Rebirth Brass Band

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Rebirth Brass Band ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! REBIRTH BRASS BAND ! ! ! ! Thousand Island Rebirth Brass band CD: Rollin' ! ! Don't U Wish Rebirth Brass Band CD: We Come to Party ! ! El Capitan Various Artists CD: The Spirit of America: The Patriotic Music of John Phillip Sousa ! ! The Washington Post March Various Artists CD: The Spirit of America: The Patriotic Music of John Phillip Sousa ! ! New Orleans Wiggle A.J. Piron's New Orleans Orchestra CD New Orleans Jazz of the 20s ! ! Knock With Me-Rock With Me The L'il Rascals Brass Band CD: Buck It Like A Horse ! Cassanova Rebirth Brass Band CD: Ultimate ! Blue Monk Dirty Dozen Brass Band CD: My Feet Can't Fail Me Now ! Bongo Beep Dirty Dozen Brass Band CD: My Feet Can't Fail Me Now ! ! Blackbird Special Dirty Dozen Brass Band CD: My Feet Can't Fail Me Now ! ! My Feet Can't Fail Me Now Dirty Dozen Brass Band CD: My Feet Can't Fail Me Now ! Feel Like Funkin' It Up Rebirth Brass Band CD: Feel Like Funkin' It Up ! ! Why You Worried 'Bout Me? Rebirth Brass Band Single ! ! We Come to Party Rebirth Brass Band CD: We Come to Party ! Exactly Like You Rebirth Brass Band CD: Rebirth of New Orleans ! ! I Like It Like That Rebirth Brass Band CD: Rebirth Brass Band ! All of Me Rebirth Brass Band CD: Do Watcha Wanna ! Bye and Bye Rebirth Brass Band CD: Do Watcha Wanna ! ! Do Watcha Wanna Rebirth Brass Band CD: Do Watcha Wanna ! ! It's All Over Now Rebirth Brass Band CD: Feel Like Funkin' It Up ! ! Talkin' Loud and Saying Nothing (Part 1 & 2) James Brown CD: 20th Century Masters -- the Millenium Collection: Best of James Brown ! ! Talkin' Loud and Saying Nothing Rebirth Brass Band Recording courtesy of Matt Sakakeeny ! ! AP Touro Rebirth Brass Band CD: Rebirth of New Orleans .
Recommended publications
  • Japan Loves New Orleans's Music
    University of New Orleans ScholarWorks@UNO Senior Honors Theses Undergraduate Showcase 5-2017 Nihon Wa New Orleans No Ongaku Ga Daisukidesu (Japan Loves New Orleans’s Music): A Look at Japanese Interest in New Orleans Music from the 1940s to 2017 William Archambeault University of New Orleans Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uno.edu/honors_theses Part of the Oral History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Archambeault, William, "Nihon Wa New Orleans No Ongaku Ga Daisukidesu (Japan Loves New Orleans’s Music): A Look at Japanese Interest in New Orleans Music from the 1940s to 2017" (2017). Senior Honors Theses. 94. https://scholarworks.uno.edu/honors_theses/94 This Honors Thesis-Unrestricted is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by ScholarWorks@UNO with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Honors Thesis-Unrestricted in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. This Honors Thesis-Unrestricted has been accepted for inclusion in Senior Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UNO. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Nihon Wa New Orleans No Ongaku Ga Daisukidesu (Japan Loves New Orleans’s Music): A Look at Japanese Interest in New Orleans Music from the 1940s to 2017 An Honors Thesis Presented to the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of the University of New Orleans In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Interdisciplinary Studies, with University High Honors and Honors in Interdisciplinary Studies by William Archambeault May 2017 Archambeault i Acknowledgments This undergraduate Honors thesis is dedicated to Travis “Trumpet Black” Hill, a New Orleans trumpeter who died in Tokyo, Japan, on May 4, 2015, while touring Japan.
