Sister Sparrow & The Dirty Birds are a "soulful-rock / rhythm & blues band out of Brooklyn, NY" (3 of the Dirty Birds originated in San Francisco) that has been touring extensively in support of their sophomore album Pound Of Dirt. They are gaining momentum for their live shows, having already landed opening spots with Dr. John, The Black Keys, Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, (among many others). Recently, they played 3 sets at Bonnaroo, a set at Summer Camp, a set at CBGB Festival, and SXSW with an upcoming spot at Telluride Jazz Festival. This Saturday night, the monster combo rolls into the Boom Boom Room on Fillmore.
“You gotta eat a pound of dirt before you die.” That little twist on an old American proverb provides an album title (Pound of Dirt), a lyric and an underlying philosophy for Sister Sparrow & the Dirty Birds.
“That lyric sums up our new record,” says frontwoman Arleigh Kincheloe (aka Sister Sparrow, who boasts impressive pipes that recall the likes of Aretha and Bonnie Raitt). “There’s creatively more weight here than what we’ve done before. We spent more time on it, there are bigger themes, and it’s better produced. This album is how we’ve always wanted to present ourselves to the world.”
But the world had already noticed. Since forming in 2008, Sister Sparrow’s mix of thick grooves, sultry vocals and heavyweight horns (not to mention some killer harmonica) has caught the ears of some pretty big names; the group’s already landed gigs with Levon Helm, Warren Haynes, Donald Fagen, the Neville Brothers, Dr. John, the Rebirth Brass Band, and Sharon Jones, as well as slots on major music festivals including, Gathering of the Vibes, Bear Creek, moe.down, Catskill Chill, among many others.
Pretty impressive for a young band, and a testament to their talent and passion. But in a way, Sister Sparrow and her bandmates have been prepping for their moment in the spotlight for a long time. Growing up in the Catskill Mountains in upstate New York with a country music singing mom and a drummer dad, Kincheloe got a lot of early exposure to music. “Even as a toddler I was always dancing and singing, even before I knew what was going on,” she says. “And it helped that my parents were supportive and bad-ass musicians.”
As she grew older, Kincheloe started writing and performing, incorporating her brother Jackson [harmonica] and cousin Bram [drums] into the mix. The family connection actually helped birth a name—and a mission—for her music. “The name came before the band,” remembers the singer. “My brother was saying ‘dirty birds’ a lot, and we were calling our sister ‘Mama Quail.’ She said, if I’m that, you gotta be ‘Sister Sparrow.’ That kind of helped me form a vision of where I wanted to go with my music. And then with the help of my brother and cousin, we got this gaggle of kids together to form a group.”
Moving to NYC, cousin Bram brought in childhood friends J.J. Byars (alto saxophone) and Ryan Snow (trombone), who in turn recruited baritone saxophonist and close friend Johnny Butler. With the addition of trumpeter Phil Rodriguez, guitarist Sasha Brown and bassist Aidan Carroll, the Dirty Birds band line-up was set.
Word of their boisterous live show spread quickly. Soon after forming, the group was headlining a five-month residency at the famous downtown venue Rockwood Music Hall and fielding tour offers from national bands. “Our live shows get sweaty,” says Kincheloe. “We get everyone dancing. We feed off of the audience, and they feed off of us. It’s kind of like a punk show with soul music.”
With a fanbase in place, the group signed to Modern Vintage Recordings and released its self-titled debut in 2010, recorded in one marathon overnight session. “It was a ‘wham bam thank you ma’am’ kind of recording,” says Kincheloe. “We loved it, but the record was really a snapshot of our live show.”
For their follow-up Pound of Dirt, the Birds decided to take their time and (slight pun intended) spread their wings. Recorded over two months at The Motherbrain studio in Brooklyn with producer Brian Bender, the group was able to add several layers to their already dynamic sound – now the horns are funkier, the guitars meatier, the drums kick a little more, and the harmonica shreds (see “Make It Rain” and “Too Much” for proof). Tempos and styles shift throughout, with slower grooves like “Millie Mae” and the ballad “Horse to Water” sharing time with full-on soul workouts like “Hollow Bones” and the rock guitar of “Feather of a Queen.” Says the singer: “With the extra time, we got to be more creative, use different amps, drums…we even got Jackson’s bass harmonica at times to sound like an organ.”
If the music is that much more dynamic, there’s an interesting bit of contrast in the lyrics, which show a band and a singer growing wiser from their travels.
