Monthly Archives: July 2012

Musician in NY: why and how I met Michael Wimberly.

Text by Sohrab Saadat Ladjevardi

My first encounter with the djembe was, when I played with Salif Keita and his band for the first at the Blue Note in Tokyo in 2001. Before the show I had no chance to rehearse with him. When Salif called me on stage to join him in one of his songs, I felt so insecure and was so scared. When he started the song I didn’t know what to do about myself. But things instantly changed when I started to play my solo. I could feel instantly that the djembe player was following me. He quickly developed a cool rapport with me. By doing so he gave me confidence in my performance. I could feel that he enjoyed the melodies and noise I created. Eventually we were grooving together, so did the whole band. Salif and the whole band enjoyed my contribution to the song. The audience got excited as well, so when we finished we received a standing ovation. What an experience!!!

Playing three nights with Salif at the Blue Note made me decide to look for a djembe player for my own band. I searched in the internet for djembe players in Tokyo and found out about an African restaurant in the outskirts of Tokyo which had African live music once a week.

Some weeks later there was a Senegalese music and dance show directed by the Senegalese sabar player Wagane N’Diaye Rose. Before going I thought that the sabar drum is kind of a djembe drum, but when I saw him playing I found out that I was wrong. It’s a different drum but played with the same spirit. Wagane invited me to sit in and wowwwwwwwwww it was great playing with him. I fell in love with him in the same way I did with Salif’s djembe player. A couple of months later he joined my band The Tehran-Dakar Brothers. After moving to New York I had following Senegalese musicians in my band: Mar Gueye (sabar), Masamba Diop (tama or talking drum), Cheikh Tarou B’Baye (sabar), Jean-Marie Collatin-Faye (djembe) and now Michael Wimberly (djembe and drums) who is American.

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Concert review: META a well-blended confection of jazz and African (both Subsaharan and Northern) musics and sensibilities

Date: June 27, 2012
Venue: Le Poisson Rouge
Review by Matt Cole

On Wednesday,  June 27; singer, songwriter, and percussionist META played before a sparse, but enthusiastic crowd at La Poisson Rouge, backed by Ari Hoenig on drums, Francois Moutin on bass, and Thomas Enhco on piano and violin. Meta’s music has been described as “world songs,” and tonight’s show would feature a well-blended confection of jazz and African (both Subsaharan and Northern) musics and sensibilities.

Meta opened the show playing a tambourine-like instrument (I wasn’t close enough to see exactly what) in an odd meter, and singing in a tenor voice. I heard bits of both sides of the Sahara in his vocals. Then the rest of the band came in, playing what basically sounded like good 1960s-modern jazz, but fitting quite nicely with Meta’s singing. Presently, Meta stepped back and ceded the sound scape to the instruments, each of whom had a chance to come to the fore before Meta came back in. Whether he was singing conventionally with the band, or more orthogonally, it all came together quite smoothly.

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CD Review: Finger Songwriter – Jeremy Siskind’s new CD!

Artist: Jeremy Siskind
Title: Finger – Songwriter
Label:  Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records
Genre: Jazz
Review by Dawoud Kringle

Not long ago, I attended Siskind’s performance at Carnegie Hall’s Weill Recital Hall (see my review here.) Now, my experience of Siskind’ss music will take a tour of his music in the recorded medium. I speak of his newest release; Finger – Songwriter.

Pianist, composer, and educator Jeremy Siskind originally from Irvine, CA, now living in NYC earned his Bachelor’s Degree from Eastman and his Master’s in English and Comparative Literature from Columbia, and studies piano with  Sophia Rosoff and Fred Hersh. Siskind performs around the world as a leader and sideman. Since the 2010 release of Simple Songs, Siskind’s first CD on Brooklyn Jazz Underground Records, he placed 2nd in the Montreux Jazz Festival Solo Piano Competition, was a runner-up for the American Pianist Association’s Cole Porter Fellowship, performed at Carnegie Hall, has had his book, Jazz Etude Inspirations, published by Hal Leonard, and has become the musical director for Sandra Bernhard.

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Music listings – 7/9 through 7/15

1. MADAGASCAR MEETS NEW YORK

Date: Monday, July 9, 2012
Time: 7:30pm
Venue: ShapeShifter Lab (18 Whitwell Pl, between Carroll St & 1st St, Brooklyn, NY 11215, 646-820-9452)
Ticket: $10
Genre: Gospel / Jazz / Latin with  native rhythms from Madagascar

PATRICK ANDY BAND is: Eli Menezes: guitar, Tim Reyes: guitar, Carlos Mendoza: drums, Dave Rodriguez: keyboard, Ivory McDonald: vocal and Patrick Andy: bass.

Patrick Andy blends Gospel / Jazz / Latin with his native rhythms from Madagascar. A Patrick Andy Band live is a unique listening experience that’s guaranteed to bring Joy to both musicians who are always in search of intricate-different stuff, and to non-musicians who just wanna enjoy good music.

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Finally Japan Says Fukushima Disaster was “Man-Made” & “Preventable.”!!! Banzai!

Text by Sohrab Saadat Ldjevardi

Finally a Japanese parliamentary inquiry has concluded that last year’s nuclear meltdown of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was “a profoundly man-made disaster — that could and should have been foreseen and prevented.” But this isn’t really news for me. It’s just a delayed official confirmation of a bad and inhuman handling by the Japanese government. I still believe that the Japanese government had the knowledge and capacity at the time, when the disaster happened, to do something about it. At least they could have closed the nuclear plant instead of keeping it alive. More about this topic  in this video by Democracy Now!.