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07

Feb

Free EP.

januaryelh:

Listen to it on the right of my page & download it if you like it! You can also find it on Soundcloud.

Blame me for anything bad;It’d sound worse hadn’t it been for this guy.

Thanks to Veeberry & Alittle for hosting it.

All feedback is welcome! Except for lies, of course. Keep those^_^.

29

Dec

fattonyrap:

Houston Press: Top 10 Houston Rap Albums of 2010
http://blogs.houstonpress.com/rocks/2010/12/top_10_houston_rap_albums_of_2.php?page=3
RABDARGAB: #4 out of 10“The guy after whom they renamed the Houston Press Best Underground Rapper award after (it’s now called The Obi) claims fourth with RABDARGAB, his compelling, ambitious if not altogether adventurous debut outing. There wasn’t one other album this year that had a stronger three song set than the first three songs here (“Nigga U Ain’t Fat”; “Rap Babies”; “Luv It, Mayne”). Overweight Anthony is a growing force.”
Right above Bun B’s Trill O.G. album at #5. Thank you.Shoutout to everyone that made this year’s list! New Houston rap niggas galore.
RABDARDIGITAL: http://fattonyrap.bandcamp.com/album/rabdargabRABDARCD: http://fattony.bigcartel.com/product/rabdargab-cd-debut-album-produced-by-tom-cruz

fattonyrap:

Houston Press: Top 10 Houston Rap Albums of 2010

http://blogs.houstonpress.com/rocks/2010/12/top_10_houston_rap_albums_of_2.php?page=3

RABDARGAB: #4 out of 10
“The guy after whom they renamed the Houston Press Best Underground Rapper award after (it’s now called The Obi) claims fourth with RABDARGAB, his compelling, ambitious if not altogether adventurous debut outing. There wasn’t one other album this year that had a stronger three song set than the first three songs here (“Nigga U Ain’t Fat”; “Rap Babies”; “Luv It, Mayne”). Overweight Anthony is a growing force.”

Right above Bun B’s Trill O.G. album at #5. Thank you.

Shoutout to everyone that made this year’s list! New Houston rap niggas galore.


RABDARDIGITALhttp://fattonyrap.bandcamp.com/album/rabdargab

RABDARCD: http://fattony.bigcartel.com/product/rabdargab-cd-debut-album-produced-by-tom-cruz

Go See FAT TONY!!

Go check out Fat Tony’s page.  He is having a New Year’s Eve party which is going to be awesome as well as many many more upcoming shows! 

28

Dec

Cool Kids @ Warehouse Live! Jan. 23, 2011

David Caceres CD Release @ Stafford Centre

David Caceres (CD-Release Concert) Image gallery

Presented by Stafford Centre at Stafford Centre

January 15, 2011

The David Caceres Jazz Quartet will perform at Caceres’ CD-Release Concert on Saturday, January 15, 2011 at 9:00 p.m. at the Stafford Centre.

A twenty-first century musician would be one who is proficient in all of the inventions and dimensions of jazz, and can speak the languages of R&B, country, folk and pop – both instrumentally and vocally. On his self-titled, Sunnyside Records debut, the Houston-based alto saxophonist/vocalist/composer/educator David Caceres shows why he’s a musician who fits that bill.

A scion of a legendary family of Texas musicians, Caceres’s sax is a pleasing blend of David Sanborn’s bite with Paul Desmond’s romanticism, mixed with a mellow-toned vocal style that amalgamates the best of Stevie Wonder and Donny Hathaway. Those gifts made him a standout in Houston, and they are in full effect on this CD, produced by Matt Pierson (Pat Metheny, Brad Mehldau) and arranged by keyboardist Gil Goldstein (Bobby McFerrin, Chris Botti, Esperanza Spalding), featuring bassist Larry Grenadier, drummer Bill Stewart, organist Shedrick Mitchell, percussionist Bashiri Johnson, guitarist Larry Campbell and pianist Aaron Parks. With that sterling support, the CD’s eleven tracks showcase Caceres’s multi-faceted musicianship in a variety of moods and grooves.

“It feels just as good to sing one note as it does to play one note,” Caceres says. “However, they have very different roles and somewhat different languages when used in the same song. The voice sets the tone of the tune, drawing the listener in with a direct, rather vulnerable statement. Then the sax is allowed to stretch out and explore some of the other emotional layers of the song.”

Buoyed by Goldstein’s evocative string and horn arrangements, Caceres’s sax and vocals breathe new life into Maxwell’s heartbreaking ballad “Sympton Unknown,” Ray Lamontagne’s folk/pop number “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers,” Van Morrison’s “The Way that Lovers Do,” and a soulful rendering of the Donny Hathaway selection “Giving Up.” James Taylor’s waltzy “You Make it Easy” retains its middle-of-the-road charm, and Caceres’ takes on two Stevie Wonder compositions, the poetic and pleading trio take of “Seems So Long,” and the festive Afro-Brazilian motored “Bird of Beauty,” which features special guest vocalist Margret Grebowicz, are inventive as they are inspired. Caceres’s mastery of the jazz canon is evidenced by his down-home and dancing rendition of Thelonious Monk’s “Round Midnight” and his soaring reading of Herbie Hancock’s “Tell Me a Bedtime Story.” Two Caceres originals, the midtempo “Sacred Path” and the Latinesque “Gratitude,” complete this sumptuous and stunning CD.