    [Show full text]
  • First Steps with the Drum Set a Play Along Approach to Learning the Drums
    First Steps With The Drum Set a play along approach to learning the drums JOHN SAYRE www.JohnSayreMusic.com 1 CONTENTS Page 5: Part 1, FIRST STEPS Money Beat, Four on the Floor, Four Rudiments Page 13: Part 2, 8th NOTES WITH ACCENTS Page 18: Part 3, ROCK GROOVES 8th notes, Queen, R.E.M., Stevie Wonder, Nirvana, etc. Page 22: Part 4, 16th NOTES WITH ACCENTS Page 27: Part 5, 16th NOTES ON DRUM SET Page 34: Part 6, PLAYING IN BETWEEN THE HI-HAT David Bowie, Bob Marley, James Brown, Led Zeppelin etc. Page 40: Part 7, RUDIMENTS ON THE DRUM SET Page 46: Part 8, 16th NOTE GROOVES Michael Jackson, Erykah Badu, Imagine Dragons etc. Page 57: Part 9, TRIPLETS Rudiments, Accents Page 66: Part 10, TRIPLET-BASED GROOVES Journey, Taj Mahal, Toto etc. Page 72: Part 11, UNIQUE GROOVES Grateful Dead, Phish, The Beatles etc. Page 76: Part 12, DRUMMERS TO KNOW 2 INTRODUCTION This book focuses on helping you get started playing music that has a backbeat; rock, pop, country, soul, funk, etc. If you are new to the drums I recommend working with a teacher who has a healthy amount of real world professional experience. To get the most out of this book you will need: -Drumsticks -Access to the internet -Device to play music -Good set of headphones—I like the isolation headphones made by Vic Firth -Metronome you can plug headphones into -Music stand -Basic understanding of reading rhythms—quarter, eighth, triplets, and sixteenth notes -Drum set: bass drum, snare drum, hi-hat is a great start -Other musicians to play with Look up any names, bands, and words you do not know.
    [Show full text]
  • Rhythm, Dance, and Resistance in the New Orleans Second Line
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles “We Made It Through That Water”: Rhythm, Dance, and Resistance in the New Orleans Second Line A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnomusicology by Benjamin Grant Doleac 2018 © Copyright by Benjamin Grant Doleac 2018 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION “We Made It Through That Water”: Rhythm, Dance, and Resistance in the New Orleans Second Line by Benjamin Grant Doleac Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnomusicology University of California, Los Angeles, 2018 Professor Cheryl L. Keyes, Chair The black brass band parade known as the second line has been a staple of New Orleans culture for nearly 150 years. Through more than a century of social, political and demographic upheaval, the second line has persisted as an institution in the city’s black community, with its swinging march beats and emphasis on collective improvisation eventually giving rise to jazz, funk, and a multitude of other popular genres both locally and around the world. More than any other local custom, the second line served as a crucible in which the participatory, syncretic character of black music in New Orleans took shape. While the beat of the second line reverberates far beyond the city limits today, the neighborhoods that provide the parade’s sustenance face grave challenges to their existence. Ten years after Hurricane Katrina tore up the economic and cultural fabric of New Orleans, these largely poor communities are plagued on one side by underfunded schools and internecine violence, and on the other by the rising tide of post-disaster gentrification and the redlining-in- disguise of neoliberal urban policy.
