The Selective Echo: “Chicago Afrobeat Project, The Pimps of Joytime among blockbuster Utah Arts Festival’s closing headliners”

This article originally appeared on The Selective Echo.

Editor’s Note: Aaron Wolcott provides a concise look at three musical headliners who will send Utah Arts Festival visitors out on some fine notes to close out the 2012 four-day event.

Chicago Afrobeat Project, 8:30 p.m., Amphitheater Stage

A group with its roots in the Chicago loft party scene and the innovative sounds of Fela Kuti’s Nigerian Afrobeat movement, The Chicago Afrobeat Project is an eight-piece ensemble whose signature style blends elements of jazz, funk, hip hop and rock. Afrobeat is a sound you immediately recognize, although you may not have heard the name put to it.

Afrobeat touchstones include Roy Ayers’ score for the blaxploitation film ‘Coffy’ and countless other film scores of a similar vein. Chicago Afrobeat’s songs are meditations – perfectly built Afrobeat journeys with each turn a pleasant and interesting surprise.

Blue Highway, 9:45 p.m., Festival Stage

Blue Highway is a bluegrass supergroup if ever there was one: Grammy nominated and Dove Award recipients. Blue Highway comprises five unquestionably mind-boggling musicians with their origins in the likes of Alison Krauss & Union Station and the Cox Family. From lush harmonies to back country ballads, Tim Stafford has a voice that hits the sweet spot of that mournful achy tone (regardless of whether the song is joyful or not) and that is the trademark of the bluegrass sound.

Blue Highway members are genuine storytellers and masters of a poignant turn of phrase. Expect some tricky pickin’ and rock solid songwriting. They’re one hell of a band.

The Pimps of Joytime, 10 p.m., Amphitheater Stage

A great festival send-off will feature smooth-talking funk proselytisers The Pimps of Joytime, a funk group for the year 2012 bringing the message of the ‘Janxta Funk!,’ an album possessing the preternatural ability to inspire a mood-lit groove party in any setting the moment it comes through the air.

This is electro funk with a Latin flair and some solid hip-hop thrown into the mix which becomes a tasty, contemporary and eclectic funk perfectly catered to the modern ear. With its growing fanbase PJT seems poised to take over the airwaves but be warned: festival goers who attend the PJT show are required by law to get up and bust a move.

Salt Lake Tribune: “Utah Arts Festival invites the funk out”

This article originally appeared in the Salt Lake Tribune.

We want the funk. Give up the funk. We need the funk. We gotta have that funk.

In years past, the Utah Arts Festival has spotlighted rock, country, Americana, blues and jazz bands. This year, there’s more funk music, which makes sense since festivals become capital-F Festivals when the music is one long groove that lasts for three days.

This year, among the national headliners setting the groove will be New Orleans’ genre-hopping Stooges Brass Band, as well as bluesman Curtis Salgado, the world-music ensemble Chicago Afrobeat Project and Israeli funk-inspired guitar virtuoso Oz Noy.

While the lineup spotlights a variety of music, the bands draw upon a melting pot of soul, jazz and R&B influences, much of their music featuring a strong bass and rhythmic pulse — which is a good feeling in a crowd.

Here are some of the highlights of this year’s festival:

The Stooges Brass Band • Two weeks ago, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band showed Utah fans at Red Butte Garden what traditional New Orleans jazz sounded like.

This weekend, The Stooges Brass Band offers a fun extrapolation of the genre. The band of youthful New Orleans musicians blends experiences of growing up listening to hip-hop on the radio with traditional jazz influences. Besides the stage show tonight (8:30 p.m., Amphitheatre Stage), the Stooges Second Line will parade through the festival grounds. While second-line parades in New Orleans usually mark a funeral, this march will celebrate the rebirth of jazz, and a new kind of jazz.

“We come up in the hip-hop tradition,” said Walter “Whoadie” Ramsey, who created The Stooges Brass Band in 1996. But it wasn’t only rap that he and others listened to: There was a healthy mix of James Brown, Earth, Wind & Fire, and, of course, Parliament and Funkadelic. All of those influences can be heard during the high-intensity, high-octane stage show that The Stooges Brass Band will deliver. The band’s style of bebop meshes well with the musicians’ scatting and rapping.