Born in San Antonio in 1967, Caceres comes from a talented family of musicians. His grandfather, jazz violinist Emilio Caceres, led a popular swing orchestra in San Antonio, Texas in the 1930’s & 40’s, and his great uncle Ernie Caceres played saxophone and clarinet with the Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, and Woody Herman big bands. “I remember when I was about five years old, staying over at my grandparents’ house, and seeing my grandfather in his tux heading out for a gig and I wouldn’t see him till the next morning. I understood that my grandfather and great-uncle were musicians, but it wasn’t until I was around 12 that I heard the last record they did together in 1969,” he says. “There was an extensive bio in it about my relatives and I used to read it all the time. Although I didn’t really understand the language they were playing, I felt connected to it and the music was definitely making an impression on me.”

David’s maternal grandfather, Manuel Rangel, owned a major Latin music record retailer, label, and distribution company, and his mother managed a store, called “Sound of Music.” Growing up in this environment, it’s no surprise that young Caceres found himself beginning piano studies as an eight-year old, and took up the alto saxophone three years later. “Of all of the instruments, the alto seemed to most emulate the human voice and I was also intrigued by the complexity of all the keys,” he recalls. He studied John Coltrane, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, and Sonny Rollins, learned to play soprano, clarinet, and flute, started playing gigs in San Antonio, graduated from high school and earned a scholarship to Berklee College of Music, graduating in 1989. It was at that esteemed institution where he found his singing voice. “There was a wedding band that needed a sax player who could also sing a few tunes. I had never sung publicly,” Caceres recalls, “but I figured what the hell? I knew I could at least sing in tune - how bad could it be?”

Caceres moved on to New York with a Berklee class that included Roy Hargrove, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Mark Turner, Donny McCaslin, Antonio Hart, Seamus Blake and Chris Cheek. But the pull of Texas called him back to San Antonio, and then on to Houston, where he joined the Paul English Quartet, the fusion group Stratus and a 10-piece funk outfit named TKOh! Caceres has logged hours in the recording studio on numerous sessions, including Latin sensation La Mafia’s Grammy award-winning Un Millon De Rosas, plus New York sessions with Deodato and Robbie Williams, among others and led his own quartet. He has shared the stage with a varied and prestigious list of musicians, including Milt Hinton, James Williams, Kirk Whalum, John Pattitucci, Will Kennedy, the Drifters, and Tejano star Little Joe. His three previous, independently-released CDs as leader – released from 1995 to 2007 – include: Innermost, Trio and Reflections.

Which bring us to David Caceres, a bold new, statement from a daring and diverse musician who exhibits three hundred and sixty degrees of inspired, category-crossing art.

“Caceres has ‘it,’ that something extra that separates him from his peers.”
-Paul J. MacArthur, The Houston Press

Photo courtesy Sunnyside.

Wale At Warehouse Live! Dec. 30, 2010

Wale (in the Ballroom)

Presented by Warehouse Live at Warehouse Live

December 30, 2010

Warehouse Live  presents Wale. (in the Ballroom). With DJ Mr Rodgers, GO MC Kane.

Wale Victor Folarin (born Olubowale Victor Akintimehin on September 21, 1984), better known by his stage name Wale (pronounced /?w??le?/), is an American rapper from Washington, D.C. Wale was born to Nigerian immigrant parents. He rose to prominence in 2006, when his song “Dig Dug (Shake It)” became popular in his hometown.

Wale became locally recognized and continued recording music for the regional audience. Producer Mark Ronson discovered Wale in 2006 and signed him to Allido Records in 2007. While signed to that label, Wale released several mixtapes and appeared in national media including MTV and various urban magazines.

In 2008, Wale signed to Interscope Records for $1.3 million, and his debut album Attention Deficit was released in 2009 with the singles “Chillin”, “Pretty Girls”, and “World Tour”.
 

Nero at Rich's Feb. 11, 2011

Too Short w/ Devin The Dude & Kid Capri

Too Short with Devin The Dude & DJ Kid Capri - Jan 16, 2011 House Of Blues Houston 8 PM.

WATTS
Featuring Jeff “Tain” Watts, Nicholas Payton,
Christian McBride and David Sánchez
Friday, April 8, 2011; 8:00 PM
Cullen Theater, Wortham Theater Center

Lionel Loueke Trio Saturday Feb. 5, 2011. 8 PM.  Cullen Theatre, Wortham Center.

Stefon Harris and Blackout Saturday January 22, 2010. 8PM Cullen Theatre, Wortham Center.

Just Go To Everything At The Symphony

Real & Imagined at Zilka Hall Jan. 8

Musical Resolutions: Music of the Baroque Dec. 31 2010