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Sunday, October 11, 2009
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Category: Music
 MARQUE GILMORE & DRUM-FM in Association with UBIQUITA-NYC & The Black Rock Coalition Present the Return to New York of The World’s FIRST Live-Interactive Jungle/DnB Club: D R U M – F M"Interactive Tribalistic Sessions" featuring: Marque Gilmore the inna•most Acousti-Lectric Drumz : inna•EFX -and- Mikel Banks da "Spirit-Hood" Vocals : Flute : Cosmic Guide (Dustbin Brothers) *Special Guests* Greg Tate + Members of Burnt Sugar, Black Rock Coalition & surprise 12th Planet Funkateers! A sonic exploration into the sub-atomic structure of reality and Funque.... A full-spectrum Ancestral analysis of Black-Electric Progression inna - "Interactive Tribalistic Session." MONDAY – 19 OCTOBER – 2009Live @ LITTLEFIELD - NYC622 DeGraw St Brooklyn, NY 11217 (718) 855-3388 www.littlefieldnyc.com 
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Sunday, October 11, 2009
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Category: Music
New Omar Sosa CD: Across The Divide
Released March 24, 2009
On Half Note Records.
For media inquiries, please contact Jonathan Kantor at 212-475-0049. **** We're pleased to announce that Omar's CD, "Across The Divide", on Half
Note Records, was recently nominated for a Latin GRAMMY Award in the Best
Instrumental Album category. The 10th Annual Latin GRAMMY Awards will
be presented in Las Vegas on November 5, 2009. **** 
Recorded
at the Blue Note jazz club in New York City, Across The Divide is a
song cycle documenting the shared rhythms of Omar Sosa and Tim Eriksen,
a New England multi-instrumentalist specializing in native and adopted
American musics. The album is a narrative, a tale of musical and
spiritual passage, melding and mingling seemingly disparate cultures
yet highlighting the musical roots common to us all. Featured within
are sampled readings from Langston Hughes, renowned giant of the Harlem
Renaissance, whose words add lift to the musical journey.
Produced by Jeff Levenson
Featuring:
Omar Sosa, piano, fender rhodes, electronics, samplers, vocals
Tim Eriksen, vocals, banjo, violin
Childo Tomas, electric and electro-acoustic bass guitars, kalimba, chigovia, vocals
Marque Gilmore, acousti-lectric drumz, vocals
Leandro Saint-Hill, soprano, alto & tenor saxophones, clarinet, flutes, caxixis
David Gilmore, acoustic & electric guitars
Ramon Diaz, bata drums, congas, cajon, vocals
LINER NOTES:
Across
The Divide began like a shooting star – a luminous certainty that two
folkloric musicians, a Cuban pianist and a New England
multi-instrumentalist specializing in native and adopted American
musics, could trace the connections between seemingly disparate worlds
of thought. What was not seen at the start, however, was the great
drama unfolding before us, a backdrop for the making of this record –
the ascendancy of Barack Obama to the presidency of the United States.
His
climb to power proved timely on so many levels – among them, the nation
declaring its readiness to accept a leader of color at exactly the same
moment we were birthing a song cycle highlighting the Middle Passage.
From the castles of Ghana to the White House.
Moreover, the
surround sound of the political machine filled the air with an unmusic
soundtrack; the relentless drone and grind of the campaign lending
contrast to the stirring uplift of our musical discoveries. Across the
Divide had not anticipated any seismic social shifts, had not aimed at
didacticism. Indeed, its mandate was more pleasure-driven, in the ways
of art and entertainment.
The crystallizing element in
assembling this narrative was rhythm, heard through a melding and
mingling of cultures and manifesting the shared roots between Omar Sosa
and Tim Eriksen. No surprise, really. During the forced migration of
slaves, a practice that spanned centuries and fed the triangulated
economies of Europe, Africa, and the Americas, indigenous musics and
performance traditions entered New World ports, among them Havana and
Chesapeake Bay. These strains of expression took root and became the
basis for much popular culture.
Omar knows this in his bones.
He is a global musician, attuned to the pulse of nature. His air of
authority, of wisdom, is born from immersion in the musics of the world
and a desire to propagate his folk heritage. Tim is a preservationist,
uncovering songs dug deep in the soil and offering them as evidence of
an exchange system distinctly American because of its cultural
beginnings elsewhere. Theirs is a model marriage (one with rich
historical roots), bearing offspring, new idioms, spiritually endowed.
