Albert Mazibuko of Ladysmith Black Mambazo

For over 50 years, South Africa’s Ladysmith Black Mambazo has warmed the hearts of audiences worldwide with their uplifting vocal harmonies, signature dance moves and charming onstage banter. With a deep respect for both their cultural and personal history, Ladysmith Black Mambazo is ever-evolving with an eye toward their long musical legacy. Over the years, the original members have welcomed a younger generation in their mission, passing along the tradition of storytelling and spreading their message of peace, love, and harmony to millions of people. The newer members, in turn, have infused the group with their youthful energy and the promise of a bright future. Ladysmith Black Mambazo founder Joseph Shabalala looks to these young men to carry on his dream to “keep South Africa alive in people’s hearts” for years to come.

I had the honor of talking with Albert Mazibuko, who has been with the group since the early seventies, as Ladysmith Black Mambazo makes their way to Madison on February 24, at the Overture Center for the Arts. Albert and I discuss the two latest Grammy nominated albums, “Songs of Peace and Love for Kids & Parents Around the World” and “Shaka Zulu Revisited” and how handing off the group’s mission to someone other than Joseph Shabalala became the new way, without forgetting the way it has been. and what a young kid could expect from their first time being a part of a show. We walked down the path of creating an album for children and something real interesting, was the conversation about how new members are invited to try to become a part of this worldwide cultural legacy. Fascinating.

The Subject Tonight Is Love

Kate McGarry looks ahead with optimism born of the many facets of love on her first trio album featuring Keith Ganz and Gary Versace. On The Subject Tonight Is Love, out February 2 via Binxtown Records, the trio conjures an alluring cinematic approach to a wide-ranging spectrum of love songs. Kate is as versatile a songwriter and singer out there who is able to translate feeling into sound, with words and with the way the words are drawn outward. She is someone who has taking in many lessons from life, music, and love to help paint the expressions into song.

I had the opportunity to talk with Kate about the new album. How the magic moments took place and just when was it that the three artists did the best research and development behind the compositions. We take time to dissect one of my favorite tunes on the album and get a chuck of interesting insight into the flow of the album. Each arrtists brings a sense of how to do the things they set out to accomplish, this conversation will give you a very strong idea how Kate and Keith and Gary all were able to take advantage of each others rare time, energy and devotion to the project. We even get a little peek into some of the music Kate is turning to these days, as a listener, herself.

Worldly Pepper

The extra portion of the proGram produced a pepper stuffed with worldly goodness….finally:

Cha Cha du Nord- Omar Soasa & NRD Bigband
The In Between- Mark Egan & Arjun Bruggeman
Joy Ride- Mark Egan & Arjun Bruggeman
Spirit Blues- Mark Egan & Arjun Bruggeman
Two Faces of the Moon- Sameer Gupta
Tyagaraja Dreams in Brooklyn- Sameer Gupta

The Falls- House of Waters
***Excerpt of pre-recorded conversation with Max ZT of House of Waters***
17- House of Waters
Patience- House of Waters
Bobby Babylon- Freddie McGregor
Little Girl- Freddie McGregor
Swinging King- Glen & Dave
Good Enough- Glen & Dave
Factory Girl- Little Axe
Method 7- Method of Defiance

The Metal Leaves

The second portion of the proGram took the metal leaves and grew out:

And We all Swing the Tuna- Chad Smith’s Bombastic Meatbats
Greasy Louise- Chad Smith’s Bombastic Meatbats
Fire on the Mountain- Joe Russo’s Almost Dead (live, 1/13/2018->
***Excerpt of pre-recorded conversation with Joe Russo***
->Fire on the Mountain- Joe Russo’s Almost Dead (live, 1/13/2018)
~~
Fistful- Matthew Stubbs & The Antiguas
Blisters- The James Hunter Six
ArchiZoom- Calibro 35
Superstudio- Calibro 35

~
Nobody’s Fault But Mine- Orgone Ft. Kelly Finnigan
Melting Pot- Orgone
Shot Undercover- Alessandro Alessandroni
Obstinate Pop- Alessandro Alessandroni
Call Out My Name- Ruby Velle & The Soulphonics

