Monday, April 23, 2007

The Source Band!


We are at the Zinc Bar every month but lately our regular first Friday schedule has been disrupted to accommodate us and/or other Zinc Bar performers' needs. There will be more disruption in the next few months. Please check the "Events" page of our website for a consistently up-to-date calendar (promise).


Friday, May 20, 2007


SOURCE w/ Abdoulaye Diabate
@ the Zinc Bar

w/
Abdoulaye Diabate: vocals, guitar
Sylvain Leroux: flute, sax
Bailo Bah: tambin
Shai Bachar: keys
Fred Doumbe: bass
Robert Bonhomme: drums
Daniel "Lezardo" Villeneuve: congas


Zinc Bar
90 West Houston Street
(corner La Guardia Place)
Manhattan, New York
212-477-8337


Sets at 10, 11:30 and 1 am


...african time, always


NEWS:

Check out Global Rhythm Magazine in May for a Source track on the monthly sampler CD
Airplay continues unabated in Guinea

On July 7 in Toronto, Source will be performing at the Afrofest, the largest African music event in Canada

Elin Sings!




I will be performing some new songs, including new originals and obscure songs you may have thought you'd never hear me do... Details are as follows:


ELIN, ELIANE and JESS FURMAN - THURS APRIL 26TH
@ ACE OF CLUBS (http://www.aceofclubsnyc.com/)
9 Great Jones St @ Lafayette (underneath ACME restaurant, same entrance)
New York, NY 10012
Cover $10
DOORS: 8PM



MY SHOW IS FIRST AND IT'S ONE SET ONLY!!!
ELIANE - 9:30PM (www.myspace.com/elianeperforms)
JESS FURMAN - 10:30PM (www.jessfurman.com)


And my fantastic musicians for the night will be:


Pablo Vergara - keyboard (www.myspace.com/pablovergara)
Yoshi Waki - bass (www.myspace.com/yoshiwaki)
Yayo Serka - drums


And yes...you heard right: Two days after my show I head off to the New Orleans Jazz Festival for a week-long stay!! I will have more details for you soon...in case any of you plan to be there, or would like to send any of your friends my way.

Coming this Friday!!!!


Deadline Approaches


Friday, April 6, 2007


Kakraba Lobi at Hughes House

Sunday, April 8, 7:30 PM (doors open @ 7) at

The Historical Langston Hughes House in Harlem

( Located in the landmarked home of poet Langston Hughes @20 E. 127th Street between 5th and Madison.)

Admission $10RSVP: events@motema.com · 212-860-6969

Kakraba Lobi is considered to be the one of the great African musicians of his time. He has gained international acclaim as being the first to take the gyil (a complex and obscure West African marimba) from his village folk tradition to the international classic concert stage as a solo and chamber music medium.

At Hughes House, on Easter Sunday at 7:30pm, Krakaba will perform with his protojé, Valarie Naranja, one of America's premier marimbists known for her work in the Saturday Night Live band, with The Lion King, and with Paul Winter Concert. Also performing is Naranja's long time musical partner, multi-instrumentalist Barry Olson known for his work with Paul Simon , Ray Barretto and Hector Lavoe. The group has an extraordinary chemistry and instrumentation. This will be an evening of deep musical meditation and expansion.

The compositions that the group will perform come alive at the intersection between the highest mastery of traditional rhythm and melody from Krakaba's home land, Ghana, and the highly disciplined cutting edge creativity of Naranja and Olsen, long time innovators on the New York music scene.

This Easter, please join us to witness history in the making as Krakaba Lobi & Valarie Naranja perform in masterful synchrony on the gyil, ancestral African fore-father of the modern piano, and Barry Olson performs on the Hughes House's brand new Fazioli grand piano, the most modern innovation in piano making artistry. (The Fazioli Piano Forte company was founded in 1979, and is now considered among the finest piano marks in the world.)

"Stunning solos" The Star Ledger (Johanessburg) "The experience of being taken back to African roots and then hearing it's transformation into cutting edge art that retains its hold on traition is a breathtaking one." Christopher Padock, U.S. Information Agency.

