[acid-jazz] COTC: Our Boyz Are Makin Some Noize?

From: Bob Davis (earthjuice_at_prodigy.net)
Date: 2003-10-29 02:49:37

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    _________________________

    Good Golly Miss Molly

    I'm lovin this kinda stuff...

    --------------------------------------------------------
    Children On The Corner's new CD called "Rebirth" is starting to make a move.
    Last week alone over 600 people listened (via Soul-Patrol.Net Radio) to some of the prime cuts
    from the CD and learned about it's historical importance/connecttion with the original 1972
    Jazz-Funk classic "On The Corner" (Miles Davis) LP.

    'CHILDREN ON THE CORNER' S REBIRTH
    A reunion of the 1970s MILES DAVIS BAND
    http://www.soul-patrol.net/cotc.ram
    _
    Michael Henderson: bass, Ndugu Chancleor (drums), Barry Finnerty (guitar), Sonny Fortune
    (sax/flute), Badal Roy (tablas), Michael Wolff (keys)
    _
    <a href="http://www.soul-patrol.net/cotc.ram"> Listen to A reunion of the 1970s MILES DAVIS
    BAND </a>
    --------------------------------------------------------

    --------------------------------------------------------
    We also know that a relativly large number of Soul-Patrollers have clicked on our link to the
    OFFICIAL Children On The Corner website:
    THE RELEASE OF CHILDREN ON THE CORNER  REBIRTH, featuring a reunion of the 1970s MILES
    DAVIS BAND: Michael Henderson: bass, Ndugu Chancleor: drums, Barry Finnerty: guitar, Sonny
    Fortune: sax, flute, Badal Roy: tablas, Michael Wolff: keys, a band that I have personally
    seen perform these songs LIVE about a year ago in Los Angeles California
    Buy it out online at:
     http://www.davisind.com/redirect/?d=newsletter_cotc
    <a href="http://www.soul-patrol.net/cotc.ram"> MORE INFO ON THE RELEASE OF CHILDREN ON THE
    CORNER  REBIRTH </a>
    --------------------------------------------------------
    We also know that there are some commercial "jazz" radio stations that are adding the CD to
    their playlists...
    --------------------------------------------------------

    Now here is a review from All About Jazz!

    What's next, (dare I say "Downbeat Magazine"?)
    :)
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/news.php?id=2876
    Bassist Michael Henderson and other Miles Davis Alumni Join Forces in Children on the Corner -
    Their Debut Live Recording 'Rebirth' on Sonance Records
    2003-10-27

     Following a rash of acclaimed digitally re-mastered reissues on the Columbia/Legacy label, a
    new wave of interest has been sparked in Miles Davis' most volatile and controversial period,
    the electrified '70s. Now -- 30 or so years after the fact -- a number of respected Miles
    alumni have joined forces to recreate and reinterpret this intensely visceral and highly
    provocative groove-oriented, rock-tinged jazz. Billed as Children On The Corner (a sly
    reference to Miles' groundbreaking 1972 studio recording, On The Corner), they are now
    spreading Miles' edgiest, most unabashedly electrified music in clubs, concert halls and
    festivals around the world. Their debut release, Rebirth hits the streets on October 7th from
    Sonance Records. A whole new audience who missed out on this fiercely uncompromising sound the
    first time around can now picking up on what Michael Henderson and his crew are putting down.

    Alongside saxophonist Sonny Fortune (a Miles alum from 1974 who appeared on Big Fun, Agharta,
    Pangaea and Get Up With It), tabla player Badal Roy (who played a key role on 1972's On The
    Corner), drummer Ndugu Chancler (who toured Europe with Miles for one month in 1971 as a sub
    for Jack DeJohnette), guitarist Barry Finnerty (who played on Miles' 1981 comeback album The
    Man With The Horn) and keyboardist Michael Wolff (who although he never played with Miles
    Davis was hugely influenced by Miles' electric years, as evidenced by his 2001 release,
    Intoxicate), Henderson conjures up some of the same bubbling, subversive and influential
    grooves that shook up the world 30-some years ago. On Rebirth, a live set recorded at the
    renowned Oakland, California jazz spot, Yoshi's, the music sounds as ferocious now as it did
    back in the day.

    The exemplary ensemble fires off tunes from Miles' fusion canon. Included are fiery
    interpretations of Josef Zawinul's Directions from the Davis LP of the same name and New
    York Girl and Black Satin from On the Corner. In addition to some incendiary tracks culled
    from live collective improvisation are two pieces by Michael Wolff that capture the spirit and
    vibe that these Miles alumni bring to this music that so influenced their individual musical
    journeys.