~~
BPM- Headhunters
Everything- Headhunters
Chick’s Chums- The Chick Corea & Steve Gadd Band
~
Busy Hands- 4S’d
Nectar Nymph- 4S’d
Eat The Weak- Dingonek Street Band
Siddhatha- Dingonek Street Band
Grind it Out- Lowdown Brass Band

The Grain Goes With

The first portion of the proGram went with the grain and the grain followed:

Hard Days Work- Nickel & Rose
Life Goes On- Nickel & Rose
Zorro’s Last Ride- Tommy Emmanuel & David Grisman
Saturday Night Shuffle- Tommy Emmanuel Ft. Jorma Kaukonen & Pat Bergeson
Can’t Look Away- The Wood Brothers

~~
I Wanna Do it- Johnny Tucker
Catfish Blues- The Bush League
The Extra Mile- Laurie Morvan

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Bee Hive Baby- Reverend Raven & The Chain Smokin’ Altar Boys
The Arson’s Match- Peter Karp
Lonely Feelings- John Mayall (live)

I Can’t Lose- Mindi Abair
~~
Will There Be Any Stars In My Crown? (Instrumental)- Jorma Kaukonen
Fur Peace Rag- Jorma Kaukonon
***Excerpt of pre-recorded conversation with Jorma Kaukonen***
Late Breaking News- Jorma Kaukonon
Beatles Medley/Classical Gas- Tommy Emmanuel (live at the Ryman)
~~~
Wash Your Hair- AJ Ghent
23rd Century Hard Bop- Monks of Doom
Gimme That- Jane Lee Hooker

Jorma’s Coming To Town

Whether you know Jorma Kaukonen from his legendary hall of fame work with bands like Jefferson Airplane or Hot Tuna, or as a singing/songwriting troubadour spinning and telling his tales as a solo artist, his dynamic style is captivating. Jorma has a natural way of making the music, and the story not only sound good, but it feels right and relate-able. He is one of those artists that makes it comfortable to get a look at life from his take. Fortunately, we will get to take a shared ride down the same path as Jorma heads to the Stoughton Opera House on February 15th.

I had the honor of talking with Jorma about how the music and the times do some changing. We chat a bit about storytelling and storytellers, even sharing which book remains one of those we were first introduced to that stuck. The thing I have always liked about Jorma is the things he does for music and to enhance the learning experience of those around him. The work being done at Fur Peace Ranch is just one example of some of the cool going on in his scene. We share thoughts about three of his friends and instructors, and friends of the proGram, Mr. Tommy Emmanuel, Teresa Williams & Larry Campbell. While learning why Jorma prefers live music and what makes a good show, in his opinion…Jorma shares a nice word or two about the Stoughton Opera House.

Max ZT of House Of Waters

House of Waters forms a rare and dynamic soundscape. They incorporate elements of West-African, jazz, psychedelic, indie rock, classical and world music into their astonishingly unique sound. House of Waters’ music is both complex and easy to enjoy, a musical exploration that invites listeners to open themselves to new sounds. One of those sounds is that of Max ZT‘s instrument, the hammered dulcimer, a percussion/stringed instrument that takes years of study and spans dozens of cultures around the globe. Most often associated with traditional American and Irish folk music, Max has taken the instrument in entirely new directions. But to truly experience House of Waters, see them live. The reward of this band’s versatility is that they easily fit in so many different spaces within a diverse listener group. We are fortunate to have them coming to the Stoughton Opera House on February 17th to do some ear and mind opening.

Please enjoy my conversation with Max as House of Waters makes their maiden voyage to play Wisconsin. We find out why Max decided to follow in the footsteps of so many others and form a Hammered Dulcimer Power Trio and follow it on a journey which makes him incredibly happy, and that feeling is bound to be shared in a live setting. Max gives a little background on his band-mates and how they are able to meld this completely unique experience into something that, at times, has as many layers as one can dream of. We go deep and learn the true meaning behind the band’s name and we walk down the process path that has gone into creates a new album’s flow. Speaking of….there’s a new album coming out very soon. We even take a couple of moments to pay respect to the inspiration a couple of artists House of Waters shared the stage with and the impact the way those artists did what they did, had on Max.

