News & Updates — give the drummer some
Armando Peraza / May 30, 1924 - April 14, 2014
The Cuban-born, West Coast-based hard-hitting percussionist Armando Peraza is best known for his work with the Santana band, George Shearing and Cal Tjader. He played congas, bongos and timbales, was a songwriter and dancer and made a killer album under his own name for Skye Records. Born in Havana, he was orphaned and took to boxing and baseball. After some time as a boxing coach he became a musician at 17, joining the band of Albert Ruiz and other Cuban groups. It may have been just another hustle at first, but it set him off onto a globe-trotting career! He...
Jaki Liebezeit / May 26, 1938 - Jan 22, 2017
Here's a salute to the recently deceased Jaki Liebezeit, the human metronome for Can, among other projects. After playing free-jazz in Germany in the mid-to-late '60s, including an ensemble led by Manfred Schoof, as well as with Globe Unity Orchestra (with a young Peter Brotzmann on sax!) he decided to go with a decidedly more disciplined "motorik" beat as a founding member of Can, a band of Stockausen's students that were really into the Velvet Underground and "world music" and forged a whole new template for out-rock. Indeed, Can are synonymous with the "Krautrock" history. Brian Eno called Krautrock's "motorik"...
Levon Helm / May 26, 1940 - April 19, 2012
Happy birthday to Levon Helm, drummer and vocalist for The Band, bringing classic American roots, country, blues, gospel, R&B, rockabilly and rock into a popular mixture. From Arkansas, he started playing music at a young age, with Bill Monroe as a first major influence. Another early influence was James "Peck" Curtis, drummer for Sonny Boy Williamson II. He started his first band in the mid '50s and was inspired after witnessing early performances by Elvis Presley, Bo Diddley and other greats. In the late '50s he joined Ronnie Hawkins' band. Several members of that band became known as Levon &...
Henri Guédon / May 22, 1944 - Feb 12, 2006
One of my favorite Caribbean-born artists was master percussionist & composer Henri "Kiké" Guédon. Born in Martinique, he got his career going in the mid '60s with his band La Contesta. He played every style of Latin music, with strong funk & jazz undercurrents, to go with his Antillan and Caribbean musics (zouk, bomba, merengue, beguine, Cuban, etc) and even classical and avant-garde. He was a major Latin music star in France and enlisted world class musicians in his bands. He performed with the percussion front-of-the-stage like his idol Ray Barretto. There are some good collections and reissues of some...
Guy Warren aka Kofi Ghanaba / May 4, 1923 - Dec 22, 2008
Kofi Ghanaba, aka Guy Warren, was the first musician from the African continent to become known with a career and recordings in the USA, fusing American jazz with African folk forms. He was also a teacher, writer, historian and pan-Africanist of renown. A Ghanaian by birth, during WW2 he worked for the US as a spy, after which he became a journalist and a jazz musician. In 1947 he was a founding member of the great African-jazz band The Tempos with ET Mensah. In '51 he became the first African to become a BBC radio producer and also did radio...