Official blog of Avant-garde, Free Improvisation and Jazz Drummer, Composer Billie Davies.
Showing posts with label Avant Garde Jazz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Avant Garde Jazz. Show all posts
Friday, October 11, 2019
SOUND I (Davies, Masakowski, Balgochian) Live at Sidebar Nola
SOUND A meeting of minds. Set 1 Billie Davies - drums Steve Masakowski - guitar Abbey Balgochian - bass Live at Sidebar Nola in New Orleans October 5, 2019 serious sound sculpture... consider yourself early-warned....Buckle Up! Sound and video recorded by Mike Davies on Zoom Q8.
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Albey Balgochian bass,
Art Music,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Billie Davies drums,
Billie Davies Trio,
Free Improvisation,
New Orleans,
Steve Masakowski guitar
Location: New Orleans, LA, USA
New Orleans, LA, USA
Friday, October 5, 2018
Billie Davies trio "PERSPECTIVES II" Now Available On BandCamp
#newmusic #billiedaviestrio "PERSPECTIVES II" Now available @Bandcamp https://lnkd.in/eVpExbi . Also available on @ReverbNation . Listen on @AllAboutJazz @AppleMusic @Spotify @iTunes #jazzimprovisation #music @InTheKeyOfJazz
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
All About Jazz,
Allie Porter,
appplemusic,
Ari Kohn,
Avant Garde Jazz,
BANDCAMP,
Billie Davies,
Billie Davies Trio,
deezer,
Evan Oberla,
Iris P,
New Orleans,
Oliver Watkinson,
Perspectives II,
spotify
Wednesday, February 14, 2018
BILLIE DAVIES trio "PERSPECTIVES" Live @ The New Orleans Jazz Museum January 31, 2017.
View de 2nd evolution from the Full Blood Moon concert on January 31, 2017 below...
BILLIE DAVIES trio "PERSPECTIVES" Live @ The New Orleans Jazz Museum
(-: #billiedaviestrio, #bloodmoon, #fullbloodmoon, #fullmoon :-)
video info
L to R: Evan Oberla - piano, Ari Kohn - reeds, Oliver Watkinson - upright bass, Allie Porter - spoken word, Billie Davies - drums.
Sound & Video recording: Joe Stolarick at The New Orleans Jazz Museum, Music At The Mint.
Sound Mix and Post Production: Mike Davies, Billie Davies
Logistics: Mike Davies
Photography: Mike Davies
L to R: Evan Oberla - piano, Ari Kohn - reeds, Oliver Watkinson - upright bass, Allie Porter - spoken word, Billie Davies - drums.
Sound & Video recording: Joe Stolarick at The New Orleans Jazz Museum, Music At The Mint.
Sound Mix and Post Production: Mike Davies, Billie Davies
Logistics: Mike Davies
Photography: Mike Davies
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Allie Porter,
Ari Kohn,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Billie Davies,
Billie Davies Trio,
Evan Oberla,
Live video,
Mike Davies,
New Orleans Jazz Museum,
Oliver Watkinson,
Perspectives,
The Billie Davies Trio,
video
Sunday, May 8, 2016
BILLIE DAVIES & The Bad Boyzzzz Live at Open Ears Music Set 2
"In The Key Of Jazz" (Set 2).
Billie Davies & The Bad Boyzzzz
Tuesday May 03, 2016 @
Open Ears Music Series
Blue Nile Balcony Room
Frenchmen Street, New Orleans.
Ari Kohn reeds, Billie Davies drums, Branden Lewis trumpet, Oliver Watkinson bass, Evan Oberla trombone.
Video & Sound: Mike Davies.
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Ari Kohn reeds,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Billie Davies & The Bad Boyzzzz,
Billie Davies drums,
Branden Lewis- trumpet,
Evan Oberla- trombone,
Louisiana,
New Orleans,
Oliver Watkinson bass
Saturday, May 7, 2016
BILLIE DAVIES & The Bad Boyzzzz Live at Open Ears
"In The Key Of Jazz" (Set 1).
Billie Davies & The Bad Boyzzzz
Tuesday May 03, 2016 @
Open Ears Music Series
Blue Nile Balcony Room
Frenchmen Street, New Orleans.
Ari Kohn reeds, Billie Davies drums, Branden Lewis trumpet, Oliver Watkinson bass, Evan Oberla trombone.
Video & Sound: Mike Davies.
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Ari Kohn reeds,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Billie Davies & The Bad Boyzzzz,
Billie Davies drums,
Branden Lewis- trumpet,
Evan Oberla- trombone,
Louisiana,
New Orleans,
Oliver Watkinson bass
Thursday, March 31, 2016
BILLIE DAVIES - '20 Years Stronger'. DownBeat | Digital Edition | May 2016
DownBeat | Digital Edition | May 2016
BILLIE DAVIES... 'Twenty Years Stronger'
From Down Beat magazine, the monthly "bible" of jazz, blues, and roots music.May 2016 issue. Article written by Jennifer Odell.
Billie Davies, a Belgium-born drummer whose career path has been as avant-gar- de as her music, had an existential crisis of sorts before she returned to drumming full- time in 2009.
