Posts Tagged ‘music’

Music Monday: a review of Corinne Bailey Rae live @ Roseland Theater for Soul’d Out Festival by John-Henry Dale

Monday, April 19th, 2010

To be honest, I’ve never been a huge Corinne Bailey Rae fan. It’s not that I had any reason not to listen to or like her music -  she’s just one of the thousands of talented artists in this world that hadn’t yet filtered to the top of my playlist.  Making my own music and keeping up with all the artists on my general music-listening radar takes a talent for time-management that I’ve yet to achieve.

But I’d heard enough about Corinne Bailey-Rae to know that, whenever it was that I actually found the time to listen to her music, I would likely enjoy it. As I found out last night at Portland’s Roseland Theater, my intuitions about her music were quite the understatement. I absolutely loved it.

Prior to his death in March of 2008, I had been more familiar with Bailey-Rae’s late husband’s music than her own. Jason Rae, a Scottish saxophone player from Aberdeen, played with an incredibly talented horns-based funk / afro-beat / souljazz band called The Haggis Horns who were regular players at a party called Departure Lounge, which I used to help my promoter/DJ friend Astroboy (Chris Knight) organize from time to time.

I lived  in Edinburgh, Scotland from 2006-2008 while pursuing my MSc at University of Edinburgh and found myself consistently amazed at the dedication to Motown sounds that came from Northern England and Scotland. Something about that land  (persecution and prejudice at the hands of the English perhaps ?) seemed to resonate deeply with the sounds of Motown. Jason Rae was a Scottish Motown funksman through and through. Even if you don’t know his name, you’ve likely heard him play with Amy Winehouse and Mark Ronson.

But to get back to the matter at hand, Corinne’s show at the Roseland Theatre last night was simply riveting, from start to finish. She and her band seamlessly moved between psychedelic northern soul,  gospel-flavored balladry, Motown funk and soul, Jazz and other various eclectica from the last 50 years. Although tragic, one might argue that her late husband’s death might have inspired a type of soul-searching and mourning that has put Corinne Bailey Rae at the top of her musical game. But it also helps to have a voice that could shatter fortresses and a band that brings forth the sort of effortless virtuosity and dynamic range that hers did last night.

The band towed the musical line perfectly, playing at all times with rapt attention to what appeared to be the question of “will this phrase enhance or detract from what everyone else, especially Bailey-Rae,  is doing right now ?” In other words, they accomplished something far too rare in public musical performance, even by top-billing artists of every genre: they listened to each other.  Carefully and joyfully. The net effect was to provide the perfect balance of funk, rock and soul music to underscore the huge voice from Bailey Rae’s tiny frame.

It was a wonderful way to start Portland’s Soul’d Out Festival, a musical undertaking that I hope to see flourish for years to come. Corinne Bailey Rae’s music is EXACTLY what this town needs more of. Huge kudos to Corinne Bailey Rae, The (RED) Nights concert series,  the whole Soul’d Out Festival crew and everyone else who made this show possible.

Below is a video I shot on my iPhone of Bailey Rae’s encore performance. Pardon the poor sound and video, but I think you’ll find the quality shines through.

Corinne Bailey Rae\’s encore performance on 4.11.10 @ The Roseland in Portland, Oregon, for the Soul\’d Out Festival

Hello Kavita interview

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

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Photos by Scott Russell

By Mark Hagelberg

Hello Kavita is a folk-rock band that formed in Denver in 2007. I caught their show at the Hi-Dive this past weekend and I was able to get a little interview with Corey Teruya, the bands lead singer:

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MH: What bands (past or present) would you say have influenced your band’s sound?

CT: Definitely Neil Young would be number 1… The Beatles, Bread… And then like modern influences would be Grizzly Bear, Wilco, Beck, Bon Iver

MH: What are a few bands that you are listening to right now?

CT: John Lennon’s Plastic Ono Band, Three Dog Night, The Antlers, and St. Vincent.

MH: Since your band got started, how do you think Hello Kavita has changed, or evolved, or grown or whatever?

CT: I think the musicianship has improved a lot. We’ve finally found a bass player and drummer that are on the same page as us, and a lot of the ideas they have fit in perfectly with what Ian and Lucas and I were doing, so its been really easy to write songs and just play music without really thinking about it… which is kind of what you want.

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MH: You and some of your bandmates have a recording background. Maybe you can talk about what you like to do in the studio, what your recording experiences have been like in the past, and how that has evolved?

CT: Well, we did the last record on 2-inch tape analog, which was a lot of fun. The process was a lot different because you can’t just go in and edit anywhere you want with Pro Tools or a digital format, you know? So we really had to be on our game and know what we were playing before we got into the studio because if we messed up a take we couldn’t just save it and be like, “well we’ll try another one, and if we like that one we’ll use it,” just because we didn’t have the luxury of a lot of tape.

MH: Yeah..

CT: So it was either we record over the entire take and lose some of those good moments, or we could just keep it, and live with some of the mistakes that we made on the take. And I think doing that kinda made the recording more real.. You know, like less plastic…

MH: Kind of like.. Maybe more…

CT: More organic. Some of those mistakes ended up making the song more interesting.

MH: Maybe it gave it a little bit more of that ‘70s sound that you have, perhaps?

CT: Yeah, absolutely. Because all of that stuff was recorded on analog. And we kinda wanted to make a record the way we perceive bands from that era would make records, in the ‘60s and ‘70s.

MH: Would you describe your band as more of a studio band or a live band?

CT: I think we all have more fun playing live, but recording is a lot of fun because we are recording to a medium that is going to be permanent. And creating something that we can remember is kinda cool- to document it.

MH: Yeah it’s a lot of fun to put a lot of work into something and have a finished product, I’m sure…

CT: Yeah, totally. And just being able to do the creative process, to stop, and just talk things over… You can’t really do that live… I guess they’re both fun, in very different ways.

MH: What are your plans for the band for the immediate future?

CT: We’re just doing a little mini-tour in Utah: Salt Lake and Provo. And then we’re doing a little Midwest tour in the beginning of April. And then in the meantime, we’re just writing new material and hopefully we can put out an EP or something in the summer.

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To hear Hello Kavita’s golden retro sound check out their website or their MySpace page. Their new album To A Loved One is available now on CD and digital download.

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