The
four vocals featured in Across The Divide are bound to the Eastern
seaboard by tradition and development. “Promised Land,” a Welsh hymm
dating from the mid-1700’s, first embraced as Guide Me O Thou Great
Jehovah, is commonly heard in Baptist congregations of the American
South. “Gabriel’s Trumpet” hails from Maine, where it was first cited
in the mid-1800’s, introduced perhaps by sailors docking in the port
town of Camden. “Sugar Baby Blues,” known among West Virginians and
popularized by Dock Boggs in the early days of “hillbilly music,” was
widely associated with the banjo, an instrument of African origin. And
“Night Of The Four Songs” draws from the sacred music tradition of
congregational singing, having passed through North Carolina many
decades ago.
These songs are linked by Sosa’s instrumental
odysseys, tales of ancestry: the dreams and realities of passage within
and beyond Africa; meditations on the solstice and the natural order,
the longest days, the seasons of life; reverence for Eleggua, the deity
who determines fate and tests the will of man. Across The Divide is
fueled by these crosswinds. Sosa is guided by the North Stars of
spirituality, ritual, and the human condition.
So too, it
seems, was the poet and novelist Langston Hughes, a seminal voice in
the Harlem Renaissance, whose reading of “The Struggle” was sampled
then woven into the narrative. His call for racial consciousness and
self-determination (No man wanted to be a slave) is the literary
counterweight to this musical oblation.
Which leads us to
recognize the indomitable life force that faces unspeakable horrors yet
somehow prevails a beacon penetrating the fog of oppression, its
promise flooding across oceans, continents, centuries. Every now and
then we’re reminded of that. Through a work of art or, less frequently,
a presidential election.
-Jeff Levenson
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Monday, September 07, 2009
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Category: Music
Tales from the Earth (OTA1020)

Direct Link To Order CD: http://www.melodia.com/order.php
Tales From The Earth. A thoroughly cosmopolitan outlook rooted in the
rhythmic intensity and improvisatory, call-and- response spirit of
Africa writ large. Artists of Cuban, Haitian, West African (Bénin,
Ivory Coast), European, African American and Jewish American heritage,
entering a Berlin studio for two days of intensive recording, without
music or a predetermined conception, only a shared commitment to the
communal, celebratory character that embodies the expressive riches of
Mother Africa.
Flautist Mark Weinstein’s groundbreaking Cuban Roots (1967) melded the
influences of Mingus, Machito, Puente,
Tjader, and Palmieri, carried forward into the present with his recent
collaborations, Cuban Roots Revisited, Algo Más, and now, Tales From
The Earth. Weaving a musical lineage of a thousand strands, if Tales
From The Earth recalls something of the creative spirit of M’Boom, the
inventive all-percussion octet founded by Max Roach in 1970, it
captures the global ecumenical spirit of the present.
Accordingly, Tales From The Earth resounds with the Afro-Cuban
traditions of Omar Sosa—best known as a pianist and composer, but here
primarily on marimba and vibraphone, which Sosa studied in Cuba’s
conservatories before switching to piano. It features the eclectic
guitar talents of Jean Paul Bourelly (Miles Davis, Roy Haynes, Elvin
Jones, Pharoah Sanders, Cassandra Wilson); the resonant balafon of Aly
Keita’s Ivory Coast; the insistent drum ‘n’ bass sensibilities of
Stockholm-based Marque
Gilmore (Roy Ayers, Steve Coleman, Graham Haynes, Toumani Diabate,
Vernon Reid, Joe Zawinul, MeShell Ndegeocello, Susheela Raman, Nitin
Sawhney, Talvin Singh); the vocal and percussive vitality of Aho Luc
Nicaise and Mathias Agbokou; and the fresh, ever-surprising turns of
phrase that each artist invests in this pioneering project.
Tales From The Earth weaves a musical narrative that can be read as a
journey to the source of the human spirit with all the playfulness,
celebration, contemplation, historical awareness, compassion,
reverence, and gratitude manifest in a life consciously lived.
Co-produced by Mark Weinstein, Omar Sosa, and Jean Paul Bourelly, Tales
From The Earth embraces the radical challenge laid down by Monk long
ago: “Jazz is freedom, so I play music. If I ever play the same thing
twice, I’ll stop making music. ”
This ensemble never plays the same thing twice, and Tales From The
Earth expresses a revelatory message, deeply grounded in tradition, yet
thoroughly contemporary and innovative in realization, an expression of
human freedom, and a celebration of the Diaspora, alive in our times.
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