Kincheloe remains the lyricist and main songwriter, however the band is a collaborative effort, with the entire group responsible for arrangements and fleshing out the songs. “The first record was more from a perspective of when I lived upstate,” the singer explains. “The new songs I wrote in the city—and living in New York, the city really forces you to look at yourself and figure out what’s going on with your life. It’s also about our time on the road and just learning from those experiences.”
With an ambitious new album in tow, the band has big plans for the remainder of 2012, including festivals, Mountain Jam and Summer Camp to name a few, and some more headlining dates, where the new songs can really shine. “I think getting time in the studio has actually helped our live show,” says Kincheloe. “It made us see what more we could do with our music.” But don’t think the group’s recent whirlwind of activity and increased exposure will make the band lose track of what made them so compelling in the first place.
“In the end, we’re a community of minds working together, but we’re also really great friends,” she says. “That adds a lot to the process. We’re having a great time doing this, and you can definitely see and hear that in our music.”
Sister Sparrow & The Dirty Birds
The Boom Boom Room, 1601 Fillmore
Saturday, July 28th @ 9:30pm
Admission $12
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Thursday, July 19, 2012
John Moremen's "Flotation Device" Returns to the Hotel Utah
John Moremen's nifty combo, "Flotation Device", returns to the Hotel Utah, alongside bandmates Adam Symons on drums, Chris Xefos on bass and Ian Robertson on guitar. Last June I quoted one of their earliest reviews which stated Moremen was, "Almost impossible to explain. A session-man, side-man, band leader and collaborator extraordinaire, the San Francisco musician has recorded with experimentalists Half Japanese and MX-80, backed legendary Flamin' Groovies front man Roy Loney, written with The Minus Five's Scott McCaughey and fronted his own bands. And that's alongside over a decade as a member of Bay Area popsters, The Orange Peels, first as their drummer and now as their lead guitarist. Yet none of that explains what he does on "Flotation Device," where he navigates surf, NRBQ-esque roots rock and Monk-like bop with a deft hand."
In the spring of 2011, Moremen started working on some instrumentals for fun, but over the course of a few months found himself completing over 20 songs. After each one was finished, Moremen would post them online as a work in progress.
"I was kind of going back to something I did when I was in my teens, where I would come up with these instrumentals and then as quickly as possible, sit down and record the drums, guitar and bass. The whole process from writing to recording was almost instantaneous," Moremen says. "It was a routine I had and it was a really fun thing for me and I wanted to tap into that again."
Soon friends and fellow musicians were asking whether he was actually making an album. Working with producer (and Orange Peels band mate) Allen Clapp, the two mixed, mastered and sequenced fifteen of the songs into "Flotation Device."
"John is too ridiculously talented. Everyone knows this," Clapp says. "Flotation Device is like what it must be like inside John's head: Thelonious Monk, Robert Fripp, Jimmy Page all hanging out on the San Francisco coast..."
Performing all the instrumental parts on this album, Moremen freely navigates between drums, bass and guitar while never losing sight of the end goal: songs that move, shake and rattle with palpable energy. From "Stay Inside," which refers to his theory about listening and learning music to "Outta Here," motivated by the homerun call of San Francisco Giants announcer Duane Kuiper, while "Skybar", (featured below and a personal favorite), is a little musical candy bar with its separate sections. Call it 21st century mood music; call it a West-Coast guitar freak-out; call it what you will —Moremen is entirely at home in the grooves of this album…"
John Moremen's Flotation Device
w/ Rue 66 and New Dress
Saturday, July 21
Hotel Utah
500 4th Street (at Bryant), SF
Show starts at 9:00 PM. 21+
$10.00
In the spring of 2011, Moremen started working on some instrumentals for fun, but over the course of a few months found himself completing over 20 songs. After each one was finished, Moremen would post them online as a work in progress.
"I was kind of going back to something I did when I was in my teens, where I would come up with these instrumentals and then as quickly as possible, sit down and record the drums, guitar and bass. The whole process from writing to recording was almost instantaneous," Moremen says. "It was a routine I had and it was a really fun thing for me and I wanted to tap into that again."
Soon friends and fellow musicians were asking whether he was actually making an album. Working with producer (and Orange Peels band mate) Allen Clapp, the two mixed, mastered and sequenced fifteen of the songs into "Flotation Device."