House of Waters

Joe Russo’s Almost Dead Live In Madison

Joe Russo’s Almost Dead is a cover band of sorts that takes some of the tunes of The Grateful Dead and allows them to flow out of their collective beings into a sound pool for some of the most involved fan-base there ever has been. When these five cats get toGether in this form, the momentary surprises are many and way far out. The five are: Joe Russo, Dave Dreiwitz, (friend of the program) Marco Benevento, Scott Metzger & Tom Hamilton. Each bring an incredible individual force to this JRAD scene. While Joe has been a big part of Further and played with members of the Dead, this band brings as much of themselves to the “cover” of the Dead (and a few other bands) to reform a sound and a feeling that is recognizable and exciting. JRAD has been touring and securing itself on the festival scene while constantly bringing more ears along for the ride and us in Madison are lucky to welcome them here on February 18th at The Orpheum.

I am very grateful to have had the opportunity to talk to Joe before they land here in Madison. We spend time getting to understand what dialect and language each individual brings to this group and the fun and energy that causes in a live setting. We talk about how they add the skins to the spine that is the vast songbook of The Grateful Dead, and how much of the show is based off improvised segments within that skeletal system of sound. Joe attests that this project might have started off with the idea of a one off and you can hear a little of the amazement in his voice when talking about how long the pulse has been thumping. Hearing Joe speak about the times they have had to call in a sub or two off the bench (including Oteil Burbridge) is really truly a sincere appreciation of brothers. To my brothers and sisters, please enjoy this chat.

PHOTO BY Timothy Dwenger

Museum Glass Welcome

The second portion of the proGram featured two conversations from two artists who share a space in each others lives. The meeting on this program was unintentional, just a sign of having the finger on the pulse of some scene. We have a radio debut of a young artist and the music went in and around and it is still there…somewhere:

Mambo Rapido- Orquesta Akokán
Mambo Arabia- Eddie Kochak
The Mojo- Sax Mallard
Mary- Preacher Stephens & The Foree Wells Combo

~
Code Pavao- Coco Raizes De Arcoverde
Baiao Destemperado- Barbatuques
Brilhantina- Renata Rosa

~
Rumbero Como Yo- Brenda Navarrete
Tsunami- Stephane Wrembel
Let There Be Light- Darshan
~~
Run for the Red Fort (Raga Chandrakauns)- Sameer Gupta
***Pre-recorded Conversation with Sameer Gupta***
Innocence in Harlem- Sameer Gupta
~~
Mystic- Youssoupha Sidibe
Vision- Youssoupha Sidibe

Tumba- Angelique Kidjo
~~
Salutations- Tina Turner, Ani Choying, Sawani Shende Sathaye, Mor Karbasi, Dima Orsho & Regula Curti
***Pre-recorded Conversation with Falu***
My Name- Nishaad *Radio Debut
Drugs Hallucinations, The Divine- Ravi Shanakr
~~~
You Don’t Own Me- The Resistance Revival Orchestra

Glass Pieces Shaped

The first portion of the proGram took the pieces and fixed them into a mosaic movement:

Farm Fun Time- Tommy Emmanuel & David Grisman
This is It- The Wood Brothers

~~
Love & Appreciation (To Georgia)- Johnny Tucker
The Nietzsche Lounge- Peter Karp
Big Bee- Reverend Raven & The Chain Smokin’ Altar Boys
Dance In the Rain- Laurie Morvan

~~
Mr. Dill Pickle- Carolyn Gaines
(We’ve got to) Come Together- The Reverend Shawn Amos

~~
Pizza Flavored Kisses- Spice Boys
The Brontë Pin, Pt.2- Monks of Doom
How Ya Doin’?- Jane Lee Hooker
Alive- Dope Sagittarius