    Henderson, the one-time Motown session bass player was recruited into the ranks of Miles
    Davis' most turbulent ensemble in 1970 during a series of jam-oriented recording sessions that
    ended up on A Tribute to Jack Johnson. Davis, a pugilist himself, recorded this soundtrack for
    an obscure documentary film on the life and times of the audacious heavyweight boxing champion
    from the early 1900s. Henderson would remain with Miles through 1975, appearing on such
    groundbreaking recordings as Live/Evil, On The Corner, Get Up With It, Agharta, Pangaea and
    Dark Magus. He described his duties with Miles during those turbulent but productive years:
    He basically wanted me to just keep it funky. When I was with Stevie Wonder, that's what I
    did. Stevie Wonder was pretty funky his damn self so he didn't need nobody to keep it funky,
    but when I was with him, that's what we played...funk. And Miles wanted that, too. He wanted
    me to give him bass lines that were memorable. Nothing too busy, just solid stuff. Heavy
    groove. Something that you can remember. He wanted to get into having hit records.

    Taking his cues from two reigning black pop stars of the day -- Sly Stone and Jimi Hendrix --
    Miles became intent on purveying groove music, but with his own unique twist that incorporated
    bits of free jazz, Indian classical music, Afro-Cuban percussion and searing rock decibels on
    top. Henderson played a key role in Davis' plan by remaining the rock steady anchor in the
    fray, the deeply-rooted fulcrum upon which everything pivoted. His deep-toned ostinatos and
    vamps provided a kind of hypnotic glue that brought all the parts -- no matter how turbulent
    and potentially chaotic they might become -- together into a cohesive yet kinetic whole.
    That's what he hired me for, says Henderson, to come in and take control and to keep it
    there. In fact, that was my job with everybody I worked with before Miles, just to come in and
    keep it solid. Miles definitely knew what he wanted, always.

    Striking out on his own in 1976, when Miles went into a self-imposed exile, Henderson went on
    to gain international renown as a singer-songwriter-producer who wrote and performed on
    several Top 10 hits, including Norman Connors' Grammy-winning You Are My Starship and his
    own 1980 hit Wide Receiver. He recorded as a solo artist for Buddah Records from 1976 to
    1983 and later recorded duets with singers Phyllis Hyman, Bobby Womack and Johnnie Taylor.
    Since forming Children on the Corner in 2002, Henderson has watched the band gel naturally
    through the age-old process of gigging.

    We're growing, just like Miles' band from those earlier years did over time. We've been out
    there hitting it and there's something very special happening for us right now. At first it
    was a struggle to get this band back on the scene but it seems very timely that this project
    is coming out now. It's going to strike up a whole other thing, maybe help stir up interest in
    Miles music of that period. To pull this project off successfully, it was just a question of
    getting the right people involved, going through the material from that period and doing it
    right. I just feel blessed that we got the right cats for this project and that we're putting
    this music out there again. Now's the time.

    Lest anyone misunderstand, Michael is quick to point out, This ain't no smooth jazz. Don't
    come to hear us and get ready to eat your steak and sit there and have a conversation with
    your old lady. It ain't happenin'. Because when we hit the stage, we mean business. We're
    going for the throat.

    The sheer visceral power that Michael Henderson helped unleash in Miles Davis' most
    provocative and electrified ensemble from the 1970s is still reverberating around the world.
    And it's found a new home in Children On The Corner, the keepers of that volatile flame. Hear
    them explode out of the gate and stretch to the stratosphere on Rebirth, their incendiary
    debut on Sonance Records, a label specializing in live recordings from an eclectic variety of
    bands from all genres.

     _________
    Bob Davis
    <a href="http://www.soul-patrol.com"> SOUL-PATROL.COM </a>
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    Email: <a href="mailto:earthjuice_at_prodigy.net"> earthjuice_at_prodigy.net </a>
    _________________________
    'CHILDREN ON THE CORNER' – REBIRTH
    A reunion of the 1970’s MILES DAVIS BAND
    http://www.soul-patrol.net/cotc.ram
    _
    Michael Henderson: bass, Ndugu Chancleor (drums), Barry Finnerty (guitar), Sonny Fortune
    (sax/flute), Badal Roy (tablas), Michael Wolff (keys)
    _
    <a href="http://www.soul-patrol.net/cotc.ram"> A reunion of the 1970’s MILES DAVIS BAND </a>