She’d been working in Northern California as an art dealer—one of many hats that have ranged from DJ to gypsy musician to information architecture IT specialist—when it occurred to her she wasn’t sure who she was anymore. Distraught, she picked up the phone and called Serge Vandercam (1924–2005), a Danish visual artist with whom she’d bonded, for advice.
She’d been working in Northern California as an art dealer—one of many hats that have ranged from DJ to gypsy musician to information architecture IT specialist—when it occurred to her she wasn’t sure who she was anymore. Distraught, she picked up the phone and called Serge Vandercam (1924–2005), a Danish visual artist with whom she’d bonded, for advice.
“I just go, ‘Who am I?’” Davies recalled, her voice cracking as if stuck halfway between the onset of laughter or tears.
Vandercam’s reply was terse: “You’re an artist. Get on with it. Stop whining.” She took it in stride.
“ That was such a reinforcement for me,” she explained. “And then a full moon ended up coming and he goes, ‘Come on, Billie. I’ll paint; you play the drums.’”
Vandercam’s reply was terse: “You’re an artist. Get on with it. Stop whining.” She took it in stride.
“ That was such a reinforcement for me,” she explained. “And then a full moon ended up coming and he goes, ‘Come on, Billie. I’ll paint; you play the drums.’”
The collaboration yielded a series of wild visual and aural meditations on matters like nature, wisdom, love and transcendence. But it wasn’t until 2015 that Davies, now 60, put the results out into the world in the form of Hand In Hand In e Hand Of e Moon, an eight- part jazz symphony she recorded in her adopted home of New Orleans last spring.
Full of shifting dynamics and unorthodox riffs on swing, the album sees Davies’ quintet share melodic and rhythmic responsibilities almost equally. “Tiburon” evokes darkness through a groove, while horns and bass turn percussive on the skittering “Hand In Hand.”
Reflecting on her decision to wait, re-record the material and release it 20 years after its inception, Davies is positive.
“I was 20 years older, I was 20 years stronger in my [self] expression,” she said, sipping a glass of red wine in her Terrytown, Louisiana, home.
Full of shifting dynamics and unorthodox riffs on swing, the album sees Davies’ quintet share melodic and rhythmic responsibilities almost equally. “Tiburon” evokes darkness through a groove, while horns and bass turn percussive on the skittering “Hand In Hand.”
Reflecting on her decision to wait, re-record the material and release it 20 years after its inception, Davies is positive.
“I was 20 years older, I was 20 years stronger in my [self] expression,” she said, sipping a glass of red wine in her Terrytown, Louisiana, home.
“We’ve all been so subdued to be fearful of passion and anger and sadness and all this kind of stuff. Passion’s everything. ... If you can still have that and you’ve mastered these channels of energy, then you can just mold them in a certain way into music.”
That ethos, along with a bohemian sense of art as necessity, has driven Davies since childhood, when she regularly joined her jazz-head mother at shows. Davies went on to sing classically, drumming on the side, but things shifted after her teenage years. Her voice changed. She began exploring Europe. And she maintained a special pride in being a female drummer at a time when they were few and far between.
“ There’s not enough of us, and we have our own ways of expressing ourselves,” she said, citing her appreciation of Cindy Blackman and Sheila E.
Today, Davies is one of the few female drummers in a leadership role on the New Orleans jazz scene. She describes members of her band, the Bad Boyzzzz, as “a family” focused on staging conversation through song.
“In the majority of rehearsals, we end up being able to predict what the people around us are doing,” Bad Boyzzzz bassist Oliver Watkinson said. “Billie might play the bass line, for example, and combined with the rearrangement of the horns and how the bass fits into that, makes me view the whole process differently.”
Watkinson noted that whether the band is playing an original or a standard, Davies keeps the role of each musician flexible—an approach that forces players to keep passion and feeling at the forefront of their self-expression.
Davies expressed concerned that “jazz is becoming too intellectualized,” but obstructing that process isn’t her goal.
“I’m not here to stop it,” she said, smiling pensively. “I just want to strip it down of all the bullshit.” —Jennifer Odell
That ethos, along with a bohemian sense of art as necessity, has driven Davies since childhood, when she regularly joined her jazz-head mother at shows. Davies went on to sing classically, drumming on the side, but things shifted after her teenage years. Her voice changed. She began exploring Europe. And she maintained a special pride in being a female drummer at a time when they were few and far between.
“ There’s not enough of us, and we have our own ways of expressing ourselves,” she said, citing her appreciation of Cindy Blackman and Sheila E.
Today, Davies is one of the few female drummers in a leadership role on the New Orleans jazz scene. She describes members of her band, the Bad Boyzzzz, as “a family” focused on staging conversation through song.
“In the majority of rehearsals, we end up being able to predict what the people around us are doing,” Bad Boyzzzz bassist Oliver Watkinson said. “Billie might play the bass line, for example, and combined with the rearrangement of the horns and how the bass fits into that, makes me view the whole process differently.”
Watkinson noted that whether the band is playing an original or a standard, Davies keeps the role of each musician flexible—an approach that forces players to keep passion and feeling at the forefront of their self-expression.
Davies expressed concerned that “jazz is becoming too intellectualized,” but obstructing that process isn’t her goal.
