New World/Folk/Roots duo Bethany & Rufus along with Fulani flutist Yacouba
Moumouni and Afro Haitian drummer 'Bonga' Jean-Baptiste will release a new
CD, entitled "Live A Fip" on October 22, 2009. The Bethany & Rufus Roots
Quartet "Live A Fip" CD features 12 tracks, and will debut in Europe on the
Daqui Records label.
The "Live A Fip" CD release was a natural extension of Bethany & Rufus'
collaborations with Jean-Baptiste and Moumouni. Bethany & Rufus, who share
the same label with Moumouni, also shared the stage with him for one song
during the 10th anniversary celebration of Daqui Records. They knew
instantly that their political beliefs and musical chemistry would bond
them together, catapulting them forward with continued performances. The
trio became a quartet when 'Bonga' Jean-Baptiste was invited to perform
with them the following summer at Les Nuits Atypique. During a promotional
radio spot for the festival on Radio France in March 2009, the quartet was
asked to perform live on the Live A Fip radio series, and the rest is
history.
The Bethany & Rufus Roots Quartet's Live A Fip CD's strength lies not just
in each artist's singular talents, but in their capacity to combine their
abilities in a way that complements each member of the group to bring about
a sound that is unique and groundbreaking, while incorporating concerns
about global injustices, violence, and inequalities. Live A Fip is the
product of a world where people and societies are interconnected,
converging, and in turmoil.
One reviewer describes "Live A Fip," as "like nothing you've ever heard
before. Styles from everywhere and anywhere come together seamlessly. One
hears distinctly Afro-Cuban rhythms pop under driving bass lines, folksy
lyrics and screaming flute. "Death Don't Have No Mercy" is particularly
characteristic of this mixing and meshing. The cello is inescapably funky,
the bongos complexify the rhythms, the flute line seethes with fiery
reverberance, and Bethany's vocals lament the world in a way that only
American folk music can."
Bethany Yarrow's voice has a deep resonance, a profound yearning that
blends perfectly with the earthy sound of her band. Perhaps her voice
sounds so good in this group because all of the instruments have a
distinctly vocal quality about them. Yacouba Moumouni's flute imparts an
especially human sound, a personification of woody vibrations that conjure
images of life in its rawest form. 'Bonga' Jean-Baptiste's rhythms are
complex and gel with Rufus Cappadocia's funky bass lines. Cappadocia's
sound is also unique. His five string cello sound is rich in overtones that
compound the earthiness of the group, and Yacouba's chants send shivers
through your spine.
The whole album feels alive and growing. These are the sounds of life
piercing a dry and crusted earth, its roots twisting and crawling,
crackling and snapping. This music transcends the genres in which it finds
its origins. It's not roots music, or blues, or funk, or jazz. While it
contains elements of all of those styles, it is also unmistakably new and
impossible to characterize in the traditional musical panacea. This pure,
vibrating, swelling sound is open and honest. The Quartet is sincere and
their music, all recorded live, makes you feel what they feel. This is an
original and refreshing CD.
Click on the following link to listen to some of the tracks from the
Bethany & Rufus Roots Quartet "Live A Fip" CD:
http://bethanyandrufus.musicdish.net/
About Bethany Yarrow
Bethany is the daughter of Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul and Mary - one of
the leading groups of the American folk movement. Peter, literally a living
"memory-man" of American songs, considers himself as much a political
activist as a musician. He sees music as a way of bringing people together,
of reaching into their hearts and dissolving prejudices, to create a common
humanity. Bethany has maintained this vision in her music as well... even
when it was rock music. Today, her voice reflects all the nuances of
America: Europeans, African Americans, Native Americans, and other
immigrant cultures - because for Bethany, the United States of America is a
mix of all these things.