    [Show full text]
  • "Born in a Second Line": Glen David Andrews Shares New Orleans Musical Heritage with the World
    COVER STORY "Born in a Second Line": Glen David Andrews shares New Orleans musical heritage with the world By Dean M. Shapiro Over a long, stellar career filled with honors, awards and international accolades, Glen David Andrews has just added another milestone to his list of accomplish- ments: his own namesake record label! The New Orleans born-and-raised trom- bonist and vocalist with possibly the most distinguished musical lineage in the city’s history, is touting his latest release, a digital album titled “Live in My Living Room” on the Glen David Andrews Records label (a subsidiary of Louisiana Red Hot Records). Recorded live in his French Quarter living room during the COVID-19 quarantine, the album is already making the rounds and available for downloading from Andrews’ Facebook page and website. Backed by the six-piece Glen David Andrews Band plus himself on vocals, Andrews penned five of the disc’s eight cuts. These include the lead track, “Treme Hideaway,” a tribute to a music club recently opened by his older brother, Grammy Award-winning drum- mer Derrick Tabb of the Rebirth Brass Band, in the city’s musically rich 6th Ward where the two of them grew up. As he explained in the accompanying liner notes, “This album was done to give you the experience of my live shows. Due to the current situation we couldn’t go in the studio to record this record, but nothing can stop the Spirit of the New Orleans musicians so we decided to record it live.” Despite being unable to perform in clubs, go on tour or play for special events, Andrews has not been idle.
    [Show full text]
  • 2008 State of New Orleans' Music Community Report
    2008 State of New Orleans’ Music Community Report Copyright page Date, etc. Sweet Home New Orleans Board of Sweet Home New Orleans Staff Directors • Ali Abdin, Case Manager • Kim Foreman • Kate Benson, Program Director • Bethany Bultman • Aimee Bussells • Kat Dobson, Communications Director • Tamar Shapiro • Helene Greece, MSW, Social Worker • “Deacon” John Moore • Armand Richardson • Klara Hammer, Financial Director • Cherice Harrison-Nelson • Jordan Hirsch, Executive Director • Reid Wick • Lauren Anderson • James Morris, GSW, Director of Social Services • Scott Aiges • Lynn O’Shea, MNM, Director of Organizational • Tamara Jackson Development • Lauren Cangelosi • Joe Stern, Case Manager • David Freedman • Paige Royer (please alphabetize board list) (possible heading or title here) This report represents the culmination of three years of our direct service to New Orleans’ music community. Renew Our Music, founded as New Orleans Musicians Hurricane Relief Fund, began issuing relief checks to New Orleans artists while floodwaters still covered parts of the city. Sweet Home New Orleans evolved in 2006 to provide case management and housing assistance to the musicians, Mardi Gras Indians, and Social Aid & Pleasure Club members struggling to return to their neighborhoods. In 2008, these agencies merged to form a holistic service center for the music community, assisting with everything from home renovations to instrument repair. As of the third anniversary of the storm, we have distributed $2,000,000 directly to more than 2,000 of New Orleans’ cultural tradition bearers. Our case workers assess clients’ individual needs to determine how our resources, and those of our partnering agencies, can most effectively assist them in perpetuating our city’s unique music culture.
    [Show full text]
  • Dirty Dozen Brass Band from Purists to Those Who Prefer Fourth Offering in the Formation Call 463-9670