“I’m not here to stop it,” she said, smiling pensively. “I just want to strip it down of all the bullshit.” —Jennifer Odell
To read the article online in the DownBeat online digital publication please go to: http://www.downbeat.com/digitaledition/2016/DB1605/single_page_view/25.html
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Billie Davies,
Billie Davies & The Bad Boyzzzz,
Billie Davies drums,
Down Beat,
DownBeat Magazine,
Hand In Hand In The Hand Of The Moon,
Jazz,
Jazz Musicians,
Oliver Watkinson bass
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
Free MP3 at All About Jazz: “v. The Shark In The Hand” by Billie Davies
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Alex Blaine- Sax,
All About Jazz,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Billie Davies- drums,
Branden Lewis- trumpet,
Ed Strohsahl- bass,
Evan Oberla- trombone,
Hand In Hand In The Hand Of The Moon,
Jazz,
New Orleans
Saturday, March 14, 2015
To Jazz or not to Jazz, there is no question. (Louis Armstrong)
|
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Bass,
Billie Davies,
BILLIE DAVIES Ensemble,
Drums,
Horns,
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Musicians
Friday, December 26, 2014
Happy New Year 2015
Wishing you a very, very Happy New Year 2015
full of Love, Peace and Happiness.
''Doubt that the stars are fire, Doubt that the sun does move, But never doubt I Love You ...''
Love always,
Billie Davies
~ A Jazz Musician ~
New Orleans, LA
Tel: (+1) 310.467.2061
Email: Billie@BillieDavies.com
on the Web:
Website: http://www.BillieDavies.com
Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billie_Davies
Press Kit: http://www.reverbnation.com/rpk/billiedavies
Blog: http://BillieDavies.blogspot.com
Like her Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/BillieDaviesJazz
Fan her on AllAboutJazz: http://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/musician.php?id=43171
Follow her on Twitter: @BillieDavies
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UTN15vKwac&feature=share&list=UU8A-rTV0D0DeDFpqQczycew
Buy Billie Davies Music:
at CDBaby: http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/billiedavies - http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/thebilliedaviestrio
on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/billie-davies/id532658143
at Reverbnation: http://www.Reverbnation.com/BillieDavies
~ A Jazz Musician ~
New Orleans, LA
Tel: (+1) 310.467.2061
Email: Billie@BillieDavies.com
on the Web:
Website: http://www.BillieDavies.com
Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billie_Davies
Press Kit: http://www.reverbnation.com/rpk/billiedavies
Blog: http://BillieDavies.blogspot.com
Like her Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/BillieDaviesJazz
Fan her on AllAboutJazz: http://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/musician.php?id=43171
Follow her on Twitter: @BillieDavies
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UTN15vKwac&feature=share&list=UU8A-rTV0D0DeDFpqQczycew
Buy Billie Davies Music:
at CDBaby: http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/billiedavies - http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/thebilliedaviestrio
on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/billie-davies/id532658143
at Reverbnation: http://www.Reverbnation.com/BillieDavies
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Billie Davies- drums,
Daniel Coffeng- guitar,
Happy New Year,
Jazz,
Jazz Musicians,
Jazz Promotions,
Musicians
Monday, July 28, 2014
Award Winning, Belgium Born Jazz Drummer Leaves Career in California for a Career in New Orleans!
PRESS RELEASE
Award Winning, Belgium Born Jazz Drummer Leaves Career in California for a Career in New Orleans!
Billie Davies (born Billie Goegebeur, December 10, 1955 in Bruges) is an American female jazz drummer and composer best known for her Avant-garde jazz compositions, as well as her improvisational drumming techniques which she has performed in Europe and in the US since the mid-nineties.
Billie and her, recording/producer husband, Mike, moved to New Orleans this last March to achieve her dream of being a New Orleans based musician. She has been working with local, like-minded sidemen, Shan Kenner on guitar and Pete Olynciw on upright bass to form her New Orleans Ensemble. They have created a suite of new music entitled Downman Road.
Her 2012 release of “all about Love” solidified her position as a professional jazz musician. This recording of standards and original music, charted #1 in CMJ Jazz College Radio Charts for ‘top jazz add’ in new albums and went on to stay there for 4 weeks. “all about Love” was also very well received in Canada where the album ended up in the Top 10 on three different! Earshot Jazz charts.
In October, 2013 Billie released “12 VOLT” which also garnered national and international attention. CJ Bond, JAZZ MUSIC (an online jazz journal), wrote the following… “12 VOLT” features exclusively original compositions of Billie Davies, revealing yet another formidable creative talent in Davies' impressive artistic arsenal; making this an important CD for Davies, since it adds the crucial tyne of 'composer/arranger' to her sterling artistic fork, augmenting fearless innovation, and superlative drumming technique as well.
In September of 2013, Billie Davies was nominated for the top Jazz Artist award from the 23rd Annual Los Angeles Music Awards; she received the award on November 14. Five months later she moved to New Orleans and is now ready to present her show to the New Orleans audience.