In 2003, Bethany released her debut CD, entitled "Rock Island", to amazing
(and amazed) reviews. Beautifully produced by Kevin Salem (Mercury Rev, Bad
Brains, Chocolate Genius) and Knox Chandler (David Gahan, Siouxsie & the
Banshees), the CD mixed the gloss of pop production with banjos, dulcimers,
harmonicas, slide guitars, gospel choirs, and the sampled ghosts of some of
the great blues singers in America. In totally unexpected ways, Bethany
took traditional slave lullabies, prison songs, and murder ballads, and
turned them into grooving electronic pop for a new generation.
Bethany's brand of folk has certainly struck a chord across the country,
and ears are beginning to perk up noticeably… HBO recently featured her
version of "Black is the Color" in their series Cat House, and listeners
have been knocked out by her "fascinating" and "dramatic" interpretations.
Her voice has been called, "mesmerizing", "intense", "powerful",
"spell-binding"…. "A cross between PJ Harvey and Annie Lennox… Dido and
Grace Slick…" Bethany has been dubbed a "musical medium", crossing genres
and time, and in re-inventing these deeply American songs, Bethany has not
only taken them into the future, she has made them deeply her own.
About Rufus Cappadocia
Rufus Cappadocia comes from Canada, where he studied the Japanese Suzuki
method of learning music by ear, after which he trained classically with
the Czech cello master Zdenick Konicek. But Rufus, who now lives in New
York, says that he plays the folkloric music of New York; in other words,
music from around the world: the Middle East, Asia, Africa, the
Caribbean...
About Yacouba Moumouni
Yacouba Moumouni is a singer and flautist, leader of the jazz-ethnic band
from Niger, Mamar Kassey. Moumouni is probably the best known Nigerien
musician outside the country, and is much beloved in his home country.
Mastering the traditional flute, he joined the Ballet National of Niger
and then formed Mamar Kassey, an eight man group featuring Moumouni and
guitarist Abdallah Alhassane. Together they have toured West Africa,
Europe, and the United States, and have become the most popular musical
group in Niger.
In 1986 Yacouba accepted an invitation to join the traditional band Zongo.
Together, they toured and performed in Korea, Libya, Algeria, and West
Africa. Transferring to Orchestre Takeda, the house band at the musical
academy Centre de Formation et de Promotion Musicale (CFPM), in 1990,
Yacouba was mentored by the group's director and lead guitarist, Abdoulaye
Alhassane. He remained with the band for five years. Together with other
CFPM musicians, including Ahlassane, Yacouba formed Mamar Kassey in 1995.
The band's debut album, Alatoumi, released in 1999 on the French Daqui
label, was followed by Denke-Denke two years later.
About 'Bonga' Jean-Baptiste
Gaston Jean-Baptiste, known as "Bonga", is a musical virtuoso who has been
performing and studying traditional Haitian drum, dance and song since the
age of seven. He began playing drums in his family's peristil in his
hometown of Croix-des-Mission in La Plaine, an area of Haiti known for
culture and history.
Bonga is regarded as a master of the Afro Haitian drum, sought-after for
his extensive repertoire of pan-African rhythms. A dynamic performer,
accompanist, session player and educator, Bonga works on stage, in the
recording studio, and in educational settings. He is one of the few drum
experts and craftsmen outside of Haiti who continues to build traditional
drums using techniques that are centuries old.
As a core member of the seminal Haitian roots bands, Boukman Eksperyans
and Foula, Bonga was invited to the U.S. in the '90s when musicians were
becoming a strong voice for the Haitian people. Since then, Bonga has
continued to play solo and in ensemble and at numerous worldwide venues. He
is a featured performer with Peter Yarrow, Grace Jones, Dan Zanes and Urban
Tap, to mention a few. His drums opened the NY premiere of the Rolling
Stones "Voodoo Lounge" tour and he is prominently featured on recordings by
Wyclef Jean and Salif Keita.
Bonga's first CD, Kanzo (2000), incorporates elements of jazz, blues, and
funk to create a dynamic version of mizik rasin. The recording features Lou
Reed, bassist Fernando Saunders, and trumpeter Frank London. Bonga's second
CD, Ayiti Afrika (2006), received critical acclaim.
