Monthly Archives: May 2013

DooBeeDoo Recommends: A Martial Arts-Samurai Sword Fighting-Music/Theater Fantasy Action-Adventure “DEADLY SHE-WOLF ASSASSIN AT ARMAGEDDON!”

Date: Thursday May 16, 2013 through June 2, 2013
Time:  7:30pm
Venue: La Mama (74A East 4th Street, btw Bowery & 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10003, 212-475-7710)
Ticket: $30
Genre: music theater

A Martial Arts-Samurai Sword Fighting-Music/Theater Fantasy Action-Adventure Blockbuster homage to Lone Wolf and Cub(Kozure Ogami) in a story of imperial decline and desperation, revenge, intrigue and catharsis. Fred Ho’s super-talented team unleashes a music/theater work of dazzling spectacle and emotional power.

Music and Concept by Fred Ho / Written by Fred Ho and Ruth Margraff / Directed by Sonoko Kawahara

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Book Release Event Review: Russell Maroon Shoatz “Maroon the Implacable” – The Book Launch of An American Political Prisoner.

Date: May 3, 2013
Venue: The DiMenna Center for Classical Music, New York City
Text by Dawoud Kringle

maroon_the_implacable.inline“There is a war going on in America.” Thus began the book release event for Maroon the Implacable: The Collected Writings of Russell Maroon Shoatz.

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Music listings – 5/13 through 5/19

1. JAIMEO BROWN AND TRANSCENDENCE featuring JD Allen, Chris Sholar and vocalist, Falu.

Date: Tuesday May 14, 2013
Time:  9:30pm
Venue: Drom (85 Avenue A, NY, NY 10009, 212- 777-1157)
Ticket: $19
Genre: jazz

Transcendence marks the Motéma Music debut from Jaimeo Brown, a brilliant 34-year-old drummer, composer and conceptualist. With an intriguing amalgam of modern jazz, Southern black spiritual music, East Indian Carnatic music, blues, and hip-hop/electronica production tactics, Transcendence introduces Brown as a fearless renegade – an artist who seeks new pathways for personal musical expression through honoring a deep and broad lineage of musical and cultural traditions. Brown’s chemistry with guitarist/producer Chris Sholar (Q’tip, Kanye West, Jay Z) and jazz sax titan JD Allen is extraordinary.

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How To Master Circular Breathing – A Breathing Technique To Make Silence “Hearable”

Text by Sohrab Saadat Ladjevardi

As you know I’m a sax player myself. And one technique I’ve never tried out was circular breathing. Why? Because from the start of my saxophone career my approach to music was to play my horn naturally based on my own breathing rhythm. Especially from Kendo I adopted a breathing technique which didn’t allow circular breathing. Kendo taught me to breathe “naturally”, i.e. breath in and breath out as my body wants to do it. So it was unnatural for me to play very long tones.

I found already out during my first year playing the horn that when you stop breathing and playing at the same time, you are able to hear “silence.” Silence is then an “unheard space.” Thus creating and manipulating space between tones and when to stop playing became major issues in my music.

Developing my own sound on the horn was my priority and still is. Sound dynamics became also an important part of my music. Through Kendo and Zen practice I learned that extreme performances in general and in music, such as sustaining very long notes, executing very fast and complicated chord progressions, wouldn’t make me a “real” musician. A real musician just plays himself and would use a technique as a tool to express an idea. Nowadays musicians depend mostly only on technique without having any idea what they are doing. Circular breathing could be one of these dangerous techniques to lose yourself.

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