News & Updates
Please note: this page is here for archival purposes only and is no longer being updated.
[ { "id": "dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-vol-2", "data": { "title": "DJ Bongohead's \"Rough Guide To Latin Rare Groove, Vol. 2\"", "slug": "dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-vol-2", "date": "2015-04-05T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://www.npr.org/2015/04/01/396851384/rare-latin-grooves-excavated-in-anthology)\n\nCheck out this radio piece on the new compilation for the The Rough Guide To Latin Rare Groove, Vol. 2, compiled by Peace & Rhythm's own DJ Bongohead, [reviewed recently by NPR's Milo Miles on Fresh Air](http://www.npr.org/2015/04/01/396851384/rare-latin-grooves-excavated-in-anthology).", "filePath": "content/posts/dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-vol-2.md", "digest": "f9cd3594098dca89", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://www.npr.org/2015/04/01/396851384/rare-latin-grooves-excavated-in-anthology\"><img src=\"/images/blog_rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-vol-2-1011x1024.jpg\" alt=\"rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-vol-2\"></a></p>\n<p>Check out this radio piece on the new compilation for the The Rough Guide To Latin Rare Groove, Vol. 2, compiled by Peace & Rhythm’s own DJ Bongohead, <a href=\"http://www.npr.org/2015/04/01/396851384/rare-latin-grooves-excavated-in-anthology\">reviewed recently by NPR’s Milo Miles on Fresh Air</a>.</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560917-18", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "DJ Bongohead's \"Rough Guide To Latin Rare Groove, Vol. 2\"", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=109", "date": "April 05, 2015", "post": "DJ Bongohead's \"Rough Guide To Latin Rare Groove, Vol. 2\"", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-vol-2", "slug": "dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-vol-2" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "announcing-big-mean-sound-machine-super-hi-fi-split-7-coming-soon", "data": { "title": "Announcing: Big Mean Sound Machine/Super Hi-Fi split 7\" Coming Soon!", "slug": "announcing-big-mean-sound-machine-super-hi-fi-split-7-coming-soon", "date": "2015-03-06T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/PandR45_003_Sleeve_Wrap_150.jpg)\n\nPeace & Rhythm has got some hot new wax coming your way this spring & summer! We just sent off the next one to the pressing plant. We're happy to announce a forthcoming split 7\" featuring a song each by Brooklyn dub band [Super Hi-Fi](https://www.facebook.com/SuperHiFi) and Ithaca-based afrofunk juggernaut [Big Mean Sound Machine](https://www.facebook.com/thebigmeansoundmachine). Two earth-rumbling cuts by two heavy groove bands on one DJ-friendly platter, complete with a picture sleeve and two-sided insert. 800 press. The two bands will be playing some shows together this summer, so get in touch if you'd like to book them. And don't hesitate to also check out Super Hi-Fi's previous records on Electric Cowbell and BMSM's previous records on Angry Mom Records.\n\nHere's a look at the two sided sleeve for the release. Design by Pablo Yglesias, photo by Andrew Greto, boomboxes provided by Giovanny Zuniga (Spin That Records, Springfield MA), \"wild style\" lettering by Armando \"Leaf\" Collado. Images copyright 2015 Peace & Rhythm. Co-released with Record Friends of Jamestown, NY.\n\n[Super Hi-Fi website](http://superhifimusic.com/band/)\n\n[Big Mean Sound Machine website](http://www.bigmeansoundmachine.com/)", "filePath": "content/posts/announcing-big-mean-sound-machine-super-hi-fi-split-7-coming-soon.md", "digest": "40010f5fc54b60c2", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/PandR45_003_Sleeve_Wrap_150.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_PandR45_003_Sleeve_Wrap_150-450x228.jpg\" alt=\"BMSM-SuperHiFi 45 sleeve.indd\"></a></p>\n<p>Peace & Rhythm has got some hot new wax coming your way this spring & summer! We just sent off the next one to the pressing plant. We’re happy to announce a forthcoming split 7” featuring a song each by Brooklyn dub band <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/SuperHiFi\">Super Hi-Fi</a> and Ithaca-based afrofunk juggernaut <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/thebigmeansoundmachine\">Big Mean Sound Machine</a>. Two earth-rumbling cuts by two heavy groove bands on one DJ-friendly platter, complete with a picture sleeve and two-sided insert. 800 press. The two bands will be playing some shows together this summer, so get in touch if you’d like to book them. And don’t hesitate to also check out Super Hi-Fi’s previous records on Electric Cowbell and BMSM’s previous records on Angry Mom Records.</p>\n<p>Here’s a look at the two sided sleeve for the release. Design by Pablo Yglesias, photo by Andrew Greto, boomboxes provided by Giovanny Zuniga (Spin That Records, Springfield MA), “wild style” lettering by Armando “Leaf” Collado. Images copyright 2015 Peace & Rhythm. Co-released with Record Friends of Jamestown, NY.</p>\n<p><a href=\"http://superhifimusic.com/band/\">Super Hi-Fi website</a></p>\n<p><a href=\"http://www.bigmeansoundmachine.com/\">Big Mean Sound Machine website</a></p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560914-17", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Announcing: Big Mean Sound Machine/Super Hi-Fi split 7\" Coming Soon!", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=109", "date": "March 06, 2015", "post": "Announcing: Big Mean Sound Machine/Super Hi-Fi split 7\" Coming Soon!", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/announcing-big-mean-sound-machine-super-hi-fi-split-7-coming-soon", "slug": "announcing-big-mean-sound-machine-super-hi-fi-split-7-coming-soon" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "peace-rhythm-nyc-action-this-weekend", "data": { "title": "Peace & Rhythm NYC Action This Weekend!!", "slug": "peace-rhythm-nyc-action-this-weekend", "date": "2015-03-06T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/10980734_1079182848774177_7232014156011652094_n.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/RS_MAR_14-LoRes.jpg)\n\n**We're back in the Big Apple this weekend!**\n\nFri 3/14 Boogaloo! Monthly Party Presents: Fulaso w/ The Boogaloo Brothers (DJs Turmix and Bongohead)...Nublu, 11pm\n\nSat 3/15 DJ Bongohead (after Chia)...Barbés, 11:45pm More info: **“Boogaloo!”** Launched by DJ Turmix in January of 2011 with the support of Fania Records is bringing back bugalú to the Big Apple!…Along with Turmix and guest dj’s, this party includes live music by top latin groove bands. ABOUT THE BAND Erica Ramos was the lead singer of Spanglish Fly, now she presents her own band and we are very proud to present the debut of [Fulaso](https://www.facebook.com/fulaso) from NYC! Come to enjoy 2 live sets of Funk, Latin Soul, Salsa and Bugalu plus guest DJ Bongohead ([Vampisoul](https://www.facebook.com/pages/Vampisoul/109987245254) , [Peace & Rhythm](https://www.facebook.com/pages/Peace-Rhythm/1419359794984720)) and resident [Dj Turmix](https://www.facebook.com/OriginalDjTurmix) ( [Fania Records](https://www.facebook.com/FaniaRecords)) #BoogalooParty **Barbés Midnight Set:**\n\n<http://www.barbesbrooklyn.com/calendar.html>\n\nHey ya'll, come check out the great shows this coming Saturday at Barbes!\n\nI will be playing a lot of rare and freaky tropical dance vinyl, vintage and contemporary cumbias, boogaloos, descargas, and other steamy, dreamy delights for the latest sensation at Barbes, the **_Midnight DJ Set_**.\n\nBefore my DJ gig, be sure to come dance to Chia's Dance Party!\n\n \n\n<http://www.chiamusic.com/>\n\nShoutout to Thom Dudley of Sightlab for the awesome poster design!", "filePath": "content/posts/peace-rhythm-nyc-action-this-weekend.md", "digest": "90a1adbcaf14657a", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/10980734_1079182848774177_7232014156011652094_n.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_10980734_1079182848774177_7232014156011652094_n-228x450.jpg\" alt=\"10980734_1079182848774177_7232014156011652094_n\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/RS_MAR_14-LoRes.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_RS_MAR_14-LoRes-291x450.jpg\" alt=\"RS_MAR_14-LoRes\"></a></p>\n<p><strong>We’re back in the Big Apple this weekend!</strong></p>\n<p>Fri 3/14 Boogaloo! Monthly Party Presents: Fulaso w/ The Boogaloo Brothers (DJs Turmix and Bongohead)…Nublu, 11pm</p>\n<p>Sat 3/15 DJ Bongohead (after Chia)…Barbés, 11:45pm More info: <strong>“Boogaloo!”</strong> Launched by DJ Turmix in January of 2011 with the support of Fania Records is bringing back bugalú to the Big Apple!…Along with Turmix and guest dj’s, this party includes live music by top latin groove bands. ABOUT THE BAND Erica Ramos was the lead singer of Spanglish Fly, now she presents her own band and we are very proud to present the debut of <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/fulaso\">Fulaso</a> from NYC! Come to enjoy 2 live sets of Funk, Latin Soul, Salsa and Bugalu plus guest DJ Bongohead (<a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/pages/Vampisoul/109987245254\">Vampisoul</a> , <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/pages/Peace-Rhythm/1419359794984720\">Peace & Rhythm</a>) and resident <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/OriginalDjTurmix\">Dj Turmix</a> ( <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/FaniaRecords\">Fania Records</a>) #BoogalooParty <strong>Barbés Midnight Set:</strong></p>\n<p><a href=\"http://www.barbesbrooklyn.com/calendar.html\">http://www.barbesbrooklyn.com/calendar.html</a></p>\n<p>Hey ya’ll, come check out the great shows this coming Saturday at Barbes!</p>\n<p>I will be playing a lot of rare and freaky tropical dance vinyl, vintage and contemporary cumbias, boogaloos, descargas, and other steamy, dreamy delights for the latest sensation at Barbes, the <strong><em>Midnight DJ Set</em></strong>.</p>\n<p>Before my DJ gig, be sure to come dance to Chia’s Dance Party!</p>\n<p><a href=\"http://www.chiamusic.com/\">http://www.chiamusic.com/</a></p>\n<p>Shoutout to Thom Dudley of Sightlab for the awesome poster design!</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560912-16", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Peace & Rhythm NYC Action This Weekend!!", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=109", "date": "March 06, 2015", "post": "Peace & Rhythm NYC Action This Weekend!!", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/peace-rhythm-nyc-action-this-weekend", "slug": "peace-rhythm-nyc-action-this-weekend" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "a-gozar-directors-cut", "data": { "title": "\"A Gozar\" - Director's Cut", "slug": "a-gozar-directors-cut", "date": "2015-02-16T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "Here's a peak at the talents of filmmaker [Rodrigo Balseca Carmona](https://vimeo.com/rodcarmona), an amigo and co-conspirator of Peace & Rhythm. Inspired by Leon Gast's \"Our Latin Thing\", this documusic video tours us through the culturally rich neighborhood of Washington Heights, NYC by way of a boy running through the barrio/hood. We get a peek at the diversity of daily and nightly life of this Dominican diaspora fused with an equally dynamic instrumental which mixes the old sounds of Nuyorican boogaloo and salsa with classic hip hop beats. [https://vimeo.com/119055693](https://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fvimeo.com%2F119055693&h=6AQHEd2A1&s=1)", "filePath": "content/posts/a-gozar-directors-cut.md", "digest": "4bacbd98b6ef46e1", "rendered": { "html": "<p>Here’s a peak at the talents of filmmaker <a href=\"https://vimeo.com/rodcarmona\">Rodrigo Balseca Carmona</a>, an amigo and co-conspirator of Peace & Rhythm. Inspired by Leon Gast’s “Our Latin Thing”, this documusic video tours us through the culturally rich neighborhood of Washington Heights, NYC by way of a boy running through the barrio/hood. We get a peek at the diversity of daily and nightly life of this Dominican diaspora fused with an equally dynamic instrumental which mixes the old sounds of Nuyorican boogaloo and salsa with classic hip hop beats. <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fvimeo.com%2F119055693&h=6AQHEd2A1&s=1\">https://vimeo.com/119055693</a></p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560906-13", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "\"A Gozar\" - Director's Cut", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=110", "date": "February 16, 2015", "post": "\"A Gozar\" - Director's Cut", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/a-gozar-directors-cut", "slug": "a-gozar-directors-cut" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-psychedelic-salsa-drops-2-23", "data": { "title": "DJ Bongohead's \"Rough Guide to Psychedelic Salsa\" Drops 2/23!", "slug": "dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-psychedelic-salsa-drops-2-23", "date": "2015-02-16T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/418456319135.jpg)\n\nDJ Bongohead's \"Rough Guide to Psychedelic Salsa\" is out 2/23 on London label [World Music Network](https://www.facebook.com/WorldMusicNetwork). Check out tunes new and old, including some highlights from our good friends in [Bio Ritmo](https://www.facebook.com/bioritmomusic), [Grupo Fantasma](https://www.facebook.com/grupofantasmamusic) and [Quantic](https://www.facebook.com/quanticmusic). Check the link for full track list, some background and pre-order, as well as a very cool video by NYC's [La Mecanica Popular](https://www.facebook.com/pages/La-Mecanica-Popular/241062815948678). <http://www.worldmusic.net/store/item/RGNET1304/>\n\nTrack List\n\n 1. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX6ueeWWTYVji/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8867/ \"Naci De La Rumba Y Guaguanco\") **Grupo Fantasma Feat. Larry Harlow:** Naci De La Rumba Y Guaguanco (7:57)\n 2. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX7PMdjcxzIoN/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8868/ \"La Paz Del Freak\") **La Mecánica Popular:** La Paz Del Freak (3:23)\n 3. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYXwC%252FTpPS0K28/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8869/ \"Dub Y Guaguanco\") **Quantic Presenta Flowering Inferno:** Dub Y Guaguanco (4:27)\n 4. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX6Y1QU3cll9o/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8870/ \"Jud Ross\") **Conjunto Siglo 21:** Jud Ross (3:14)\n 5. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYXwl%252FnbV18JZz/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8871/ \"Recordando Los Soneros\") **Ray Pérez Y Su Orquesta:** Recordando Los Soneros (2:25)\n 6. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX08%252FTBSJ7i8Z/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8872/ \"Muchacho Tranquilo\") **San Lazaro:** Muchacho Tranquilo (4:36)\n 7. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX6LCRUdQq7FG/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8873/ \"Japones\") **Bacalao Men:** Japones (4:27)\n 8. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYXzaC9flKjlmQ/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8874/ \"Londres \\(London\\)\") **Nelson Y Sus Estrellas:** Londres (London) (5:04)\n 9. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX8vt06CjERyY/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8875/ \"Recuerdos\") **Los Sander'S De Ñaña:** Recuerdos (3:17)\n 10. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX0oscjLpHwEA/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8876/ \"Cannabis\") **Los Pambele:** Cannabis (2:38)\n 11. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX5QeOicfTIgx/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8877/ \"El Son Del Carangano\") **Fruko Y Sus Tesos:** El Son Del Carangano (5:05)\n 12. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX847ANw%252Bntuy/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8878/ \"Vamos Pa' Dakar\") **Orchestra Rytmo Africa-Cubana:** Vamos Pa' Dakar (7:28)\n 13. [Listen](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX9L9BUVBxQf7/excerpt.mp3) [Buy MP3](http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8879/ \"Chuleta\") **Bio Ritmo:** Chuleta (7:00)\n\n\n\nMP3s are priced at $0.99 each", "filePath": "content/posts/dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-psychedelic-salsa-drops-2-23.md", "digest": "5edf7e6108335ae2", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/418456319135.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_418456319135-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"418456319135\"></a></p>\n<p>DJ Bongohead’s “Rough Guide to Psychedelic Salsa” is out 2/23 on London label <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/WorldMusicNetwork\">World Music Network</a>. Check out tunes new and old, including some highlights from our good friends in <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/bioritmomusic\">Bio Ritmo</a>, <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/grupofantasmamusic\">Grupo Fantasma</a> and <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/quanticmusic\">Quantic</a>. Check the link for full track list, some background and pre-order, as well as a very cool video by NYC’s <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/pages/La-Mecanica-Popular/241062815948678\">La Mecanica Popular</a>. <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/item/RGNET1304/\">http://www.worldmusic.net/store/item/RGNET1304/</a></p>\n<p>Track List</p>\n<ol>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX6ueeWWTYVji/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8867/\" title=\"Naci De La Rumba Y Guaguanco\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Grupo Fantasma Feat. Larry Harlow:</strong> Naci De La Rumba Y Guaguanco (7:57)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX7PMdjcxzIoN/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8868/\" title=\"La Paz Del Freak\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>La Mecánica Popular:</strong> La Paz Del Freak (3:23)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYXwC%252FTpPS0K28/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8869/\" title=\"Dub Y Guaguanco\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Quantic Presenta Flowering Inferno:</strong> Dub Y Guaguanco (4:27)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX6Y1QU3cll9o/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8870/\" title=\"Jud Ross\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Conjunto Siglo 21:</strong> Jud Ross (3:14)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYXwl%252FnbV18JZz/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8871/\" title=\"Recordando Los Soneros\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Ray Pérez Y Su Orquesta:</strong> Recordando Los Soneros (2:25)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX08%252FTBSJ7i8Z/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8872/\" title=\"Muchacho Tranquilo\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>San Lazaro:</strong> Muchacho Tranquilo (4:36)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX6LCRUdQq7FG/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8873/\" title=\"Japones\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Bacalao Men:</strong> Japones (4:27)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYXzaC9flKjlmQ/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8874/\" title=\"Londres (London)\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Nelson Y Sus Estrellas:</strong> Londres (London) (5:04)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX8vt06CjERyY/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8875/\" title=\"Recuerdos\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Los Sander’S De Ñaña:</strong> Recuerdos (3:17)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX0oscjLpHwEA/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8876/\" title=\"Cannabis\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Los Pambele:</strong> Cannabis (2:38)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX5QeOicfTIgx/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8877/\" title=\"El Son Del Carangano\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Fruko Y Sus Tesos:</strong> El Son Del Carangano (5:05)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX847ANw%252Bntuy/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8878/\" title=\"Vamos Pa' Dakar\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Orchestra Rytmo Africa-Cubana:</strong> Vamos Pa’ Dakar (7:28)</li>\n<li><a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/preview/6kq31%252BGStFEAIjcxXL5zY%252BxVU3RcADQknXkHEjD9T9HK%252Bo3hXgfYX9L9BUVBxQf7/excerpt.mp3\">Listen</a> <a href=\"http://www.worldmusic.net/store/add/item/8879/\" title=\"Chuleta\">Buy MP3</a> <strong>Bio Ritmo:</strong> Chuleta (7:00)</li>\n</ol>\n<p>MP3s are priced at $0.99 each</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560908-14", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "DJ Bongohead's \"Rough Guide to Psychedelic Salsa\" Drops 2/23!", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=109", "date": "February 16, 2015", "post": "DJ Bongohead's \"Rough Guide to Psychedelic Salsa\" Drops 2/23!", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-psychedelic-salsa-drops-2-23", "slug": "dj-bongoheads-rough-guide-to-psychedelic-salsa-drops-2-23" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-2-20", "data": { "title": "Rumba Psicodelica returns to The Quarters 2/20!", "slug": "rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-2-20", "date": "2015-02-16T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/GetInline-15.jpg)\n\nDJs Andujar & Bongohead will bring their Rumba Psicodélica party back to the Quarters on Friday, Feb 20. These two tropi-heads will be spinning from their expansive vinyl direct to The Quarters Sound System. South American psych rock, messed-up cumbias, dark dubs, hard Afro rock, Cuban experimental, Trópicalia, salsa loca, spookaloo, tropical funk, Caribbean electro-derangement, Ethio-groove and other borderless haze. Join us 8pm-1am at [The Quarters](https://www.facebook.com/hadleyquarters) Friday 2/20. No cover. Come play some arcade games, drink some brews, eat some food and get your brain mangled. Brought to you by The Quarters and Peace & Rhythm. Poster by [Sightlab](http://sightlab.com/).", "filePath": "content/posts/rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-2-20.md", "digest": "f5e8cc475b64fd42", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/GetInline-15.