The Afrobeat Blog: “Chicago Afrobeat Project at Drom-August 9, 2008”

This article originally appeared on The Afrobeat Blog on 08/14/08.

The Chicago Afrobeat project lit up the stage at Drom Saturday night when they brought their midwest afroswing to the east village club on the back end of nationwide tour that took them west to California and Colorado before coming to the east coast. The seven-piece ensemble was joined onstage by two dancers from the Muntu Dance Theater of Chicago during the second set at which point the show went from a dope band laying down some beats to a spectacular audio-visual presentation that doesn’t come around very often.

The Chicago Afrobeat Project got their start playing parties in the Chicago loft scene and has been touring the country spreading their politically charged Afrobeat message for the last six years. Their sound encompasses a wide range of influences and styles including jazz, funk, rock, afro-cuban, and West African highlife and juju. Perhaps the most prevalent sound in their arsenal is the soulful jazz element supplied by Kevin Ford on Fender Rhodes piano and David Glines on guitar. They both emphasize a light, jazzy style that cuts across the heavy percussion and bass arrangement and provides a perfect backdrop over which the horns glide.

(A) Move to Silent Unrest, the band’s second full-length album, came out last year and exhibits the same range and variety as their live show; they have the ability to do deep, slower, jazzy songs, and then switch up the pace with an aggressive, faster, more hard-driving cut. Their rhythm section composed of Thad Landis on bass, George Jones on congas and percussion, and Marshall Greenhouse on trap drums, know how to move a party. Greenhouse especially can drum himself into a frenzy, sometimes bearing a resemblance to Animal from the Muppet Show.

The Chicago Afrobeat Project have an unparalleled live performance that features beautiful African dancers, polyrhythmic percussion sessions, and nasty soloists. They make it to the east coast a couple times a year, so definitely check them out when you get the chance. I highly recommend picking up their album in the meantime, especially if you’re looking for something to play at your next dance party.

The Valley-Journal: “37th Mountain Fair delivers musical flair”

This article originally appeared in The Valley-Journal on 07/24/08.

From high school rockers, gypsy jammers and Gospel singers to Chicago funk, Columbian Vallenatto and Boulder folk, the 37th annual Carbondale Mountain Fair has it all when it comes to musical entertainment.

Best yet, it’s all free in Sopris Park starting Friday evening, July 25, and continuing through Sunday, July 27. Here’s a sampling of the weekend’s offerings.

For a full schedule of music and other Fair happenings, see the official Mountain Fair Guide inside this edition of The Valley Journal, or pick up a copy at the park entrances.

At 5 p.m. Friday things get rocking and rolling in a big way with the up-and-coming Aspen trio Slightly White. These high schoolers, multi-year winners of the local Battle of the Bands contest, have been playing since before middle school, and have opened for the likes of the Dave Mason Band, Joe Cocker and Little Feat.

Two band members, Obadiah Jones and Cooper Means, have been playing together since they were 6, and performing live since they were 7, when they won the Carbondale Talent Show with an original song called “Time.”

The trio, which now includes Miles Phillips, has been together since 2003. Learn more about them at www.slightlywhite.com.

After that, it’s Latin, American style, as Cerronato takes the stage at 7 p.m. Friday.

Cerronato takes its inspiration from the Vallenato tradition of coastal Colombia. Interspersing various Vallenato approaches with cumbia, the Texas quintet’s debut album “De Músico, Poeta, y Loco” was met with rave reviews. More about them at www.cerronato.com.

The funky sounds of Chicago are going to be prominent on the stage this weekend with two bands in particular — Bumpus (Saturday, 7 p.m.), described as an unusually groovy sound for central Colorado (www.bumpusweb.com); and the Chicago AfroBeat Project (Sunday, 5 p.m.) The band tours using used veggie oil and other green methods to minimize their carbon footprint, too. More about them at www.chicagoafrobeatproject.com.

The Fishtank Ensemble (Saturday, 2 p.m.) brings a mix of traditional and original songs. They’re described as “the rompin’, stompin’ leaders of cross-pollinated Gypsy music.” More about them atwww.fishtankensemble.com.

At 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Lipbone Redding shakes things up with his New Orleans-style dance-hall music and ’70s soul.

Boulder singer-songwriter Kort McCumber leads the folk-bluegrass band McCumberland Gap (Sunday, 1 p.m.). A classically trained pianist & cellist (he learned from his mom, Joy Myers, who played for the Jacksonville Symphony for more than two decades) McCumber now plays guitar, mandolin, banjo, harmonica, piano, bouzouki, cello and more. He writes, plays and sings Americana — equal parts folk, country, blues and bluegrass (www.kortmusic.com).

The sound will switch to rock and roll after that, when Nelson Oldham’s local band, the Redtones, take over at 5 p.m. Owner .of Dos Gringos Burritos in Carbondale, Oldham is both a friend and fan of the Band of Heathens, a group that performed last year at Mountain Fair. And, while the same band is never booked twice for the event, the Heathens will be in town and performing at Steve’s Guitars on Sunday night. But, they may just pop by the gazebo to play with the Redtones. Might want to be there for that one.

