The Falcon Outdoor Stage | No Tickets | No Cover | Donations Encouraged | Reservations Required
Celebrating over 20 years, Sexmob continues to deconstruct familiar pop tunes with subversive impunity. Everything from Princeâs âSign Oâ the Timesâ to John Barryâs âGoldfingerâ, the Grateful Deadâs âRippleâ, Nirvanaâs âAbout a Girlâ, the Rolling Stonesâ âRuby Tuesdayâ, Buffalo Springfieldâs âFor What Itâs Worthâ, Paul McCartneyâs âLive and Let Dieâ and ABBAâs âFernandoâ is fair game for this band of musical renegades.
Bernstein is explicit about Sexmob not being a cover band. âCovers to me means you play it exactly like the record,â he explains. âI just take songs that I feel have a great melody and do them in my style. So Iâll pick a tune and tell the guys, âLetâs Sexmob this!â And I realize that's what jazz musicians have always done. Thatâs how Lester Young and Charlie Parker and Miles Davis got popular. They played the songs that everyone knew. And because they could recognize the song then that invited them into their style."...
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The Falcon Outdoor Stage | No Tickets | No Cover | Donations Encouraged | Reservations Required
Celebrating over 20 years, Sexmob continues to deconstruct familiar pop tunes with subversive impunity. Everything from Princeâs âSign Oâ the Timesâ to John Barryâs âGoldfingerâ, the Grateful Deadâs âRippleâ, Nirvanaâs âAbout a Girlâ, the Rolling Stonesâ âRuby Tuesdayâ, Buffalo Springfieldâs âFor What Itâs Worthâ, Paul McCartneyâs âLive and Let Dieâ and ABBAâs âFernandoâ is fair game for this band of musical renegades.
Bernstein is explicit about Sexmob not being a cover band. âCovers to me means you play it exactly like the record,â he explains. âI just take songs that I feel have a great melody and do them in my style. So Iâll pick a tune and tell the guys, âLetâs Sexmob this!â And I realize that's what jazz musicians have always done. Thatâs how Lester Young and Charlie Parker and Miles Davis got popular. They played the songs that everyone knew. And because they could recognize the song then that invited them into their style."
The fact that Bernstein exclusively plays slide trumpet in Sexmob gives the quartet an even more distinctive edge. As he puts it, âWhen you play the trumpet, Louis Armstrong is the king. But when I play the slide trumpet, Iâm the king. Itâs my voice. On trumpet, thereâs no escaping Armstrong and Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Freddie Hubbard, Woody Shaw, Lester BowieâŚall those cats. But on slide trumpet, itâs just me.â
Sexmob came together in 1996 in a weekly residency at the Knitting Factory Tap Room and in 1998 released its debut, Din of Inequity. They followed with 2000âs Solid Sender, 2001âs Sex Mob Does Bond, 2003âs Dime Grind Palace, 2006âs Sexotica, 2009âs Sex Mob Meets Medeski: Live in Willisau and 2013âs Cinema, Circus & Spaghetti: Sex Mob Plays Fellini. The groupâs latest, Cultural Capital, is the first Sexmob recording to feature all Bernstein original compositions. âSome of them, like âBari Si,â âStep Apacheâ and âSyrupâ are through-composed like Jelly Roll Morton pieces,â he explains. âAnd some like â4 Centsâ and âStreetâ and are more jammy, where we take a little idea â a line or a groove â and just develop it.â
The rubato ballad âHelmland,â which features some particularly expressive slide trumpet work by Bernstein, carries a hymn-like feel while âGiant Mindsâ sounds like a requiem. Krauss and Scherr overdub guitars on âValentinoâ and the raucous second-line groover âGolden Houses.â Krauss is featured on the free interlude âLacyâ and heâs turned loose on the edgy closer, âBriggan,â Says the leader, âSometime itâs a little uncomfortable and jarring for people but thatâs what Briggan does, thatâs his thing. Heâs a different kind of virtuoso.â Scherr is showcased on the African-influenced âHear Youâ while âSFâ pays tribute to Bernsteinâs Bay Area roots. âThere were all these kind of psychedelic-blues hippie bands when I was growing up like Quicksilver Messenger Service, Sons of Champlin, The Loading Zone, Moby Grape. Youâd hear those bands more than the Grateful Dead. So thatâs what this song was about.â
Bernstein and his Sexmob crew continue to push the envelope in delightfully subversive ways on their fiercely independent, self-produced new outing, Cultural Capital.
Bernsteinâs on-stage antics and the bandâs amazing musicianship are the focal points. They never rehearse. They never have a set list. Things are constantly fresh.
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