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_GetInline-15-290x450.jpg\" alt=\"GetInline-15\"></a></p>\n<p>DJs Andujar & Bongohead will bring their Rumba Psicodélica party back to the Quarters on Friday, Feb 20. These two tropi-heads will be spinning from their expansive vinyl direct to The Quarters Sound System. South American psych rock, messed-up cumbias, dark dubs, hard Afro rock, Cuban experimental, Trópicalia, salsa loca, spookaloo, tropical funk, Caribbean electro-derangement, Ethio-groove and other borderless haze. Join us 8pm-1am at <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/hadleyquarters\">The Quarters</a> Friday 2/20. No cover. Come play some arcade games, drink some brews, eat some food and get your brain mangled. Brought to you by The Quarters and Peace & Rhythm. Poster by <a href=\"http://sightlab.com/\">Sightlab</a>.</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560910-15", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Rumba Psicodelica returns to The Quarters 2/20!", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=109", "date": "February 16, 2015", "post": "Rumba Psicodelica returns to The Quarters 2/20!", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-2-20", "slug": "rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-2-20" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "sonido-robotico-dj-bongohead-interviews-dj-roger-mas-of-los-discos-duro", "data": { "title": "Sonido Robótico: DJ Bongohead Interviews DJ Roger Más of Los Discos Duro", "slug": "sonido-robotico-dj-bongohead-interviews-dj-roger-mas-of-los-discos-duro", "date": "2015-02-05T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/rogermas.jpg)\n\nCheck out the latest on the Bongohead blog, a piece about Bay Area based electro-cumbia party man Roger Más. Check the link [here](http://www.bongohead.blogspot.com/2015/02/0-false-18-pt-18-pt-0-0-false-false.html).", "filePath": "content/posts/sonido-robotico-dj-bongohead-interviews-dj-roger-mas-of-los-discos-duro.md", "digest": "c695afd6121e0765", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/rogermas.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_rogermas-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"rogermas\"></a></p>\n<p>Check out the latest on the Bongohead blog, a piece about Bay Area based electro-cumbia party man Roger Más. Check the link <a href=\"http://www.bongohead.blogspot.com/2015/02/0-false-18-pt-18-pt-0-0-false-false.html\">here</a>.</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560903-12", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Sonido Robótico: DJ Bongohead Interviews DJ Roger Más of Los Discos Duro", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=110", "date": "February 05, 2015", "post": "Sonido Robótico: DJ Bongohead Interviews DJ Roger Más of Los Discos Duro", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/sonido-robotico-dj-bongohead-interviews-dj-roger-mas-of-los-discos-duro", "slug": "sonido-robotico-dj-bongohead-interviews-dj-roger-mas-of-los-discos-duro" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "our-favorite-records-of-2014", "data": { "title": "Our Favorite Records of 2014", "slug": "our-favorite-records-of-2014", "date": "2014-12-30T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/GetInline-8.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/cover.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a3087419370_10.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a2063330422_10.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/UR327.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/quantic-magnetica.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Peru-Bravo-Artwork.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/1543772_631562060248101_167942652_n-1.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/y9Nl4t3JYupFyTVR_SuQvVgytzqC4ZgHgOEM96T7prs.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/sendero-mistico21.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/kidnappingdenials.png)[](/images/blog_boomarm008ep_CU.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5631898-1398482660-2462.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5557249-1396550194-5373.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a3592192940_10.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/images_uploads_album_1500x1500.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/abel-lima-sleeve-mockup.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/5992232.png)[](/images/blog_mestre_cupij_large.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5674988-1399602973-7736.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5644632-1398807239-9509.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/henri-pierre-noc3abl-one-more-step.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/1411367127_va-colemine-singles-20-45rpm-b.jpg)[](/images/blog_VDSQ007LP_CU.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5459431-1393901758-3566.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/nan_love_photo.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/1609806_684295028296402_503999572173800188_n.png)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5143845-1385674521-2298.jpg)[](/images/blog_La-Chiva-Gantiva-Vivo.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/la-mecanica-popular.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/images.list_.co_.uk_fumaca-pr.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/fsrcd106.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a1388654141_10.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/TRUT5154247.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/ray-lugo-boogaloo-destroyers-que.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a1683161390_10.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/bio-ritmo-puerta-del-sur.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/69b72c66-08bc-4b38-aada-dac89b3043a7.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a2923374043_10.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5952790-1407238088-6299.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/ImageProxy-1.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5653593-1399041788-2761.jpeg.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-6119901-1411557318-6551.jpeg.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/music_phases4.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/10540907_893777853985361_3201658003476093560_n.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/PORTADA_1.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/zFront-Peliroja.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/10383963_10152391298972616_1232029388097163026_n.jpg)[](/images/blog_deep_wound.jpg)[](/images/blog_ImageProxy.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/jmancd067.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/guesscoverart.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/VAMPI158LP_CU.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/pazantiguan_surfinthe_101b.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/146211.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-6236845-1415281501-9654.jpeg.jpg)[](/images/blog_rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-351x351.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/10464191_434003700075212_6619003552369285001_n.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/uprootcover.jpg)[](/images/blog_Boogaloo-Assassins.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/CS2379543-02A-BIG.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/1ab56448-d5a5-4a43-9a71-8db140917e9e.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Paris_DJs_Soundsystem-Vinyl_Is_Good_For_You-1.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/ee5c6bb8-03c4-49c0-8125-5110c1045f46.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a1642532101_10.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/81VMIztr4VL._SL1500_.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/d6501f83-3849-4d35-83df-012991c6d294.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a3302755842_10.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5776820-1402354699-2296.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a2305750538_10.jpg)[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/artworks-000087599906-fzcytn-t500x500.jpg) What records made your ears happy?", "filePath": "content/posts/our-favorite-records-of-2014.md", "digest": "1219464caf6a3c80", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/GetInline-8.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_GetInline-8-435x450.jpg\" alt=\"GetInline-8\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/cover.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_cover-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"cover\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a3087419370_10.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_a3087419370_10-450x426.jpg\" alt=\"a3087419370_10\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a2063330422_10.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_a2063330422_10-450x420.jpg\" alt=\"a2063330422_10\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/UR327.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_UR327-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"UR327\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/quantic-magnetica.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_quantic-magnetica-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"quantic-magnetica\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Peru-Bravo-Artwork.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_Peru-Bravo-Artwork-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"Peru-Bravo-Artwork\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/1543772_631562060248101_167942652_n-1.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_1543772_631562060248101_167942652_n-1-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"1543772_631562060248101_167942652_n-1\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/y9Nl4t3JYupFyTVR_SuQvVgytzqC4ZgHgOEM96T7prs.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_y9Nl4t3JYupFyTVR_SuQvVgytzqC4ZgHgOEM96T7prs-443x450.jpg\" alt=\"y9Nl4t3JYupFyTVR_SuQvVgytzqC4ZgHgOEM96T7prs\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/sendero-mistico21.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_sendero-mistico21-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"sendero-mistico21\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/kidnappingdenials.png\"><img src=\"/images/blog_kidnappingdenials-438x450.png\" alt=\"kidnappingdenials\"></a><a href=\"/images/blog_boomarm008ep_CU.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_boomarm008ep_CU.jpg\" alt=\"boomarm008ep_CU\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5631898-1398482660-2462.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-5631898-1398482660-2462-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-5631898-1398482660-2462\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5557249-1396550194-5373.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-5557249-1396550194-5373-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-5557249-1396550194-5373\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a3592192940_10.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_a3592192940_10-450x447.jpg\" alt=\"a3592192940_10\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/images_uploads_album_1500x1500.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_images_uploads_album_1500x1500-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"images_uploads_album_1500x1500\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/abel-lima-sleeve-mockup.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_abel-lima-sleeve-mockup-448x450.jpg\" alt=\"abel-lima-sleeve-mockup\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/5992232.png\"><img src=\"/images/blog_5992232-450x450.png\" alt=\"5992232\"></a><a href=\"/images/blog_mestre_cupij_large.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_mestre_cupij_large.jpg\" alt=\"mestre_cupij_large\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5674988-1399602973-7736.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-5674988-1399602973-7736-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-5674988-1399602973-7736\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5644632-1398807239-9509.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-5644632-1398807239-9509-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-5644632-1398807239-9509\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/henri-pierre-noc3abl-one-more-step.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_henri-pierre-noc3abl-one-more-step-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"henri-pierre-noc3abl-one-more-step\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/1411367127_va-colemine-singles-20-45rpm-b.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_1411367127_va-colemine-singles-20-45rpm-b-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"1411367127_va-colemine-singles-20-45rpm-b\"></a><a href=\"/images/blog_VDSQ007LP_CU.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_VDSQ007LP_CU.jpg\" alt=\"VDSQ007LP_CU\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5459431-1393901758-3566.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-5459431-1393901758-3566-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-5459431-1393901758-3566\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/nan_love_photo.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_nan_love_photo-450x448.jpg\" alt=\"nan_love_photo\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/1609806_684295028296402_503999572173800188_n.png\"><img src=\"/images/blog_1609806_684295028296402_503999572173800188_n-450x444.png\" alt=\"1609806_684295028296402_503999572173800188_n\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5143845-1385674521-2298.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-5143845-1385674521-2298-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-5143845-1385674521-2298\"></a><a href=\"/images/blog_La-Chiva-Gantiva-Vivo.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_La-Chiva-Gantiva-Vivo.jpg\" alt=\"La Chiva Gantiva - Vivo\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/la-mecanica-popular.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_la-mecanica-popular-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"la-mecanica-popular\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/images.list_.co_.uk_fumaca-pr.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_images.list_.co_.uk_fumaca-pr-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"images.list.co.uk_fumaca-pr\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/fsrcd106.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_fsrcd106-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"fsrcd106\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a1388654141_10.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_a1388654141_10-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"a1388654141_10\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/TRUT5154247.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_TRUT5154247-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"TRUT5154247\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/ray-lugo-boogaloo-destroyers-que.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_ray-lugo-boogaloo-destroyers-que-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"ray+lugo+boogaloo+destroyers+que\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a1683161390_10.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_a1683161390_10-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"a1683161390_10\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/bio-ritmo-puerta-del-sur.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_bio-ritmo-puerta-del-sur-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"bio-ritmo-puerta-del-sur\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/69b72c66-08bc-4b38-aada-dac89b3043a7.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_69b72c66-08bc-4b38-aada-dac89b3043a7-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"69b72c66-08bc-4b38-aada-dac89b3043a7\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a2923374043_10.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_a2923374043_10-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"a2923374043_10\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5952790-1407238088-6299.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-5952790-1407238088-6299-450x417.jpg\" alt=\"R-5952790-1407238088-6299\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/ImageProxy-1.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_ImageProxy-1-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"ImageProxy-1\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5653593-1399041788-2761.jpeg.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-5653593-1399041788-2761.jpeg-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-5653593-1399041788-2761.jpeg\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-6119901-1411557318-6551.jpeg.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-6119901-1411557318-6551.jpeg-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-6119901-1411557318-6551.jpeg\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/music_phases4.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_music_phases4-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"music_phases4\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/10540907_893777853985361_3201658003476093560_n.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_10540907_893777853985361_3201658003476093560_n-450x394.jpg\" alt=\"10540907_893777853985361_3201658003476093560_n\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/PORTADA_1.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_PORTADA_1-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"PORTADA_1\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/zFront-Peliroja.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_zFront-Peliroja-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"zFront+Peliroja\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/10383963_10152391298972616_1232029388097163026_n.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_10383963_10152391298972616_1232029388097163026_n-450x405.jpg\" alt=\"10383963_10152391298972616_1232029388097163026_n\"></a><a href=\"/images/blog_deep_wound.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_deep_wound.jpg\" alt=\"deep_wound\"></a><a href=\"/images/blog_ImageProxy.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_ImageProxy.jpg\" alt=\"ImageProxy\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/jmancd067.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_jmancd067-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"jmancd067\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/guesscoverart.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_guesscoverart-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"guesscoverart\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/VAMPI158LP_CU.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_VAMPI158LP_CU-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"VAMPI158LP_CU\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/pazantiguan_surfinthe_101b.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_pazantiguan_surfinthe_101b-448x450.jpg\" alt=\"pazantiguan_surfinthe_101b\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/146211.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_146211-450x441.jpg\" alt=\"146211\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-6236845-1415281501-9654.jpeg.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-6236845-1415281501-9654.jpeg-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-6236845-1415281501-9654.jpeg\"></a><a href=\"/images/blog_rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-351x351.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-351x351.jpg\" alt=\"rough-guide-to-latin-rare-groove-351x351\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/10464191_434003700075212_6619003552369285001_n.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_10464191_434003700075212_6619003552369285001_n-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"10464191_434003700075212_6619003552369285001_n\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/uprootcover.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_uprootcover-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"uprootcover\"></a><a href=\"/images/blog_Boogaloo-Assassins.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_Boogaloo-Assassins.jpg\" alt=\"Boogaloo-Assassins\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/CS2379543-02A-BIG.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_CS2379543-02A-BIG-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"CS2379543-02A-BIG\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/1ab56448-d5a5-4a43-9a71-8db140917e9e.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_1ab56448-d5a5-4a43-9a71-8db140917e9e-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"1ab56448-d5a5-4a43-9a71-8db140917e9e\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Paris_DJs_Soundsystem-Vinyl_Is_Good_For_You-1.