Music Review: Jacob Collier – In My Room

So, I found this musical phenom on YouTube a little while ago. The 22-year-old jazz composer and multi-instrumentalist, originally from London, shot to fame as a music-making teenager on YouTube. Then, he got the attention of Quincy Jones and Herbie Hancock. Many music experts have called him a prodigy or even a genius. These adjectives about Collier are not unwarranted. His music holds a particular appeal for jazz aficionados, who hear his brilliance in the technical minutiae.

Collier possesses immense talent. His soulful baritone contradicts his slight frame and youthful age. On his debut CD, In My Room, he employs a myriad of layers of vocal harmonies and instrumentation, each intricately arranged into place. Ideas stack on top of ideas, multitudes of melodies intertwined, the twists, turns and modulations are all carefully calculated and backed up by an unfathomable understanding of music theory. I’ve never heard anything “homemade” that approaches this level of production! In My Room exudes the allure of a record lovingly pieced together by one man over countless hours…in his room.

All of the songs are great ideas with intelligent and thoughtful key concepts, but Collier, being a composer, singer, instrumentalist, and producer of great ability. Collier’s use of reharmonization, particularly with regards to the multi-track vocals, provide a constant sense of motion that is somewhat reminiscent of the piano playing of the late John Taylor.

Woke Up Today, opens the album, epitomizing the hyper-eclectic sound of Collier and his music, with a raggedy-funk rhythm consisting of miscellaneous sounds sampled into virtual percussion instruments, with Collier creating his vocal chorus.

The Beach Boys’ In My Room is a little on the nose, so it had to be included in this album. It’s a unique version with the densely layered vocals, and various percussion sounds, more so than even a Beach Boys record.

Along the same lyrical lines is Hideaway, done with a sparse but atmospheric instrumental backup including some acoustic guitar.

Sounding a bit like a more standard jazz ballad with outstanding vocal arranging is Collier’s arrangement of a tune by one of his biggest influences- Stevie Wonder, You and I.

However, the Stevie Wonder influence really comes to the forefront on an original called Saviour (British spelling, remember Jacob is from the UK). A mixture of vocal acrobatics with grooves constructed with combinations of unconventional sounds.

One of the most musically interesting pieces on the album is an original called Hajanga, in which Collier says he wanted to convey the effect of spinning in circles.

The most straight-out fun track on the album and also one of the most impressive is one of the covers. Collier does an amazing mostly a cappella version of the theme from The Flintstones. In the middle of the tune, Collier throws in a solo on a melodica, a kind of keyboard harmonica.

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With all the layered vocal parts that dominate this album, Collier does a very attractive ballad called In The Real Early Morning, which is mainly just keyboard and his solo vocal.

There are a lot of musicians out there plying their trade, many of them very good, some of them innovative. And then there are those who are one of a kind, seeming to emerge fully formed at a young age. We have such a rare bird this week. It’s Jacob Collier’s In My Room is a wild mix of multiple layered vocals and jazz influence along the lines of Bobby McFerrin, the funk of Stevie Wonder and a quirky collection of instrumentation, which manifests itself as must listen to album.

The Making of a Bass Guitar

serek bassesSerek Basses are handmade here in Chicago. They feel, sound and look amazing! Another quality product being made in Chicago.

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Music Review: The Lost Fingers

Lost FingersI’ve been listening to CD that I just can’t get enough of. The Lost Fingers is a Quebec jazz trio named in tribute to Django Reinhardt’s 2 lost fingers (who turned a terrible manual injury into a technical advantage on the guitar). Performing jazz swing covers, double bassist Alex Morrisette and guitarists Christian Roberge and Byron Mikaloff have all their fingers, and have them poking about in the 80’s hit parade for tunes to twist in a lively, acoustic style. Material ranging from AC/DC and Soft Cell to Paula Abdul and George Michael. The first track is telling—the trio’s cover of Technotronic’s “Pump Up the Jam” may be the most absurd inclusion, but possibly the strongest.

The Lost Fingers—Lost in the 80’s is just plain fun! Who would have ever thought that Samantha Fox’s “Touch Me” could be sung in a gypsy swing? What would Stevie Wonder say about his“Part-time Lover” sung with Quebecer’s bouncing jazz harmonies…? Maybe it’s because the 80’s represent my high school and college years, but I can’t help but smile when I hear a boggie swing of Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean”. When you listen to “You Shook Me All Night Long”, you might think that Randy Newman was on the disc playing and singing a cameo. The fact that a Jazz trio could take an AC/DC song and put doo-wops and scat in it is nothing short of genius! I was never a Paula Abdul fan, but it is a kick to tap your foot to her “Straight Up” without the aid of drum machines (BTW: no drums at all on the disc) or synthesizers.

Though it may be a little bit of a shtick, The Lost Fingers have a really cool concept here. Idiosyncratic, unusual and entertaining are all words to describe this musical escapade you’ll be sure to enjoy.

Why every graduation plays the same song

It’s that time of year… Graduations. Here’s a cool video explaining why this one tune is played at almost all graduations.

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Why Does Music Make Us Feel?

From the Incomparable Jason Silva.

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Simplest Turntable Ever

viagrasansordonnancefr.com wheel playerThe Wheel by Miniot might be the simplest turntable ever. The elegance of placing a record down and touching a stick, then listen, is brilliant.

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WheelHere’s how it works:

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The role of trust in musical leadership

conductingConductor Charles Hazlewood talks about the role of trust in musical leadership — then shows how it works, as he conducts the Scottish Ensemble onstage. He also shares clips from two musical projects: the opera “U-Carmen eKhayelitsha” and the ParaOrchestra.

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How brass instruments work

brassWhat gives the trumpet its clarion ring and the tuba its gut shaking oompah-pah? And what makes the trombone so jazzy? Al Cannon shows how these answers lie not in the brass the instruments are made of, but in the journey that air takes from the musician’s lungs to the instrument’s bell.

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Earworms: Those songs that get stuck in your head

earwormsHave you ever been waiting in line at the grocery store, innocently perusing the magazine rack, when a song pops into your head? Not the whole song, but a fragment of it that plays and replays until you find yourself unloading the vegetables in time to the beat? Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis explores earworms — a cognitive https://www.acheterviagrafr24.com/generic-viagra/ phenomenon that plagues over 90% of people at least once a week.

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