    Page 6. The VMI Cadet. February s. 1967 At Ease Sound Off Curran Bowen by: Scott McCumber The Housemartins—"London Mid-Winter 0 Hull 4" Once gain, the subject of this week's column is an English band, and once again, the music Weekend is good. Sorry to disappoint all the American music lovers, but Mid winters already 1 Can you together a great show not to be the sad fact is that a rather believe it? There is no need wor- missed. large majority of the new music rying about what's happening. Also Saturday is the continua- is from England. It is time to take a break from tion of the W&L Superdance. Another new band, "The the books and recouperate this This fund raiser for Muscular Housemartin's "London O Hull weekend. Distrophy Association features 4" is an exceptional piece of Friday night is the formal hop SG & L and the White Animals. work. (By the way, anyone who right here at VMI in Cocke Hall. Cost is about $10. Look for a knows the meaning behind the The gals will be dolled up and possible permit. (Thanks Kevin album's title feel free to let me ready to party with the Mighty Alvis.) know). The music on the album Majors. Don't let them down And to cap off this weekend, is fast paced and exciting. Most fellas. as if it's not enough, ZoUman's of the songs contain a "guitar If Post is cramping your style Pavillion opens Sunday from 1 Billy Idol *'Whiplash Smile' solo of some repute," and there and you are on the road, then to 5 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Euphoria Brass Band, a San Diego Music Award 3 P.M
    Summer Brass Funk Explosion! Saturday, July 27 Euphoria Brass Band, a San Diego Music Award 3 p.m. Winner, is an exciting and unique San Diego-based musical collective serving up a contemporary mix Library Lawn of old school New Orleans traditional brass band jazz, funky street beats and new school edginess with a West Coast feeling! Embracing the exciting spirit of jazz improvisation with hard edge funk, Limited seating is available, the critically acclaimed and award-winning feel free to bring your own lawn Euphoria Brass Band has become known for their chairs to enjoy the concert. incendiary high-energy shows! This Summer Festival Event is made possible by the Friends of the Library. ABOUT THE BAND Euphoria Brass Band is a critically acclaimed and award winning San Diego based musical collective that serves up a contemporary mix of old school New Orleans traditional brass band jazz, funky street beats and new school edginess with a West Coast feeling! Euphoria Brass Band has become a Southern California favorite, playing many high profile music venues, festivals, and parades. Euphoria Brass Band was awarded the 2019 San Diego Music Award in the Best Jazz category! EBB was created in 2011 by two New Orleans transplants, Ron Bocian and David Bandrowski and local jazz radio DJ, Drew Miller. They quickly assembled a top notch, hard-hitting horn section: Steve Ebner (trumpet), April West (trombone), David Jackson (tenor sax), JP Balmat (baritone & alto sax, clarinet) and Wayne Rice (sousaphone). Euphoria Brass Band is proud to have been nominated 5 years in a row for various San Diego Music Awards since their inception in 2011! EBB always leaves ‘em wanting more! Euphoria Brass Band has had the honor of sharing the stage with some of New Orleans music’s royalty: Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • SUPERSTARS of BRASS 10 Great Videos to Watch from Some Legends of Brass
    SUPERSTARS OF BRASS 10 great videos to watch from some legends of brass. 1. TINE THING HELSETH – Haydn Trumpet Concerto, 3rd Movement https://youtu.be/ASB6hFUat4g 2. JOHN FLETCHER (tuba) – Flight of the Bumblebee https://youtu.be/2-NVMsj6lXA 3. BLACK DYKE BAND – Hedwig’s Theme https://youtu.be/kXI3pKiVa3A 4. MILES DAVIS – Ascenseur pour l’Echafaud (Lift to the Scaffold) https://youtu.be/PW-SxgZViuk 5. CAROL JARVIS (trombones) – Back to the Future https://youtu.be/bq9xBEpBrwM 6. MNOZIL BRASS – James Bond https://youtu.be/b9PCyUIg4u4 7. RADOVAN VLATKOVIC – Mozart Horn Concerto no.4, 3rd movement https://youtu.be/jbuELxd54nY 8. ARTURO SANDOVAL – A Night in Tunisia https://youtu.be/6A3SX9LOGQs 9. CAROL JANTSCH (tuba) – The Carnival of Venice https://youtu.be/hu52NuHjx5M 10. DIRTY DOZEN BRASS BAND – My feet can’t fail me now https://youtu.be/ASGn9H5fdPM Suggested Activites Choose one or more of the following activities to have a go at, related to brass playing: 1. Which video did you enjoy most? What was it about the music that made you enjoy it? What type of music was it? (eg Classical, Jazz, Latin). Which instruments could you hear or see in the video? 2. Choose your favourite player or group from video selections. Do some research on them and write a short biography about them. It needn’t be any longer than half a page of A4. If they are a soloist, I’d like to know their date of birth, where they were born, when they started playing their instrument and which groups or orchestras they played with.