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_Paris_DJs_Soundsystem-Vinyl_Is_Good_For_You-1-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"Paris_DJs_Soundsystem-Vinyl_Is_Good_For_You-1\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/ee5c6bb8-03c4-49c0-8125-5110c1045f46.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_ee5c6bb8-03c4-49c0-8125-5110c1045f46-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"ee5c6bb8-03c4-49c0-8125-5110c1045f46\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a1642532101_10.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_a1642532101_10-450x442.jpg\" alt=\"a1642532101_10\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/81VMIztr4VL._SL1500_.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_81VMIztr4VL._SL1500_-450x411.jpg\" alt=\"81VMIztr4VL.SL1500\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/d6501f83-3849-4d35-83df-012991c6d294.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_d6501f83-3849-4d35-83df-012991c6d294-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"d6501f83-3849-4d35-83df-012991c6d294\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a3302755842_10.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_a3302755842_10-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"a3302755842_10\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/R-5776820-1402354699-2296.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_R-5776820-1402354699-2296-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"R-5776820-1402354699-2296\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/a2305750538_10.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_a2305750538_10-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"a2305750538_10\"></a><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/artworks-000087599906-fzcytn-t500x500.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_artworks-000087599906-fzcytn-t500x500-450x450.jpg\" alt=\"artworks-000087599906-fzcytn-t500x500\"></a> What records made your ears happy?</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560901-11", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Our Favorite Records of 2014", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=110", "date": "December 30, 2014", "post": "Our Favorite Records of 2014", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/our-favorite-records-of-2014", "slug": "our-favorite-records-of-2014" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "do-your-thing-nye-2014-2015-with-the-whiskey-barons", "data": { "title": "Do Your Thing! NYE! 2014>>2015 With the Whiskey Barons", "slug": "do-your-thing-nye-2014-2015-with-the-whiskey-barons", "date": "2014-12-29T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/NYE2014poster-rgb-vertical-e1419809473100.png) We’ll be spending our [New Years Eve at the ZuZu](https://www.facebook.com/events/1503577966592316/) in Cambridge and we hope you’ll join us if you are in the Boston / Cambridge Area. [ Advance Tix are only $15](http://www.ticketweb.com/t3/sale/SaleEventDetail?dispatch=loadSelectionData&eventId=5484795&pl=mideastclub) and $20 at the door. CELEBRATORY BOOGIE DOWN **WHISKEY BARONS** STYLE TIMELESS & GLOBAL >> FUNK / SOUL / DISCO / AFRO / LATIN / HOUSE / ROCK & ROLLL", "filePath": "content/posts/do-your-thing-nye-2014-2015-with-the-whiskey-barons.md", "digest": "33de0ff860067169", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/NYE2014poster-rgb-vertical-e1419809473100.png\"><img src=\"/images/blog_NYE2014poster-rgb-vertical-e1419809473100-291x450.png\" alt=\"NYE2014poster-rgb-vertical-e1419809473100\"></a> We’ll be spending our <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/events/1503577966592316/\">New Years Eve at the ZuZu</a> in Cambridge and we hope you’ll join us if you are in the Boston / Cambridge Area. <a href=\"http://www.ticketweb.com/t3/sale/SaleEventDetail?dispatch=loadSelectionData&eventId=5484795&pl=mideastclub\"> Advance Tix are only $15</a> and $20 at the door. CELEBRATORY BOOGIE DOWN <strong>WHISKEY BARONS</strong> STYLE TIMELESS & GLOBAL >> FUNK / SOUL / DISCO / AFRO / LATIN / HOUSE / ROCK & ROLLL</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560891-10", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Do Your Thing! NYE! 2014>>2015 With the Whiskey Barons", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=110", "date": "December 29, 2014", "post": "Do Your Thing! NYE! 2014>>2015 With the Whiskey Barons", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/do-your-thing-nye-2014-2015-with-the-whiskey-barons", "slug": "do-your-thing-nye-2014-2015-with-the-whiskey-barons" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-12-6", "data": { "title": "Rumba Psicodélica Returns To The Quarters!! 12/6", "slug": "rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-12-6", "date": "2014-12-11T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/GetInline-15.jpg)\n\nDJs Andujar & Bongohead will bring their Rumba Psicodélica party back to the Quarters on Saturday, December 6th. These two tropi-heads will be spinning from their expansive vinyl direct to The Quarters Sound System. South American psych rock, messed-up cumbias, dark dubs, hard Afro rock, Cuban experimental, Trópicalia, salsa loca, spookaloo, tropical funk, Caribbean electro-derangement, Ethio-groove and other borderless haze. Join us 8pm-1am at [The Quarters](https://www.facebook.com/hadleyquarters) Saturday 12/6. No cover. Come play some arcade games, drink some brews, eat some food and get your brain mangled. Brought to you by The Quarters and Peace & Rhythm.\n\nPoster by Sightlab.", "filePath": "content/posts/rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-12-6.md", "digest": "248696d07d0b1f56", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/GetInline-15.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_GetInline-15-291x450.jpg\" alt=\"GetInline-15\"></a></p>\n<p>DJs Andujar & Bongohead will bring their Rumba Psicodélica party back to the Quarters on Saturday, December 6th. These two tropi-heads will be spinning from their expansive vinyl direct to The Quarters Sound System. South American psych rock, messed-up cumbias, dark dubs, hard Afro rock, Cuban experimental, Trópicalia, salsa loca, spookaloo, tropical funk, Caribbean electro-derangement, Ethio-groove and other borderless haze. Join us 8pm-1am at <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/hadleyquarters\">The Quarters</a> Saturday 12/6. No cover. Come play some arcade games, drink some brews, eat some food and get your brain mangled. Brought to you by The Quarters and Peace & Rhythm.</p>\n<p>Poster by Sightlab.</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560889-9", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Rumba Psicodélica Returns To The Quarters!! 12/6", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=110", "date": "December 11, 2014", "post": "Rumba Psicodélica Returns To The Quarters!! 12/6", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-12-6", "slug": "rumba-psicodelica-returns-to-the-quarters-12-6" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "peliroja-45-release-party-this-wednesday", "data": { "title": "Peliroja 45 release party this Wednesday!!!!!", "slug": "peliroja-45-release-party-this-wednesday", "date": "2014-10-23T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/GetInline-8.jpg)\n\nPeace & Rhythm, in alliance with Chulo Records are pleased to announce the release party for the Peliroja 7″ 45 of “Situaciones” and “Ciudad de Nadie”. Peliroja presents these songs and their other great tunes live in concert at 730, with guest DJ Bongohead (of Peace & Rhythm) at 6pm. Wed 10/29 at Joe’s Pub, 425 Lafayette St, NYC. Get ready for some Heavy Latin Soul! [Facebook event page](https://www.facebook.com/events/1537518643129864/) » [More details & tickets](http://joespub.publictheater.org/en/Tickets/Calendar/PlayDetailsCollection/Joes-Pub/2014/P/Peliroja/) »\n\n### Check out the official video for “Situaciones”\n\n“Some of the musicians in Peliroja and I would meet up after school on Jane Street in the West Village, at a stoop with some Old English, a spliff and a tape deck,” says Jacob best known as producer and musician for salsa masters, Los Hacheros. “We were gangly, awkward 15 year-olds and not cool by any means. I’m not sure how we became obsessed with obscure 70s funk and Afrobeat music, but that’s what we would listen to: The 3 Sounds, Lyn Collins, Africa 70.” Two decades later, his friends have gone on to become key players in the Brooklyn funk scene, and Jacob has spent the last 10 years refining his music on the road with salsa and bachata bands. Produced and co-written by Plasse _, _these tunes were recorded live to tape at his studio in Brooklyn, in the spirit of the music he was raised on. The groove to this music is deep, and heard in the way the Daptones’ rhythm section – drummer Homer Steinweiss and bassist Nick Movshon – play off the polyrhythms of Carlos Padron’s timbales and Jhair Salas’ congas, forming a new fusion of old sounds. Jainardo Batista’s vocals soar over these rhythms, propelled forward by Mike Eckroth’s mercurial arrangements. “I think the experience of growing up in New York and getting to hear and play with all these wonderful musicians and having them in my life has let me create something that is true to myself, and hopefully them as well,” Jacob adds.“This album is for those boys on the stoop who hadn’t figured out how to be in this world, but were lucky enough to know what they loved.”", "filePath": "content/posts/peliroja-45-release-party-this-wednesday.md", "digest": "efcaf06a6ea95e94", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/GetInline-8.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_GetInline-8-290x300.jpg\" alt=\"GetInline-8\"></a></p>\n<p>Peace & Rhythm, in alliance with Chulo Records are pleased to announce the release party for the Peliroja 7″ 45 of “Situaciones” and “Ciudad de Nadie”. Peliroja presents these songs and their other great tunes live in concert at 730, with guest DJ Bongohead (of Peace & Rhythm) at 6pm. Wed 10/29 at Joe’s Pub, 425 Lafayette St, NYC. Get ready for some Heavy Latin Soul! <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/events/1537518643129864/\">Facebook event page</a> » <a href=\"http://joespub.publictheater.org/en/Tickets/Calendar/PlayDetailsCollection/Joes-Pub/2014/P/Peliroja/\">More details & tickets</a> »</p>\n<h3 id=\"check-out-the-official-video-for-situaciones\">Check out the official video for “Situaciones”</h3>\n<p>“Some of the musicians in Peliroja and I would meet up after school on Jane Street in the West Village, at a stoop with some Old English, a spliff and a tape deck,” says Jacob best known as producer and musician for salsa masters, Los Hacheros. “We were gangly, awkward 15 year-olds and not cool by any means. I’m not sure how we became obsessed with obscure 70s funk and Afrobeat music, but that’s what we would listen to: The 3 Sounds, Lyn Collins, Africa 70.” Two decades later, his friends have gone on to become key players in the Brooklyn funk scene, and Jacob has spent the last 10 years refining his music on the road with salsa and bachata bands. Produced and co-written by Plasse _, _these tunes were recorded live to tape at his studio in Brooklyn, in the spirit of the music he was raised on. The groove to this music is deep, and heard in the way the Daptones’ rhythm section – drummer Homer Steinweiss and bassist Nick Movshon – play off the polyrhythms of Carlos Padron’s timbales and Jhair Salas’ congas, forming a new fusion of old sounds. Jainardo Batista’s vocals soar over these rhythms, propelled forward by Mike Eckroth’s mercurial arrangements. “I think the experience of growing up in New York and getting to hear and play with all these wonderful musicians and having them in my life has let me create something that is true to myself, and hopefully them as well,” Jacob adds.“This album is for those boys on the stoop who hadn’t figured out how to be in this world, but were lucky enough to know what they loved.”</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [ { "depth": 3, "slug": "check-out-the-official-video-for-situaciones", "text": "Check out the official video for “Situaciones”" } ], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560887-8", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Peliroja 45 release party this Wednesday!!!!!", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=111", "date": "October 23, 2014", "post": "Peliroja 45 release party this Wednesday!!!!!", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/peliroja-45-release-party-this-wednesday", "slug": "peliroja-45-release-party-this-wednesday" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "rumba-psicodelica-at-the-quarters-friday-10-17", "data": { "title": "Rumba Psicodélica at The Quarters!! Friday 10/17!", "slug": "rumba-psicodelica-at-the-quarters-friday-10-17", "date": "2014-10-14T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "[](http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/RUMBA_OCT_17_WEB.jpg)\n\nDJs Andujar & Bongohead will bring their Rumba Psicodélica party to the Quarters on Friday Oct 17. These two tropi-heads will be spinning from their expansive vinyl direct to The Quarters Sound System. South American psych rock, messed-up cumbias, dark dubs, hard Afro rock, Cuban experimental, Trópicalia, salsa loca, spookaloo, tropical funk, Caribbean electro-derangement, Ethio-groove and other borderless haze. Join us 8pm-1am at [The Quarters](https://www.facebook.com/hadleyquarters) Friday 10/17. No cover. Come play some arcade games, drink some brews, eat some food and get your brain mangled. Brought to you by The Quarters and Peace & Rhythm.\n\nAnother great poster by Sightlab!", "filePath": "content/posts/rumba-psicodelica-at-the-quarters-friday-10-17.md", "digest": "258656ca895bbc6c", "rendered": { "html": "<p><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/RUMBA_OCT_17_WEB.jpg\"><img src=\"/images/blog_RUMBA_OCT_17_WEB-194x300.jpg\" alt=\"RUMBA_OCT_17_WEB\"></a></p>\n<p>DJs Andujar & Bongohead will bring their Rumba Psicodélica party to the Quarters on Friday Oct 17. These two tropi-heads will be spinning from their expansive vinyl direct to The Quarters Sound System. South American psych rock, messed-up cumbias, dark dubs, hard Afro rock, Cuban experimental, Trópicalia, salsa loca, spookaloo, tropical funk, Caribbean electro-derangement, Ethio-groove and other borderless haze. Join us 8pm-1am at <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/hadleyquarters\">The Quarters</a> Friday 10/17. No cover. Come play some arcade games, drink some brews, eat some food and get your brain mangled. Brought to you by The Quarters and Peace & Rhythm.</p>\n<p>Another great poster by Sightlab!</p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560884-7", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Rumba Psicodélica at The Quarters!! Friday 10/17!", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=111", "date": "October 14, 2014", "post": "Rumba Psicodélica at The Quarters!! Friday 10/17!", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/rumba-psicodelica-at-the-quarters-friday-10-17", "slug": "rumba-psicodelica-at-the-quarters-friday-10-17" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "andujars-interplanetary-music-scene-report", "data": { "title": "Andujar's Interplanetary Music Scene Report", "slug": "andujars-interplanetary-music-scene-report", "date": "2014-09-30T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "\n\n## Check out Andujar's latest record reviews round-up at the Peace & Rhythm blog. A whole lot of sonic ground gets covered.\n\n## <http://peaceandrhythm.blogspot.com/2014/08/pardon-my-ears-interplanetary-music.html>", "filePath": "content/posts/andujars-interplanetary-music-scene-report.md", "digest": "b0fc7ef7fe0bd804", "rendered": { "html": "<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img1.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<h2 id=\"check-out-andujars-latest-record-reviews-round-up-at-the-peace--rhythm-blog-a-whole-lot-of-sonic-ground-gets-covered\">Check out Andujar’s latest record reviews round-up at the Peace & Rhythm blog. A whole lot of sonic ground gets covered.</h2>\n<h2 id=\"httppeaceandrhythmblogspotcom201408pardon-my-ears-interplanetary-musichtml\"><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.blogspot.com/2014/08/pardon-my-ears-interplanetary-music.html\">http://peaceandrhythm.blogspot.com/2014/08/pardon-my-ears-interplanetary-music.html</a></h2>", "metadata": { "headings": [ { "depth": 2, "slug": "check-out-andujars-latest-record-reviews-round-up-at-the-peace--rhythm-blog-a-whole-lot-of-sonic-ground-gets-covered", "text": "Check out Andujar’s latest record reviews round-up at the Peace & Rhythm blog. A whole lot of sonic ground gets covered." }, { "depth": 2, "slug": "httppeaceandrhythmblogspotcom201408pardon-my-ears-interplanetary-musichtml", "text": "http://peaceandrhythm.blogspot.com/2014/08/pardon-my-ears-interplanetary-music.html" } ], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560880-5", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Andujar's Interplanetary Music Scene Report", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=111", "date": "September 30, 2014", "post": "Andujar's Interplanetary Music Scene Report", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/andujars-interplanetary-music-scene-report", "slug": "andujars-interplanetary-music-scene-report" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-producer-ray-lugo", "data": { "title": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Producer Ray Lugo", "slug": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-producer-ray-lugo", "date": "2014-09-30T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "\n\n## Check out our exclusive interview with Ray Lugo (Kokolo/Boogaloo Assassins/etc). Lots of biographical info here!\n\n## \n\n## <http://peaceandrhythm.blogspot.com/2014/09/peace-rhythms-interview-with-producer.html>", "filePath": "content/posts/peace-rhythms-interview-with-producer-ray-lugo.md", "digest": "7c5de4d96a14670e", "rendered": { "html": "<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<h2 id=\"check-out-our-exclusive-interview-with-ray-lugo-kokoloboogaloo-assassinsetc-lots-of-biographical-info-here\">Check out our exclusive interview with Ray Lugo (Kokolo/Boogaloo Assassins/etc). Lots of biographical info here!</h2>\n<h2 id=\"\"></h2>\n<h2 id=\"httppeaceandrhythmblogspotcom201409peace-rhythms-interview-with-producerhtml\"><a href=\"http://peaceandrhythm.blogspot.com/2014/09/peace-rhythms-interview-with-producer.html\">http://peaceandrhythm.blogspot.com/2014/09/peace-rhythms-interview-with-producer.html</a></h2>", "metadata": { "headings": [ { "depth": 2, "slug": "check-out-our-exclusive-interview-with-ray-lugo-kokoloboogaloo-assassinsetc-lots-of-biographical-info-here", "text": "Check out our exclusive interview with Ray Lugo (Kokolo/Boogaloo Assassins/etc). Lots of biographical info here!" }, { "depth": 2, "slug": "", "text": "" }, { "depth": 2, "slug": "httppeaceandrhythmblogspotcom201409peace-rhythms-interview-with-producerhtml", "text": "http://peaceandrhythm.blogspot.com/2014/09/peace-rhythms-interview-with-producer.html" } ], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560882-6", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Producer Ray Lugo", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=111", "date": "September 30, 2014", "post": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Producer Ray Lugo", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/peace-rhythms-interview-with-producer-ray-lugo", "slug": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-producer-ray-lugo" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "visiting-the-dark-side-brownout-presents-brown-sabbath-ubiquity-records", "data": { "title": "Visiting the Dark Side...Brownout presents Brown Sabbath (Ubiquity Records)", "slug": "visiting-the-dark-side-brownout-presents-brown-sabbath-ubiquity-records", "date": "2014-07-07T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "\n\n_([photo by focalchrome](http://thelasvegan.com/music/galleries/6/brownsabbath/gal_art0.html))_\n\nThis is the highly publicized Black Sabbath tribute from members of **Brownout** and Grupo Fantasma. I have seen both of those bands several times and have been continually amazed by their tight live shows with swingin' horns and rippin' grooves. Intrigued further, I decided to gain access into their world and tried to find out what makes them so sick.\n\nI was told to meet them in some late night Texas heat (I took a left at the longhorn, vultures circling). When I arrived on the scene there was a wicked feeling that came over me. The entire area was reeking of witches' herbs and I was told to sit tight and wait for a Brownout rep. I could see the flickering night sky and lots of smoke from fires burning just yonder. Guitarist Beto Martinez met me and he seemed different than usual. I had never noticed his fangs before! I assured him that I was ready for whatever initiation awaited me. He led me into the Brownout camp and I felt the chills as we walked past a boiling pit of something. Beto explained that they were cooking up a concoction of goat blood, wax and the boiled remains of record industry do-wrongers. \"That splatter vinyl Brown Sabbath 10\" you have? It is made from this stuff.\" Wow. I took warning.\n\nAs we passed a line-up of virgins awaiting initiation from bassist Goyo, I could make out some voodoo rhythms. As we got nearer, I could see the trance that percussionists Sweet Lou and John Speice were in, playing batás, congas and drumkit to awake the evil spirits. Speice in particular was scary with his burning eyes and his beard totally on fire. These dudes looked like serious mad men! And I spotted a black-cloaked figure over on the side. On closer inspection it was none other than Adrian Quesada, mixing the Brown Sabbath music by torchlight! This whole scene was giving me the heebie-jeebies. Trumpeter Gil told me, \"This is how we get ourselves ready for all the shows we do. We have to sacrifice animals and sometimes people too so that we can get the vibe right. In fact, just last night we nearly sacrificed our trombonist Speedy until he stepped forward and blew a tremendous solo. It was that action only that allowed himself to be saved from slaughter.