$20 Advance / $24 Day of Show(rsvp on facebook)AMENDOLA vs BLADESâIf told about a band that consisted of only keyboards and drums, one wouldnât be faulted for thinking, âWhereâs the rest of the group?â But one listen to Amendola Vs. Bladesâthe funky California-based duo of Wil Blades on Hammond organ and clavinet and Scott Amendola behind the kitâand all fears will be assuaged. Bladesâs cutting solos and deep bass lines make for a thick stew of soulful harmony and daring improvisation. And Amendolaâs beats are simply unstoppable, simultaneously pushing the duo to heights unknown and sending the listener into a joyful sonic trance...
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$20 Advance / $24 Day of Show(rsvp on facebook)AMENDOLA vs BLADESâIf told about a band that consisted of only keyboards and drums, one wouldnât be faulted for thinking, âWhereâs the rest of the group?â But one listen to Amendola Vs. Bladesâthe funky California-based duo of Wil Blades on Hammond organ and clavinet and Scott Amendola behind the kitâand all fears will be assuaged. Bladesâs cutting solos and deep bass lines make for a thick stew of soulful harmony and daring improvisation. And Amendolaâs beats are simply unstoppable, simultaneously pushing the duo to heights unknown and sending the listener into a joyful sonic trance. But, in a move away from their debut album, âGreatest Hits,â the new album from Amendola Vs. Blades is bursting not only with creativity, but with personnel. âEverybody Winsâ features only three tracks that are exclusively duo. The rest of the album sees contributions from guitarist Jeff Parker (Tortoise), saxophonist Skerik (Les Claypool, Garage A Trois), percussionist Cyro Baptista (Herbie Hancock, Sting), and keyboardist Rob Burger (Tin Hat Trio, Laurie Anderson). Unsurprisingly, the music is as outsized as the roster of guest musicians. Moving between any number of styles and moods, âEverybody Winsâ is sure to expand minds and preconceptions.The guests, of course, didnât find themselves in the studio by chance. Amendola, for instance, plays alongside Baptista in the Nels Cline Singers, headed up by Wilco guitarist Nels Cline. And Parker and Amendola met at Berklee College of Music in the late â80s, later appearing on the drummerâs albums, âBelieveâ and âLift.â Parker also appears on Bladesâs 2014 album Field Notes. Burger, a musical compatriot of Amendola in San Francisco circa the mid-90s, joins the duo on âFabulous:Stupendous,â adding lush synth strings, and vintage keyboard sounds to the predominantly through composed Amendola composition. It ultimately propels the track into deep aural dimensions. Indeed, these musicians have more than just shared experiences in common; the additional players are coming from the same free-flowing arena that Amendola and Blades operate in.âJeff, Skerik, and Cyro are all extremely broad, versatile musicians,â explains Blades. âScott and I are the same. They just fit with what we do; they straddle a lot of stylistic boundaries, all while maintaining their musical voices. We can go in so many different directions musically, and it's really fun. Everyone is really open-minded and down to go wherever the music takes us!âIt takes them a lot of places. The opening âHi-Loâ is a thrilling, dark-hued funk piece with some odd-meter progginess thrown in. ââFess Up (Before Ya Mess Up)â is a New Orleans groove paying tribute to NOLA piano great Professor Longhair. âWall Townâ is a laid-back, but purposeful latin-jazz number featuring some shimmery soloing from Parker. And âHambelaâ works with a boogaloo groove recalling Lou Donaldsonâs Blue Note LPs from the late â60s. But the standout track might be the epic âMetropolian Hustle,â which begins in an experimental vein before moving into jittery jazz and psychedelic dub. The song has a special emphasis on collectivity.ââMetropolian Hustleâ is more of a sketch of a song thatâs about the ensemble with open sections, and not about individual solos,â says Amendola. âThereâs a form, but when we play it live weâll be doing a lot of cueing. Weâre not counting bars. The idea is that the band, whether the duo or with guests, can play around with the melodies, etc. Thereâs a particular vibe happening in the three different sections.âMore than just a confluence of friends and influences, âEverybody Winsâ is a celebration of Blades and Amendolaâs decade-plus adventure together. The musicians first united in 2006 to perform the Duke Ellington album Far East Suite and the ball hasnât stopped rolling since. And despite a little distance on the horizonâBlades recently relocated to L.A.âthere is no end in sight for the duo that sounds like an eight-piece band. The extra-musical bond keeps growing, too.âThe âVs.â is about how we mess with each other,â says Amendola. âItâs one fun part of our personal connection. Our friendship. We take the art of what we do seriously, but we donât take ourselves too seriously. Gotta have fun, mess with each other . . . and keep improvising!â
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