Her guitar player on “12 VOLT,” Daniel Goffeng, describes Billie as …bringing something radically new to the idiom of modern jazz in various ways which, in its purest essence, incorporates everything in its collective subconscious amalgam that has come before. Billie Davies' music is unapologetically moving in the direction of “true art” and plays with colors, moods, movements, feelings and interactions, a paradoxically more advanced concept of expression...
S. Victor Aaron tells us that "Davies is not countering the modern jazz movement so much but rather stripping it down to its essence. When listening to Davies play, it’s easier to think of her not as a drummer but a tonal painter who swipes brushstrokes with her drumsticks."
l-r: Gary Washington- bass, Billie Davies- drums, Shan Kenner- guitar. |
We are looking for any and all opportunities to help promote her New Orleans debut and to officially introduce her to New Orleans’ music scene.
For more information about Billie Davies, her music, and more reviews, please check her out by following this link for Billie Davies Website. To schedule appointments for interviews, please contact Glinda Mantle at 504-453-5533 or via email at glinda.mantle@gmail.com.
Thank you.
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
12 VOLT,
All About Love,
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Monday, December 16, 2013
BILLIE DAVIES at NOLA's
BILLIE DAVIES at NOLA's
BILLIE DAVIES Ensemble
http:// www.billiedavies.com/ BillieDavies_Ensembles.html
Billie Davies: drums. Daniel Coffeng: guitar. Will Mack: bass.
Performance at:
Nola's - A Taste of New Orleans
Doors open at 5 pm
Performance Time: 7:00 pm - 9:00pm
Address:
734 E. 3rd Street, Los Angeles, CA 90013
Neighborhood:
Downtown L.A.
Full Details: http://nolasla.com/ billie-davies-group/
http://
Billie Davies: drums. Daniel Coffeng: guitar. Will Mack: bass.
Performance at:
Nola's - A Taste of New Orleans
Doors open at 5 pm
Performance Time: 7:00 pm - 9:00pm
Address:
734 E. 3rd Street, Los Angeles, CA 90013
Neighborhood:
Downtown L.A.
Full Details: http://nolasla.com/
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Bass,
Billie Davies,
BILLIE DAVIES Ensemble,
Billie Davies- drums,
Daniel Coffeng- guitar,
Drums,
Guitar,
Jazz,
Jazz Promotions,
Will Mack- bass
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Billie Davies walking the red carpet of the 23rd Annual LA Music Awards with Mike Davies
to receive the 2013 "Jazz Artist" award.
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Billie Davies,
Billie Davies- drums,
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Photography
Friday, November 22, 2013
Dr. Will Smith's Playlist: Review (Avant Garde): “12 Volt” - Billie Davies
Dr. Will Smith's Playlist: Review (Avant Garde): “12 Volt” - Billie Davies:
You can listen to her work here:
Review (Avant Garde): “12 Volt” - Billie Davies
Billie Davies has an interesting story. Her travels have led her to many places. She began her journey in Belgium and grew up
singing, writing, and eventually playing drums at the age of 14. After several awards for her artistic
creations, she became a DJ at 23 and played in clubs in Germany and
Belgium. It was at this time she was
offered a grant to study at Berklee College of Music under Max Roach after he
heard her audition tape. He felt that she “could learn
more fundamental drumming techniques” but he heard “the natural drummer” in
her.
She declined the move to the US at that time but became a
professional drummer at 25 citing Al Foster, Billy Higgins, Billy Cobham, Jack De Johnette, Ed
Thigpen, and Peter Erskine as her biggest influences.
After moving to the US at 32 she settled in Los Angeles,
California and became a US Citizen. She
recorded with several artists and began to compose music for her own
release. Her latest project “12 Volt”
was recorded in April 2013 and released in October. It features Daniel Coffeng on Guitar and Adam Levy on Bass.
The
pieces on the album are inspired by her life in the wine regions of France
where she lived amongst gypsies.
The title comes from the 12 volt battery that ran everything electric in
the RV where she stayed with local blues jazz guitarist Claude Mazet. She remembers her life among the gypsies and
her life in the south of Europe fondly and “It is that bohemian life,
that close to nature life... so close that all the music…everything else you do
or think becomes….a reflection of it.”
The first selection on the album is reminiscent of Miles
Davis’ electric period of the 70s. There
are several themes that are stated initially, these are followed by the
improvisation section which brings in ideas from the themes that were
presented. The piece ends on the same thematic material that it began
with. There are some nice dynamic
changes in the music and Ms. Davies creates some pleasant colors with her
cymbal work. Daniel Coffeng has ample
chops to play a variety of styles and his technique ties the variety of ideas
together.
Her style is definitely of the avant garde school of jazz
which seeks to go beyond the boundaries of the standard elements of music. We are taught that the elements of music: rhythm,
harmony, melody and form, are the key foundational elements of music. Well what happens if you remove these
elements can you still call it music? Is it possible to remove them completely? This is the debate that has been going on in
the jazz community since Ornette Coleman released Free Jazz in 1960.
Ms. Davies is adding her take on that conversation and she
brings an interesting offering to the table with her composition “12 Volt.” Give it a listen and let us know what you
think.