\" I heard evil laughs all around. As the band moved toward me I got the feeling that I should escape. I took off running, trying to get off this evil ranch. I sped past zombified cattle and petrified cacti. The only time I even dared to look back I saw Beto with a bat head hanging in his mouth and vowed from that day on I would never, ever inquire about a band's pre-gig rituals ever again.\n\nAnd the album? Fucking great, a sonic dream come true. If you are a child of heavy music like I am then you may find excitement in Sabbath tunes played with batá and funk horns. \"Iron Man\" in particular is given epic treatment here. \"Hand of Doom\" thrills like a good horror flick, pushing you into madness. \"Planet Caravan\" is a smoky trip. The best part about this awesome concept is that it remains very Sabbathy, not some gimmicky funk bullshit trying to force someone else's music into what it is not. The guitars are still heavy (Beto said he started playing guitar because he wanted to be in a metal band: this is the closest he's come.) This is very clearly a work of appreciation, not novelty. And perhaps making it lifestyle might be the ticket to better understanding the black (or brown) arts. And why is there not vocals on every song? Probably because both singers got their organs ripped out and eaten backstage on the last tour. I am glad I got to see this monster project before the true darkness prevails on all of us. The LP, the 10\" and the live show are all evil. Do it. Do it. Do it...\n\n\n\n**Brownout website** [here](http://brownoutmusic.tumblr.com/) **Ubiquity Records** [here](http://www.ubiquityrecords.com/) \n\n\n\n\n\n_Post author: Andujar_", "filePath": "content/posts/visiting-the-dark-side-brownout-presents-brown-sabbath-ubiquity-records.md", "digest": "c989d64ddfc24b5e", "rendered": { "html": "<p><img src=\"/images/blog_10382106_10152282390653751_4890068767202937778_o.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><em>(<a href=\"http://thelasvegan.com/music/galleries/6/brownsabbath/gal_art0.html\">photo by focalchrome</a>)</em></p>\n<p>This is the highly publicized Black Sabbath tribute from members of <strong>Brownout</strong> and Grupo Fantasma. I have seen both of those bands several times and have been continually amazed by their tight live shows with swingin’ horns and rippin’ grooves. Intrigued further, I decided to gain access into their world and tried to find out what makes them so sick.</p>\n<p>I was told to meet them in some late night Texas heat (I took a left at the longhorn, vultures circling). When I arrived on the scene there was a wicked feeling that came over me. The entire area was reeking of witches’ herbs and I was told to sit tight and wait for a Brownout rep. I could see the flickering night sky and lots of smoke from fires burning just yonder. Guitarist Beto Martinez met me and he seemed different than usual. I had never noticed his fangs before! I assured him that I was ready for whatever initiation awaited me. He led me into the Brownout camp and I felt the chills as we walked past a boiling pit of something. Beto explained that they were cooking up a concoction of goat blood, wax and the boiled remains of record industry do-wrongers. “That splatter vinyl Brown Sabbath 10” you have? It is made from this stuff.” Wow. I took warning.</p>\n<p>As we passed a line-up of virgins awaiting initiation from bassist Goyo, I could make out some voodoo rhythms. As we got nearer, I could see the trance that percussionists Sweet Lou and John Speice were in, playing batás, congas and drumkit to awake the evil spirits. Speice in particular was scary with his burning eyes and his beard totally on fire. These dudes looked like serious mad men! And I spotted a black-cloaked figure over on the side. On closer inspection it was none other than Adrian Quesada, mixing the Brown Sabbath music by torchlight! This whole scene was giving me the heebie-jeebies. Trumpeter Gil told me, “This is how we get ourselves ready for all the shows we do. We have to sacrifice animals and sometimes people too so that we can get the vibe right. In fact, just last night we nearly sacrificed our trombonist Speedy until he stepped forward and blew a tremendous solo. It was that action only that allowed himself to be saved from slaughter.” I heard evil laughs all around. As the band moved toward me I got the feeling that I should escape. I took off running, trying to get off this evil ranch. I sped past zombified cattle and petrified cacti. The only time I even dared to look back I saw Beto with a bat head hanging in his mouth and vowed from that day on I would never, ever inquire about a band’s pre-gig rituals ever again.</p>\n<p>And the album? Fucking great, a sonic dream come true. If you are a child of heavy music like I am then you may find excitement in Sabbath tunes played with batá and funk horns. “Iron Man” in particular is given epic treatment here. “Hand of Doom” thrills like a good horror flick, pushing you into madness. “Planet Caravan” is a smoky trip. The best part about this awesome concept is that it remains very Sabbathy, not some gimmicky funk bullshit trying to force someone else’s music into what it is not. The guitars are still heavy (Beto said he started playing guitar because he wanted to be in a metal band: this is the closest he’s come.) This is very clearly a work of appreciation, not novelty. And perhaps making it lifestyle might be the ticket to better understanding the black (or brown) arts. And why is there not vocals on every song? Probably because both singers got their organs ripped out and eaten backstage on the last tour. I am glad I got to see this monster project before the true darkness prevails on all of us. The LP, the 10” and the live show are all evil. Do it. Do it. Do it…</p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img2.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>Brownout website</strong> <a href=\"http://brownoutmusic.tumblr.com/\">here</a> <strong>Ubiquity Records</strong> <a href=\"http://www.ubiquityrecords.com/\">here</a></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/img1-1_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/img_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><em>Post author: Andujar</em></p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560877-4", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Visiting the Dark Side...Brownout presents Brown Sabbath (Ubiquity Records)", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=111", "date": "July 07, 2014", "post": "Visiting the Dark Side...Brownout presents Brown Sabbath (Ubiquity Records)", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/visiting-the-dark-side-brownout-presents-brown-sabbath-ubiquity-records", "slug": "visiting-the-dark-side-brownout-presents-brown-sabbath-ubiquity-records" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-jim-thomson-of-electric-cowbell", "data": { "title": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Jim Thomson of Electric Cowbell", "slug": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-jim-thomson-of-electric-cowbell", "date": "2014-06-04T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "**Jim Thomson** is an enthusiastic promoter of music, with a hand in booking, producing and distributing the wide variety of sounds he digs. A percussionist with several notable ensembles (discussed within), his [**Electric Cowbell**](http://electriccowbell.bigcartel.com/) label puts out (mostly) 7\" records with seemingly no stylistic boundaries. Since 2009 the label has released \"a marching band that thinks it's a rock band\" (Mucca Pazza), a funk band with people from USA Is A Monster (CSC), an Ethiopian groove band (Debo), a progressive salsa band (Bio Ritmo), a collaborative 7\" with ESP-Disk (Talibam!), a record by Greg Ginn...and that is just a tip of the iceburg! We present to you Jimmy T of the brain-jolting Electric Cowbell:\n\n \n\n**Could you give some background about growing up, your early years and how you got into being involved in music. **\n\n_I grew up on an apple orchard in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. I was the youngest of four brothers. My two oldest brothers were significantly older by 13-15 years. I was born in 1966 so when I was becoming more aware of pop culture and music outside of nursery rhymes and bible school, it was my brother's and their teenage tastes that influenced me the most. They also had a band that practiced in one of the barns on our farm. They were playing Jimi Hendrix covers. It was extremely exciting for me to listen to the music outside the door of where they were jamming. I thought everything about rock and roll was cool. A Christian rock group by the name of Flame visited our church and gave a concert once. It was loud and I loved it. I didn't start playing music myself until I was about 14._\n\n**What were some bands that you grew up listening to?**\n\n_Like I mentioned, my brothers were influencing me quite a bit. They were into Hendrix and a lot of Woodstock type stuff. Plus Leon Russell and Edgar Winter. Of course there were The Beatles. They weren't much into The Stones though. I first got into the 45's because we had a little 45 player there in the house. There were lots of Beatles records but also The Zombies and some British Invasion stuff. It wasn't until I was about 12 that I started going next level. My friend's older brother's record collections seemed to hold a lot of mysteries. But it was staying up late and watching_ Saturday Night Live _that expanded my mind. I remember specifically watching Joe Jackson give a [punky performance](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSppm8lS2rc) on _American Bandstand _and seeing[The Specials on ](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkKPG0FL4cU)_[SNL](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkKPG0FL4cU) _. That really twisted things up. I had no idea what I was seeing or hearing. No reference point really other than there was a lot of bouncing up and down and wild energy. Then I found a Specials record in one of my friend's big brother's record collections. The graphic design and style of the band made an impact on me. One of my girlfriend's had a big brother who was really into Black Sabbath. I remember getting_[Master of Reality](http://www.discogs.com/viewimages?release=590773) _by Black Sabbath as a birthday gift when I turned 13. I relied on DC radio stations as well. Washington, DC was about 65 miles east of the farm. Back then the jocks were playing more than just the hits on the records. DC101 was decent. I was also addicted to listening to_ American Top 40 _. Then WHFS came along, at least I started picking it up. They were playing new wave stuff like Ultravox, Kraftwerk, Simple Minds, and stuff like The Buzzcocks in the early 80s. During high school I used to listen with a pen and paper nearby. The next biggest town near the farm was Winchester, Virginia. There were a couple record shops and department stores that had records and tape sections. The import sections were where stuff like the Dead Kennedys would be. I remember seeing The Jam and Sex Pistols records in there and also Joy Division. The imports were expensive and too risky for me to purchase without knowing what was on there. By my junior and senior years in high school I had graduated from my big brothers' influence and even that of my peers. I prided myself on not having the standard issue commodities that the other students had but I was also getting something in the transmission of the alternative stuff I was seeking out. I couldn't find myself comfortable with any one identity: punk, ska, mod, rocker, metal head. I liked too many things that were all over the place. At the time it bothered me that I couldn't pick an identity. Looking in the rear view mirror now I'm glad I couldn't. I used to go see The Fleshtones at the old 9:30 Club in DC. They were awesome. Sometimes more punk bands would open for them. I think I saw Black Market Baby on a bill with them. I thought it was great. I also saw the first Bad Seeds tour with Nick Cave around that time. I randomly just happened to be hanging out at the club that night. It was another \"WTF?\" musical moment._\n\n**Could you talk about your time spent****in Gwar?**\n\n_**Gwar** was something I kind of fell into. There was, and still is, a vibrant music and art scene in Richmond, Virginia, where I went to college in 1984. It was quite a change of pace from the DC scene. It seemed more relaxed at the time. Death Piggy was sort of a hardcore band with a slapstick sense of humor that was fronted by Dave Brockie who was a huge creative force in the scene. We were all just trying different stuff out at the time. We shared practice spaces in an old dairy plant that used to bottle milk and make ice cream. I was playing in an instrumental spazzy rock band called the **Alter Natives**. We slipped into the Gwar costumes for a while before Greg Ginn signed us to SST Records. I returned to do some touring with Gwar a couple years later. My character's name was Hans Orifice. \n_\n\n_ _\n\n**What about some of your other musical projects?**\n\n_It's definitely not a straight path. One thing just led to another. By the time the Alter Natives disbanded in 1991, I was wanting to go further into drumming. I'd heard the Kodo drummers from Japan and heard they more or less lived together on an island or something. I couldn't think of anything better than to be that committed. But I lacked the discipline to do something like that yet I was still committed. I had read_ Drumming at the Edge of Magic _by Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart and was inspired that this rock drummer had gotten into the shamanistic aspects of drumming. Around the same time Joseph Campbell had done that famous interview with Bill Moyers,_ Power of Myth _. And I was reading other articles and books on various drummers and connecting this spiritual dimension to my whole path. I was very interested in vodun and trance. I was connecting everything through this lens at the time. There were industrial groups like Test Department and artists like [Z'ev](http://www.rhythmajik.com/) and his _RHYTHMAJIK _philosophy. Hip Hop as well. I just saw all this popular and underground music tied in with this continuum of rhythm that connected humanity, not in a \"we are the world\" kind of way but that there were invisible forces at play that could be tapped into. The lines between subjective and objective were often blurry for me in those days._\n\n**Have you ever worked on making music for movies?**\n\n_Not really. I have approached music with cinema in mind for sure but never deliberately scored music for film._\n\n**What was your path into latin and african music? **\n\n_It probably had a lot to do with my interest in vodun. I was also an avid reader of liner notes on the backs of LPs. I used to do manual labor for this older hippy in Richmond, Virginia. When CDs came out he replaced his entire record collection and essentially gave me all his old records. There was tons of killer stuff in there._[Out to Lunch](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPHnvZBpsSk) _[by Eric Dolphy](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPHnvZBpsSk), Mingus, tons of later-era Coltrane, Miles. I liked Santana too and always noted the rhythm section, especially with Armando Peraza. The library was another spot where I started coming across percussion records. Then I bought a record by Mongo Santamaria called _Yambú _. It was a heavy hitter. I didn't even know about him as a latin jazz or pop artist who had a hit with his version of \"Watermelon Man.\" This was deep and dark stuff. Around the same time I met two of the founders of**[Bio Ritmo](http://bioritmo.com/)** -Jorge Negron and Rei Alvarez. They hipped me to all the Fania stuff. I wanted to start playing hand percussion too but I didn't want anything to do with the hippies in the drum circles with their Guatemalan sandals with their djembe drums. But I thought the Afro-Cuban stuff was slick and bad ass. There was the guy who was like a spiritual elder for those early days of Bio Ritmo-Miguel Valdez (RIP). He lived in Richmond and had played with Dave Matthews Band (barf) and The Brand New Heavies. He was a Cuban who had some relatives who lived in Richmond. I really never knew where he came from or why he was there but meeting him changed my life. I only had maybe three lessons from him, most of which was just talking. He was a santero. His family had ties to Yoruban religion. He was one of the most musical souls I ever met. He partied very hard too. So hard in fact, that he died of liver failure not long after I had met him. His wake was heavy. I felt some tingling in my body during the ceremony where his family and some drummers sent him off. If you're interested in drumming and it's origins it all goes back to Africa or comes from Africa, so naturally as my interest in drumming expanded, it led me to Latin and African music._\n\n\n\n**I am a big fan of Electric Cowbell. What was the original inspiration and idea behind the label? Are there any musical boundaries at all?**\n\n_I was living in New York City. I felt a bit aimless at the time. I wasn't depressed or anything but I was looking for some new kind of kick in the ass. Wasn't sure what I was going to do next. Being in a band wasn't as simple as it used to be when I was younger. I had answered some ads on Craigslist to jam with people but nothing was clicking. A friend of mine called me up and told me they were putting together a funk band to open for another friend's band who were on tour. They were doing Sun Ra covers off of_ Lanquidity _and some covers of some African funk reissues. I was in. It was a racket and we played a couple loft parties. We weren't supposed to be a band really but we kept doing gigs and named ourselves**[CSC Funk Band](https://www.facebook.com/CSCfunkband)**. Daptone was in high gear at the time along with the Truth and Soul record label. I liked the overall aesthetic and the fact that they put out singles. I saw lots of DJs with their 45 boxes. I remembered John Peel had that box of 148 45s or whatever. I just liked the emphasis on recording a 7\" 45RPM record. You had less than five minutes to do your thing. It made the CSC Funk Band self-edit these extended psychedelic jams into a distilled piece of essence. This is when and why I started the label. We recorded two songs: \"Bad Banana Bread\" and \"Caneca\" in a basement in Bushwick. I took the singles around to local record stores in Brooklyn and Manhattan and got really good feedback from the clerks. Then I started looking for distribution. The distributors were like, we don't really have time for you unless you have a catalog or something. That's when I started rallying my contacts to make 45s: Spanglish Fly, Bio Ritmo, Debo Band, and Superhuman Happiness were some of the first._\n\n**When you find an artist you'd like to present on EC how do you go about doing it? Is there a basic template you work with? Do you give royalties or records to the artists?**\n\n_There's no boundaries really. I mean a 45, especially now, is a hard sell. I imagine DJs out there like myself who like to spin 45s. If it's too weird or doesn't have a groove or solid backbeat, it might not make into the Platter-Pak for a DJ set. When I buy 45s I'm thinking about that. I am imagining dropping it at a party. Will it clear the floor? But basically my template is an extended network of like-minded friends and community. I really don't crank out the releases. I have to be able to enjoy the process of a release: working with the artists, the designer, setting up the manufacturing. It's a creative act that I find nourishing. It's rare I take a demo. I have before like with**Karthala 72** but that was an exception because it's exceptional music. We do royalties but it's not like you get a check with your royalties. It's a 50/50 deal. I normally can't afford to front production costs so I always compare it to baking a cake together. This is after the group or artist have already recorded. I don't know many labels who give out recording budgets anymore. But I get everyone involved in a project like we're baking a cake together. I might bring 30% of the ingredients and they bring 70%. Once the record comes out of the oven we divide them according to what each of us put in. I generally don't make much as I keep the price as low as possible for distribution. The band has a much better chance of making their money back with mark-up and selling their product at shows. I hardly ever do digital. There's just too many spoons in the soup to make streaming revenue work for multiple parties. My feeling is that the bands should run their own digital. I have some of the catalog available for streaming but that's really just to keep the brand out there and accessible to people everywhere._\n\n**How many items are in the catalog? What is forthcoming?**\n\n_We're at about 30 releases right now. We've got the new**[Zongo Junction](http://zongojunction.net/)** 12\" dropping in July. Great afrobeat group from NYC but there's something that separates them from the pack. I don't want to just say they're more experimental but there's a lot of different elements at work on their new record that I really connected with. Also we're releasing _**[NAWA: Ancient Sufi Invocations and Forgotten Songs from Aleppo](https://soundcloud.com/lostorigins/nawa)** _as a collaboration with Lost Origins of ancient Sufi chants recorded in Syria in 2009. We released it initially on Record Store Day 2014 but it sold out and then some. So we're going to repress and re-release._ **Are there any particularly best-selling titles in the catalog?** _Karthala 72, Bio Ritmo, CSC Funk Band, Spanglish Fly but I wouldn't say there's real best-sellers. _\n\n \n\n**Does the label make enough $$ to sustain itself or do you have to put in out-of-pocket at times?