    [Show full text]
  • Friends of WWOZ Board of Directors Meeting May 9, 2012 General Manager's Report
    Friends of WWOZ Board of Directors Meeting May 9, 2012 General Manager's Report 1. 2012 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival Coverage. Once again, WWOZ provided start-to-finish broadcast and webcast coverage of this year’s New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. And once again, the station’s remote production krewe headed by Program Director Dwayne Breashears and Chief Engineer Damond Jacob provided live feeds to seventeen stations around the country, including KUVO (Denver), KVJZ (Vail), WUSM, Hattiesburg, MS, KPOV, Bend, OR, KDHX, St Louis, MO, CIUT, Toronto, Canada, KFCF, Fresno, CA, WNCU, Durham, NC, WCLK, Atlanta, GA, KMUD, Garberville, CA, KMUE, Eureka ,CA, KLAI, Laytonville/Shelter Cove, CA, WPFW, Washington, DC, KGOU, Norman, OK, KROU Spencer/Oklahoma City, KOUA, Ada, OK, KWOU, Woodward, OK. A small broadcast crew and more than 100 volunteers handled WWOZ’s multiple Jazz Fest activities ranging from broadcast, to membership/brass pass distribution, WWOZ Mango Freeze sales, Piano Night, and night time broadcasts from local clubs. Broadcast Krewe: The broadcast crew included George Ingmire, Bradley Blanchard, Jerry Lenaz, SherriLynn Colby-Bottel, David Kunian, Dimitri Apessos, Linda Santi, Olivia Greene, and many more. Engineering Krewe: The engineering crew included Tony Guillory, Robert Carroll, Khalid Hafiz, and Susan Jacob. Volunteer Power: Veronica Cromwell, Bill Insley, Leslie Cooper, Elsie Bunny Walker, Mary Lambert, Marie MacAdory, Paige Patriarca, Ruth Marinello, Jerry Lenaz, Heather McGlynn, Linz Adams, Mary Naughton, Christy Grimes, Ron Clingenpeel, Lance Albert, Rick Wilkof, Eric Ward, Duane Williams, Melissa Gemeinhardt, Christy Carney, Duane Williams, Betty Schlater, Melissa DeOrazio, Matthew De Orazio, Craig Christopher, Steve Daub, and many more.
    [Show full text]
  • 6 Unique Nights & Collaborations
    SYMPHONY CENTER PRESENTS JUNE 10-12 & 16-18 a journey through musical roots New York City FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 8:00 BILL CHARLAP piano Th is portrait of New York’s rich and varied musical Kurt Elling vocals history focuses on two distinct and important eras. Ken Peplowski clarinet First, Bill Charlap directs an all-star ensemble, Jeremy Pelt trumpet including Chicago native and jazz vocalist Kurt Jimmy Greene tenor saxophone Elling, on a journey through the music of the Roaring Peter Washington bass Twenties, Broadway, Ellington, Bernstein, Sinatra and Kenny Washington drums be-bop. In the second half, accomplished singer-songwriter Suzanne Vega and guests Richard Julian and legendary folk singer SUZANNE VEGA guitar and vocals and Chicago native Tom Paxton celebrate the New York folk music Tom Paxton guitar and vocals scene of the 1950s, ‘60s and beyond. Richard Julian guitar and vocals Gerry Leonard guitar Mike Visceglia bass Route 66 SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 8:00 ARLO GUTHRIE guitar and vocals Inspired by America’s “Mother Road,” this performance CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Vance Gilbert guitar and vocals is directed by legendary folk singer Arlo Guthrie, and SYMPHONY CENTER PRESENTS Eliza Gilkyson guitar and vocals showcases the nostalgic songs and music of an era when 220 South Michigan Avenue Chris Smither guitar and vocals this famous highway was the path of choice through the Chicago, IL 60604-2559 American west, uniting people on their journey from Chicago to Los Angeles. With its starting point adjacent to Symphony Center at the corner of Michigan and Adams, Route 66 celebrates its 85th anniversary in 2011.