You can listen to her work here:
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
12 VOLT,
Adam Levy- Bass,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Bass,
Billie Davies,
Billie Davies- drums,
Daniel Coffeng- guitar,
Drums,
Guitar,
Jazz Artist of the Year 2013 Awarde,
Jazz Musicians,
Musicians
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Press, Reviews and Accolades for avant garde jazz drummer Billie Davies
Press, Reviews and Accolades for avant garde jazz drummer Billie Davies
BILLIE DAVIES is a recipient of the 2013 23rd Annual Los Angeles, California LA Music Awards
"JAZZ ARTIST" Award. 11/14/2013.
BILLIE DAVIES is a recipient of the 2013 23rd Annual Los Angeles, California LA Music Awards
"JAZZ ARTIST" Award. 11/14/2013.
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
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Billie Davies- drums,
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Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Billie Davies: 12 VOLT
Billie Davies Trio: 12 Volt
Just to be clear, this is not an album reinterpreting guitarist Django Reinhardt
's tunes or anyone else's for that matter. It is a cohesive work of bold innovation and free flowing spontaneity in tribute to the unfettered spirit of those individuals. The title track, for instance, opens with Davies' thundering cascade of beats that fall like refreshing rain over guitarist Daniel Coffeng's earthy, slow simmering, chords. Her restless polyrhythms, tempered by the intricately textured, sublime timbres drive Coffeng's electrifying, fiery improvisation along bassist Adam Levy's densely woven rhythmic trails.
One of the thematic threads of the disc is a superb balance of cerebral creativity and a raw, visceral fervor. The passionate "Tango for Patti" is a dramatic piece filled with thrilling harmonic structures and a subtle and effusive assonance. Coffeng's crisp guitar's logical progression echoes over Davies' ardent, sensual rumble and Levy's delightfully angular, percussive bass lines.
The intelligent, spur of the moment extemporizations maintain throughout a definite melodicism. The bluesy "Gypsy" features Coffeng's soulful and mellifluous strings against Levy's agile walking bass and Davies' rocking drums in an enchanting and though provoking three-way dance. The closer, "La Sieste," meanwhile, is an ethereal and fantastical composition with gorgeously elegiac tones. Davies' dexterous alternation of whispering brushes and tapping sticks, peppered with silent pauses, creates a hypnotic ambience filled with Coffeng's quietly poetic phrasing.
As evidenced on this uniformly intriguing disc Davies thrives in the sparse, collaborative setting of the trio. Throughout her recorded legacy, her partners have changed but her artistic imagination and her inspired ingenuity have solidified and matured. The result is a stimulating, original and singularly satisfying oeuvre that, hopefully, will continue to expand and evolve.
Track Listing: Collioure; Meeting Manitas; 12 Volt; Les Landes; Tango for Patti; Grapes, Plums and Tomatoes; Gypsy; La Sieste.
Personnel: Billie Davies: drums; Daniel Coffeng: guitar; Adam Levy: bass.
Record Label: Cobra Basement
Style: Beyond Jazz
Billie Davies Trio: 12 Volt (2013)
By
Published: October 29, 2013
Belgium native and Los Angeles based drummer Billie Davies continues to forge her own path in the improvised music world. Endowed with an explorative temperament and unique, yet definite swing sense, Davies pays homage to Gypsy musicians on her fourth release as a leader, 12 Volt. Published: October 29, 2013
Just to be clear, this is not an album reinterpreting guitarist Django Reinhardt
's tunes or anyone else's for that matter. It is a cohesive work of bold innovation and free flowing spontaneity in tribute to the unfettered spirit of those individuals. The title track, for instance, opens with Davies' thundering cascade of beats that fall like refreshing rain over guitarist Daniel Coffeng's earthy, slow simmering, chords. Her restless polyrhythms, tempered by the intricately textured, sublime timbres drive Coffeng's electrifying, fiery improvisation along bassist Adam Levy's densely woven rhythmic trails.
One of the thematic threads of the disc is a superb balance of cerebral creativity and a raw, visceral fervor. The passionate "Tango for Patti" is a dramatic piece filled with thrilling harmonic structures and a subtle and effusive assonance. Coffeng's crisp guitar's logical progression echoes over Davies' ardent, sensual rumble and Levy's delightfully angular, percussive bass lines.
The intelligent, spur of the moment extemporizations maintain throughout a definite melodicism. The bluesy "Gypsy" features Coffeng's soulful and mellifluous strings against Levy's agile walking bass and Davies' rocking drums in an enchanting and though provoking three-way dance. The closer, "La Sieste," meanwhile, is an ethereal and fantastical composition with gorgeously elegiac tones. Davies' dexterous alternation of whispering brushes and tapping sticks, peppered with silent pauses, creates a hypnotic ambience filled with Coffeng's quietly poetic phrasing.
As evidenced on this uniformly intriguing disc Davies thrives in the sparse, collaborative setting of the trio. Throughout her recorded legacy, her partners have changed but her artistic imagination and her inspired ingenuity have solidified and matured. The result is a stimulating, original and singularly satisfying oeuvre that, hopefully, will continue to expand and evolve.
Track Listing: Collioure; Meeting Manitas; 12 Volt; Les Landes; Tango for Patti; Grapes, Plums and Tomatoes; Gypsy; La Sieste.