The young men in the band coalesced in one of the country’s richest musical breeding grounds. “Our experience comes from French Quarter busking,” Ramsey said. “You cut your teeth in the French Quarter.”

Once the band formally began, Ramsey would lead the members on seven-mile marches throughout the streets of southern Louisiana to build their stamina. Once you can march for four hours, Ramsey said, a two-hour show is child’s play.

Curtis Salgado • One of America’s finest R&B singers and a harmonica virtuoso, Curtis Salgado won the award for Soul Blues Male Artist of the Year in 2010 at the 30th annual Blues Music Awards, and just won the same award at the 33rd annual Blues Music Awards. But the title doesn’t include one of the genres that, in part, distinguishes him from his peers.

“I’m totally into funk,” he said. “If it’s too sweet and saccharine, I can’t get into it.”

Even though he was once the lead vocalist for Santana as well as a fixture with the Robert Cray Band, the Oregon-based Salgado will always be remembered for being the muse for John Belushi’s Blues Brothers.

In 1977, Belushi was in Eugene filming “Animal House,” and the two struck up a friendship after the comedian caught Salgado’s act. Salgado began playing old records for Belushi, teaching him about blues and R&B. The first Blues Brothers album, “Briefcase Full of Blues,” is dedicated to Salgado.

But although Salgado professes a love for funk, the blues, gospel and R&B, he doesn’t like being pigeonholed. “It’s only labels,” he said. “It’s music.”

Chicago Afrobeat Project • This ensemble began in 2002 and quickly became a leader in the nontraditionalist arm of the Afrobeat movement. But it wasn’t until recently that audiences began flocking to see the band.

The rising curiosity about Afrobeat comes on the heels of the musical “Fela!,” which won critical acclaim on Broadway in 2009 and has returned this summer for a short run before an international tour. The musical is based on the life and music of the late Fela Kuti, a pioneer of Afrobeat, a genre defined as a mix of traditional Nigerian music, jazz, funk, chanted vocals and rhythmic, almost tribal percussion.

“The fact that there’s a ‘Fela!’ musical shows that there is a growing interest [in Afrobeat],” said baritone sax player Garrick Smith.

The past year has been the most successful of the band’s career, with a performance earlier this year with Seun Kuti, Fela’s son and torch-bearer, as well as being the official after-party band when the national touring show of “Fela!” opened in Chicago in March.

Up next, Smith said, is the album “N’Yash Up,” due Aug. 14, that features the group “taking contemporary artists that influenced us and giving it an Afrobeat feel.” The album includes songs from Radiohead, Taking Heads, System of a Down, Led Zeppelin and Marvin Gaye. “Motown lends itself to Afrobeat sound,” Garrick said.

Oz Noy • The guitarist moved from Israel to New York in 1996 and has become a respected part of the jazz scene with a musical style that draws upon Western inspirations such as pop, rock, blues and funk. Having performed, toured and recorded with Harry Belafonte, Toni Braxton and Cyndi Lauper, Noy will be performing for the first time in Utah. In a phone interview, he repeatedly returned to the word “groove.” “I like groove,” he said. “I like funk grooves better than other grooves.”

Noy originally moved to America because “all the music I liked, like jazz, was from here,” he said. As soon as he arrived in New York, he was advised that to be able to play grooves, he needed to play alongside the musicians who appeared on landmark records with first-class drumming — rather than just playing along to the record. So he sought out and eventually played with Anton Fig, Keith Carlock and Mike Clark.

You might think he would be influenced by Middle Eastern music since he lived in Israel until he was 16. “I don’t really like Middle Eastern music,” he explained. “I grew up there, so I know what it is.”

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Utah Arts Festival

Where • Library Square, 200 East and 400 South, Salt Lake City

When • Thursday through Sunday, June 21-24

Hours • Noon to 11 p.m.

Admission • $10 for adults, $5 for seniors (65 and older), free for kids 12 and younger. A four-day pass is $30. A lunchtime special offers $5 tickets for Thursday and Friday from noon to 3 p.m. A “y’all come back” pass, available at the exits, is good for 2-for-1 admission on a return visit.

Information • Visit www.uaf.org.

Stooges Brass Band

When • Friday, 8:30 p.m.

Where • Amphitheater Stage

In addition • Stooges Brass Band parades, Friday from 5 to 5:30 p.m. and 6 to 6:30 p.m. through festival grounds

Curtis Salgado

When • Friday, 9:45 p.m.