About the Musicians


Kakraba Lobi is from the Lobi nation, known for their musical abilities, and was born into a family of gyil players/makers in Kalba Saru, in upper western Ghana. He moved to Accra in his early 20s, where he began his performing career doing broadcasts for "Radio Ghana." From 1962 until 1987, he was a full-time member of the staff at the University of Ghana's Institute of African Studies, and is currently an advising member. Kakraba was one of the musicians in Ghana's first National Dance Company. Upon hearing his solo presentation within the company's program, many concert promoters invited him to return alone. It was in this context that he honed his art as a composer, arranger, and soloist; often using the applause of his international audiences as his quality gauge. Kakraba has taught at universities and colleges throughout the Americas and Europe, and has performed in many countries, including the Czech Republic, Sweden, Denmark, England, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Mexico, Nigeria, Poland, Russia, Malawi, Senegal, Nigeria, South Africa, and Togo.

His repertoire and technique have been studied by ethnomusicologists from around the world, and his original music has been performed by leading artists on various instruments worldwide. His art is contemporary, yet deeply rooted in tradition, and by virtue of his personality and extraordinary life circumstances, he has evolved into a legendary solo performer.

Valerie Dee Naranjo - has been the percussionist on the NBC television Show "Saturday Night Live" for over eleven years. Known for her pioneering efforts in West African keyboard percussion, Valerie has studied gyil since 1984. She has been a student of Maestro Kakraba Lobi since 1991, and has been featured with him on CNN. Valerie and Barry were honored with a First Place Award at Ghana's Kobine festival in 1996, the only to date non-West Africans to do so. Valerie has also studied with many other master percussionists in 8 African countries: Ghana, Burkina Faso, Egypt, Morrocco, South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Madagascar. She has performed with such artists as Tori Amos, Airto Moriera, Glen Velez, David Byrne, Zakir Hussein, Milton Cardona, The Philip Glass Ensemble, and The Paul Winter Consort; and is an arranger and performer for Broadway's "The Lion King". For the past 23 years she has co-led with Barry Olsen "Mandara" a quintet of instrumentalist-vocalists from diverse ethnic and musical backgrounds. She was named "World Music Percussionist of the Year 2005" by Drum! reader's poll, and has been featured in Drum!, Modern Drummer, Percussive Notes, and World Percussion Rhythm magazines. She has performed on six continents, including nine African countries, and in such diverse situations and locations as Lincoln Center; Carnegie Hall; New York's City Center; London's Royal Festival Hall; Mexico City's UMAS; Perth, Australia's Opera House; The Pyramids in Cairo, Egypt; The Arts Alive and Grahamstown Festivals (South Africa); The Kaisuka Festival (Japan); The Vancouver Jazz Festival; and Scotland's Edinburgh Festival. She has released several CDs as a leader. She endorses Avedis Zildjian Cymbals, Pearl/Adams (Latin and Concert Percussion), and Vic Firth drumsticks and mallets.

Barry Olsen is a native New Yorker who began his career in the late 70's playing trombone in that city's Latin dance music scene. Over the years he has performed with almost all the major artists in this field, including Ray Barretto, Eddie Palmieri, Hector Lavoe,Tito Puente, Celia Cruz, Marc Anthony, and La India. He recently completed a Rhythm Road Jazz Ambassadors tour of four East African countries, playing piano, trombone and percussion. He has also worked with Paul Simon, David Byrne, The Paul Winter Consort, Charlie Persip and many others. He has been a frequent guest with the jazz group Ingoma, led by South African saxophonist and composer Zim Ngqawana, having toured with them in Europe and the U.S., as well as in their home country. Barry is the regular pianist for the Latin-Jazz group Syotos, led by trombonist Chris Washburne, and is featured on their recordings "Nuyorican Nights.," "The Other Side" and "Paradise in Trouble". On marimba and percussion he is frequently heard in the orchestra of the Broadway hit "The Lion King." Since 1988 he has been performing Lobi and Dagara music, playing the drums known as kuar and gangaa, which accompany the gyil . In 1996 he performed with Valerie Naranjo in the Kobine Festival of Traditional Music in Lawra, Ghana, where they were honored as the only non-Ghanaians to date to be awarded a first prize.

Kakraba Valerie and Barry began performing together in 1997, and have released three CDs combining Kakraba's solo performances with trio pieces : Song of Legaa (Lyrichord, 2000); Song of Niira (Mandara Music 2001); and Da Yillena - Wood that Sings (Mandara Music 2002). Together they compiled and published the transcription and recorded series "West African Music for the Marimba Soloist" transcriptions of Kakraba's music onto chromatic marimba.

They are on their 5th East Coast tour.

Bill's Place on Friday


Eric Frazier LIVE in New York in April at Enzo's!!!