Personnel: Billie Davies: drums; Daniel Coffeng: guitar; Adam Levy: bass.
Record Label: Cobra Basement
Style: Beyond Jazz
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
12 VOLT,
Adam Levy- Bass,
All About Jazz,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Bass,
Billie Davies,
Billie Davies- drums,
Daniel Coffeng- guitar,
Drums,
Guitar,
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Jazz Artist of the Year 2013 Award,
Jazz Musicians
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Something Else! Reviews: Billie Davies – 12 Volt (2013) Reviewed by S. Victor Aaron.
Jazz, Uncategorized — October 2, 2013 at 9:00 am
The 23rd Annual L.A. Music Awards has recently nominated drummer and bandleader Davies as “Jazz Artist of the Year” for 2013, a mere four years after she set up shop in Los Angeles and made it her home. But this bohemian from Belgium has quickly made positive impressions everywhere she goes, including this reviewer when sizing up her third album all about Love a year ago.
For album #4 12 Volt, Davies assembled a new trio to go along with her new songs, in which she constructed around a concept of simplicity and being closer to nature. In this case, being closer to nature meant deconstructing jazz to its base components. The liner notes for Billie Davies’ upcoming album went into the detail of what makes the jazz of this drummer stand out from the herd, but one sentence seemed to sum it up nicely: “Davies is not countering the modern jazz movement so much but rather stripping it down to its essence.”
Moving on from the trumpet/bass/drums configuration of Love, Davies enlisted Amsterdam guitarist Daniel Coffeng and acoustic bassist Adam Levy to make this album live in the studio in a single day. That’s an approach that has fostered simplicity and natural playing. The airy, free flowing way these songs are played are like that, too. Take the opening cut, “Collioure,” an esoteric melody that moves at a naturally occurring cadence. Davis is making melody right alongside Coffeng, and Levy’s arco bass provides a well-defined harmonic counterpoint. The second part of song descends and ascends, Davies soloing while closely following Coffeng’s moves. With such attention to timbre, space and mood, it’s easy to forget that much of the music here and on the rest of the album is dissonant, because it’s avant-garde in a very embraceable way.
When listening to Davies play, it’s easier to think of her not as a drummer but a tonal painter who swipes brushstrokes with her drumsticks. “Collioure” is a prime example, and also in her subtly guiding ever so incremental changes in intonation on songs such as “Tango for Patti” as well as confidently leading the group through a deconstructed section within “Les Landes.” On angular blues such as “!2 Volt” and “Grapes, Plums and Tomatoes” she swings authoritatively without ever having to resort to brute force.
Coffeng employs the pillowy, sweet tones of Jim Hall, and he demonstrates nifty single note run skills during a solo on “Gypsy.” But his economy of notes is perhaps his greatest asset for this session; it fits in fine with the “less is more” mantra Davies champions and allows her and Levy to be heard as equals. The songs generally follow the head-solos-head format, but the extended solo sections are allowed so much freedom, whole other songs are nearly created between the heads; the group members typically improvise as a unit.
It’s some honor for Billie Davies to be considered for the top jazz musician award in a big musical and cultural center such as Los Angeles, but that the institution pays close attention to the likes of her speaks well for their recognition of outlier talent. And 12 Volt can’t help but to strengthen Davies’ chances for winning it.
12 Volt is due out later this week on CDBaby. Visit Billie Davies’ website for more info.
Billie Davies – 12 Volt (2013)
by S. Victor AaronThe 23rd Annual L.A. Music Awards has recently nominated drummer and bandleader Davies as “Jazz Artist of the Year” for 2013, a mere four years after she set up shop in Los Angeles and made it her home. But this bohemian from Belgium has quickly made positive impressions everywhere she goes, including this reviewer when sizing up her third album all about Love a year ago.
For album #4 12 Volt, Davies assembled a new trio to go along with her new songs, in which she constructed around a concept of simplicity and being closer to nature. In this case, being closer to nature meant deconstructing jazz to its base components. The liner notes for Billie Davies’ upcoming album went into the detail of what makes the jazz of this drummer stand out from the herd, but one sentence seemed to sum it up nicely: “Davies is not countering the modern jazz movement so much but rather stripping it down to its essence.”
Moving on from the trumpet/bass/drums configuration of Love, Davies enlisted Amsterdam guitarist Daniel Coffeng and acoustic bassist Adam Levy to make this album live in the studio in a single day. That’s an approach that has fostered simplicity and natural playing. The airy, free flowing way these songs are played are like that, too. Take the opening cut, “Collioure,” an esoteric melody that moves at a naturally occurring cadence. Davis is making melody right alongside Coffeng, and Levy’s arco bass provides a well-defined harmonic counterpoint. The second part of song descends and ascends, Davies soloing while closely following Coffeng’s moves. With such attention to timbre, space and mood, it’s easy to forget that much of the music here and on the rest of the album is dissonant, because it’s avant-garde in a very embraceable way.
When listening to Davies play, it’s easier to think of her not as a drummer but a tonal painter who swipes brushstrokes with her drumsticks. “Collioure” is a prime example, and also in her subtly guiding ever so incremental changes in intonation on songs such as “Tango for Patti” as well as confidently leading the group through a deconstructed section within “Les Landes.” On angular blues such as “!2 Volt” and “Grapes, Plums and Tomatoes” she swings authoritatively without ever having to resort to brute force.