~~
Interlude 3- Todd Clouser, John Medeski & JT Bates (live at Icehouse)
*&%* You Guys- Todd Clouser, John Medeski & JT Bates
Jabberwockie- MK Groove Orchestra

~
Bastille Day- Matthew Stubbs and the Antiguas
Don’t Let Pride Take You For a Ride- The James Hunter Six
Look a Py Py- Orgone
Psycheground- Calibro 35

~
Li’l Liza Jane Interlude- Kermit Ruffins & Irvin Mayfield
Just Playin’ Kermit Ruffins & Irvin Mayfield Ft. Wendell Brunious, Leroy Jones, Leon “Kid Chocolate” Brown & Andrew Baham
Strip Tease- Alessandro Alessandroni
Night Fly- Alessandro Alessandroni

~
Gave My Heart (SMBD Edit)- Omar Ft. Leon Ware

A Walk Through Falu’s Bazaar

Falu is internationally recognized for her rare ability to seamlessly blend a signature modern inventive style with a formidable Indian classically-shaped vocal talent. She was trained rigorously in the Jaipur musical tradition and in the Benares style of Thumrie. She later continued studying under the late sarangi/vocal master Ustad Sultan Khan, and later with the legendary Smt. Kishori Amonkar (Jaipur style). Originally from Bombay, Falu moved to the States in 2000 and was appointed as a visiting lecturer at Tufts University. Falu’s subsequent career in the States had led to a series of brilliant and high profile collaborations with Yo-Yo Ma, Wyclef Jean, Philip Glass, Ricky Martin, Blues Traveler and A. R. Rahman amongst, to name just a few. She has even performed for President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama at the White House. I have always enjoyed the artist, Falu but what I have learned over time is that it is also the person she is that adds to the art. Her latest project, “Falu’s Bazaar” takes families on a musical journey through South Asia, while creating the wide open opportunity to learn about the culture, everyday life and how to be a a cultivator of ones roots.

I had the pleasure of talking with Falu about the project. We took a walk through the bazaar together and discovered how the flow of the album from top down to lullaby were presented as ideas, and how the questions of a child can really lead you any/everywhere. In a first, Falu’s son Nishaad took to the conversation. He unveils what his favorite song on the album is, how grandma did with her song and there’s actually an unplugged version of the album’s opening track, as performed by Nishaad. Radio gold. Please enjoy our conversation.

Falu’s Bazaar

Sameer Gupta with A Circle Has No Beginning

Sameer Gupta is known as one of the few percussionists simultaneously representing the traditions of American jazz on drumset, and Indian classical music on tabla. Though his first few years were spent under the guidance of Ustad Zakir Hussain, his own interests and love of tabla brought him to the great tabla maestro Pt Anindo Chatterjee. Sameer has continued to build his career by combining traditional and modern improvisational styles drawing from his dual Indian and American heritage, and has already established himself as an original musical voice in jazz, world, and fusion music. From his early percussion studies in Tokyo, Japan in the mid 80s, he has consistently placed himself in many challenging musical environments. From bebop to avant-garde jazz, and European classical percussion to North Indian classical tabla, he continues to compose and perform music from a true multi-cultural perspective that now bridges several continents. As 2018 rolls in, Sameer is set to release a brand new album, “A Circle Has No Beginning”. This project brings together some of today’s finest accompanists and soloists in various styles to create a truly remarkable musical journey. With a firm Indian Classical Raga influence, the album draws on strong modern jazz improvisational roots to heighten the creative energy and spectrum of possibilities.

I had the pleasure of talking with Sameer about the project, and how he was able to follow the album from the directions it was taking him and his colleagues. We break down a couple of the artists and their important contributions and shared visions. We dissect a couple of the tracks that hit me hard in my heart’s ears as well as compare and contrast a little between the new album and his last release, Namaskar. We walk a little through the scene of the Brooklyn Raga Massive which has been hailed as “Leaders of the Raga Renaissance” by the New Yorker. I have to say that I always get a thrill out of talking about an album, a song a scene I digg, but this album took me on a new turn and I was equally opened up by chatting with Sameer about the flow, the process and the way music….in the moment….makes it happen. I hope you’ll find the same feeling about both, the album itself and the people who are behind the moments.

