Archive for the ‘City’ Category

Salvador Santana Solo Album

SALVADOR SANTANA DEBUTS SOLO ALBUM, COLLABORATES WITH MONEY MARK, DEL, AND GZA
Keyboard City Out February 2 Via Quannum/Various Music

Salvador Santana

Music is a burst of choices. Not only what note to play when and with what instrument, but whether to play a note at all. Salvador Santana, the 26-year-old keyboardist, vocalist, composer, and songwriter with strong Bay Area roots, knows what it means to navigate the infinite options of music. His 2008 project with the Salvador Santana Band pursued the scope of his ability. But for Santana, it wasn’t enough. He has no choice but to push himself further.

Collaboration has always been the centerpiece of his creations, and this passion manifested his solo debut Keyboard City around the inspirations of a few legends: Bay Area MC/producer Del tha Funky Homosapien, who helped hone in Santana’s writing skills, Beastie Boys studio wizard Money Mark, and GZA of the Wu-Tang Clan. The legendary Wu founder rallied support around the album by featuring himself on a remix of the title track “Keyboard City” earlier this fall. Stream the track here.

Santana’s long anticipated debut hits the streets February 2, 2010 followed by extensive touring with his keyboard-laden band, featuring a three-person keyboard assault with Santana at the head.

Money Mark inspired Santana in a beautiful way during the creation process. “With all the people I’ve ever collaborated with or just working by myself, I have never produced so many ideas into songs as I have during these Money Mark sessions. That guy is just a machine,” said Santana. Additionally, Money Mark opened up a new way of recording that was previously unknown to Santana. “He has mentored me by showing me that it’s cool to be all over the place. It’s cool to sit there and work on a song, then out of nowhere, interrupt that flow and work on another idea… to just go with it.”

Santana is pushed by a need to step out of his comfort zone in a quest for new ideas. Easy going and humble, Santana exudes the Bay Area vibe. He began playing the drums at age three – sitting on his father’s lap, controlling the snare and tom, as his father worked the hi-hat and kick drum – but his true love was discovered when he began taking piano lessons when he was six. Later, he studied at San Francisco’s heralded School of the Arts before attending Cal Arts in Valencia, CA. His education, passion and lineage has turned Santana into a monster on the keys, leading him to say that he’s “a musician first, a vocalist second and a performer second-and-a-half.”

Music truly thrives in Santana’s veins. His maternal grandfather was blues pioneer Saunders King and his paternal grandfather was the internationally celebrated violinist and mariachi bandleader Jose Santana. And, of course, his father, and frequent collaborator, is 10 time Grammy-winning, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Carlos Santana (Salvador co-wrote “El Farol” from 1999′s smash album Supernatural). With his upcoming solo project, however, Salvador Santana will truly become a brand of his own.

“With the Salvador Santana Band record I was very passive and insecure, only because I wasn’t listening to my gut, allowing my second opinions to get to me. Knowing what I know now, I could have played that part better. I don’t ever want to have that feeling ever again,” he says.

In addition to his musical desires, Santana has worldly efforts on his mind. After a trip to South Africa and inspiring work with Artists for a New South Africa (ANSA), something triggered inside of Santana to make sure his music wasn’t only about personal glory. Once the record is released and he begins touring the project, Salvador will be posting various non-profit organizations on his website that will receive a percentage of the profits. “I want to use music in a positive way, and give back to people in need. There can never be enough people who do that.” And there can never be enough musicians pushing their art to the brink.

Praise for Keyboard City

“On Keyboard City Sal and Mark layer reedy, synth atmospherics, icy-cool electronic keys and a smooth-as-butter beat underneath Sal’s awesomely zonked-out Vocoder-heavy vocals – RollingStone.com






Monotonix: Where Were You When It Happened?

By: Dennis Cook

There ain’t nothing sweet or subtle about Monotonix. The Israeli-cum-international trio of noisemakers sprout more hair than a Yeti and rarely keep their cloths on while hurtling at you like men hopped up on some new upper drug cooked up from cough syrup, used panties, and the drippings of vintage Grand Funk Railroad. And they sure as shit don’t need more than a half hour to slap your eardrums around until you yelp in pleasure-pain. Bursting forth from unzipped blue jeans on the cover of sophomore effort, Where Were You When It Happened? (Drag City), Monotonix gently complicates their swing-a-cat wildness with moments of funkiness and emotional honesty that announce there’s more than rafter swinging, ass-crack revealing antics to these lunatics.

For just two guys playing instruments – Haggai Fershtman (percussion) & Yonatan Gat (guitars, keys) – and one feverishly possessed frontman, Ami Shalev (think young Iggy Pop with flashes of early Ted Nugent), Monotonix exudes a jet engine blast that leaves one flattened and happy. No wooing ballads here, it’s all thrust and jab whose impact leaves you dizzy with curious fingerprints all over your body. “Something Has Dried,” “As Noise”and “Hunt You Down” are quality lovelorn man stuff with brutal, Dio-esque shout-to-the-heavens accents. “Set Me Free” offers something faintly danceable yet still quite anguished, and the rest is a total smackdown. Once again co-producer/engineer Tim Green (Fucking Champs) captures it all in unvarnished glory. Nasty slap ‘n’ tickle gets no better than this.

JamBase | Hirsute
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Craig Greenberg Band in NYC

CRAIG GREENBERG PERFORMS WITH A FULL BAND AT NYC’S SULLIVAN HALL NOVEMBER 18

Craig Greenberg

New York City-born and based artist Craig Greenberg performs his first show with a full band in over three years at Sullivan Hall, next Wednesday, November 18 at 9:30 p.m. Joining Craig will be local musician Scott Garapolo on drums, and James Preston on bass.

Craig will be playing a combination of new and old material, including the new song “The Thought Of You,” which recently was named Runner Up in the Relix magazine Songwriting Jam Off Contest for the Dec/Jan issue.

In addition to being a singer-songwriter, Craig has performed or worked with many other acts, including Jackson Browne, Jerry Joseph, Eric McFadden, and members of Parliament Funkadelic.

Craig Greenberg and Band
Where: Sullivan Hall, 214 Sullivan St., New York City
When: November 18, 2009, 9 p.m.
Cost: $10