Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Happy Holidays! from Billie Davies

Billie Davies
~ A Jazz Musician ~
New Orleans, LA
Tel: (+1) 310.467.2061
Email: Billie@BillieDavies.com
Website: http://www.BillieDavies.com
Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billie_Davies

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Billie Davies And The Bad Boyzzz





At the Roaring 20's​ Dec 10, 2015 with Ari Kohn​, Branden Lewis​, Evan Oberla​, Billie Davies​ and Oliver Watkinson​. Katie Sikora​ photos & video. This video & sound was made possible by Mike Davies​ . A memorable night ... :) <3 Thank you Scott Thompson​ , Thank you JazzCorner​, Thank you Jazz Caribe​. <3

http://www.billiedavies.com/

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Moanin' improv by Billie Davies and The Bad Boyzzz









Come and hear us at the Roaring 20's, in Terrytown (New Orleans), Louisiana, USA​

Tonight, Dec 10 2015, at 8PM ... :)

Celebrating

The release of their new album "Hand In Hand In The Hand Of The Moon"

And

Billie Davies Birthday!

BILLIE DAVIES AND THE BAD BOYZZZ
Be There or Be Square ... Cha CHa Cha ~~~

Friday, October 30, 2015

Billie Davies, Hand in Hand in the Hand of the Moon (Album Review)

Billie Davies, Hand in Hand in the Hand of the Moon (Album Review) In OffBeat Magazine in New Orleans.

Billie Davies, Hand In Hand In The Hand Of The Moon (Independent)

Avant-garde music really finds its beauty in the way it rids musical expression of a number of conceptual restraints, leaving the core of the artist’s emotion to be exposed bare.
This kind of intimate connection with the listener is what drummer Billie Davies offers in her release Hand in Hand in the Hand of the Moon.
The album, a symphony in eight movements dedicated to Belgian painter Serge Vandercam, was recorded in one take, with each movement inspired by a different painting by Vandercam.
Davies invites musicians to converse freely around pieces of visual art created in a session she spent with Vandercam in 1995. That type of experimentation in music allows her to draw connections between different individuals and their ideas, through different art forms, and across different timeframes.
Though the instrumentation remains within the established norms of the jazz quintet, the absence of piano challenges the horns to build a melodic and rhythmic rapport among themselves and with Davies’ lead drumming, rather than relying on set harmonies or chord structure.
The bare and vivid expression that results from this combination of ideas—on how to create music—shows a certain degree of sincerity and openness that remains present throughout this concept album.