    [Show full text]
  • Trombone People Loved It, Because We Were Picking up the Beat' Trombonists in Every Era and Genre - Performers Who (Rogovoy 2001)
    Trombone people loved it, because we were picking up the beat' trombonists in every era and genre - performers who (Rogovoy 2001). Players such as the Dirty Dozen Brass have cumulatively expanded the possibilities for trom- Band's Kirk Joseph have amplified the sousaphone to bone range, sound quality capabilities and performance emulate many characteristics of the electric bass guitar. speed in ways completely unanticipated and unimagin- able in European art music. It is here, in the popular Bibliography sphere, that the trombone has made its most expressive Bevan, Clifford. 1978, The Tuba Family. London; Faber impact as an instrument with unique vocal and emo- and Faber, tional qualities. Rogovoy, Seth, 2001, 'Dirty Dozen Updates New Orleans The 'tailgate' trombone style, critical to the sound of Street-Band Music' Berkshire Eagle (30 November), Dixieland collective improvisation, was developed sub- http;//www.rogovoy,com/150.shtml stantially in the second and third decades of the twenti- Schafer, William J. 1977. Brass Bands and New Orleans eth century by Edward 'Kid' Ovf and Jim Robinson. Jack Jazz. Baton Rouge, LA; Louisiana State University Teagarden, Jimmy Harrison, Vic Dickenson, Benny Press, Morton and Dicky Wells extended the melodic and rhythmic capabilities of the trombone in the 1920s and Discography 1930s in the transition to swing. Band leader trombon- Dirty Dozen Brass Band, The, My Feet Can't Fail Me Now. ists like Glenn Miller and Tommy Dorsey developed the Concord Jazz 43005. 1984: USA, trombone's role as a lyrical lead
    [Show full text]
  • Dr. John: Adam E
    BAM 2012 Winter/Spring Brooklyn Academy of Music presents Alan H. Fishman, Chairman of the Board William I. Campbell, Vice Chairman of the Board Dr. John: Adam E. Max, Vice Chairman of the Board Karen Brooks Hopkins, Insides Out President Joseph V. Melillo, BAM Howard Gilman Opera House Executive Producer Approximate running time: two hours including one intermission Produced by BAM Mar 29—31, 2012 at 8pm A LOUIS ARMSTRONG TRIBUTE Dr. John James Andrews Blind Boys of Alabama Wendell Brunious Telmary Diaz Roy Hargrove Rickie Lee Jones Kermit Ruffins Arturo Sandoval Apr 5—7, 2012 at 8pm LOCKED DOWN Dr. John Dan Auerbach Upcoming concert: Apr 12—14, 2012 at 8pm BAM 2012 Winter/Spring Season sponsor: FUNKY BUT IT’S NU AWLINS Davell Crawford, Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Donald Presenting sponsor: Harrison, Ivan Neville, Nicholas Payton, Irma Thomas, and more Leadership support for Dr. John: Insides Out provided by Merryl H. & James S. Tisch, and Frances Bermanzohn & Alan Roseman Dr. John: Louis Armstrong Tribute Louis Armstrong. Photo: Library of Congress Mar 29—31, 2012 at 8pm LOUIS ARMSTRONG TRIBUTE Dr. John piano, guitar, vocals With special guests: James Andrews trumpet Blind Boys of Alabama vocals Wendell Brunious trumpet Telmary Diaz vocals Roy Hargrove trumpet Rickie Lee Jones guitar, vocals Kermit Ruffins trumpet Arturo Sandoval trumpet DR. JOHN’S BAND David Barard bass Alonzo Bowens tenor saxophone and horn leader Gary Winters trumpet John Fohl guitar Jason Mingledorff baritone saxophone Sarah Morrow trombone Kenneth Williams percussion Raymond Weber drums James Lemkin company stage manager Jerry Manuel production manager Dwayne Steele stage technician and sound monitor engineer Sarah Morrow music coordination Alonzo Bowens, Sarah Morrow arrangements Dr.
    [Show full text]