** /p> \n\n_Both. It's always a case-by-case scenario._\n\n**Have there been any favorite labels that you trust for quality through the years?**\n\n_Su_ _re. There was**SST** before they signed my band! [Factory](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factory_Records) was of course great at one time. Nowadays I look to [NYC Trust](http://www.nyctrust.com/) and most of the labels we have on Independent Grand: Daptone, Soundway, Sofrito, PPU, Omega Supreme, Black Pearl, Wonderwheel and more._\n\n**You are involved with the****[Independent Grand](http://www.independentgrand.com/) online store. How did this come about? Could you explain the philosophy and desire to distribute other labels' vinyl? **\n\n_I'm friends with NYC Trust guys. Each of our labels have had a moderately successful self-run webshop on our respective websites, but the aim of Independent Grand is to provide a 1-stop shopping destination to help combat some of the recent & evil USPS postage hikes by offering a greater amount of stock to customers. As the new rates reflect, bundling multiple records saves greatly on postage, most especially for those overseas and in Canada._ _In addition to a reaction to this unfortunate USPS mandate, Independent Grand was formed to provide a unique and curated selection of records and labels. Stock is limited and specifically chosen to promote and support the business and culture of like-minded independent vinyl labels_ and _ mall-run record releases. It's kind of a power in numbers move._\n\n\n\n**You are involved with booking music in the NYC and DC areas. Could you elaborate on that?** /p> \n\n_It's a hustle. It's also a natural extension of what I do: promoting and servicing music that I like or that I feel like has a value in it. But I work mostly with emerging artists. It's likely that I'll be promoting groups that are not as well-known. Sometimes I feel like I need a gimmick or a chicken suit to wear to get folks to check out a great new band or an unknown group from Mali or whatever._\n\n**As you are somebody who not only plays in bands but also produces records for others and presents concerts, what do you feel you need to provide for an artist? What types of standards do you like to see in regards to treatment of artists at concerts and for recordings? **\n\n_This is pretty simple for me. Respect and support. Be kind and courteous when you can. You do need some tough skin sometimes because dealing with presenting in night clubs can be tedious and fraught with peril. I find myself trying to shield artists from the dark side if like I'm dealing with a club owner whose out of his mind on cocaine and booze but at the same time I remember reading Miles Davis's or James Brown's autobiographies. The night club business is historically joined at the hip it seems with the lowest and highest forms of life. It's like a cosmic dance. If you can't get some perspective or be able to laugh at it, you will go crazy._\n\n**Who have been the most exciting artists you have heard in recent times?**** **\n\n_[Tal National](https://www.facebook.com/TalNational), Janka Nabay, Oumar Konate. Seems like my mind is being blown by lots of West African music these days._\n\n**What forthcoming projects can we look forward to?**\n\n**_Z_** _**ongo Junction** 12\" dropping in July. It's called _No Discount _._\n\n**Besides the music, what are some of your other personal interests?**\n\n_Writing occasionally. Watching Youtube. Reading books. Hikes and beaches._\n\n**Could you recommend a favorite current restaurant or two?**\n\n_[Merkat Ethiopian](http://www.yelp.com/biz/merkato-ethiopian-restaurant-washington) in DC and [The Greek Spot](http://www.greekspotdc.com/)._\n\n**What have been your favorite cities you have lived in or visited?**\n\n_Asheville, NC and Los Angeles._  **Name a few records that you count among your all time favorites (any style, genre, era). ** _**This list can change at anytime on any given day:**_\n\n**\\--Motorhead _No Sleep Til Hammersmith_** **(Mercury-US)**\n\n \n\n**\\--Bad Brains (ROIR) cassette**\n\n \n\n**\\--John Coltrane _Live at the Village Vanguard_ (Impulse)**\n\n \n\n**\\--Husker Du _Zen Arcade_ (SST)**\n\n \n\n**\\--Minutemen _Double Nickels on the Dime_ (SST)**\n\n \n\n \n\n**\\--Tito Puente _Dance Mania_ (RCA Victor)**\n\n \n\n \n\n**\\--King Sunny Ade _Juju Music_ (Mango)**\n\n\n\n**\\--Joy Division _Unknown Pleasures _(Factory)**\n\n\n\n \n\n**\\--Slayer _Reign in Blood_****(Def Jam)**\n\n****\n\n**\\--Tom Waits _Rain Dogs_ (Island)**\n\n \n\n**Electric Cowbell can be found [here](http://electriccowbell.bigcartel.com/), [here](https://www.facebook.com/ElectricCowbellRecords), [here](https://twitter.com/ElectricCowbell), or [here](https://www.youtube.com/user/ElectricCowbell45). And if, after that, you need more Electric Cowbell, than you can archaically shoot an email to _electriccowbell45@gmail.com_.** **Peace & Rhythm can be reached at _peaceandrhythm45@gmail.com_ (two doors down on the web).**", "filePath": "content/posts/peace-rhythms-interview-with-jim-thomson-of-electric-cowbell.md", "digest": "525bbd268245ca18", "rendered": { "html": "<p><strong>Jim Thomson</strong> is an enthusiastic promoter of music, with a hand in booking, producing and distributing the wide variety of sounds he digs. A percussionist with several notable ensembles (discussed within), his <a href=\"http://electriccowbell.bigcartel.com/\"><strong>Electric Cowbell</strong></a> label puts out (mostly) 7” records with seemingly no stylistic boundaries. Since 2009 the label has released “a marching band that thinks it’s a rock band” (Mucca Pazza), a funk band with people from USA Is A Monster (CSC), an Ethiopian groove band (Debo), a progressive salsa band (Bio Ritmo), a collaborative 7” with ESP-Disk (Talibam!), a record by Greg Ginn…and that is just a tip of the iceburg! We present to you Jimmy T of the brain-jolting Electric Cowbell:</p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img15.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>**Could you give some background about growing up, your early years and how you got into being involved in music. **</p>\n<p><em>I grew up on an apple orchard in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. I was the youngest of four brothers. My two oldest brothers were significantly older by 13-15 years. I was born in 1966 so when I was becoming more aware of pop culture and music outside of nursery rhymes and bible school, it was my brother’s and their teenage tastes that influenced me the most. They also had a band that practiced in one of the barns on our farm. They were playing Jimi Hendrix covers. It was extremely exciting for me to listen to the music outside the door of where they were jamming. I thought everything about rock and roll was cool. A Christian rock group by the name of Flame visited our church and gave a concert once. It was loud and I loved it. I didn’t start playing music myself until I was about 14.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What were some bands that you grew up listening to?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Like I mentioned, my brothers were influencing me quite a bit. They were into Hendrix and a lot of Woodstock type stuff. Plus Leon Russell and Edgar Winter. Of course there were The Beatles. They weren’t much into The Stones though. I first got into the 45’s because we had a little 45 player there in the house. There were lots of Beatles records but also The Zombies and some British Invasion stuff. It wasn’t until I was about 12 that I started going next level. My friend’s older brother’s record collections seemed to hold a lot of mysteries. But it was staying up late and watching</em> Saturday Night Live _that expanded my mind. I remember specifically watching Joe Jackson give a <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSppm8lS2rc\">punky performance</a> on _American Bandstand <em>and seeing<a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkKPG0FL4cU\">The Specials on </a></em><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkKPG0FL4cU\">SNL</a> <em>. That really twisted things up. I had no idea what I was seeing or hearing. No reference point really other than there was a lot of bouncing up and down and wild energy. Then I found a Specials record in one of my friend’s big brother’s record collections. The graphic design and style of the band made an impact on me. One of my girlfriend’s had a big brother who was really into Black Sabbath. I remember getting</em><a href=\"http://www.discogs.com/viewimages?release=590773\">Master of Reality</a> <em>by Black Sabbath as a birthday gift when I turned 13. I relied on DC radio stations as well. Washington, DC was about 65 miles east of the farm. Back then the jocks were playing more than just the hits on the records. DC101 was decent. I was also addicted to listening to</em> American Top 40 <em>. Then WHFS came along, at least I started picking it up. They were playing new wave stuff like Ultravox, Kraftwerk, Simple Minds, and stuff like The Buzzcocks in the early 80s. During high school I used to listen with a pen and paper nearby. The next biggest town near the farm was Winchester, Virginia. There were a couple record shops and department stores that had records and tape sections. The import sections were where stuff like the Dead Kennedys would be. I remember seeing The Jam and Sex Pistols records in there and also Joy Division. The imports were expensive and too risky for me to purchase without knowing what was on there. By my junior and senior years in high school I had graduated from my big brothers’ influence and even that of my peers. I prided myself on not having the standard issue commodities that the other students had but I was also getting something in the transmission of the alternative stuff I was seeking out. I couldn’t find myself comfortable with any one identity: punk, ska, mod, rocker, metal head. I liked too many things that were all over the place. At the time it bothered me that I couldn’t pick an identity. Looking in the rear view mirror now I’m glad I couldn’t. I used to go see The Fleshtones at the old 9:30 Club in DC. They were awesome. Sometimes more punk bands would open for them. I think I saw Black Market Baby on a bill with them. I thought it was great. I also saw the first Bad Seeds tour with Nick Cave around that time. I randomly just happened to be hanging out at the club that night. It was another “WTF?” musical moment.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Could you talk about your time spent****in Gwar?</strong></p>\n<p>_<strong>Gwar</strong> was something I kind of fell into. There was, and still is, a vibrant music and art scene in Richmond, Virginia, where I went to college in 1984. It was quite a change of pace from the DC scene. It seemed more relaxed at the time. Death Piggy was sort of a hardcore band with a slapstick sense of humor that was fronted by Dave Brockie who was a huge creative force in the scene. We were all just trying different stuff out at the time. We shared practice spaces in an old dairy plant that used to bottle milk and make ice cream. I was playing in an instrumental spazzy rock band called the <strong>Alter Natives</strong>. We slipped into the Gwar costumes for a while before Greg Ginn signed us to SST Records. I returned to do some touring with Gwar a couple years later. My character’s name was Hans Orifice.<br>\n_</p>\n<p>_ _<img src=\"/images/blog_img14.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>What about some of your other musical projects?</strong></p>\n<p><em>It’s definitely not a straight path. One thing just led to another. By the time the Alter Natives disbanded in 1991, I was wanting to go further into drumming. I’d heard the Kodo drummers from Japan and heard they more or less lived together on an island or something. I couldn’t think of anything better than to be that committed. But I lacked the discipline to do something like that yet I was still committed. I had read</em> Drumming at the Edge of Magic <em>by Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart and was inspired that this rock drummer had gotten into the shamanistic aspects of drumming. Around the same time Joseph Campbell had done that famous interview with Bill Moyers,</em> Power of Myth _. And I was reading other articles and books on various drummers and connecting this spiritual dimension to my whole path. I was very interested in vodun and trance. I was connecting everything through this lens at the time. There were industrial groups like Test Department and artists like <a href=\"http://www.rhythmajik.com/\">Z’ev</a> and his _RHYTHMAJIK <em>philosophy. Hip Hop as well. I just saw all this popular and underground music tied in with this continuum of rhythm that connected humanity, not in a “we are the world” kind of way but that there were invisible forces at play that could be tapped into. The lines between subjective and objective were often blurry for me in those days.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Have you ever worked on making music for movies?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Not really. I have approached music with cinema in mind for sure but never deliberately scored music for film.</em></p>\n<p>**What was your path into latin and african music? **</p>\n<p><em>It probably had a lot to do with my interest in vodun. I was also an avid reader of liner notes on the backs of LPs. I used to do manual labor for this older hippy in Richmond, Virginia. When CDs came out he replaced his entire record collection and essentially gave me all his old records. There was tons of killer stuff in there.</em><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPHnvZBpsSk\">Out to Lunch</a> _<a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPHnvZBpsSk\">by Eric Dolphy</a>, Mingus, tons of later-era Coltrane, Miles. I liked Santana too and always noted the rhythm section, especially with Armando Peraza. The library was another spot where I started coming across percussion records. Then I bought a record by Mongo Santamaria called _Yambú <em>. It was a heavy hitter. I didn’t even know about him as a latin jazz or pop artist who had a hit with his version of “Watermelon Man.” This was deep and dark stuff. Around the same time I met two of the founders of**<a href=\"http://bioritmo.com/\">Bio Ritmo</a>** -Jorge Negron and Rei Alvarez. They hipped me to all the Fania stuff. I wanted to start playing hand percussion too but I didn’t want anything to do with the hippies in the drum circles with their Guatemalan sandals with their djembe drums. But I thought the Afro-Cuban stuff was slick and bad ass. There was the guy who was like a spiritual elder for those early days of Bio Ritmo-Miguel Valdez (RIP). He lived in Richmond and had played with Dave Matthews Band (barf) and The Brand New Heavies. He was a Cuban who had some relatives who lived in Richmond. I really never knew where he came from or why he was there but meeting him changed my life. I only had maybe three lessons from him, most of which was just talking. He was a santero. His family had ties to Yoruban religion. He was one of the most musical souls I ever met. He partied very hard too. So hard in fact, that he died of liver failure not long after I had met him. His wake was heavy. I felt some tingling in my body during the ceremony where his family and some drummers sent him off. If you’re interested in drumming and it’s origins it all goes back to Africa or comes from Africa, so naturally as my interest in drumming expanded, it led me to Latin and African music.</em></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img13.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>I am a big fan of Electric Cowbell. What was the original inspiration and idea behind the label? Are there any musical boundaries at all?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I was living in New York City. I felt a bit aimless at the time. I wasn’t depressed or anything but I was looking for some new kind of kick in the ass. Wasn’t sure what I was going to do next. Being in a band wasn’t as simple as it used to be when I was younger. I had answered some ads on Craigslist to jam with people but nothing was clicking. A friend of mine called me up and told me they were putting together a funk band to open for another friend’s band who were on tour. They were doing Sun Ra covers off of</em> Lanquidity <em>and some covers of some African funk reissues. I was in. It was a racket and we played a couple loft parties. We weren’t supposed to be a band really but we kept doing gigs and named ourselves**<a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/CSCfunkband\">CSC Funk Band</a>**. Daptone was in high gear at the time along with the Truth and Soul record label. I liked the overall aesthetic and the fact that they put out singles. I saw lots of DJs with their 45 boxes. I remembered John Peel had that box of 148 45s or whatever. I just liked the emphasis on recording a 7” 45RPM record. You had less than five minutes to do your thing. It made the CSC Funk Band self-edit these extended psychedelic jams into a distilled piece of essence. This is when and why I started the label. We recorded two songs: “Bad Banana Bread” and “Caneca” in a basement in Bushwick. I took the singles around to local record stores in Brooklyn and Manhattan and got really good feedback from the clerks. Then I started looking for distribution. The distributors were like, we don’t really have time for you unless you have a catalog or something. That’s when I started rallying my contacts to make 45s: Spanglish Fly, Bio Ritmo, Debo Band, and Superhuman Happiness were some of the first.</em></p>\n<p><strong>When you find an artist you’d like to present on EC how do you go about doing it? Is there a basic template you work with? Do you give royalties or records to the artists?</strong></p>\n<p><em>There’s no boundaries really. I mean a 45, especially now, is a hard sell. I imagine DJs out there like myself who like to spin 45s. If it’s too weird or doesn’t have a groove or solid backbeat, it might not make into the Platter-Pak for a DJ set. When I buy 45s I’m thinking about that. I am imagining dropping it at a party. Will it clear the floor? But basically my template is an extended network of like-minded friends and community. I really don’t crank out the releases. I have to be able to enjoy the process of a release: working with the artists, the designer, setting up the manufacturing. It’s a creative act that I find nourishing. It’s rare I take a demo. I have before like with<strong>Karthala 72</strong> but that was an exception because it’s exceptional music. We do royalties but it’s not like you get a check with your royalties. It’s a 50/50 deal. I normally can’t afford to front production costs so I always compare it to baking a cake together. This is after the group or artist have already recorded. I don’t know many labels who give out recording budgets anymore. But I get everyone involved in a project like we’re baking a cake together. I might bring 30% of the ingredients and they bring 70%. Once the record comes out of the oven we divide them according to what each of us put in. I generally don’t make much as I keep the price as low as possible for distribution. The band has a much better chance of making their money back with mark-up and selling their product at shows. I hardly ever do digital. There’s just too many spoons in the soup to make streaming revenue work for multiple parties. My feeling is that the bands should run their own digital. I have some of the catalog available for streaming but that’s really just to keep the brand out there and accessible to people everywhere.</em></p>\n<p><strong>How many items are in the catalog? What is forthcoming?</strong></p>\n<p>_We’re at about 30 releases right now. We’ve got the new**<a href=\"http://zongojunction.net/\">Zongo Junction</a>** 12” dropping in July. Great afrobeat group from NYC but there’s something that separates them from the pack. I don’t want to just say they’re more experimental but there’s a lot of different elements at work on their new record that I really connected with. Also we’re releasing _<strong><a href=\"https://soundcloud.com/lostorigins/nawa\">NAWA: Ancient Sufi Invocations and Forgotten Songs from Aleppo</a></strong> <em>as a collaboration with Lost Origins of ancient Sufi chants recorded in Syria in 2009. We released it initially on Record Store Day 2014 but it sold out and then some. So we’re going to repress and re-release.</em> <strong>Are there any particularly best-selling titles in the catalog?</strong> _Karthala 72, Bio Ritmo, CSC Funk Band, Spanglish Fly but I wouldn’t say there’s real best-sellers. _</p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img12.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>Does the label make enough $$ to sustain itself or do you have to put in out-of-pocket at times?</strong> /p></p>\n<p><em>Both. It’s always a case-by-case scenario.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Have there been any favorite labels that you trust for quality through the years?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Su</em> <em>re. There was<strong>SST</strong> before they signed my band! <a href=\"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factory_Records\">Factory</a> was of course great at one time. Nowadays I look to <a href=\"http://www.nyctrust.com/\">NYC Trust</a> and most of the labels we have on Independent Grand: Daptone, Soundway, Sofrito, PPU, Omega Supreme, Black Pearl, Wonderwheel and more.</em></p>\n<p><strong>You are involved with the</strong>**<a href=\"http://www.independentgrand.com/\">Independent Grand</a> online store. How did this come about? Could you explain the philosophy and desire to distribute other labels’ vinyl? **</p>\n<p><em>I’m friends with NYC Trust guys. Each of our labels have had a moderately successful self-run webshop on our respective websites, but the aim of Independent Grand is to provide a 1-stop shopping destination to help combat some of the recent & evil USPS postage hikes by offering a greater amount of stock to customers. As the new rates reflect, bundling multiple records saves greatly on postage, most especially for those overseas and in Canada.