Where • Amphitheater Stage

Oz Noy

When • Saturday, 9 p.m.

Where • Park Stage

Chicago Afrobeat Project

When • Sunday, 8:30 p.m.

Where • Amphitheater Stage

 

 

 

Getting Out: “AFROBEAT RHYTHMS HELP CLOSE OUT UTAH ARTS FESTIVAL”

The Chicago AfroBeat Project’s baritone sax man Garrick Smith is looking forward to coming back to the Utah Arts Festival with his band this weekend.

“Last time we were there, we had a blast,” said Smith, calling from his home base in Chicago. “It was a really good time with a fantastic crowd. They danced their butts off.”

But then, Smith enjoys playing art festivals, as much for the opportunity that they give him and his cohorts to soak in a little culture of their own, as well as the opportunity to play for an open-minded crowd.

“These things are not only good for the people who come to witness it, but we also get to see things we never see. Sometimes, on the road, you don’t necessarily see much outside of the van. It’s very nice to just spend a little time, take in a little culture, and take in some of the acts. Plus, you never know who you’ll run into at these things.”

One time, Smith remembers, they met a Latin band out of Columbia, Mo.

“And I hate to say this, but we were like, ‘Eh, they’ll be passable.’ But no — they were killer. They brought it for real! Those kinds of surprises are wonderful.”

The Chicago AfroBeat Project plays on Sunday, the final day of the festival.

Fela and company

The Chicago AfroBeat Project came to be about 10 years ago. At that time, AfroBeat, which is loosely defined as a combination of Yoruba music, jazz, highlife, call-and-response and chants, was not well-known in this country.

Nor was its founding father, Nigerian Fela Kuti, who coined the term after a tour in the United States in 1970.

“It really was a project, like the name said, at the beginning,” said Smith. “People were kind of coming in and out of the group, depending who was around. As we started to play and write some more tunes, the lineup kind of coalesced. We also have some outlying members, and some percussion players who we can add in. But then, that is the beauty of being in a music city like Chicago. You have multiple, quality players to choose from, capable of playing at the level we need them to — and often at short notice.”

Smith was turned on to Kuti and AfroBeat by the band’s trombonist, Mark Thompson.

“I wish I could say that I was listening to this before everyone, but I wasn’t,” said Smith. “I was listening to Brazilian stuff, and some reggae and ska, but I hadn’t really touched on the African diaspora. … I wasn’t hip to Fela yet. When Mark turned me onto him. I was amazed, and I could not believe I was not familiar with this stuff.”

Times have changed since. From a handful of American AfroBeat bands scattered across the country have arisen many, in most urban areas, said Smith. And in 2009, a Broadway musical called “Fela!” celebrating the musician’s life, was a roaring success.

“You know what I think is great about these days?” said Smith. “You can actually show people the YouTube videos instead of just going, ‘Dude, this is so awesome.’ No — now you can go, ‘Watch, and be amazed.’ ”

AfroBeat mash

The band went in a bit different direction for its new album, “Nyash UP!,” which they will be bringing with them to Salt Lake City.

“What we have here is a bunch of songs of other genres done in the AfroBeat style,” said Smith. “And yes, some of them are actual mash-ups.”

For instance, the band musically joined Kuti’s “Just Like That” with Radiohead’s “I Might Be Wrong.”

“We also did ‘What’s Goin’ On,’ the Marvin Gaye song. We did a Talking Heads tune, and we got some free jazz on there.”

Smith said there have been some changes in the music since they were last in Salt Lake City.

“We’ve added a little bit of hip-hop. We’ve added an MC, Square Black, out in front, and there might be a little more indie rock mixed in there, too.

“AfroBeat, for us, is really more of a springboard. One in a while, we throw in a Fela cover, but more often than not, we are really trying to come up with something original with the style.”

PREVIEW

WHO: Chicago AfroBeat Project

  • WHEN: 8:30 p.m. Sunday, June 24
  • WHERE: Utah Arts Festival, Amphitheater Stage, Library Square at 400 East and 400 South.
  • TICKETS: Included with admission to the festival, which is $10, $5/weekday lunchtime admission, $5/seniors, free/age 12 and younger, $30/four-day pass