To request mp3 tracks for review as well as interview requests,
contact:
Eric de Fontenay
MusicDish
bethanyrufus@musicdish.net
+1 718 278 0662
About bethanyandrufus
"Stunning." (Goldmine Magazine) "Remarkable." (Jazz Times) "The real deal."
(Allmusic). "Extraordinary... Brilliant" (All About Jazz)
Having recently returned from the Festival Daoula in Bamako, Mali; Bethany
& Rufus have expanded their group formation to include Yacouba Moumouni
(Niger) and Haitian Percussionist 'Bonga' Jean-Baptiste. The expanded group
came into being on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of their Label
Daqui. Yacouba was appearing with his ground breaking group from Niger,
Mamar Kassey, on the same stage as Bethany and Rufus . Yacouba joined
Bethany & Rufus for one of the songs and the rest is the kind of magic
chemistry that can never be planed. The following summer the expanded group
along with Bonga was invited to perform at Les Nuits Atypique and while
doing a promotional spot on Radio France for the festival they were invited
to perform on the Live a FIP radio series in March of 2009 that will be
released as a Live CD September 10 2009 as a co- production with Radio
France and Daqui Records. It was in the process of rehearsing that the
group really came into focus. Bethany as the daughter of legendary 60's
Folk singer Peter Yarrow (Peter , Paul & Mary) draws from the many songs
that her father collected as part of the seminal folk movement of the 60s.
Yacouba has dug deeply into the folkloric Hausa, Djerma, Peul and Songhai
traditions of Niger and Bonga is the descendant of a very rich lineage of
Vodou ceremonial drumming and song. Bonga has also traveled extensively
through Haiti collecting and learning the different manifestations of
Haitian song and folklore. Rufus has taken the cello into previously
unknown realms and is noted for his collaborations in African, Arabic, and
American music forms and also has a solo CD Songs for Cello on the Daqui
label. Individually all of the members of the group have been instrumental
in expanding the role of traditional forms in their respective musics. It
is with this background that they have come together to create a sound that
although based around the song forms of American traditional music reaches
back to a common root that has inspired everyone involved.
Bethany Yarrow
In 2003, Bethany released her debut CD, entitled "Rock Island", to amazing
(and amazed) reviews. Beautifully produced by Kevin Salem (Mercury Rev, Bad
Brains, Chocolate Genius) and Knox Chandler (David Gahan, Siouxsie & the
Banshees), the CD mixed the gloss of pop production with banjos, dulcimers,
harmonicas, slide guitars, gospel choirs, and the sampled ghosts of some of
the great blues singers in America. In totally unexpected ways, Bethany
took traditional slave lullabies, prison songs, and murder ballads, and
turned them into grooving electronic pop for a new generation. Bethany's
brand of folk has certainly struck a chord across the country, and ears are
beginning to perk up noticeably... HBO recently featured her version of
"Black is the Color" in their series Cat House, and listeners have been
knocked out by her "fascinating" and "dramatic" interpretations. Her voice
has been called, "mesmerizing", "intense", "powerful", "spell-binding"....
"A cross between PJ Harvey and Annie Lennox... Dido and Grace Slick..."
Bethany has been dubbed a "musical medium", crossing genres and time, and
in re-inventing these deeply American songs, Bethany has not only taken
them into the future, she has made them deeply her own. Although Bethany
has dedicated herself to music for the past several years, she started out
as a documentary filmmaker. In between her junior and senior years at
college, Bethany was awarded a fellowship to go to South Africa to make a
documentary about the women in the townships outside of Cape Town. What
emerged was the award-winning film, "Mama Awethu!", which aired nationally
on PBS and won numerous prizes at film festivals around the world including
the the Sundance, Berlin, Human Rights Watch, and Bombay Film Festivals. "I
never planned on being a filmmaker," says Bethany. "I just had something to
say, and it seemed like film was the best way to tell that story. Sometimes
music is not the best vehicle. But right now the story I want to tell is in
music. Maybe one day, when I have another story that needs telling, I'll
make another film, but for the moment, making music is more than enough
work!"