"John is too ridiculously talented. Everyone knows this," Clapp says. "Flotation Device is like what it must be like inside John's head: Thelonious Monk, Robert Fripp, Jimmy Page all hanging out on the San Francisco coast..."
Performing all the instrumental parts on this album, Moremen freely navigates between drums, bass and guitar while never losing sight of the end goal: songs that move, shake and rattle with palpable energy. From "Stay Inside," which refers to his theory about listening and learning music to "Outta Here," motivated by the homerun call of San Francisco Giants announcer Duane Kuiper, while "Skybar", (featured below and a personal favorite), is a little musical candy bar with its separate sections. Call it 21st century mood music; call it a West-Coast guitar freak-out; call it what you will —Moremen is entirely at home in the grooves of this album…"
John Moremen's Flotation Device
w/ Rue 66 and New Dress
Saturday, July 21
Hotel Utah
500 4th Street (at Bryant), SF
Show starts at 9:00 PM. 21+
$10.00
Thursday, July 12, 2012
The Victor Wooten Band Comes to Yoshi's
Five-time Grammy-winning musician Victor Wooten, best known for his work with Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, Stanley Clarke, Dave Matthews is on tour this summer backed by an amazing ensemble of musicians as he gears up for the release of two new CDs on VIX Records in September of 2012. In between intense touring with The Flecktones, Wooten has been recording and mixing a new CD that will be released in two versions simultaneously in September. Wooten and his band roll into Yoshi's at Jack London Square, July 19th and 20th.
Words & Tones comprises 13 songs (11 new original tracks and 2 cover songs) which all feature a female vocalist. Vocalists include longtime friends Saundra Williams (Sharon jones and the Dap Kings) and Divinty Roxx (Beyonce), as well as Wooten’s brothers and kids. New collaborations include a smooth vocal performance from Me’shell Ndegeocello, a beautiful duet featuring Joey Kibble (Take 6), and fiery percussion from “Pedrito” Martinez.
Sword & Stone is the instrumental rendition of the recordings. To make things more interesting, Wooten has added new arrangements, solos, instruments, and musicians to this CD. Each CD features a few songs not found on the other.
On this tour brings Krystal Peterson, a young singing sensation from Cincinnati. Also joining Wooten are long time cohorts J. D. Blair, Derico Watson, Anthony Wellington, Steve Bailey, and Dave Welsch. These touring musicians also join Wooten on the new CDs. Peterson sings two songs on Words and Tones.
Each musician will multitask (actually switching instruments mid-song) resulting in a part choreographed and part improvised display of musicianship and showmanship at its best. Instruments include: bass, acoustic bass, drums, keyboards, trumpet, trombone, cello, percussion, vocals, and more.
Wooten comments, “Like the new records, I’ll make a slight departure from previous bands. This time around, I’ll be featuring a unique mixture of multi-instrumentalists. Fans can expect high energy, world-class musicianship, and as always, things they’ve never seen or heard before. The show will consist of mostly new music from my upcoming 2 new CD’S, but will also feature songs from my earlier releases, as well as original music from members of the band, including selections from 2012?, J.D.Blair’s new CD, which was just released on VIX Records.”
You can sample the new music here:
http://www.victorwooten.com/newcd.html
Victor Wooten
Yoshi's in Oakland
Thursday, July 19th and Friday, July 20th @8:00 P.M. and 10:00 P.M.
Tickets: $28.00.
Words & Tones comprises 13 songs (11 new original tracks and 2 cover songs) which all feature a female vocalist. Vocalists include longtime friends Saundra Williams (Sharon jones and the Dap Kings) and Divinty Roxx (Beyonce), as well as Wooten’s brothers and kids. New collaborations include a smooth vocal performance from Me’shell Ndegeocello, a beautiful duet featuring Joey Kibble (Take 6), and fiery percussion from “Pedrito” Martinez.
Sword & Stone is the instrumental rendition of the recordings. To make things more interesting, Wooten has added new arrangements, solos, instruments, and musicians to this CD. Each CD features a few songs not found on the other.
On this tour brings Krystal Peterson, a young singing sensation from Cincinnati. Also joining Wooten are long time cohorts J. D. Blair, Derico Watson, Anthony Wellington, Steve Bailey, and Dave Welsch. These touring musicians also join Wooten on the new CDs. Peterson sings two songs on Words and Tones.