Coffeng employs the pillowy, sweet tones of Jim Hall, and he demonstrates nifty single note run skills during a solo on “Gypsy.” But his economy of notes is perhaps his greatest asset for this session; it fits in fine with the “less is more” mantra Davies champions and allows her and Levy to be heard as equals. The songs generally follow the head-solos-head format, but the extended solo sections are allowed so much freedom, whole other songs are nearly created between the heads; the group members typically improvise as a unit.
It’s some honor for Billie Davies to be considered for the top jazz musician award in a big musical and cultural center such as Los Angeles, but that the institution pays close attention to the likes of her speaks well for their recognition of outlier talent. And 12 Volt can’t help but to strengthen Davies’ chances for winning it.
12 Volt is due out later this week on CDBaby. Visit Billie Davies’ website for more info.
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
12 VOLT,
Adam Levy- Bass,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Bass,
Billie Davies,
Billie Davies- drums,
Daniel Coffeng- guitar,
Drums,
Guitar,
Jazz,
Jazz Artist of the Year 2013 Award Nominee,
L.A. Music Awards
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
JAZZ MUSIC: 12 VOLT - BILLIE DAVIES
BILLIE DAVIES - 12 VOLT
Year: 2013
Style: Jazz
Label: Cobra Basement
Musicians: Billie Davies - drums; Daniel Coffeng - guitar; Adam Levy - bass
CD Review: On the first anniversary of her last CD release: The Billie Davies Trio - All About Love (Cobra Basement: 2012), 'lifelong natural musician' drummer Billie Davies has released another unimpeachable work: BILLIE DAVIES - 12 VOLT. Whereas, All About Love featured some of the music of venerated composers, including Victor Young, Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Mongo Santamaria, 12 VOLT features exclusively original compositions of Billie Davies, revealing yet another formidable creative talent in Davies' impressive artistic arsenal; making this an important CD for Davies, since it adds the crucial tyne of 'composer/arranger' to her sterling artistic fork, augmenting fearless innovation, and superlative drumming technique.
For 12 VOLT, Davies employs again the trio setting, but with a significant change in players. On All About Love, Tom Bone Ralls appeared on trombone, and Oliver Steinberg played bass. Now guitarist Daniel Coffeng supplants Bone Ralls, and bassist Adam Levy takes the place of Steinberg. Davies describes 12 VOLT as an ode to Manitas De Plata, the renowned French-born gypsy guitar master, Django Reinhardt, considered the king of gypsy guitarists., and "all Gypsies, Tsiganes, Manouche and Bohemians all over the world," sure to stir wide appeal, and escalating excitement among her expanding music public.
In 12 VOLT, Davies' trio presents a collection of musical images of the world of the Gypsy in portraits of untouched natural beauty, as well as its untouchable rugged other side, seen in the fierce pride and passion of a forgotten, invisible people, and their way of living; heard in the inspiring Gypsy Flamenco music; felt in the fiery guitar, the dancers' movements and expressions; a mountain of vital culture that demands an odyssey to experience; and Davies went, with her 12-VOLT 'Band on the Run"; no APBs, like the McCartney & Wings 1973 model, but free-spirited bohemians that "... went everywhere the wind was blowing..." (Davies), like (Collioure) with its bewitching European artists' light captured in uncomplicated droplets of color from Daniel Coppeng's guitar, and the easy-listening resonance of Davies' polyrhythmic exchanges.
Davies' other signature contribution to the date, beyond drumming ability, and creative energy, is a remarkable facility to remain unhurried, not irrationally exuberant, but attentive to pristine artistic environments, so as not to provoke uneven corruption or distracting, grainy, biases in the fine textures, natural colors, and flowing sequences of sights and sounds she sees, hears and plays back with impeccable sonic balance, and an almost reverential cadence (Meeting Manitas).
Davies' selection of guitarist Daniel Coffeng, and bassist Adam Levy for this project is noteworthy in its astuteness. Coffeng brings extraordinary facility for transition and energetic flow to avant jazz improvisation (12 Volt) with an extended, progressive, detailed solo, alternating between jazz and rock, but always clear and precise, like the sounds of crickets at night time. Coffeng's musical experience is deeply rooted in music cultures which reach into jazz, blues, soul, reggae, through to classical, rock, Eastern music, Latin American and West African music.
Adam Levy is a well prepared and accomplished upright bass player. His mom was "feeding him boogie woogie piano in their home at a very early age." He gets tons of experience from his brother, Mike, who Levy says is a prodigy on bass. Levy pursued a Jazz degree at the University of South Florida where he studied upright bass. He puts his bona fides in play with a superbly conversant passage depicting peacefulness and harmony, never bitter, (Grapes, Plums and Tomatoes) during exchanges with Davies' expressive drums, and Coffeng's descriptive guitar; reviving the intimate stories of Gypsies toiling in the fields; their loves, lives, prides and passions, against the unending rhythmic drumbeat of moving hands and feet. These two talented players bring to the date, a collective of experience that compliments, and fuels Davies' dauntless search for fertile creative ground to express the varied, but complex experiences unique to her posit as the cutting-edge artist in Neo-Humanistic Expressionist Jazz (Les Landes; Tango for Patti).
