The New Mastersounds

The New Mastersounds

The New Mastersounds performing live on Equifunk Music Festival in Equinunk, Pennsylvania, United States, 6 September 2009
Background information
Origin Leeds, England
Genres Funk, jazz fusion
Years active 1999–present
Labels Various including Blow it Hard Records
Associated acts Corrine Bailey Rae, Benson Taylor
Website Newmastersounds.com/
Members Simon Allen
Eddie Roberts
Pete Shand
Joe Tatton
Past members Bob Birch
Rob Lavers

The New Mastersounds are a British four-piece jazz fusion and funk band from Leeds, England. Over the last 16 years, they have issued ten studio albums, two live dates, two remix collections, and a compilation album.[1]

History

In the late 1990s, guitarist and producer Eddie Roberts was running a club night in Leeds called "The Cooker." When The Cooker moved into a new venue with a second floor in 1999, there was space and the opportunity to put a live band together to complement the DJ sets. Simon Allen and Roberts had played together in 1997 as The Mastersounds, with a different bassist and no organ. Through friends and the intimate nature of the Leeds music scene, Pete Shand and Bob Birch were added on bass and Hammond respectively, establishing The New Mastersounds. Their first rehearsal produced the release for Blow it Hard Records on two limited-edition 7" singles in 2000.

As a band, and as individuals, they have since clocked up collaborations with an impressive array of musicians DJs and producers, including: Soul Rebels Brass Band, Lou Donaldson (Blue Note), Corinne Bailey Rae (EMI), Quantic (Tru Thoughts), Carleen Anderson (Young Disciples / Brand New Heavies), Keb Darge & Kenny Dope (Kay Dee Records), John Arnold (Ubiquity), Mr Scruff (Ninja Tuna), Snowboy (Ubiquity), Fred Everything (2020 vision), Andy Smith (Portishead), James Taylor (James Taylor Quartet), LSK (Faithless), and Karl Denson (Lenny Kravitz),(Greyboy AllStars).

In 2006, as well as playing club gigs in France, Spain, Belgium and Italy, the band toured the USA and Japan. In August they finished recording their fifth album, 102% (released on One Note Records in 2007). The album features collaborations with sax and flute player Rob Lavers who performed as a guest with the band on several subsequent live tours. In the same year producer/guitarist Eddie Roberts had already released a live album in Japan (Roughneck – Live in Paris), and produced a studio album of his own arrangements of traditional Italian songs called Trenta.

2007 started auspiciously – on their first Jamcruise the NMS were playing Meters tunes with George Porter Jr. sitting in – just one of the highlights of a 3-hour set. On their return to the United Kingdom the band were greeted by a capacity crowd at London's prestigious Jazz Cafe venue, for the album launch of 102%. They also performed tunes from the new album for Mark Lamarr on BBC Radio Two. At the end of January, organist Bob Birch reluctantly retired from the band due to commitments at home. In February Eddie, Simon and Pete ushered in another Leeds keyboard player, Joe Tatton, who had depped for Bob in the past, as well as working with United Kingdom soul star Corinne Bailey Rae and funk renegades The Haggis Horns. Joe's real initiation took place in April with the band's first trip to New Orleans during which they played late night at the House of Blues and the Blue Nile and where Eddie stuck around for the following week to sit in with the likes of Idris Muhammad, Lonnie Smith, Galactic, Papa Mali and The Greyboy Allstars. Having thrilled audiences at Wakarusa, Harmony, Gratefulfest and High Sierra Music Festivals, the NMS returned to the United States at the end of July – to Chicago, to play Wicker Park and to open for The Headhunters.

After a break, the NMS regrouped in October for a two-week tour of France during which they rediscovered the joy of the original four-piece NMS sound: bass, drums, guitar and Hammond.

On the record front, German label Legere Recordings released their compilation An Introduction to The New Mastersounds on CD and LP back in May, while Milan-based label Record Kicks was putting together an album of NMS tunes remixed by a host of talented underground funk and beats producers. The New Mastersounds – Re::Mixed was released on CD, LP and iTunes on 15 October.

As an example of the respect this band commands, Peter Wermelinger – deejay, collector, and author of the crate-diggers' bible The Funky & Groovy Music Lexicon – places the 2001 NMS track "Turn This Thing Around", in his all-time top-ten tunes, along with the likes of Eddie Harris, Funkadelic, and Herbie Hancock.

Discography

Albums

Singles

One Note Records

Since 2003, The Mastersounds have distributed their music on One Note Records. According to its website, One Note Records was set up by the New Mastersounds in 2003 and is named after the NMS dancefloor classic One Note Brown.[2]

References

  1. 1 2 Thom Jurek (2016-04-22). "The Nashville Session - The New Mastersounds | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 2016-06-19.
  2. "Official Website". One Note Records.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.