Each musician will multitask (actually switching instruments mid-song) resulting in a part choreographed and part improvised display of musicianship and showmanship at its best. Instruments include: bass, acoustic bass, drums, keyboards, trumpet, trombone, cello, percussion, vocals, and more.
Wooten comments, “Like the new records, I’ll make a slight departure from previous bands. This time around, I’ll be featuring a unique mixture of multi-instrumentalists. Fans can expect high energy, world-class musicianship, and as always, things they’ve never seen or heard before. The show will consist of mostly new music from my upcoming 2 new CD’S, but will also feature songs from my earlier releases, as well as original music from members of the band, including selections from 2012?, J.D.Blair’s new CD, which was just released on VIX Records.”
You can sample the new music here:
http://www.victorwooten.com/newcd.html
Victor Wooten
Yoshi's in Oakland
Thursday, July 19th and Friday, July 20th @8:00 P.M. and 10:00 P.M.
Tickets: $28.00.
Friday, July 6, 2012
The 2012 Outsound New Music Summit
The San Francisco Bay Area’s underground music scene covers a tremendous
range of styles and artists. What they share is a love of
improvisation, and of new or unusual compositions and sound-making
techniques. Coming out of genres as diverse as jazz, electronica,
contemporary composition, world music, hip-hop, and metal, the
performing artists are led by their desire to learn and impart something
new about music. The Bay Area new music scene often works outside of
traditional venues, creating special environments for new kinds of
sound. Outsound volunteer curators are dedicated to presenting the
cutting edge of sound and music composition and performance.
The Outsound New Music Summit runs from July 15th-21st, and marks its eleventh consecutive year in 2012 with a night of wildly imaginative poetry with Ronald Saur, rAmu Aki, and Carla Harryman along with some of the Bay Area’s finest improvisers. Also featured will be a night of new compositions, featuring John Shiurba’s 9:9 Ensemble. A night of extended percussion ensembles with Falkortet, and Benjamin Ethan Tinker’s Seems An Eternity follows, and the festival ends with an all blow out night of master improvisers from both East and West coasts…multi-instrumentalist and award-winning composer Vinny Golia as well as keyboardist Dave Bryant (from Ornette Colman’s Prime Time). In addition, the Johnny Appleseed of improvisation Jack Wright will play solo.
Sacramento living legend Tony Passarell will bring his “Thin Air Orchestra” to play the Summit for the first time! The festival kicks off Sunday, July 15, 7:00 p.m., with its always-popular Touch the Gear night, a free hands-on expo where attendees can experience new and exotic instruments and electronic gear and make some of their own unique sounds.
The 2012 Outsound New Music Summit
July 15th-21st
San Francisco Community Music Center
544 Capp Street @ 20th
San Francisco, CA click for map
Q&A Sessions 7:15 -7:30 pm
Performance 8:15 pm
Sunday July 15: Touch the Gear Expo! 7-10pm Free Admission
A hands-on experience of sound producing gear and instruments!
Touch the Gear is a hands-on, family-friendly event that allows the public to roam among 25-30 musicians and inventors with their various different configurations of “gear.” -- Everything from oscillators to planks of wood with strings attached. Everyone gets to ask questions, make sound and experience how these set-ups work. It’s an environment that demystifies technology while inspiring creativity.
Monday July 16: Composers Symposium 7-9pm Free Admission
Compositional Process and Changing the Rules
2012 composers John Shiurba, Christina Stanley, Benjamin Ethan Tinker, and Matthew Goodheart will discuss the elements of their compositional styles and how they navigate the worlds of modern compositional techniques, combined with individual forms of experimentation. There will be a Q&A segment for attendees of this free public
event.
Wednesday July 18: Sonic Poetry
Unique word and sound fusions and fissions
poets: Ronald Sauer, rAmu Aki, Carla Harryman
Musicians: Jacob Felix Heule, Jordan Glenn, Karl Evangelista,
Jon Raskin, Gino Robair
In a special Outsound presentation, three leading Bay Area poets collaborate with some of music’s top improvisers to create new word and sound compositions in this evening of visionary literary experimentation.
Thursday July 19: The Composers Muse
World debut performances from some of the Bay Area’s most adventurous composers
Christina Stanley's Skadi Quartet,
Matthew Goodheart’s recursive physical object electro-acoustics
John Shiurba's 9:9
Friday July 20: Thwack, Bome, Chime
an evening of structured percussion
Dave Douglas' The Walls Are White With Flame
Benjamin Ethan Tinker's “Seems An Eternity”
Falkortet
Showcasing the wide and wild world of modern percussion in all shapes, sizes, and sounds.