But Gypsies can swing too (Gypsy), because Django, "The King" taught them how. They listened, and never forgot. Now sadness, anger, and disappointment are anathema to them: Davies' vivid drumming, Coffeng's uplifting guitar, and Levy's unassailable bass notes, all say so in their precise rhythmic footprints that revisit musical paths Davies traveled while living, and loving the gypsy life all over the South of Europe; footprints now leading toward exciting, unexplored, far-reaching musical frontier space for her muse to continue that restless, relentless quest to create and give musical ears and voice to what is not there...yet!
Track Listing: Collioure; Meeting Manitas; 12 Volt; Les Landes; Tango for Patti; Grapes, Plums and Tomatoes; Gypsy; La Sieste.
Recorded at The Bedrock Room at Bedrock L. A. in Echo Park
Recording Engineer: Eric Rennaker
Recording & Sound Technology/Engineering Management: Mike Davies
Mixing: Mike Davies, Billie Davies, Daniel Coffeng
Mastering: John Vestman at Vestman Mastering in HD format
All Photos by Inez Lewis
CJ Bond, JAZZ MUSIC
Style: Jazz
Label: Cobra Basement
Musicians: Billie Davies - drums; Daniel Coffeng - guitar; Adam Levy - bass
CD Review: On the first anniversary of her last CD release: The Billie Davies Trio - All About Love (Cobra Basement: 2012), 'lifelong natural musician' drummer Billie Davies has released another unimpeachable work: BILLIE DAVIES - 12 VOLT. Whereas, All About Love featured some of the music of venerated composers, including Victor Young, Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Mongo Santamaria, 12 VOLT features exclusively original compositions of Billie Davies, revealing yet another formidable creative talent in Davies' impressive artistic arsenal; making this an important CD for Davies, since it adds the crucial tyne of 'composer/arranger' to her sterling artistic fork, augmenting fearless innovation, and superlative drumming technique.
For 12 VOLT, Davies employs again the trio setting, but with a significant change in players. On All About Love, Tom Bone Ralls appeared on trombone, and Oliver Steinberg played bass. Now guitarist Daniel Coffeng supplants Bone Ralls, and bassist Adam Levy takes the place of Steinberg. Davies describes 12 VOLT as an ode to Manitas De Plata, the renowned French-born gypsy guitar master, Django Reinhardt, considered the king of gypsy guitarists., and "all Gypsies, Tsiganes, Manouche and Bohemians all over the world," sure to stir wide appeal, and escalating excitement among her expanding music public.
Davies' other signature contribution to the date, beyond drumming ability, and creative energy, is a remarkable facility to remain unhurried, not irrationally exuberant, but attentive to pristine artistic environments, so as not to provoke uneven corruption or distracting, grainy, biases in the fine textures, natural colors, and flowing sequences of sights and sounds she sees, hears and plays back with impeccable sonic balance, and an almost reverential cadence (Meeting Manitas).
Davies' selection of guitarist Daniel Coffeng, and bassist Adam Levy for this project is noteworthy in its astuteness. Coffeng brings extraordinary facility for transition and energetic flow to avant jazz improvisation (12 Volt) with an extended, progressive, detailed solo, alternating between jazz and rock, but always clear and precise, like the sounds of crickets at night time. Coffeng's musical experience is deeply rooted in music cultures which reach into jazz, blues, soul, reggae, through to classical, rock, Eastern music, Latin American and West African music.
L - R: bassist Adam Levy; drummer Billie Davies; guitarist Daniel Coffeng |
But Gypsies can swing too (Gypsy), because Django, "The King" taught them how. They listened, and never forgot. Now sadness, anger, and disappointment are anathema to them: Davies' vivid drumming, Coffeng's uplifting guitar, and Levy's unassailable bass notes, all say so in their precise rhythmic footprints that revisit musical paths Davies traveled while living, and loving the gypsy life all over the South of Europe; footprints now leading toward exciting, unexplored, far-reaching musical frontier space for her muse to continue that restless, relentless quest to create and give musical ears and voice to what is not there...yet!
Track Listing: Collioure; Meeting Manitas; 12 Volt; Les Landes; Tango for Patti; Grapes, Plums and Tomatoes; Gypsy; La Sieste.
Recorded at The Bedrock Room at Bedrock L. A. in Echo Park
Recording Engineer: Eric Rennaker
Recording & Sound Technology/Engineering Management: Mike Davies
Mixing: Mike Davies, Billie Davies, Daniel Coffeng
Mastering: John Vestman at Vestman Mastering in HD format
All Photos by Inez Lewis
CJ Bond, JAZZ MUSIC
Labels: Billie Davies, Jazz, Jazz Music,
12 VOLT,
Adam Levy- Bass,
Avant Garde Jazz,
Avant Jazz,
Bass,
Billie Davies,
Billie Davies- drums,
Daniel Coffeng- guitar,
Guitar,
Jazz Artist of the Year 2013 Award Nominee,
Jazz Musicians
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