Rufus Cappadocia
"I've studied a lot of different musical vocabularies," Rufus Cappadocia
explains. "And I've played with musicians literally from around the world.
But, in the end, music all comes down to a single source. You can be pulled
this way or that, but essentially it all converges on the same location.
Every doorway leads back to one place." He pauses before adding with a
laugh, "I guess you could say my whole life has been an attempt at getting
to that place." Meet cellist Rufus Cappadocia, a multi-lingual musician,
performer, composer and recording artist of incredible range and diversity.
From the modalities of Middle Eastern, West African and pan-European folk
forms to blues, rock and jazz along the way, adding elements American
roots, Mediterranean textures, and Caribbean percussion for good measure,
Cappadocia's effortless and natural embrace of all music is awe-inspiring.
A native of Hamilton, Ontario, Cappadocia picked up his first cello at the
age of three, but to call him a prodigy is to miss the point. "I've always
had a problematic relationship with my instrument," he muses. "It's been
the essential means of expression for me, but the standard career paths it
can lead you down leave a lot to be desired." Cappadocia realized early on
that the strictures of classical music couldn't come close to capturing the
soaring sounds he heard in his head. "The first time I ever heard a walking
bass line, something stirred deep inside. When I heard B.B. King's 'The
Thrill Is Gone' for the first time, I actually wept. It was like suddenly
discovering that I hadn't been alone all that time." Cappadocia moved to
Montreal to attend McGill University, where he spent hours in its library's
ethno-musicology department, discovering everything from the Pygmy chants
of the West African rain forest to vintage Bulgarian folk recordings. "It
was a tremendously productive time," he enthuses. "I was learning Hendrix
and Coltrane riffs note-for-note. I got deeply in the city's progressive
jazz scene and developed and built a solid-body five string electric cello,
so I could hold my own with other electric instruments. Eventually I'd hook
it up to a battery and play on the streets and in the subway stations."
Leaving school, Cappadocia relocated to Europe, where his busking landed
him in Southern France and, eventually, Spain, where he was first exposed
to the mix of Romish and Arabic influences that reached their apotheosis in
Flamenco. "I used it all," he says. "The slapping techniques on the guitar;
the way the dance steps carried the rhythms. It was all part of a search
for something, even if I didn't know exactly what I was looking for." That
search would subsequently lead him to New York where he set up a more or
less permanent base, intent, in his words, "on playing with as many
different musicians as I could. If my travels had taught me anything, it
was the value of playing with other artists." In short order Cappadocia
joined the multi-faceted jazz ensemble, The Paradox Trio, though the
nomadic artist was embraced by virtually every artist and musical community
he sought out, including such widely assorted musicians as Celtic pioneer
Seamus Eagan and master Haitian drummer "Bonga" Jean-Baptiste with the
Voodoo Drums of Haiti; musical polymath Ross Daly, who was instrumental in
introducing Cappadocia to Middle Eastern and Balkan music; Vishal Vaid, a
virtuoso Indian Ghazal vocalist and guitarist David Fiuczynski, with whom
he formed the Eastern Modal fusion group, Kif. Add to this list such
marquee names as Aretha Franklin, Odetta, Cheick Tidiane Seck, and Vernon
Reid, former guitarist of Living Color - all of whom Cappadocia has worked
with - and his reputation as a world-class artist with a world-spanning
musical reach makes perfect sense. And, like that list, it's a reputation
that continues to grow as the cellist forges new alliances in the most
unlikely musical domains. Which, in the final analysis, is the whole point.