Saturday July 21: Harmolodics Workshop w/ Dave Bryant
2-4pm Free Admission
Pianist Dave Bryant will present material gleaned from his years of performance and study with Ornette Coleman
on Harmolodic Theory and practice.
Saturday July 21: Fire & Energy
Masters of improvisation from East & West Coast meet for the Summit Finale
Jack Wright
Dave Bryant Trio
Vinny Golia Sextet
Tony Passarell's Thin Air Orchestra
A massive blowout of seasoned veterans of the improvised-jazz-inspired-music collide on this final night
of the 11th Annual Outsound New Music Summit.
The Outsound New Music Summit runs from July 15th-21st, and marks its eleventh consecutive year in 2012 with a night of wildly imaginative poetry with Ronald Saur, rAmu Aki, and Carla Harryman along with some of the Bay Area’s finest improvisers. Also featured will be a night of new compositions, featuring John Shiurba’s 9:9 Ensemble. A night of extended percussion ensembles with Falkortet, and Benjamin Ethan Tinker’s Seems An Eternity follows, and the festival ends with an all blow out night of master improvisers from both East and West coasts…multi-instrumentalist and award-winning composer Vinny Golia as well as keyboardist Dave Bryant (from Ornette Colman’s Prime Time). In addition, the Johnny Appleseed of improvisation Jack Wright will play solo.
Sacramento living legend Tony Passarell will bring his “Thin Air Orchestra” to play the Summit for the first time! The festival kicks off Sunday, July 15, 7:00 p.m., with its always-popular Touch the Gear night, a free hands-on expo where attendees can experience new and exotic instruments and electronic gear and make some of their own unique sounds.
The 2012 Outsound New Music Summit
July 15th-21st
San Francisco Community Music Center
544 Capp Street @ 20th
San Francisco, CA click for map
Q&A Sessions 7:15 -7:30 pm
Performance 8:15 pm
Sunday July 15: Touch the Gear Expo! 7-10pm Free Admission
A hands-on experience of sound producing gear and instruments!
Touch the Gear is a hands-on, family-friendly event that allows the public to roam among 25-30 musicians and inventors with their various different configurations of “gear.” -- Everything from oscillators to planks of wood with strings attached. Everyone gets to ask questions, make sound and experience how these set-ups work. It’s an environment that demystifies technology while inspiring creativity.
Monday July 16: Composers Symposium 7-9pm Free Admission
Compositional Process and Changing the Rules
2012 composers John Shiurba, Christina Stanley, Benjamin Ethan Tinker, and Matthew Goodheart will discuss the elements of their compositional styles and how they navigate the worlds of modern compositional techniques, combined with individual forms of experimentation. There will be a Q&A segment for attendees of this free public
event.
Wednesday July 18: Sonic Poetry
Unique word and sound fusions and fissions
poets: Ronald Sauer, rAmu Aki, Carla Harryman
Musicians: Jacob Felix Heule, Jordan Glenn, Karl Evangelista,
Jon Raskin, Gino Robair
In a special Outsound presentation, three leading Bay Area poets collaborate with some of music’s top improvisers to create new word and sound compositions in this evening of visionary literary experimentation.
Thursday July 19: The Composers Muse
World debut performances from some of the Bay Area’s most adventurous composers
Christina Stanley's Skadi Quartet,
Matthew Goodheart’s recursive physical object electro-acoustics
John Shiurba's 9:9
Friday July 20: Thwack, Bome, Chime
an evening of structured percussion
Dave Douglas' The Walls Are White With Flame
Benjamin Ethan Tinker's “Seems An Eternity”
Falkortet
Showcasing the wide and wild world of modern percussion in all shapes, sizes, and sounds.
Saturday July 21: Harmolodics Workshop w/ Dave Bryant
2-4pm Free Admission
Pianist Dave Bryant will present material gleaned from his years of performance and study with Ornette Coleman
on Harmolodic Theory and practice.
Saturday July 21: Fire & Energy
Masters of improvisation from East & West Coast meet for the Summit Finale
Jack Wright
Dave Bryant Trio
Vinny Golia Sextet
Tony Passarell's Thin Air Orchestra
A massive blowout of seasoned veterans of the improvised-jazz-inspired-music collide on this final night
of the 11th Annual Outsound New Music Summit.
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