</em> <em>In addition to a reaction to this unfortunate USPS mandate, Independent Grand was formed to provide a unique and curated selection of records and labels. Stock is limited and specifically chosen to promote and support the business and culture of like-minded independent vinyl labels</em> and _ mall-run record releases. It’s kind of a power in numbers move._</p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img.png\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>You are involved with booking music in the NYC and DC areas. Could you elaborate on that?</strong> /p></p>\n<p><em>It’s a hustle. It’s also a natural extension of what I do: promoting and servicing music that I like or that I feel like has a value in it. But I work mostly with emerging artists. It’s likely that I’ll be promoting groups that are not as well-known. Sometimes I feel like I need a gimmick or a chicken suit to wear to get folks to check out a great new band or an unknown group from Mali or whatever.</em></p>\n<p>**As you are somebody who not only plays in bands but also produces records for others and presents concerts, what do you feel you need to provide for an artist? What types of standards do you like to see in regards to treatment of artists at concerts and for recordings? **</p>\n<p><em>This is pretty simple for me. Respect and support. Be kind and courteous when you can. You do need some tough skin sometimes because dealing with presenting in night clubs can be tedious and fraught with peril. I find myself trying to shield artists from the dark side if like I’m dealing with a club owner whose out of his mind on cocaine and booze but at the same time I remember reading Miles Davis’s or James Brown’s autobiographies. The night club business is historically joined at the hip it seems with the lowest and highest forms of life. It’s like a cosmic dance. If you can’t get some perspective or be able to laugh at it, you will go crazy.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Who have been the most exciting artists you have heard in recent times?</strong>** **</p>\n<p><em><a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/TalNational\">Tal National</a>, Janka Nabay, Oumar Konate. Seems like my mind is being blown by lots of West African music these days.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What forthcoming projects can we look forward to?</strong></p>\n<p><strong><em>Z</em></strong> _<strong>ongo Junction</strong> 12” dropping in July. It’s called _No Discount <em>.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Besides the music, what are some of your other personal interests?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Writing occasionally. Watching Youtube. Reading books. Hikes and beaches.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Could you recommend a favorite current restaurant or two?</strong></p>\n<p><em><a href=\"http://www.yelp.com/biz/merkato-ethiopian-restaurant-washington\">Merkat Ethiopian</a> in DC and <a href=\"http://www.greekspotdc.com/\">The Greek Spot</a>.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What have been your favorite cities you have lived in or visited?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Asheville, NC and Los Angeles.</em> <img src=\"/images/blog_img11.jpg\" alt=\"\"> <strong>Name a few records that you count among your all time favorites (any style, genre, era). ** _</strong>This list can change at anytime on any given day:**_</p>\n<p><strong>—Motorhead <em>No Sleep Til Hammersmith</em></strong> <strong>(Mercury-US)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img10.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>—Bad Brains (ROIR) cassette</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img9.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>—John Coltrane <em>Live at the Village Vanguard</em> (Impulse)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img8.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>—Husker Du <em>Zen Arcade</em> (SST)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img7.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>—Minutemen <em>Double Nickels on the Dime</em> (SST)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img6.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>—Tito Puente <em>Dance Mania</em> (RCA Victor)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img5.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>—King Sunny Ade <em>Juju Music</em> (Mango)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img4.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>—Joy Division _Unknown Pleasures _(Factory)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img3.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>—Slayer <em>Reign in Blood</em>****(Def Jam)</strong></p>\n<p><strong><img src=\"/images/img2_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></strong></p>\n<p><strong>—Tom Waits <em>Rain Dogs</em> (Island)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/img1_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>Electric Cowbell can be found <a href=\"http://electriccowbell.bigcartel.com/\">here</a>, <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/ElectricCowbellRecords\">here</a>, <a href=\"https://twitter.com/ElectricCowbell\">here</a>, or <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/user/ElectricCowbell45\">here</a>. And if, after that, you need more Electric Cowbell, than you can archaically shoot an email to <em><a href=\"mailto:electriccowbell45@gmail.com\">electriccowbell45@gmail.com</a></em>.</strong> <strong>Peace & Rhythm can be reached at <em><a href=\"mailto:peaceandrhythm45@gmail.com\">peaceandrhythm45@gmail.com</a></em> (two doors down on the web).</strong></p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560875-3", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Jim Thomson of Electric Cowbell", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=112", "date": "June 04, 2014", "post": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Jim Thomson of Electric Cowbell", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/peace-rhythms-interview-with-jim-thomson-of-electric-cowbell", "slug": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-jim-thomson-of-electric-cowbell" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-chuck-nessa-of-nessa-records", "data": { "title": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Chuck Nessa of Nessa Records", "slug": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-chuck-nessa-of-nessa-records", "date": "2014-06-03T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "**Chuck Nessa** is the man who birthed the **[Nessa Records](http://www.nessarecords.com/)** label. Operating out of Chicago starting in the mid 60's, Nessa supported the up-and-coming musicians from the [AACM](http://aacmchicago.org/) (Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians) and issued artifacts from the avant-garde of jazz/modern creative music including such seminal albums by Roscoe Mitchell, Lester Bowie, the unsung Hal Russell, Von Freeman, Air and others. An underground rare groove classic by the Art Ensemble of Chicago (\"[Theme de ](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PppJOrnVtkg)[Yoyo](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PppJOrnVtkg)\") finds its home on an early Nessa release. Today, the label is still producing exciting new music and we check in with Mr Chuck Nessa: \n\n\n\n**Could you give us some background about growing up, your early years and how you got into being involved with the music. **\n\n_I was born in 1944 and grew up on a farm in central Iowa. In the mid-fifties I was into Elvis, Little Richard, Fats Domino, Jerry Lee Lewis and the like. By high school I was branching out to jazz records. Armstrong, Ellington, Gillespie and Rollins were early experiences. I had failed at piano lessons and trumpet lessons because of my own impatience. I couldn’t advance fast enough on the instruments but my ears were advancing at warp speed. _ \n\n**What was your main function at [Delmark Records](http://delmark.com/) in the early days? Do you still maintain a relationship with Delmark's Bob Koester? **\n\n_Delmark and the [Jazz Record Mart](http://www.jazzmart.com/) both operated out of the same storefront at 7 West Grand Ave in Chicago. The staff at the time was Bob, Lynne Ludy (book keeper and store clerk) and for a while the shipping clerk was Kunle Mwanga. I was hired as store manager. I took the job with the understanding I could sign three artists to contracts and record them. I signed Roscoe Mitchell, Joseph Jarman and Muhal Richard Abrams. I started working there in the Spring of ’66 and lasted exactly one year._ _There were hard feelings when I left and we didn’t speak for a few years but when I moved back to Chicago in 1975 all was forgiven. I have been using the Delmark studio for almost all of my CD reissue projects._ \n\n**Nessa Records played a crucial role in documenting the early AACM artists. What inspired you to start producing the sounds of the Chicago scene back in the 60s?**\n\n_This is partially covered above, but my interest was initially stirred by the reviews of [AACM](http://aacmchicago.org/) events in_ Down Beat _by Pete Welding. When I moved to Chicago and went to work I sought these musicians out. When I left Delmark in 1967 Lester Bowie and Roscoe Mitchell convinced me to start my own label. _\n\n\n\n**Did you find a camaraderie amongst the labels also producing this strand of music in the 60s and 70s or was it competitive?**\n\n_Generally there was friendly, respectful competition. I was closest to Bill Smith and John Norris at Sackville and Bob Cummins of India Navigation and today I am friendly with Bruno Johnson at [Okka](http://okkadisk.com/) and a couple others._\n\n**You had told me that at one point in the later 70s Nessa had some kind of P &D deal through Flying Fish.**\n\n_Fish handled my distribution for around three years at the end of the ‘70s They had a much larger network than I did and we both thought it would be beneficial. Ultimately we discovered my records sold fewer copies than their folk and bluegrass so we parted ways. Nothing more complicated than that._\n\n**What were some of the biggest challenges through the decades on maintaining the label from a business standpoint? Have you had many paid employees or have you done most of this yourself?**\n\n_Never could afford employees. The label was supported by my various day jobs and the indulgences granted by my wife and kids. My wife Ann started designing covers and taking session photos in the late ‘70s and this was a huge financial aid._\n\n**From radio to trade magazines to blogs, what kinds of challenges have you had to deal with in getting word about your releases out? Have you preferred any one way over another through the years?**\n\n_Back in the 60s – 80s press reviews and a few radio stations made a difference. Not sure anything really works today._\n\n**I've often heard stories about music distribution in general suffering in recent times, be it economic climate, changing tastes or internet-sharing in ways that artists and labels don't make money. However, from what I can tell it seems that the jazz/avant/new music (whatever someone wants to call it) still has a fairly healthy record-buying audience. Do you find this to be accurate from your standpoint?**\n\n_All of the above. The old paradigm is gone and artists are making recordings for nothing more than a few discs to sell at gigs. It is a travesty and could ultimately damage the music itself. Not much is healthy about this in my book._\n\n**Do you have any strong opinion on the usage of the word \"jazz\"?**\n\n_Not really. It seems to be an easy device for identification. I understand others objecting but it works for me._\n\n**In regards to operating costs, do you use a typical arrangement for producing a record for an artist? For example, do you pay for the studio time or license already-made recordings? Do you have a structured royalties arrangement that you like to use as a template or could the arrangement vary from project to project?**\n\n_Yes to all the above. Almost every project is different._ \n\n**Are there any particular global markets that your releases have fared best in?**\n\n_North America, Europe and Japan – in that order._ \n\n**What is the best selling Nessa release ever?**\n\n_Roscoe Mitchell’s_ Nonaah _and_ Air Time _are probably the best selling – I think._ \n\n \n\n**Do you have any personal favorites from your label? **\n\n_They are like children – no favorites._ \n\n**Do you have any outstanding crazy stories that you would like to share? Or perhaps a situation of extreme excitement about a Nessa release.**\n\n_The most outlandish was the prep for recording Roscoe’s_[LRG-The Maze-SII Examples](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L-R-G_/_The_Maze_/_S_II_Examples) _. It involved two trips to visit Roscoe in Wisconsin, rental of a large Ryder truck to transport musical instruments from Wisconsin and Chicago to Woodstock (site of a week of rehearsals) and then into Manhattan for_ Maze _session. Malachi Favors drove the truck back to Chicago and Roscoe headed back to Woodstock to rehearse LRG before we all gathered at Rudy Van Gelder’s studio to record the work. After the session Roscoe and I drove back to Chicago. On the way we discussed a dilemma. Before recording we didn’t know the length of the performances, so we didn’t know if we had one LP or two – the actual result at this point was one and a half LPs so we decided to record a solo soprano piece to fill out the second record. From original idea to “in the can” took about a year and a half._ \n\n\n\n \n\n **When was the last time that Nessa pressed (or re-pressed) a release on vinyl?** _Mid ‘80s._ \n\n**Was there ever \"one that got away\" for Nessa?**\n\n_A Cecil Taylor quartet project and a few more._ \n\n**How many releases are in the Nessa catalog?**\n\n_I am currently working on number 36._ \n\n**Do you still regularly attend concerts? Who has been exciting to hear amongst the recent generation of Chicago artists?**\n\n_When the opportunity arises. I enjoy attending events at Mike Reed’s Constellation in Chicago. Too many interesting musicians in Chicago to pick names. I do miss the Velvet Lounge. I am currently looking forward to hearing Peter Brotzmannn, William Parker and Hamid Drake at Hallwalls in Buffalo._ \n\n**What forthcoming projects can we look forward to?**\n\n_Reissues of Hal Russell with Charles Tyler and our Ira Sullivan date will be out this summer. For fall we have a lovely session by the Bobby Bradford / Frode Gjerstad quartet with Ingebrigt Håker Flaten and Frank Rosaly. I am considering a vinyl repressing of_ [Air Time](http://www.discogs.com/Air-Air-Time/release/1091748) _. But don’t hold your breath._ \n\n \n\n**Besides the music, what are some of your other personal interests?**\n\n_Family. I really can’t afford anything else – financially or emotionally._ \n\n**Could you recommend a favorite current restaurant or two?**\n\n_Too many to list and I would forget some and feel terrible – our son is a chef in Buffalo._ \n\n**Name a few records that you count among your all time favorites.**\n\n_Not a game I am good at. Distilling thousands to a handful is too painful. I listen to stuff from the ‘20s and ‘30s as much as anything. Here are a few recordings hitting my stereo in the past week:_ \\--**Jelly Roll Morton--_Birth of the Hot_ (RCA)** \n\n \n\n\\--**Duke Ellington--_Afro Bossa_ (Reprise)** \n\n \n\n\\--**Mal Waldron--_The Quest_ (New Jazz) ** \n\n\n\n\\--**Atomic--_Theater Tilters_ (Jazzland)** \n\n \n\n\\--**Willie Pickens--_Dark Eyes_ (M&I)** \n\n\n\n\\--**Lennie Tristano--_T_ _he New Tristano_ (Atlantic)** \n\n \n\n\\--**Jascha Horenstein / Vienna Symphony Orchestra--Mahler _Symphony #1_ (Vox)**\n\n \n\n \n\n \n\nFor Nessa news and inquiries, **Chuck Nessa** can be reached at _nessarecords@charter.net_. Or visit the [website](http://www.nessarecords.com/). You can reach **Peace & Rhythm** at _peaceandrhythm45@gmail.com_. \n\n", "filePath": "content/posts/peace-rhythms-interview-with-chuck-nessa-of-nessa-records.md", "digest": "9f1b94f5ab69d7d6", "rendered": { "html": "<p><strong>Chuck Nessa</strong> is the man who birthed the <strong><a href=\"http://www.nessarecords.com/\">Nessa Records</a></strong> label. Operating out of Chicago starting in the mid 60’s, Nessa supported the up-and-coming musicians from the <a href=\"http://aacmchicago.org/\">AACM</a> (Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians) and issued artifacts from the avant-garde of jazz/modern creative music including such seminal albums by Roscoe Mitchell, Lester Bowie, the unsung Hal Russell, Von Freeman, Air and others. An underground rare groove classic by the Art Ensemble of Chicago (“<a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PppJOrnVtkg\">Theme de </a><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PppJOrnVtkg\">Yoyo</a>”) finds its home on an early Nessa release. Today, the label is still producing exciting new music and we check in with Mr Chuck Nessa:</p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img28.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>**Could you give us some background about growing up, your early years and how you got into being involved with the music. **</p>\n<p>_I was born in 1944 and grew up on a farm in central Iowa. In the mid-fifties I was into Elvis, Little Richard, Fats Domino, Jerry Lee Lewis and the like. By high school I was branching out to jazz records. Armstrong, Ellington, Gillespie and Rollins were early experiences. I had failed at piano lessons and trumpet lessons because of my own impatience. I couldn’t advance fast enough on the instruments but my ears were advancing at warp speed. _</p>\n<p>**What was your main function at <a href=\"http://delmark.com/\">Delmark Records</a> in the early days? Do you still maintain a relationship with Delmark’s Bob Koester? **</p>\n<p><em>Delmark and the <a href=\"http://www.jazzmart.com/\">Jazz Record Mart</a> both operated out of the same storefront at 7 West Grand Ave in Chicago. The staff at the time was Bob, Lynne Ludy (book keeper and store clerk) and for a while the shipping clerk was Kunle Mwanga. I was hired as store manager. I took the job with the understanding I could sign three artists to contracts and record them. I signed Roscoe Mitchell, Joseph Jarman and Muhal Richard Abrams. I started working there in the Spring of ’66 and lasted exactly one year.</em> <em>There were hard feelings when I left and we didn’t speak for a few years but when I moved back to Chicago in 1975 all was forgiven. I have been using the Delmark studio for almost all of my CD reissue projects.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Nessa Records played a crucial role in documenting the early AACM artists. What inspired you to start producing the sounds of the Chicago scene back in the 60s?</strong></p>\n<p><em>This is partially covered above, but my interest was initially stirred by the reviews of <a href=\"http://aacmchicago.org/\">AACM</a> events in</em> Down Beat _by Pete Welding. When I moved to Chicago and went to work I sought these musicians out. When I left Delmark in 1967 Lester Bowie and Roscoe Mitchell convinced me to start my own label. _</p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img27.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>Did you find a camaraderie amongst the labels also producing this strand of music in the 60s and 70s or was it competitive?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Generally there was friendly, respectful competition. I was closest to Bill Smith and John Norris at Sackville and Bob Cummins of India Navigation and today I am friendly with Bruno Johnson at <a href=\"http://okkadisk.com/\">Okka</a> and a couple others.</em></p>\n<p><strong>You had told me that at one point in the later 70s Nessa had some kind of P &D deal through Flying Fish.</strong></p>\n<p><em>Fish handled my distribution for around three years at the end of the ‘70s They had a much larger network than I did and we both thought it would be beneficial. Ultimately we discovered my records sold fewer copies than their folk and bluegrass so we parted ways. Nothing more complicated than that.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What were some of the biggest challenges through the decades on maintaining the label from a business standpoint? Have you had many paid employees or have you done most of this yourself?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Never could afford employees. The label was supported by my various day jobs and the indulgences granted by my wife and kids. My wife Ann started designing covers and taking session photos in the late ‘70s and this was a huge financial aid.</em></p>\n<p><strong>From radio to trade magazines to blogs, what kinds of challenges have you had to deal with in getting word about your releases out? Have you preferred any one way over another through the years?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Back in the 60s – 80s press reviews and a few radio stations made a difference. Not sure anything really works today.</em></p>\n<p><strong>I’ve often heard stories about music distribution in general suffering in recent times, be it economic climate, changing tastes or internet-sharing in ways that artists and labels don’t make money. However, from what I can tell it seems that the jazz/avant/new music (whatever someone wants to call it) still has a fairly healthy record-buying audience. Do you find this to be accurate from your standpoint?</strong></p>\n<p><em>All of the above. The old paradigm is gone and artists are making recordings for nothing more than a few discs to sell at gigs. It is a travesty and could ultimately damage the music itself. Not much is healthy about this in my book.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Do you have any strong opinion on the usage of the word “jazz”?