Category Archives: NY Musicians

Recommended Concert: Renegade Sufi & Truculently Audacious @ Drom next Sunday!

Photo courtesy of Dawoud

Photo courtesy of Dawoud

Date: Sunday, November 24, 2013
Time: 6pm – 8pm
Venue: Drom (85 Avenue A, NY, NY 10009, 212- 777-1157)
Ticket: $1o
Genre: sitar-based electronic jazz/jazz

Renegade Sufi is an ensemble led by multi-instrumentalist/composer/improviser Dawoud who has performed and recorded with such artists as Lauryn Hill, James Blood Ulmer, and Nona Hendryx. Renegade Sufi plays a singular blend of sitar-based electronic jazz. The group expands upon classical raga with otherworldly electronics, hypnotic drum loops, and free-jazz-style improvisation to produce deep, trancelike grooves. Dawoud from the midwest, USA, yet a Muslim-Sufi somehow steeped in the mysticism of the Far East, carrying the Ravi Shankar/George Harrison banner into the next generation.

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DooBeeDoo Event Recommendation: Memorial For Steve Berrios This Coming Thursday

image001 (1)Date: Thursday, August 1, 2013
Time: 5 p.m.
Venue: St. Peter’s Church (619 Lexington Avenue at 54th Street, NYC)
Ticket: suggested donation of $25

The music world lost another great musician: jazz drummer/percussionist and Ft. Apache founding member Steve Berrios passed away, July 25, 2013. The born and bred New Yorker (February 24, 1945) was a founding member of the groundbreaking Ft. Apache Band alongside brothers Jerry and Andy Gonzalez and pianist Larry Willis and often performed in the Afro-Cuban jazz medium.

Berrios was highly regarded amongst the community of musicians and also played and recorded with Randy Weston, Art Blakey, Kenny Kirkland, Michael Brecker, Pucho & His Latin Soul Brothers, Joe Panama, Mongo Santamaría and others.

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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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