Tubby Hayes and Dick Morrissey who would both drop in for jam sessions with the visiting stars. In the mid-sixties, Ernest Ranglin was the house guitarist. The club’s house pianist until 1967 was Stan Tracey. For nearly 30 years it was home of a Christmas residency to George Melly and John Chilton’s Feetwarmers.
Now this is the kind of heritage that London’s vibrant music culture is built on. And judging by the attendance at the gig, this culture is as strong as ever and thriving. Why is it that we have to struggle so hard against the culture vultures, the keepers of our so called moral and cultural heritage, to just go out and express ourselves the way that we, as musicians know best?  As a voting citizen, why is it that my opinion as an artist doesn’t count? We need more effort, to change this mind set of the power that be. Grow up. Indian culture today is not what it was a hundred years ago. And it will be something entirely different a 100 years from now. Regardless of the people who think they have the power to control such a thing so much bigger than us all - music.
Here’s to some more Ronnie Scotts on the rocks.
Thanks to that meeting with fate, watch out for a gig alert featuring one of TAAQ’s all time greats. We have a date with Nate!
I couldn’t have written anything better about Branford and the quartet than what I read when I went online to check out my spellings. Click on the link and turn on your speakers for some the most refreshing collection of jazz I’ve heard in recent years. Anyone who gets to the end will go out and get some of this great music. Even better try to catch the man in person!
Wednesday, March 25, 2009 

Current mood:  accomplished
Category: Music
Sob kuch theek taaq

Calcutta (er, Kolkata) felt like we went back in time by around 40
years. Everything’s old and has a quaint feel about it. On the other
side of its quaintness, even the traffic, honking and road rage is
played out so realistically in true barbaric form, unlike Bangalore
where the same scenes are enacted by formally dressed yuppies driving
their mid-sized luxury cars (my great self shamefully included).
MORE

Saturday, March 21, 2009 

Current mood:  confident
Category: Music

The heat. The dust. The burden of the beast… Chennai is a true ‘Look At Me’ situation. Love it!
IIT OAT – the last time we played here was at least eight on nine
years ago – when the Greenpeace Rainbow Warrior was docked in Chennai’s
port, sounding a clarion call for ‘No More Bhopals’. Was a great gig
then (will always remember this one moment: everyone in the crowd was
given a candle and asked to light it at the same time… never seen so
many stars in the audience like that before – it was stunning); and
last night was no less.MORE

Saturday, March 14, 2009 


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QgeXAfSK1z4

Stop, for one small moment... Think one small thought... Do one small deed... Say one small word... Draw the line. And put the smile back on the face of your day. One Small Love. Go on, spread it around.

Saturday, March 14, 2009 


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2-h_198EGg

hut Up and Vote, an anthem by Bangalore band Thermal and A Quarter, spurs the youth into registering to vote. The Jaago Re! One Billion Votes campaign, a joint initiative of Janaagraha and Tata Tea, vests the onus of change on educated urban young voters. So put that index finger to good use shut up and vote!