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Not really. It seems to be an easy device for identification. I understand others objecting but it works for me.</em></p>\n<p><strong>In regards to operating costs, do you use a typical arrangement for producing a record for an artist? For example, do you pay for the studio time or license already-made recordings? Do you have a structured royalties arrangement that you like to use as a template or could the arrangement vary from project to project?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Yes to all the above. Almost every project is different.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Are there any particular global markets that your releases have fared best in?</strong></p>\n<p><em>North America, Europe and Japan – in that order.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What is the best selling Nessa release ever?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Roscoe Mitchell’s</em> Nonaah <em>and</em> Air Time <em>are probably the best selling – I think.</em></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img26.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>**Do you have any personal favorites from your label? **</p>\n<p><em>They are like children – no favorites.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Do you have any outstanding crazy stories that you would like to share? Or perhaps a situation of extreme excitement about a Nessa release.</strong></p>\n<p><em>The most outlandish was the prep for recording Roscoe’s</em><a href=\"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L-R-G_/_The_Maze_/_S_II_Examples\">LRG-The Maze-SII Examples</a> <em>. It involved two trips to visit Roscoe in Wisconsin, rental of a large Ryder truck to transport musical instruments from Wisconsin and Chicago to Woodstock (site of a week of rehearsals) and then into Manhattan for</em> Maze <em>session. Malachi Favors drove the truck back to Chicago and Roscoe headed back to Woodstock to rehearse LRG before we all gathered at Rudy Van Gelder’s studio to record the work. After the session Roscoe and I drove back to Chicago. On the way we discussed a dilemma. Before recording we didn’t know the length of the performances, so we didn’t know if we had one LP or two – the actual result at this point was one and a half LPs so we decided to record a solo soprano piece to fill out the second record. From original idea to “in the can” took about a year and a half.</em></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img25.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<pre class=\"astro-code github-dark\" style=\"background-color:#24292e;color:#e1e4e8; overflow-x: auto;\" tabindex=\"0\" data-language=\"plaintext\"><code><span class=\"line\"><span>**When was the last time that Nessa pressed (or re-pressed) a release on vinyl?** _Mid ‘80s._ </span></span></code></pre>\n<p><strong>Was there ever “one that got away” for Nessa?</strong></p>\n<p><em>A Cecil Taylor quartet project and a few more.</em></p>\n<p><strong>How many releases are in the Nessa catalog?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I am currently working on number 36.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Do you still regularly attend concerts? Who has been exciting to hear amongst the recent generation of Chicago artists?</strong></p>\n<p><em>When the opportunity arises. I enjoy attending events at Mike Reed’s Constellation in Chicago. Too many interesting musicians in Chicago to pick names. I do miss the Velvet Lounge. I am currently looking forward to hearing Peter Brotzmannn, William Parker and Hamid Drake at Hallwalls in Buffalo.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What forthcoming projects can we look forward to?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Reissues of Hal Russell with Charles Tyler and our Ira Sullivan date will be out this summer. For fall we have a lovely session by the Bobby Bradford / Frode Gjerstad quartet with Ingebrigt Håker Flaten and Frank Rosaly. I am considering a vinyl repressing of</em> <a href=\"http://www.discogs.com/Air-Air-Time/release/1091748\">Air Time</a> <em>. But don’t hold your breath.</em></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img24.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>Besides the music, what are some of your other personal interests?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Family. I really can’t afford anything else – financially or emotionally.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Could you recommend a favorite current restaurant or two?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Too many to list and I would forget some and feel terrible – our son is a chef in Buffalo.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Name a few records that you count among your all time favorites.</strong></p>\n<p><em>Not a game I am good at. Distilling thousands to a handful is too painful. I listen to stuff from the ‘20s and ‘30s as much as anything. Here are a few recordings hitting my stereo in the past week:</em> —<strong>Jelly Roll Morton—<em>Birth of the Hot</em> (RCA)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img23.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>—<strong>Duke Ellington—<em>Afro Bossa</em> (Reprise)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img22.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>—**Mal Waldron—<em>The Quest</em> (New Jazz) **</p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img21.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>—<strong>Atomic—<em>Theater Tilters</em> (Jazzland)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img20.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>—<strong>Willie Pickens—<em>Dark Eyes</em> (M&I)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img19.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>—<strong>Lennie Tristano—<em>T</em> <em>he New Tristano</em> (Atlantic)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img18.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>—<strong>Jascha Horenstein / Vienna Symphony Orchestra—Mahler <em>Symphony #1</em> (Vox)</strong></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img17.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p>For Nessa news and inquiries, <strong>Chuck Nessa</strong> can be reached at <em><a href=\"mailto:nessarecords@charter.net\">nessarecords@charter.net</a></em>. Or visit the <a href=\"http://www.nessarecords.com/\">website</a>. You can reach <strong>Peace & Rhythm</strong> at <em><a href=\"mailto:peaceandrhythm45@gmail.com\">peaceandrhythm45@gmail.com</a></em>.</p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img16.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>", "metadata": { "headings": [], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560873-2", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Chuck Nessa of Nessa Records", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=112", "date": "June 03, 2014", "post": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Chuck Nessa of Nessa Records", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/peace-rhythms-interview-with-chuck-nessa-of-nessa-records", "slug": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-chuck-nessa-of-nessa-records" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" }, { "id": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-larry-grogan-of-funky-16-corners", "data": { "title": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Larry Grogan of Funky 16 Corners", "slug": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-larry-grogan-of-funky-16-corners", "date": "2014-05-21T00:00:00.000Z" }, "body": "We're kicking off our new interview series with a fantastic funky gentleman from New Jersey named Larry Grogan. If you've ever read his popular blogs [Funky 16 Corners](http://funky16corners.com/) and [Iron Leg](http://ironleg.wordpress.com/) you'll know Larry as a passionate music fan of 60s & 70s funk, soul, garage and pop. An avid collector, groovy DJ, familyman and all-around excellent dude, Larry is a walking encyclopedia of old-school 45s. We highly recommend that you bookmark his blogs. Here we present our brother in soul, Larry Grogan: \n\n\n\n_(photo credit: Eilon Paz)_\n\n**Could you give us some background on your early life and how you found this music you passionately write about?**\n\n_I grew up in NJ during the 70s. My father was a full-time teacher and a part time musician. There was always music in our house/family (mostly jazz and classical before I started buying my own records) and we were all encouraged to play an instrument as well. I started out on the trumpet when I was in grade school, but as soon as I fell in love with rock’n’roll I got a drum set._\n\n**Tell our readers about your bands you played in. Did these bands appear on any records?**\n\n_I had a bunch of bands during and right after high school (mostly hard rock) but after getting deep into 60s garage and psyche my brothers and I formed the Phantom Five in 1984. We played 60s garage, folk rock, mod and some psyche stuff on the NYC garage scene. We recorded and released a four-song EP ('[Great Jones Street'](http://www.discogs.com/viewimages?release=4391935)) in 1986 and then recorded a second EP in 1987 that never made it past the cassette stage._\n\n\n\n**Could you tell us about your experiences with print zines? What are the best and worst things to you about switching from print to online?**\n\n_I started doing zines in 1984, first with Incognito (1984-1987) Evil Eye (1988 – 1996), then a few issues of a jazz/Beat Generation zine called Gone (1997/98). I sold them via consignment in NJ and NYC record stores, through the zine store See/Hear in NYC and through the mail._ _Funky16Corners started out in 2000 as a kind of on-line incarnation of a zine._ _If on-line as a downside, it’s the ephemeral nature of it, i.e. unless you make an effort to keep things uploaded and current, they can disappear, whereas a printed zine gives the reader something in hand. On the plus side of things, the on-line format allows for a lot of multimedia possibilities. I can use color pictures, post sound files/mixes, and link to outside sources of information. Counting the archived episodes of my radio show, I host a couple of hundred mixes at Funky16Corners, mostly by me, but also including guest mixes from my yearly fundraisers._\n\n\n\n**You have two blogs, _Funky 16 Corners_ and _Iron Leg_. What is the basic theme for each one? Why two instead of some kind of combination blog? When did you start these blogs?**\n\n_I moved from the web zine format of Funky16Corners to a blog in 2004. I started Iron Leg in 2007._ _Funky16Corners covers a fairly wide variety of funk, soul, jazz, R &B. I originally came from a ‘mod soul’ vibe that encompassed everything from late 50s R&B, to soul jazz (especially Hammond stuff) on through ‘classic era’ soul and Northern Soul-style stuff. I have also written about disco, breaks/samples, and of course funk._ _When I started Funky16Corners I was also writing about pop and rock music, but decided pretty quickly that I ought to narrow the focus to soul/funk._ _I have been a collector/fan of 60s garage/mod/psyche/pop since the early 80s, and still listen to/dig for that kind of stuff, so in 2007 I decided that I wanted to write about that music as well, and Iron Leg was born._ _The blogs have pretty distinct audiences, but I’ve found that there’s a lot of crossover as well._\n\n**Obviously your blog posts are in the spirit of spreading the music, with your writing about the tune as well as a digital file to listen to. However, have you run into any trouble with an artist or publishing company wanting you to take anything down?** _I have been extraordinarily lucky in that respect. Whether it’s because artists realize that I post the music out of respect and a wish to spread the word, or the fact that much of what I post is really old and out of print, I have never run into those kind of problems. Once I had the son of an artist write to complain about my posting a song on Iron Leg, but once I explained to him that I had purchased the music on-line and as a record, and my intention was to raise consciousness about his father’s music, he changed his tune._ _I have been contacted many, many times over the years by artists and/or their families and they are universally thrilled that someone out there cares enough to keep the sounds alive for a new generation._ _I know that it may not stay that way forever, but I just keep on keeping on and hoping for the best._\n\n**What would you say about the overall response to your blog activities?**\n\n_Very positive. Funky16Corners will celebrate its 10th anniversary this fall, and I’ve had a number of younger bloggers tell me that my site was the inspiration for them to get into the game, which makes me extremely proud. That, and the number of DJs/diggers who have given thanks, either in person or on the web for the music and stories I’ve shared._\n\n**Have you ever thought about compiling a book?**\n\n_I actually have, and right now I’m in the process of figuring out what form that book will take. I want to do anthology of writing from the blogs, but have to decide how to present it._\n\n**How often do you get out to DJ? What are some of the things about DJing that you find to be the best and worst for you?**\n\n_I don’t get out nearly as much as I’d like. Unfortunately, where I live (Central NJ) there isn’t a lot of demand for the kind of music I play. I have traveled a lot to spin, up in NYC, Philadelphia, Washington, DC, Massachusetts, Richmond, VA but having two kids (I’m a stay at home Dad), and the lack of real money involved limits the amount of travelling I can do._ _I love to DJ though, especially when you have a room full of people that are down to dance. There’s not much of a downside. People complain about folks making weird requests, but it’s not really enough of a problem to waste time worrying about it._\n\n**What about the Funky16Corners Radio Show? What are your feelings on the radio medium now, and on the internet as a medium?**\n\n_I love doing the radio show. I’m old enough to have grown up when commercial radio was still important, and to have experienced the 1980s rise (and fall) of college/alternative radio first-hand. I’m one of those kids that used to sit up listening to my radio late into the night, dreaming about being a broadcaster myself. The internet has been the great democratizer, in that anyone with access to the basic technology can put together a blog, or a podcast. The hardware required is relatively small potatoes, and the software isn’t hard to learn._ _College/public radio is really the last off-internet frontier where people can really say something interesting. Commercial radio, and unfortunately satellite (which has really been a missed opportunity) are both dead in the water._ _Podcasting is really amazing in that you can pretty much do/say anything you want to. I look at my show as an educational opportunity in the same way as the blog. I get to turn people on to things they may not have heard, or remind them of something they haven’t heard in a while. Either way, it’s another outlet to get those good sounds out into the ether._\n\n**How supportive are your family members of your collecting, blogging and DJing?**\n\n_My wife has been very supportive. We’ve been married for 14 years this year, so she’s been around for everything but the band/print-zine years. My kids both love music, and they know they’re not supposed to touch the records, so that’s all good._ _I’m not irresponsible with my time or money (both of which I’ve seen get out of hand with record friends), and I’ve managed to find a nice balance between records/record related stuff and real life._\n\n**Are there any other blogs that you enjoy reading? Would you like to shout-out any other writers?**\n\n_Yes. Though a lot of great blogs have gone under in the last few years, I always check in with AM Then FM, Echoes in the Wind, the B-Side, Fleamarket Funk, Heavysoulbrutha’s Put the Needle On the Record, The Hits Just Keep On Comin' and Soul Sides (you can find links in the Funky16Corners blogroll). They’re not all funk/soul related but they all make for interesting reading._\n\n**What are the most and least enjoyable aspects to digging for records?**\n\n_The most enjoyable aspect for me is discovery. I have very far reaching tastes, so I can usually find something new to listen to. The least enjoyable thing for me is how competitive some people are about their digging spots and the commerce of records. There are too many people who have decided to spend the bulk of their time buying to sell, instead of buying to hear. I always share my spots. There are more than enough records out there for everyone. If I come up with more from any given spot than someone else it’s because I’ve taken the time to educate myself._\n\n**How big is your vinyl collection and what other types of music beyond soul, funk and garage that we may find healthy doses of? **\n\n_I have maybe three to four thousand 45s and a couple of thousand LPs. In addition to the styles you mentioned, I have a LOT of jazz and pop, some folk, country, classical._\n\n**How do you manage your time when it comes to your blogging projects? You seem to be pretty regular, but do you ever get stressed about the blogs? Have you ever taken a vacation from it?**\n\n_Right now, I generally do three posts a week at Funky16Corners, one post at Iron Leg, a weekly radio show/podcast at F16C and a monthly podcast at Iron Leg. I record and photograph vinyl as it comes in, so I have a huge stockpile of raw material ready to be blogged, and try to keep a couple of weeks’ worth of posts done ahead of time and a few weeks of the radio show pre-recorded. If I know I’m going to be away, or have a big project coming up I’ll try to increase those numbers to give myself some breathing room._ _The only time I scaled back was to deal with a family health crisis a few years back._\n\n**Have you ever worked on compilations for labels?**\n\n_I have not. I’ve provided info and gotten thanks on a couple of things but that’s it. I’d love to compile something._\n\n**If you could put together a fictional Funky 16 Corners Soul Revue, who would you want in the concert? How about for Iron Leg?**\n\n_A Funky16Corners Revue would have to include Otis Redding, Eddie Bo, The Meters, Sam and Dave, Curtis Mayfield, Eldridge Holmes, Homer Banks, Betty Harris, Laura Lee, Irma Thomas, though I could probably spend several hours just interviewing Allen Toussaint._ _For Iron Leg it would include Curt Boettcher, Van Dyke Parks, Brian Wilson, the Sonics, UK bands like the Action, Manfred Mann, the Pretty Things and several dozen one-off US garage bands from the 60s._\n\n**Are there any contemporary bands or artists that have captured your ear?**\n\n_The only ‘of the moment’ band that I dig is Tame Impala. I do like some of the modern Afrobeat groups, like the Budos band, Antibalas, The Public Opinion Afro Orchestra and Ikebe Shakedown. The last modern band that I really flipped over was Stereolab (which isn’t that modern…). I find that I spend a lot of my time tunneling into the past, doing what I can to bring forgotten/neglected music to light. I’m sure that there’s more new music out there that I’d like, but I don’t really have the time for it._\n\n**What are some things that you are looking forward to this summer?**\n\n_Nice weather, spending time with my family and hopefully spinning some records._\n\n**Besides the music, what are some of your other personal interests?**\n\n_I love to read, any music history, Beat Generation and related, watching old movies._\n\n**Could you recommend a favorite current restaurant or two?**\n\n_Well, if you find yourself in Central New Jersey, you should hit the [Saigon Bistro](http://vietnambistrohowell.com/) in Howell, NJ (for pho and summer rolls) and [Babur Garden](http://baburgarden.com/) in Ocean Township for Afghan food._\n\n## Name a few records that you count among your all time favorites:\n\n_Hmmm….As far as soul/funk goes:_\n\n**Roger and the Gypsies – \"Pass the Hatchet\" Pts1 &2 (Seven B) ** _\\--My all-time favorite 45, by the New Orleans group Earl Stanley and the Stereos with vocals by none other than Eddie Bo._\n\n__\n\n**Rex Garvin and the Mighty Cravers – \"I Gotta Go Now (Up On the Floor)\" (Like) ** _– One of the most powerful, relentless soul 45s ever made. Brilliant and always gets the dancers moving._\n\n__\n\n**Barbara Banks – \"River of Tears\" (Veep)** _ \\--Amazing Northern Soul, also recorded (with a drum break!) by the Royalettes._\n\n__\n\n**Toussaint McCall – \"Shimmy\" (Ronn) ** _\\--Searing organ instrumental by a performer better known for his deep soul ballads._  **Homer Banks – \"60 Minutes of Your Love\" (Minit) ** _\\--Amazing Memphis soul (written by Hayes and Porter) by a hugely underrated singer/songwriter._\n\n__\n\n**Eldridge Holmes – \"A Love Problem\" (Decca) ** _\\--Amazing, heartfelt ballad from the great New Orleans singer._\n\n__\n\n_You can hit**Larry** up at funky16corners@gmail.com. You can reach **Peace & Rhythm** at peaceandrhythm45@gmail.com_\n\n_post author:**Andujar**_", "filePath": "content/posts/peace-rhythms-interview-with-larry-grogan-of-funky-16-corners.md", "digest": "0c5ef1c8075c8a0e", "rendered": { "html": "<p>We’re kicking off our new interview series with a fantastic funky gentleman from New Jersey named Larry Grogan. If you’ve ever read his popular blogs <a href=\"http://funky16corners.com/\">Funky 16 Corners</a> and <a href=\"http://ironleg.wordpress.com/\">Iron Leg</a> you’ll know Larry as a passionate music fan of 60s & 70s funk, soul, garage and pop. An avid collector, groovy DJ, familyman and all-around excellent dude, Larry is a walking encyclopedia of old-school 45s. We highly recommend that you bookmark his blogs. Here we present our brother in soul, Larry Grogan:</p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/Larry-640x420_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><em>(photo credit: Eilon Paz)</em></p>\n<p><strong>Could you give us some background on your early life and how you found this music you passionately write about?