Continuing in the folk-bluegrass vein, The Clumsy Lovers (Sunday, 7 p.m.) come from the Pacific Northwest to close out the fair, which is traditionally one of the highlights of the entire weekend. More about this band atwww.clumsylovers.com

Synthesis.net: “CAbP: Across the West in Search of Rhythm and Veggie Oil”

This article originally appeared on Synthesis.net.

Chicago Afrobeat Project is just that. A mélange of musicians, dancers and more from this Chicago-based, Fela-inspired collective. Although they’ve been under the moniker since 2002, their debut album didn’t drop until 2005. Their second full-length, (A) Move to Silent Unrest was released late last year and is drawing people even closer to the primal appeal of Afrobeat.

Synthesis got a chance to speak with tenor sax player Angelo Garcia while the band was on the road somewhere between Bozeman, Montana, and Boise, Idaho. They had just finished the first show of the tour in Missoula, and checked in with minimal sleep from their new veggie-oil fueled bus.

CAbP has recently been making more of a western swing in an effort to spread the beat. They are returning to the hills and valleys of NorCal with repeat visits to Redding’s Marketfest, followed up with two days in Quincy for the High Sierra Music Festival. The rest of the tour takes them through Utah; a nice run through Cali with a notable stop at Yoshi’s in San Francisco, Colorado, a little Pennsylvania for kicks and back home to Chicago.

They range in size from a traveling seven to nine-piece, with as many horns as they can find, to a much more dynamic 14-piece with traditional African dancers. However, as with any rhythm, more instrumentation can lead to a much deeper level. This can especially be the case if the additional players are extremely talented. Take Fareed Haque for example.

For lack of a ridiculously long hyphenation, let’s just say Haque is a guitar virtuoso. Besides leading Garaj Mahal and his own group, and teaching music at Northwestern University, Haque finds time to sit in. Not only does he play with CAbP, he can also be found on the group’s self-titled debut on “BMW.” This should give one an idea of the talent pool contained within Chicago Afrobeat Project.

“Dave Glines our guitar player wanted to bring in Fared to solo over [on the first album], so we just got in contact and he came in the studio,” said Garcia.

It is this sense of collaboration that is one of the ensemble’s strongest characteristics. All members come from varied musical backgrounds, drawing on the experience and talent of each other and the Chicago music scene. For example, they recently hosted a benefit with dancers from Chicago’s Muntu Dance Theatre, Hauqe, Master talking drummer T.J. Okulnola, break dancers, emcees and visual artists all sharing the stage.

“We do a lot of those at least once a year,” said Garcia when asked about the frequency of the multi-artist benefits shows. “We did one back in 2006 in Brooklyn. I think it was Fela’s birthday. We had a bunch of different afrobeat bands there.”

To the casual listener, Afrobeat may share some sonic qualities of dread-named jam bands. There may be long extended songs and sets with polyrhythmic interludes leading some to think it’s some sort of impromptu noodling; but make no mistake, Afrobeat is very structured and demanding on the players, and CAbP put in the work producing their own take on a reemerging well source of music. Smearing genres and media lines like a fresh mark from a new Sharpie, CAbP mixes the traditional with the current and more by intimately incorporating funk, jazz and hip-hop.

It is precisely this genre bending that creates something unique. The integration of hip-hop, Afro-Cuban, Brazilian and Nigerian High Life creates a decidedly more dance-oriented approach to a typically political genre. It’s easy to see how they are quickly gaining appreciation.

The group would do equally well at any world music, jazz, or “hippie” festival and has, playing several times at Summer Camp in Illinois along with groups like The Roots, George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic, The Flaming Lips and Hot Buttered Rum. They played Wakarusa Music Festival earlier this June, and have played High Sierra in the past.

“Wakarusa was awesome,” said Gracia. “For a playing a noon time slot there was a lot of people up and moving around.”

When the group played at last year’s Marketfest in Redding, the temperature on stage hit 130 degrees.

“That was pretty harsh,” said Garcia. “I drank a lot of water and kept myself hydrated but our drummer moves a lot more and he almost passed out. It was pretty close; we were kinda worried. We didn’t want to cancel a show.”

Although the band may be weary of the heat and fires out here, CAbP is excited to return.

Not only does the group dig seriously deep into rhythm and everything else that makes you move your body, they also believe strongly in supporting humanitarian efforts. Aside from playing benefits, the band makes the extra effort of donating proceeds from recording to humanitarian groups.

This perspective extends both globally and locally with CAbP contributing to relief funds as well as converting their tour bus to veggie oil.

“It’s really cool to drive on free fuel and not have to support the oil industry or support a war revolving around oil,” explained Garcia. “It’s just really cool driving up to a restaurant and sucking out their waste. Right now we’re working with Chicago biofuel; they are gonna help us with getting our oil. They’re non-profit and were gonna help them get the word out. The cool thing is since we did this we hope we make more people in Chicago aware of the veggie fuel; possibly think about that for the environment and be free from oil.”