"I look back on everything I've been doing for the last twenty years,"
Cappadocia concludes, "and can see the way it's all linked and how it
circles back to the beginning. With Songs For Cello, I've returned to solo
performance again. It's all live, with an emphasis on the intuitive. Those
are the things I've learned how to do through all my explorations and
collaborations. Even as I've incorporated these experiences, it brings me
back to the basics and it's the same with the music. Eastern modal
traditions; Hendrix riffs; the blues and folk music; it's all one source
that you keep tapping into in different ways." It's a lifelong quest that
had made Rufus Cappadocia a master of music's universal language, in all
its astounding diversity.
Bonga Jean Baptiste
Gaston Jean-Baptiste, known as "Bonga", is a musical virtuoso who has been
performing and studying traditional Haitian drum, dance and song since the
age of seven. He began playing drums in his family's peristil in his
hometown of Croix-des-Mission in La Plaine, an area of Haiti known for
culture and history. Bonga is regarded as a master of the Afro Haitian
drum, sought-after for his extensive repertoire of pan-African rhythms. A
dynamic performer, accompanist, session player and educator, Bonga works on
stage, in the recording studio, and in educational settings. He is one of
the few drum experts and craftsmen outside of Haiti who continues to build
traditional drums using techniques that are centuries old. As a core member
of the seminal Haitian roots bands, Boukman Eksperyans and Foulˆ, Bonga
was invited to the U.S. in the '90s when musicians were becoming a strong
voice for the Haitian people. Since then, Bonga has continued to play solo
and in ensemble and at numerous worldwide venues. He is a featured
performer with Peter Yarrow, Grace Jones, Dan Zanes and Urban Tap, to
mention a few. His drums opened the NY premiere of the Rolling Stones
"Voodoo Lounge" tour and he is prominently featured on recordings by Wyclef
Jean and Salif Keita. Bonga's first CD, Kanzo (2000), incorporates elements
of jazz, blues, and funk to create a dynamic version of mizik rasin. The
recording features Lou Reed, bassist Fernando Saunders, and trumpeter Frank
London. Bonga's second CD, Ayiti Afrika (2006), received critical acclaim.
Featuring cellist Rufus Cappadocia, multi instrumentalist Peck Allmond and
Guinean balafonist, Famoro Dioubate, Ayiti Afrika explores the African
roots of Haitian music.
Yacouba Moumouni
Yacouba Moumouni is a singer and flautist, leader of the jazz-ethnic band
from Niger, Mamar Kassey. Moumouni is probably the best known Nigerien
musician outside the country, and is much beloved in his home country. Born
in 1966 in a small sahel town some 125 miles from Niamey, Moumouni (born:
Yacouba Moumouni Alzouna) herded cattle with his family until his father
died when he when he was 10. Falling out with his brother, he ran away to
the capital, where he lived on the street for two years until his talent
attracted the attention of a music teacher, and he was taken on as an
apprentice. Mastering the traditional flute, he joined the Ballet National
of Niger and then formed Mamar Kassey, an eight man group featuring
Moumouni and guitarist Abdallah Alhassane. Together they have toured West
Africa, Europe, and the United States, and have become the most popular
musical group in Niger. With his melodic Fulani flute playing and
soft-spoken vocals in the Songhai or Peul language, Moumouni has helped to
preserve the musical traditions of Niger. He had his first break after
meeting vocalist Absatou Danté, the sister of Danté Alhassane , the
director Ballet National du Niger, in 1979. For the next seven years, Dante
exposed him to the musical traditions of Niger and taught him the
intricacies of Nigerian flute playing. After playing with Harouna
Marounfa's band, in 1986 Yacouba accepted an invitation to join traditional
band Zongo. Together with the group, he toured and performed in Korea,
Libya, Algeria, and West Africa. Transferring to Orchestre Takeda, the
house band at the musical academy Centre de Formation et de Promotion
Musicale (CFPM), in 1990, Yacouba was mentored by the group's director and
lead guitarist, Abdoulaye Alhassane. He remained with the band for five
years. Together with other CFPM musicians, including Ahlassane, Yacouba
formed Mamar Kassey in 1995. The band's debut album, Alatoumi, released in
1999 on the French Daqui label, was followed by Denke-Denke two years
later.