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I grew up in NJ during the 70s. My father was a full-time teacher and a part time musician. There was always music in our house/family (mostly jazz and classical before I started buying my own records) and we were all encouraged to play an instrument as well. I started out on the trumpet when I was in grade school, but as soon as I fell in love with rock’n’roll I got a drum set.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Tell our readers about your bands you played in. Did these bands appear on any records?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I had a bunch of bands during and right after high school (mostly hard rock) but after getting deep into 60s garage and psyche my brothers and I formed the Phantom Five in 1984. We played 60s garage, folk rock, mod and some psyche stuff on the NYC garage scene. We recorded and released a four-song EP (‘<a href=\"http://www.discogs.com/viewimages?release=4391935\">Great Jones Street’</a>) in 1986 and then recorded a second EP in 1987 that never made it past the cassette stage.</em></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_img29.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>Could you tell us about your experiences with print zines? What are the best and worst things to you about switching from print to online?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I started doing zines in 1984, first with Incognito (1984-1987) Evil Eye (1988 – 1996), then a few issues of a jazz/Beat Generation zine called Gone (1997/98). I sold them via consignment in NJ and NYC record stores, through the zine store See/Hear in NYC and through the mail.</em> <em>Funky16Corners started out in 2000 as a kind of on-line incarnation of a zine.</em> <em>If on-line as a downside, it’s the ephemeral nature of it, i.e. unless you make an effort to keep things uploaded and current, they can disappear, whereas a printed zine gives the reader something in hand. On the plus side of things, the on-line format allows for a lot of multimedia possibilities. I can use color pictures, post sound files/mixes, and link to outside sources of information. Counting the archived episodes of my radio show, I host a couple of hundred mixes at Funky16Corners, mostly by me, but also including guest mixes from my yearly fundraisers.</em></p>\n<p><img src=\"/images/blog_incognito_montage.jpg\" alt=\"\"><img src=\"/images/blog_evileye_montage.jpg\" alt=\"\"><img src=\"/images/blog_gonemontage.jpg\" alt=\"\"></p>\n<p><strong>You have two blogs, <em>Funky 16 Corners</em> and <em>Iron Leg</em>. What is the basic theme for each one? Why two instead of some kind of combination blog? When did you start these blogs?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I moved from the web zine format of Funky16Corners to a blog in 2004. I started Iron Leg in 2007.</em> <em>Funky16Corners covers a fairly wide variety of funk, soul, jazz, R &B. I originally came from a ‘mod soul’ vibe that encompassed everything from late 50s R&B, to soul jazz (especially Hammond stuff) on through ‘classic era’ soul and Northern Soul-style stuff. I have also written about disco, breaks/samples, and of course funk.</em> <em>When I started Funky16Corners I was also writing about pop and rock music, but decided pretty quickly that I ought to narrow the focus to soul/funk.</em> <em>I have been a collector/fan of 60s garage/mod/psyche/pop since the early 80s, and still listen to/dig for that kind of stuff, so in 2007 I decided that I wanted to write about that music as well, and Iron Leg was born.</em> <em>The blogs have pretty distinct audiences, but I’ve found that there’s a lot of crossover as well.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Obviously your blog posts are in the spirit of spreading the music, with your writing about the tune as well as a digital file to listen to. However, have you run into any trouble with an artist or publishing company wanting you to take anything down?</strong> <em>I have been extraordinarily lucky in that respect. Whether it’s because artists realize that I post the music out of respect and a wish to spread the word, or the fact that much of what I post is really old and out of print, I have never run into those kind of problems. Once I had the son of an artist write to complain about my posting a song on Iron Leg, but once I explained to him that I had purchased the music on-line and as a record, and my intention was to raise consciousness about his father’s music, he changed his tune.</em> <em>I have been contacted many, many times over the years by artists and/or their families and they are universally thrilled that someone out there cares enough to keep the sounds alive for a new generation.</em> <em>I know that it may not stay that way forever, but I just keep on keeping on and hoping for the best.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What would you say about the overall response to your blog activities?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Very positive. Funky16Corners will celebrate its 10th anniversary this fall, and I’ve had a number of younger bloggers tell me that my site was the inspiration for them to get into the game, which makes me extremely proud. That, and the number of DJs/diggers who have given thanks, either in person or on the web for the music and stories I’ve shared.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Have you ever thought about compiling a book?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I actually have, and right now I’m in the process of figuring out what form that book will take. I want to do anthology of writing from the blogs, but have to decide how to present it.</em></p>\n<p><strong>How often do you get out to DJ? What are some of the things about DJing that you find to be the best and worst for you?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I don’t get out nearly as much as I’d like. Unfortunately, where I live (Central NJ) there isn’t a lot of demand for the kind of music I play. I have traveled a lot to spin, up in NYC, Philadelphia, Washington, DC, Massachusetts, Richmond, VA but having two kids (I’m a stay at home Dad), and the lack of real money involved limits the amount of travelling I can do.</em> <em>I love to DJ though, especially when you have a room full of people that are down to dance. There’s not much of a downside. People complain about folks making weird requests, but it’s not really enough of a problem to waste time worrying about it.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What about the Funky16Corners Radio Show? What are your feelings on the radio medium now, and on the internet as a medium?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I love doing the radio show. I’m old enough to have grown up when commercial radio was still important, and to have experienced the 1980s rise (and fall) of college/alternative radio first-hand. I’m one of those kids that used to sit up listening to my radio late into the night, dreaming about being a broadcaster myself. The internet has been the great democratizer, in that anyone with access to the basic technology can put together a blog, or a podcast. The hardware required is relatively small potatoes, and the software isn’t hard to learn.</em> <em>College/public radio is really the last off-internet frontier where people can really say something interesting. Commercial radio, and unfortunately satellite (which has really been a missed opportunity) are both dead in the water.</em> <em>Podcasting is really amazing in that you can pretty much do/say anything you want to. I look at my show as an educational opportunity in the same way as the blog. I get to turn people on to things they may not have heard, or remind them of something they haven’t heard in a while. Either way, it’s another outlet to get those good sounds out into the ether.</em></p>\n<p><strong>How supportive are your family members of your collecting, blogging and DJing?</strong></p>\n<p><em>My wife has been very supportive. We’ve been married for 14 years this year, so she’s been around for everything but the band/print-zine years. My kids both love music, and they know they’re not supposed to touch the records, so that’s all good.</em> <em>I’m not irresponsible with my time or money (both of which I’ve seen get out of hand with record friends), and I’ve managed to find a nice balance between records/record related stuff and real life.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Are there any other blogs that you enjoy reading? Would you like to shout-out any other writers?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Yes. Though a lot of great blogs have gone under in the last few years, I always check in with AM Then FM, Echoes in the Wind, the B-Side, Fleamarket Funk, Heavysoulbrutha’s Put the Needle On the Record, The Hits Just Keep On Comin’ and Soul Sides (you can find links in the Funky16Corners blogroll). They’re not all funk/soul related but they all make for interesting reading.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What are the most and least enjoyable aspects to digging for records?</strong></p>\n<p><em>The most enjoyable aspect for me is discovery. I have very far reaching tastes, so I can usually find something new to listen to. The least enjoyable thing for me is how competitive some people are about their digging spots and the commerce of records. There are too many people who have decided to spend the bulk of their time buying to sell, instead of buying to hear. I always share my spots. There are more than enough records out there for everyone. If I come up with more from any given spot than someone else it’s because I’ve taken the time to educate myself.</em></p>\n<p>**How big is your vinyl collection and what other types of music beyond soul, funk and garage that we may find healthy doses of? **</p>\n<p><em>I have maybe three to four thousand 45s and a couple of thousand LPs. In addition to the styles you mentioned, I have a LOT of jazz and pop, some folk, country, classical.</em></p>\n<p><strong>How do you manage your time when it comes to your blogging projects? You seem to be pretty regular, but do you ever get stressed about the blogs? Have you ever taken a vacation from it?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Right now, I generally do three posts a week at Funky16Corners, one post at Iron Leg, a weekly radio show/podcast at F16C and a monthly podcast at Iron Leg. I record and photograph vinyl as it comes in, so I have a huge stockpile of raw material ready to be blogged, and try to keep a couple of weeks’ worth of posts done ahead of time and a few weeks of the radio show pre-recorded. If I know I’m going to be away, or have a big project coming up I’ll try to increase those numbers to give myself some breathing room.</em> <em>The only time I scaled back was to deal with a family health crisis a few years back.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Have you ever worked on compilations for labels?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I have not. I’ve provided info and gotten thanks on a couple of things but that’s it. I’d love to compile something.</em></p>\n<p><strong>If you could put together a fictional Funky 16 Corners Soul Revue, who would you want in the concert? How about for Iron Leg?</strong></p>\n<p><em>A Funky16Corners Revue would have to include Otis Redding, Eddie Bo, The Meters, Sam and Dave, Curtis Mayfield, Eldridge Holmes, Homer Banks, Betty Harris, Laura Lee, Irma Thomas, though I could probably spend several hours just interviewing Allen Toussaint.</em> <em>For Iron Leg it would include Curt Boettcher, Van Dyke Parks, Brian Wilson, the Sonics, UK bands like the Action, Manfred Mann, the Pretty Things and several dozen one-off US garage bands from the 60s.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Are there any contemporary bands or artists that have captured your ear?</strong></p>\n<p><em>The only ‘of the moment’ band that I dig is Tame Impala. I do like some of the modern Afrobeat groups, like the Budos band, Antibalas, The Public Opinion Afro Orchestra and Ikebe Shakedown. The last modern band that I really flipped over was Stereolab (which isn’t that modern…). I find that I spend a lot of my time tunneling into the past, doing what I can to bring forgotten/neglected music to light. I’m sure that there’s more new music out there that I’d like, but I don’t really have the time for it.</em></p>\n<p><strong>What are some things that you are looking forward to this summer?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Nice weather, spending time with my family and hopefully spinning some records.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Besides the music, what are some of your other personal interests?</strong></p>\n<p><em>I love to read, any music history, Beat Generation and related, watching old movies.</em></p>\n<p><strong>Could you recommend a favorite current restaurant or two?</strong></p>\n<p><em>Well, if you find yourself in Central New Jersey, you should hit the <a href=\"http://vietnambistrohowell.com/\">Saigon Bistro</a> in Howell, NJ (for pho and summer rolls) and <a href=\"http://baburgarden.com/\">Babur Garden</a> in Ocean Township for Afghan food.</em></p>\n<h2 id=\"name-a-few-records-that-you-count-among-your-all-time-favorites\">Name a few records that you count among your all time favorites:</h2>\n<p><em>Hmmm….As far as soul/funk goes:</em></p>\n<p>**Roger and the Gypsies – “Pass the Hatchet” Pts1 &2 (Seven B) ** <em>—My all-time favorite 45, by the New Orleans group Earl Stanley and the Stereos with vocals by none other than Eddie Bo.</em></p>\n<p><em><img src=\"/images/R-2601082-1475560430-4203_jpeg_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></em></p>\n<p>**Rex Garvin and the Mighty Cravers – “I Gotta Go Now (Up On the Floor)” (Like) ** <em>– One of the most powerful, relentless soul 45s ever made. Brilliant and always gets the dancers moving.</em></p>\n<p><em><img src=\"/images/R-2172239-1267960756_jpeg_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></em></p>\n<p><strong>Barbara Banks – “River of Tears” (Veep)</strong> _ —Amazing Northern Soul, also recorded (with a drum break!) by the Royalettes._</p>\n<p><em><img src=\"/images/R-5472483-1455821872-1546_jpeg_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></em></p>\n<p>**Toussaint McCall – “Shimmy” (Ronn) ** <em>—Searing organ instrumental by a performer better known for his deep soul ballads.</em> <img src=\"/images/blog_R-4993184-1381594551-6652.jpg\" alt=\"\"> **Homer Banks – “60 Minutes of Your Love” (Minit) ** <em>—Amazing Memphis soul (written by Hayes and Porter) by a hugely underrated singer/songwriter.</em></p>\n<p><em><img src=\"/images/R-4734562-1464379056-2243_jpeg_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></em></p>\n<p>**Eldridge Holmes – “A Love Problem” (Decca) ** <em>—Amazing, heartfelt ballad from the great New Orleans singer.</em></p>\n<p><em><img src=\"/images/eldridge-holmes-a-love-problem-decca_large.jpg\" alt=\"\"></em></p>\n<p><em>You can hit<strong>Larry</strong> up at <a href=\"mailto:funky16corners@gmail.com\">funky16corners@gmail.com</a>. You can reach <strong>Peace & Rhythm</strong> at <a href=\"mailto:peaceandrhythm45@gmail.com\">peaceandrhythm45@gmail.com</a></em></p>\n<p><em>post author:<strong>Andujar</strong></em></p>", "metadata": { "headings": [ { "depth": 2, "slug": "name-a-few-records-that-you-count-among-your-all-time-favorites", "text": "Name a few records that you count among your all time favorites:" } ], "localImagePaths": [], "remoteImagePaths": [], "frontmatter": { "web-scraper-order": "1746560871-1", "web-scraper-start-url": "https://peaceandrhythm.com", "title": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Larry Grogan of Funky 16 Corners", "pagination": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/?page=112", "date": "May 21, 2014", "post": "Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Larry Grogan of Funky 16 Corners", "post-href": "https://www.peaceandrhythm.com/blogs/news/peace-rhythms-interview-with-larry-grogan-of-funky-16-corners", "slug": "peace-rhythms-interview-with-larry-grogan-of-funky-16-corners" }, "imagePaths": [] } }, "collection": "blog" } ]
DJ Bongohead's "Rough Guide To Latin Rare Groove, Vol. 2"
April 5, 2015
Check out this radio piece on the new compilation for the The Rough Guide To Latin Rare Groove, Vol. 2, compiled by Peace & Rhythm's own DJ Bongohead, reviewed recently by NPR's Milo Miles on Fresh Air.
Announcing: Big Mean Sound Machine/Super Hi-Fi split 7" Coming Soon!
March 6, 2015
Peace & Rhythm has got some hot new wax coming your way this spring & summer! We just sent off the next one to the pressing plant. We're happy to announce a forthcoming split 7" featuring a song each by Brooklyn dub band Super Hi-Fi and Ithaca-based afrofunk juggernaut Big...
Peace & Rhythm NYC Action This Weekend!!
March 6, 2015
We're back in the Big Apple this weekend! Fri 3/14 Boogaloo! Monthly Party Presents: Fulaso w/ The Boogaloo Brothers (DJs Turmix and Bongohead)...Nublu, 11pm Sat 3/15 DJ Bongohead (after Chia)...Barbés, 11:45pm More info: “Boogaloo!” Launched by DJ Turmix in January of 2011 with the support of Fania Records is bringing...
"A Gozar" - Director's Cut
February 16, 2015
Here's a peak at the talents of filmmaker Rodrigo Balseca Carmona, an amigo and co-conspirator of Peace & Rhythm. Inspired by Leon Gast's "Our Latin Thing", this documusic video tours us through the culturally rich neighborhood of Washington Heights, NYC by way of a boy running through the barrio/hood. We...
DJ Bongohead's "Rough Guide to Psychedelic Salsa" Drops 2/23!
February 16, 2015
DJ Bongohead's "Rough Guide to Psychedelic Salsa" is out 2/23 on London label World Music Network. Check out tunes new and old, including some highlights from our good friends in Bio Ritmo, Grupo Fantasma and Quantic. Check the link for full track list, some background and pre-order, as well as...
Rumba Psicodelica returns to The Quarters 2/20!
February 16, 2015
DJs Andujar & Bongohead will bring their Rumba Psicodélica party back to the Quarters on Friday, Feb 20. These two tropi-heads will be spinning from their expansive vinyl direct to The Quarters Sound System. South American psych rock, messed-up cumbias, dark dubs, hard Afro rock, Cuban experimental, Trópicalia, salsa loca,...
Sonido Robótico: DJ Bongohead Interviews DJ Roger Más of Los Discos Duro
February 5, 2015
Check out the latest on the Bongohead blog, a piece about Bay Area based electro-cumbia party man Roger Más. Check the link here.
Do Your Thing! NYE! 2014>>2015 With the Whiskey Barons
December 29, 2014
We’ll be spending our New Years Eve at the ZuZu in Cambridge and we hope you’ll join us if you are in the Boston / Cambridge Area. Advance Tix are only $15 and $20 at the door. CELEBRATORY BOOGIE DOWN WHISKEY BARONS STYLE TIMELESS & GLOBAL >> FUNK / SOUL...
Rumba Psicodélica Returns To The Quarters!! 12/6
December 11, 2014
DJs Andujar & Bongohead will bring their Rumba Psicodélica party back to the Quarters on Saturday, December 6th. These two tropi-heads will be spinning from their expansive vinyl direct to The Quarters Sound System. South American psych rock, messed-up cumbias, dark dubs, hard Afro rock, Cuban experimental, Trópicalia, salsa loca,...
Peliroja 45 release party this Wednesday!!!!!
October 23, 2014
Peace & Rhythm, in alliance with Chulo Records are pleased to announce the release party for the Peliroja 7″ 45 of “Situaciones” and “Ciudad de Nadie”. Peliroja presents these songs and their other great tunes live in concert at 730, with guest DJ Bongohead (of Peace & Rhythm) at 6pm....
Rumba Psicodélica at The Quarters!! Friday 10/17!
October 14, 2014
DJs Andujar & Bongohead will bring their Rumba Psicodélica party to the Quarters on Friday Oct 17. These two tropi-heads will be spinning from their expansive vinyl direct to The Quarters Sound System. South American psych rock, messed-up cumbias, dark dubs, hard Afro rock, Cuban experimental, Trópicalia, salsa loca, spookaloo,...
Andujar's Interplanetary Music Scene Report
September 30, 2014
Check out Andujar's latest record reviews round-up at the Peace & Rhythm blog. A whole lot of sonic ground gets covered.
Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Producer Ray Lugo
September 30, 2014
Check out our exclusive interview with Ray Lugo (Kokolo/Boogaloo Assassins/etc). Lots of biographical info here!
Visiting the Dark Side...Brownout presents Brown Sabbath (Ubiquity Records)
July 7, 2014
(photo by focalchrome) This is the highly publicized Black Sabbath tribute from members of Brownout and Grupo Fantasma. I have seen both of those bands several times and have been continually amazed by their tight live shows with swingin' horns and rippin' grooves. Intrigued further, I decided to gain access...
Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Jim Thomson of Electric Cowbell
June 4, 2014
Jim Thomson is an enthusiastic promoter of music, with a hand in booking, producing and distributing the wide variety of sounds he digs. A percussionist with several notable ensembles (discussed within), his Electric Cowbell label puts out (mostly) 7" records with seemingly no stylistic boundaries. Since 2009 the label has...
Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Chuck Nessa of Nessa Records
June 3, 2014
Chuck Nessa is the man who birthed the Nessa Records label. Operating out of Chicago starting in the mid 60's, Nessa supported the up-and-coming musicians from the AACM (Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians) and issued artifacts from the avant-garde of jazz/modern creative music including such seminal albums by...
Peace & Rhythm's Interview with Larry Grogan of Funky 16 Corners
May 21, 2014
We're kicking off our new interview series with a fantastic funky gentleman from New Jersey named Larry Grogan. If you've ever read his popular blogs Funky 16 Corners and Iron Leg you'll know Larry as a passionate music fan of 60s & 70s funk, soul, garage and pop. An avid...