Category Archives: Musicians

Dafnis Prieto – possessing awesome virtuosity and astonishing versatility!

Dafnis Prieto Drummer / Composer

His arrival in the U.S. has been compared by to that of an asteroid hitting New York. Indeed, within a short period of time Dafnis Prieto’s revolutionary drumming techniques had a powerful impact on both the Latin and jazz music scene, locally and internationally. Having studied at the school of Fine Arts in Santa Clara as a youngster and later at the National School of Music in Havana, Prieto obtained a thorough classical education while broadening his knowledge of Afro-Cuban music, jazz and world music outside of the academy.
He first toured Europe with pianists Carlos Maza and Ramon Valle and the groundbreaking group “Columna B.” A resident of New York since only 1999, he has already played in bands led by Henry Threadgill, Steve Coleman, Eddie Palmieri, Chico and Arturo O’Farrill, Dave Samuels & The Caribbean Jazz Project, Jane Bunnett, D.D. Jackson, Edward Simon, Michel Camilo, Chucho Valdez, Claudia Acuña, Roy Hargrove, Don Byron, and Andrew Hill, among others.

As a composer , he has created music for dance, film, chamber ensembles, and most notably for his own bands, ranging from duets to his “Small Big Band” and including the distinctively different groups featured on his three acclaimed recordings as a leader, “About The Monks,” Dafnis Prieto “Absolute Quintet” and Dafnis Prieto Sextet “Taking the Soul for a Walk”. He has received new works commissions, grants, and fellowships from Chamber Music America, Jazz at Lincoln Center, East Carolina University, and Meet the Composer. Various awards include “Up & Coming Musician of the Year” by the Jazz Journalists Association in 2006, a Grammy Award Nomination for ”Absolute Quintet” as Best Latin Jazz Album, and a Latin Grammy Nomination for “Best New Artist” in 2007. He also composed the Title track for the Grammy Winner Album “Song for Chico” by Arturo O’Farril and the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra in 2008.

Continue reading

TriBeCaStan (Folklorkestra) – they took folk melodies from around the world and improvised on them!

John Kruth & Jeff Greene (photo by Sohrab Saadat Ladjevardi)

TriBeCastan's John Kruth & Jeff Greene (photo by Sohrab Saadat Ladjevardi)

Rock Paper Scissors, Inc. and the oligarchy of TriBeCaStan hosted a reception for APAP presenters and booking agents and DBDBD were invited. The TriBeCaStani cultural attaché made available his personal 5 Star Cave for the event and served a lavish spread of complimentary food and drink. This was one of those once in a lifetime events where the locale, vibe, and company are just right. Displaying the indigenous cultural splendor of TriBeCaStan was the TriBeCaStani Folklorkestra.

When: January 8, 2010/ 5:30 – 7:30+

Continue reading

TriBekastan’s John & Jeff live @ WBAI – 99.5 FM this morning at 7 AM!

TRIBIKESTAN (photo by Doron Gild)

TRIBIKESTAN (photo by Doron Gild)

Early this morning when mostly all people were sleeping TriBecastan’s John & Jeff joined the Nuyorican Sufi Conga thumpin’ DJ,film maker, teacher Ibrahim Gonzalez on New Year’s Day WBAI – 99.5 FM this morning at 7 AM!
They talked live, played a couple “strange” instruments and preview TriBecastan’s soon-to-be released second album 5 Star Cave. Featuring guest performances by Al Kooper, Steve Turre, Badal Roy, Charlie Burnham, DeanBowman & Samantha Parton.

Listen to the show here.

Continue reading

LEMUR Robots and Pat Metheny’s Orchestrion Project collaboration!

Text by LEMUR director Eric Singer

After more than a year of work and collaboration, I am extremely excited to tell you about the Orchestrion Project. In 2007, 17-time Grammy-winning jazz artist Pat Metheny came to LEMUR with the idea to produce an album and tour backed entirely by robotic musical instruments. This led to a year-long project where we produced an orchestra of nearly 40 robotic instruments, including GuitarBots, mallet instruments and a large array of percussion. These instruments, augmented with several instruments by other roboticists, comprise the Orchestrion, a robotic orchestra entirely under Pat’s compositional and improvisational control.

Continue reading

Dewey Redman – Ornette (Coleman) is missing you!

Text by Sohrab Saadat Ladjevardi

Here is a YouTube video of an audio recording of the Ornette Coleman Quartet (with Dewey Redman on tenor, Charlie Haden on bass and Ed Blackwell on drums), recorded in Belgrade, November 2, 1971. They are playing the song Who do you work for?
Unfortunately this is just an audio recording. But the music is so strong that you can imagine the players.

Dewey Redman I love Dewey Redman‘s sax playing. And it is a shame I have never had the chance to see him playing live. He is exceptional. And he has a great tone. Nobody sounds like him. No other tenor player could take his place in Ornette’s band. After more than ten months rehearsing with Ornette I started to understand why.