Musicians of the Project
Sameer Gupta – Drumset, Tabla; Marc Cary – Wurlitzer, Moog, Synth; Morley Shanti-Kamen – Vox (on Little Wheel Spin and Spin); Marika Hughes – Cello, Vox; Brandee Younger – Harp; Arun Ramamurthy – Carnatic Violin; Jay Gandhi – Bansuri Flute; Trina Basu – Violin; Rashaan Carter – Bass; Neel Murgai – Sitar; Pawan Benjamin – Tenor Saxophone; Sharik Hasan – Piano, Keys; Michael Gam – Bass

Rawwkkkk Feet

The second portion of the proGram had the feet to rawkkkkkk to:

If I Tell You I Love You- Beth Hart and Joe Bonamassa (live in Amsterdam)
For My Friends- Beth Hart and Joe Bonamassa (live in Amsterdam)
The Honorable Death of the 100 Million- Monks of Doom
Mannish Boy- Jimi Hendirx (4/22/69, Band of Gypsy Studio session, *Previously unreleased)

~~
Sharpest Claws- Dope Sagittarius
Sacred place- Dope Sagittarius

***Pre-recorded Conversation with Luqman Brown of Dope Sagittarius***
Black Empress- Dope Sagittarius
~~~
greenarrowradio theme- Mister Rourke
~~~
You’re a Star- Niles Francis
Hold Me Closer- Omar Ft. Stuart Zender & Maurice Brown
Doobie Doobie Doo- Omar Ft. Tall Black Guy
Guys Just Want to Have Pleasure- De Lux
Body Heat Disco- Body Heat Gang Band

~~
Tojo’s Tale- Astroboter
Monoatomic- Astroboter
Opal City Vice- Astroboter

~~
Life Ain’t Easy- Ghetto Priest
Find a Way- DB Cohen Ft. D’Oxman & Mark Professor (Wrongtom’s Echolocation Dub)
Above The Storm- Stick Figure

~
World Corruption Dub- Richie Phoe
Unity Dub- Richie Phoe
Rudeboy (vocals) D’Oxman Ft. Ramrock All Stars Gentlemen
Stay Alive- Hollie Cook (Hempolics Remix)

Luqman Brown of Dope Sagittarius talks Sacred Places

DOPE SAGITTARIUS is the epic tale of an inter-dimensional, time-traveling band hell-bent on saving the multiverse from mediocre music. Inspired by the likes of Funkadelic, OutKast, The Qemists & The Gorillaz, DOPE SAGITTARIUS embodies an undeniably creative blend of music, animation, technology, wit, humor & history. The man behind the band is Luqman Brown and I had a chance to catch back up with him about the new release, “Sacred Places” on Buddhabug Records. We get into how the album worked its way into a final piece, dissect a few of the tracks and make sure to give props and shout outs to the many (listed below) who helped piece it all toGether.

The Band is as follow:

Luqman Aka Whistler: Vocals/Rhythm Guitar
Ramsy Jones: Drums/Vocals
Ernest D’Amso: Bass/Vocals
Asim Barns: Lead Guitar
Micah Gaugh: Keys/Sax/Vocals

Roy Radics chanting on “Scared Place”
Entrifed the God of Sound plays keys and sings On “Brunchin With Bitches”
Cory Glover Sings on “Define Love” along with Marc Cary on keys and Ronny Drayton on lead guitar.
Mazz Muse on “Black Empress” along with Mike Ladd MCing
Shelly Nicole sings on “Hate Us” Along with Julie Brown.
Horns section is V Jeff on “Hate Us”

Produced By Luqman Brown and Brian Gosher

Hey Woman…nice shot

The first portion of the proGram celebrates the marks-woman in all of us:

Cinderella’s Fella- Tommy Emmanuel & David Grisman
Rachel’s Lullaby- Tommy Emmanuel Ft. Jake Shimabukuro

Guitar Boogie- Tommy Emmanuel (live at The Ryman)
~
London in the Sixties- The Fugitives
Les étoiles- Melody Gardot (Live – London 2016)
Goodbye- Melody Gardot (live – Utrecht 2016)

~~
Willie and Poor Bob- Dickey Betts & Warren Haynes
Talkin’ About You Baby- Johnny Tucker
The Jean Genie- The Reverend Shawn Amos
Catch That Train- Carolyn Gaines (feat. Grady Gaines, Jr.)

I Can’t Be Satisfied- Curtis Salgado & Alan Hager
Just Say When- Mindi Abair Ft. Gregg Allman
~~
Same Thing- James Montgomery Band
Who Do You Love- James Montgomery Band
CandyMan Blues- Little Feat
~
Pin Your Spin- Jon Cleary & The Absolute Monster Gentlemen
Ain’t Nuttin’ Nice- Jon Cleary & The Absolute Monster Gentlemen
Cracka Break- Mofro
Frog Giggin’- Mofro
Free- Mofro
Orange Blossoms- JJ Grey & Mofro (live)
~
Sky High- The Wood Brothers
Deep Soul For High Society- The Claudettes
Motorhome- The Claudettes

`

BY S..Shine

And This Guy

The extra portion of the proGram was overseen by this guy:

Epilogue: All You Need is Love- Kate McGarry/Keith Ganz/Gary Versace
Mr. Sparkle/What A Difference A Day Makes- Kate McGarry/Keith Ganz/Gary Versace

~
The Dream Then And Now: Movement 1- Jamaaladeen Tacuma
The Dream Then And Now: Movement 5- Jamaaladeen Tacuma
The Dream Then And Now: Movement 7- Jamaaladeen Tacuma
~~
Black Narcissus- James Hall
Glu-Glu- Omar Sosa & NRD Big Band

~~
Interlude 2- Todd Clouser, John Medeski, JT Bates (live at Icehouse)
Amazing Grace- Todd Clouser, John Medeski, JT Bates (live at Icehouse)

***Prerecorded conversation with Todd Clouser***
Nadia Me Debe- Todd Clouser, John Medeski, JT Bates (live at Icehouse)
~~
Prelude No. 6: Allegro (1996)- Eliza Garth
Prelude No. 12: Quickly (2013)- Eliza Garth
Prelude No. 10: Moderato (2006)- Eliza Garth
Blue in Green- Jamie Saft

~
Announcements- Kevin Sun
Misanthrope- Kevin Sun

Photo by: Michael Sullivan

Marimba Madness

The second portion of the proGram had the mallets to the side and the madness a-plenty:

Edgar Chaos- Ampline
Shrunken Heads- Ampline

Treasure Island- Steve Vai (live)
Oooo- Steve Vai (live)
~~
Major Tom- Ripplegroove
~~~
Security- JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound
Always Feel So Good- Freevolt
Platinum- Here Come The Mummies
V.I.P.- Here Come The Mummies
Bed, Bath & Behind- Here Come The Mummies
~~
Outro- Nooky Jones
Dreaming About You- Nooky Jones

***Pre-recorded conversation with Cameron Kinghorn of Nooky Jones***
Hello- Nooky Jones
~~
King’s March- Soulive
Think- Orgone Ft. Adryon de Leon
Fast Forward- Crowd Company
Blind Pig- Crowd Company
Station 77- Crowd Company

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The Accession- Darkhouse Family
Pirates- Brazilian Girls
PARAD(w/me)E- Sylvan Esso
In My View- Young Fathers
Tropics- SaiB

Glass Is On Fire

The first portion of the show made your you felt it as the glass cauGht the presented fire and made it grow:

The Other Shoe- Old 97’s & Waylon Jennings
Into The Blue- Old Bastard Son Of Johnny Cash
Purple Haze- Tommy Emmanuel Ft. Jerry Douglas

~
Happiness Jones- The Wood Brothers
Mellow Down Easy- Little Feat
Sideways- Lauren Ruth Ward
Air- Mofro
Jukehouse- Mofro
~~
Only Love- Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
Hot Summer Night- Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
Don’t Cut Your Hair- The Pretenders (live)
Boots of Chinese Plastic- The Pretenders (live)
Dreams- The Cranberries (live Woodstock ’94)
Two Weeks- High Up
~
Beware of My Dog- Carolyn Gaines Ft. Big Jay McNeely
Addicted To You- Mindi Abair Ft. Booker T. Jones
Sea Saw- Beth Hart and Joe Bonamassa (live)
~~~
Little Johnny- James Montgomery Band (live
One Night Only- Curtis Salgado & Alan Hager
Satisfied- Tinsley Ellis
Dixie Lullaby- Tinsley Ellis

~~
greenarrowradio theme- Mister Rourke
One More Time- Ben Miller Band
Akira Kurosawa- Ben Miller Band

Get Some Nooky Jones

After three years of captivating audiences with their unique blend of soul, jazz, and undertones of hip-hop, Minneapolis-based Nooky Jones have finally released their debut self-titled album back on July 28, 2017 via Young And Foolish Records. A truly cohesive collection of love stories and music that takes listeners to beautiful places alongside deeply provocative characters, the album is a much needed artistic expression of self for vocalist/frontman Cameron Kinghorn. Produced over the course of fifteen months at RiverRock Studios and The Hideaway in Northeast Minneapolis, the band’s debut album relies on each musician’s unique style as a critical part of the overall sound. Atop airtight yet comfortably loose drum and bass grooves often reminiscent of 90s R&B and Hip-Hop, layers of harmonically complex piano, organ, and Fender Rhodes create a lushness associated with jazz that rarely integrates into neo-soul-pop music so tastefully.

I had the opportunity to chat with Cameron about what a Madison crowd can look forward to expecting from the upcoming show on Friday, January 26th at the High Noon Saloon. We dove into the flow of the debut release and how it moves like the night of a shared first meeting moment and how the evolution of the album came to surface and reward listeners and music sharers alike. Take a listen to the above conversation to find out which two bands Nooky Jones will be playing with shortly after leaving the Madison area, (Oh Purple comes to mind) as well as what would Cam and the band choose to spin for you, if they had control of the board of greenarrowradio if I stepped out for a bit and left them in charge.

One of Todd’s People

Todd Clouser is a man who makes the journey happen his way, from moment to moment. He takes it as it goes and makes one step after the other count. Todd is one of these cats who has the ability to not only tell the story with his songs, but use his songs to communicate on another level to those who listen. I have been able to watch his sound and style grow over the course of time and that one thing…time…seems to bring the paths of similarly minded communicator to the steps of Todd’s musical door. I have watched the paints mix to create the newest of colors with some brightness and some darkness none other have duplicated. We all search and seek and dream and believe what we believe…somehow Todd has been a voice I can believe in musically, but it’s the person, the being of Todd Clouser that I am most fond of. I had the chance aGain to ask him a few questions about what’s been going on and how he is. The newness just about to come off his plate is the release of a new record for starters. Thus story-line begins on at a sold out gig on a cold Minnesota night. It features Todd talking to the room with his voice and guitar, Mr. JT Bates on drums and percussion and friend of the proGram, Mr. John Medeski on Hammond B3 Organ and Fender Rhodes, and is named: You The Brave: Live at Icehouse.

This new live recording on Ropeadope Sur is the truth, in real time of making the sounds that linked up the trios paths to that very moment, where creating meets pulse. I am proud to be someone who has been walking the paths with Todd for a few more than a few years now and to see the others who cross path to be with and create with him puts a huge smile in my heart. Todd takes a little time out of his day in Mexico to chat about the new album, working with the coolness over at Ropeadope Sur and a little about our ongoing almost project with Medeski Myself and Todd, where I am featured on power tools… We talk about vulnerability, travel and home. EarGrab some here: