Home » Jazz Musicians » Brownman Electryc Trio Discography
Gravitation
Brownman Electryc Trio
Label: Browntasauras Records
Released: 2013
Views: 720
Tracks
01 - There Will Never Be Another You (feat. Damian Erskine) (5:16)
02 - Lady Bird (feat. Tyler Emond & Brad Cheeseman) (6:35)
03 - Cantaloupe Island (6:00)
04 - Chocalet Citeh (feat. Damian Erskine) (6:16)
05 - Caravan (feat. Luisito Orbegoso) (9:57)
06 - Splatch (feat. Marc Rogers) (6:41)
07 - Recorda Me (8:14)
08 - Irrational Funktion (8:05)
09 - Anxiety and the Creature Within (feat. Damian Erskine) (4:37)
10 - Catholic School Girls (5:19)
11 - Bye Bye Blackbird (6:51)
12 - Guru Closer (0:26)
Personnel
Brownman Electryc Trio
trumpetAdditional Personnel / Information
Brownman Ali - electric trumpet
Colin Kingsmore - drums
with rotating bassist on various tracks:
Damian Erskine - bass
Brad Cheeseman - bass
Ben Miller - bass
Ian De Souza - bass
Marc Rogers - bass
Tyler Emond - bass
Album Description
This album, the sophomore release from the award-winning BROWNMAN ELECTRYC TRIO,
represents the definitive "studio" recording for the band. Featuring both Brownman Ali on
trumpet & Colin Kingsmore on drums as the consistent sound from track to track, they are
accompanied by a rotating cast of all-star bassists including Damian Erskine, Tyler Emond,
Marc Rogers, Ben Miller, Ian De Souza, and introducing Brad Cheeseman.
Below, jazz journalist Daryl Angier, former editor-in-chief of CODA magazine, and the writer
of the liner notes for JUGGERNAUT, the 1st B.E.T. record, breaks this album down for us.
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Gravitation: Staying Grounded with Brownman and the Electryc Trio
By Daryl Angier
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“I’m more than happy to live lean and drive a Civic the rest of my life as long as I get to keep
making this music on my own terms.”
Brownman
Making a full-time living as a performing professional musician isn’t easy. Making a living as
a musician in a niche genre like jazz is even harder, and making a living in jazz in a “small”
market like Canada that is spread out over a massive land mass is just about the hardest of
all. For jazz musicians, ‘twas ever thus. But it’s what makes Brownman Ali a multi-award
winning Trinidadian-born trumpeter, bandleader and composer such a special case worthy
of examination. Not only has he forged a successful career in a field filled with obstacles, he’s
done it in an uncompromising fashion, staying true to his vision of propagating his own brand
of funkified, exploratory modern jazz that often amazingly builds carefree entertainment
from the seemingly antithetical building blocks of complex compositional, rhythmic and
improvisational structures. Brownman’s music is informed heavily by an urban music aesthetic
—encompassing everything from hip hop and r&b to house, jungle and dubstep—which he
readily acknowledges has often placed him outside jazz’s more polite and inoffensive
mainstream.
“Rather than create music specific to an audience or scene, I try and create this music from
whatever crazed place inside me fuels it. And I do so already knowing who my audience is,”
he says. “I go after those people, rather than try and meet some kind of expectation". Such
statements seem taken from the playbook of one of Brownman's greatest influences Miles
Davis.
His value system is actually well-suited to the current DIY zeitgeist in the music business. In
the time since Brownman first emerged on the Toronto music scene in the mid ‘90s as a go-to
session player and prime mover in both the Jazz and Latin-jazz arenas, the economics and
business models of the entire music industry have been completely up-ended and re-aligned.
Gone are the days (if they ever existed in the first place) when your merit as a player alone
would somehow result in the emoluments of a successful career being bestowed upon you—
festival promoters and club bookers calling you for gigs, labels looking for new talent to
record, glossy magazines writing about you. Nowadays, if you want these things, you better
be prepared to develop the skills and the wherewithal to go get them yourself.
From the beginning, however, Brownman has seemed hardwired to make it in a hardscrabble
world like the Canadian jazz scene. At this point in his career, it’s hard to imagine what might
be a suitable alternative outlet for his manic energy and considerable creativity. As
illustration, the quotes here come from a conversation at 3am during an all-night session at
the then deserted underground Euphonic Sound recording studio where he was putting the
finishing touches on this record. This session followed a Friday-night gig at Poetry Jazz
leading a 3-man permutation of his latin-jazz group CRUZAO in that tiny jazz hotspot in
Toronto’s Kensington Market. It’s exactly how you might imagine a typical day in the life of
one of the hardest-working creative players on the Canadian jazz landscape today. Another
day will mean another project. The BROWNMAN ELECTRYC TRIO (B.E.T.) is just one of the 7
ensembles he leads, most of which he does all the composing for. Unshockingly, he is also
called upon by a multitude of other bandleaders and at the time of this writing, he is the
featured soloist with the JOHN CHEESMAN JAZZ ORCHESTRA (a uniquely eclectic, electric jazz
orchestra), the DON LAWS Quintet (a Bobby McFerrin protégé), the LUANDA JONES Quintet
(Brazilian-jazz), the BROWNMAN-TALSKY 5 (a co-led group with up & coming head-turning
vocalist Jordana Talsky), STRANGE ATTRACTORS (an all-star collective quintet of top-shelf
Canadian jazz composers), the SUGAR DEVILS (New Orleans flavoured soul), OMEGA MEN (a
trumpet+DJ duo with DJ Cutler from New York), and too many more to list here. And he still
does a ton of studio work for musicians in an equally wide range of genres.
It would be wrong to suggest, however, that Brownman’s efforts have only been rewarded
with a life of scuffling and little recognition. His long list of awards include two National Jazz
Awards (with 11 nominations to his name over the years), a Toronto Independent Music Award
for jazz group of the year (B.E.T.), and he recently received a citation from the Trinidad High
Commission for being a "Distinguished National of Trinidad and Tobago" for his contributions
to Canadian jazz. Most importantly Brownman has achieved what all the greatest musicians
aspire to: an immediately identifiable sound and personality on his instrument that captivates
the listener’s attention from the first notes. His formative years under the instruction of
Canadian stalwarts Guido Basso & Mike Malone and his most important 10-year period of
evolution in New York working with his mentor Randy Brecker, along with countless hours of
woodshedding, resulted in the development of his hard-blowing, notey style that owes
almost as much to the verbal acrobatics of ‘90s hip hop MCs that were in ascendancy during
this same period as it does to bop-based trumpeters like Brecker and Freddie Hubbard. The
improvisational aspects of hip hop have always been prominently featured in several of the
ensembles Brownman leads, and it is not uncommon to hear him making comparisons
between historic rapper's "flow" and the lyrical phrases of his fav iconic jazz trumpet players.
Indeed, it felt like destiny calling when rapper Guru of Gang Starr fame tapped Brownman in
2006 to join Jazzmatazz, his periodic jazz-meets-hip-hop project, and take over Donald
Byrd’s trumpet chair. Jazzmatazz would occupy the bulk of Brownman’s time for the next 4
years, doing 4 world-tours and appearing on Jazzmatazz Vol. 4—with the notable exception
being the release of the first BET record, Juggernaut, in 2009. On the surface, Jazzmatazz
looked like a working musician’s dream come true: constant touring around the world
playing to sold-out crowds of young, hip fans. But after Guru’s surprising death from cancer
at age 48 in 2010, some darker truths from that period began to emerge. Guru was being
controlled by a manipulative and physically abusive business partner who hid Guru’s illness
and isolated him from friends and family. Payment problems slowly arose as this partner
took over more of the business, until Brownman and bandmate DJ DooWop were forced to
quit the group in Jan 2010 (a May 2010 article in the Boston Phoenix, for which Brownman
was interviewed at length, is the definitive account of this entire sad episode, which became a
major scandal in hip hop circles). To make matters worse, Brownman’s own father was also
suffering from a particularly cruel cancer and succumbed to the disease just two months after
Guru did. And as an additional insult, a few months later while playing a gig in New York,
Brownman’s car (yes, a Honda Civic) was stolen, along with all the gear in it.
All that is simply to say that life is ups and downs, and Brownman seems capable of
weathering it all while producing remarkable music, fueled by life experience. Samples from
Mos Def, Chris Rock, Miles Davis, Guru & Martin Luther King, start to distinguish the current
B.E.T. record from Juggernaut, a live recording that served as an excellent representation of
seeing the group in a club. Gravitation, however, is a studio album, which has allowed
Brownman to add new highly texture layers, colours and flourishes throughout: dueling
basses here, obscure and not-so-obscure dialogue samples there, and most significantly a
large cast of six bass players from near and far, including one of America's top 6-string
players - DAMIAN ERSKINE. Throughout the record, Brownman on electric trumpet & the
astonishing COLIN KINGSMORE on drums are teamed with a variety of these bassists in
various trio permutations, often with accompanying "bass chords" (chords played on the
upper neck of the bass) and Brownman's micro-Korg (which often appears on live shows)
adding density to the tracks. "These guys are planetary-pulling, space-and-time bending
monsters man!", he states emphatically when discussing the bevy of bassists featured on this
new record. However, notwithstanding the studio magic and a cast of actually many more
than three players, this album at all times sounds like a true trio record: three musicians
succumbing to the gravitational pull of the omni-present improvisational impulse, losing
themselves in this always exploratory music. There's no mistaking these sounds for anything
else except a Brownman Electryc Trio record.
"The Search" is pretty much the only thing Brownman works on in his playing anymore. He's
already armed with an arsenal of advanced harmonic, rhythmic and melodic knowledge from
years of training. But to achieve the kinds of things he wants to hear in his music today, he
knows that doesn't come through the perfect execution of licks and tricks, but through a
sincere commitment to exploration and chance-taking with his playing. He calls it "swimming
the deep waters". And as we sit here at 3am, I watch as he listens back to these fresh new
recordings and points out what he thinks are the standout sections of tracks. “In those
moments I can really hear the search,” he says. "Can you hear that?", he asks of me. Hear it I
can. And dear listener, there are many moments on this record where the depths of that
gravitational abyss are being explored, and I encourage you to join Brownman and his crew
on their freefall journey planetside and see for yourself where you'll land.
Daryl Angier, June 2013, Toronto
Daryl Angier is the former Editor-in-Chief of the Canadian jazz magazine CODA and tried to
talk Brown into finding someone else, feeling a "bigger name" may have better suited. Expect
few men know Brown's work to the depth Daryl does (having written both an in depth cover
story for CODA on him & the Juggernaut liner notes). Brown is again honoured to have him
write here..
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The GRAVITATION Tracks
by Andrew Nicholson
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01) There Will Never Be Another You (5:16) by Harry Warren, 1942 | arr. by Brownman, 2012
feat. Brownman - electric trumpet & micro-Korg, Colin Kingsmore -drums, Damian Erskine -
bass
This vintage 1942 standard was initially a jam, a warmup in the studio to "get the blood
flowing", and was never intended to make it's way onto the record, but the warmth of
Brownman's wah-wah pedal, his lyrical soloing and the creative interaction between guest
bassist Damian Erskine (American 6-string icon & current bassist for the Jaco Pastorius Big
Band) and Colin demanded it make an appearance. Colin's hilarious defiance of strict
instructions (read: "no marches!") is evident as many appear during this jam. Brown takes on
an "if you can't beat him, join him" approach in the final moments of the song. The track also
includes a short improvised interlude which feels like deep breath before the final return of
the melody. Both Brown's and Damian's strength as soloists are on clear display throughout
the track, and it's a spirited, funky, fun way to start this record buckling the listener in nicely
for what's to come.
02) Lady Bird (6:35) by Tadd Dameron, 1939, arr. by Brownman, 2010
feat. Brownman - electric trumpet, Colin Kingsmore -drums, Tyler Emond - bass 1 (right),
Brad Cheeseman - bass 2 (left)
Interestingly the voice introducing the tune is Miles Davis - pre-throat surgery, on a gig in
Paris with Tadd Dameron in Paris in 1949. It is one of the only recordings of Miles pre-dating
his now famous scratchy throat, and was carefully time-stretched to match the tempo of
B.E.T.'s entry. This classic Dameron tune, also features Juggernaut bassist Tyler Emond (right
channel) going head to head with the newest bassist to join the ranks of B.E.T.'s alumni - Brad
Cheeseman (left channel). Both represent 2 of Toronto's most exciting 20-something electric
bassists. Though Tyler's musical focus has him now moving in different artistic directions,
catalyzing his retiring from the trio (in fact selling his 6-string and focusing on his own
brilliant acoustic group HYLIA), the Electryc Trio's earliest permutations were strongly defined
by his presence. The 2 bass players deliver each of their unique breeds of 6-string
improvising in an almost dance-like atmosphere. Early on, Brown takes a very short solo on
this track in order to make room for the 2-bass feature, but does a trumpet-drumset dance of
his own just before the tune wraps up, ending with the closing chord and applause from the
1949 sample.
03) Cantaloupe Island (6:00) by Herbie Hancock, 1964, arr. by Brownman, 2005
feat. Brownman - electric trumpet, Colin Kingsmore - drums, Tyler Emond - bass
The trio has been playing this classic Herbie 1964 tune since 2005 and it's breezy opening
volley can't help but evoke the feeling of mountain driving with the top down. The track also
features Brown's unaffected (no pedals) open horn sound. The warmth and depth of his tone
is on display early in the track, until he's pitted against Colin for some energized drum
trading, where he again reaches into his pedal bag for some tones more suited to an
exchange of ideas with Kingsmore's versatile and ubiquitous drumset skills.
04) Chocalet Citeh (6:16) [dedicated to Chris Rock] by Brownman Ali, 2010
feat. Brownman - electric trumpet, Colin Kingsmore - drums, Damian Erskine - bass
The first Brownman original to appear on this recording. Brown has long been a fan of Chris
Rock's work stating, "his devastatingly accurate edgy humour is simultaneously social
commentary couched in a slick coolness". He wanted this tune to speak to that - slick,
coolness meets edginess. The title comes from the 1st moments from "Bring The Pain" as
Rock walks on stage, he exclaims "D.C.! Chocolate City!" But Rock says "Chocolate City" with
his particular Rock-isms, causing Brown to name his tune phonetically - "Chocalet Citeh".
Unlike the 3 standards earlier on the album, this tune - written predominantly in 7/4 - has a
more intricate form including a drum'n'bass interlude (used later as a springboard for some
Kingsmore brilliance), and complex harmony behind the trumpet solo. Damian lays down a
moving bass solo meditation before Brown comes blazing in, again without pedals,
showcasing his tone and improvising ideas, before Colin rockets away against the
drum'n'bass ostinato.
05) Caravan (9:57) by Duke Ellington, 1937, arr. by Brownman, 2003
feat. Brownman - electric trumpet, Colin Kingsmore - drums, Tyler Emond - bass & Luisito
Orbegoso - congas/perc
On the 1st album, Juggernaut, the title track featured Brown's CRUZAO bandmate - acclaimed
conga player Luisito Orbegoso. We again see his return on this spirited Latin take on Duke
Ellington's 1937 classic. Brown again chooses a more open horn approach for this track,
saving the face-melting pedal choices for the climaxes of the tune. His use and exploration of
the altered, almost eastern, scale choices is a fascinating one, and perhaps precipitates Tyler
equally "eastern" approach in his bass solo. Both make definitive statements as soloists,
before making room for Colin to again have his way with the track, supported by Luisito's 3
congas & variety of claves and bells. The tune picks up steam as the ensemble makes their
run to the end, with short flourishes from Luisito on congas before Brown re-enters for one
last burst of virtuosity to close the tune off. You'll have trouble not dancing to this track.
06) Splatch (6:41) by Marcus Miller, 1986 (from Miles Davis' Tutu), arr. by Brownman,
2013
feat. Brownman - electric trumpet, Colin Kingsmore - drums, Marc Rogers - bass
Though his approach as a trumpet player is quite different, Brownman's musical ideologies
and concepts are very informed by Miles Davis', so it's no surprise to see this famous tune
from Miles' primordial "Tutu" release make an appearance. A tip of the hat to both Miles and
the 80's, this track features the incomparable Marc Rogers (bassist for Holly Cole, the
Philosopher Kings and original bassist for Brown's hip-hop crew GRUVASYLUM) thumb-
slappingly laying the groundwork for this tune's deep funk groove. Enlisting some studio
magic to create a 10-trumpet all-Brownman horn section on the bridge adds to the tune's
power. Brown weaves his way thoughtfully though the solo section, bursting forth for the final
solo break, before calmly setting the stage for Marc's own soulful solo. Marc's crackerjack
solo break is nothing short of eyebrow raising on it's own, before they settle into an 80's style
rideout, complete with 80's style fade.
07) Recorda Me (8:14) by Joe Henderson, 1963, arr. by Brownman, 2009
feat. Brownman - electric trumpet & micro-Korg, Colin Kingsmore - drums, Tyler Emond -
bass & Ian De Souza - bass chords
Using this time-honoured Joe Henderson tune as a springboard, this is the 1st taste of hip-
hop on Gravitation, and is dramatically prefaced by a sample from Martin Luther King Jr's last
speech. One may notice that Brown arranged this tune in 2009 - just before the death of his
father, and his bandleader & friend Guru. "We've got some difficult days ahead", states MLK.
If we imagine this being said in 2009, it would foreshadow Brown's own challenges for the
next difficult year of 2010. The tune has a melancholy flavour to it, in Brown's tone and
approach particularly, which has an outer hue of effects, but is primarily an open trumpet
tone for the bulk of the tune. Tyler, in contrast, is magnificently drenched in effects with both
Ian De Souza providing bass chords & Brown on micro-Korg providing an almost "X-files"
type of soundscape. Bookended by MLK, this tune has real gravity with Guru's ghost
seemingly in the air during the excursion.
08) Irrational Funktion (8:04) [based on an irrational number series] by Brownman Ali,
2012
feat. Brownman - electric trumpet, Colin Kingsmore - drums, Tyler Emond - bass & Ben Miller
- bass chords
Brown has a degree in physics. Many do not know this. But those of us that do, find it
unsurprising when he writes a tune based on an irrational function number series. To further
complicate matters, the 1st pass through the angular bass/trumpet pattern, has Colin playing
free-time leaving the listener uncomfortably struggling to find the downbeat (exactly Brown's
intention). But on the 2nd pass - Colin comes slamming in with a head-bobbing groove that
makes this complex rhythmic tune sound less like math and more like funk. It has quickly
become a much requested tune during live performances by musicians, for it's starkness &
high-wire act of rhythm. With long-time B.E.T. alumni Ben Miller providing bass chord
support, Brown deftly navigates the rhythmic white-waters during his envelope-filtered
Brecker-inspired solo before passing the ball to Tyler who also digs deeply. The solo hat is
then handed off to Colin who guilefully blows on top of the intricate bass pattern before
heading to the exit of this always, inexplicably fun, white-knuckle roller coaster ride of a
tune.
09) Anxiety & The Creature Within (4:37) by Brownman Ali, 2010
feat. Brownman - electric trumpet, Colin Kingsmore - drums, Damian Erskine - bass
This is the last tune on Gravitation to feature the talents of 6-string bass monster Damian
Erskine who additionally lays down some beautiful chord work in the bridge. The tune was
composed in the middle of hardship for Brown, then dealing with the death of Guru, his
father, his stolen car, and difficult relationship breakup. 2010 was a rough year and this tune
speaks to that. But it, almost ironically, speaks to the friendship that Brown has with Damian
as they trade darkly powerful sentences throughout this tune - no one man having a solo all
to himself, but instead sharing the solo spotlight together before providing a backdrop for
Colin to do his thing over. A false ending brings one last moment of tension before the
release of the satisfying final figures.
10) Catholic School Girls (5:19) by Brownman Ali, 2009
feat. Brownman - illegal sonic experiments, Colin Kingsmore - drums, Tyler Emond -
bass
Dirty. When asked what this tune is, that's what Brown answers: "Dirty. It's just dirty". And what
do you think of when you think of dirtiness, Brown? "Catholic School Girls". Written in 10/8
this fitfully dirty ride appropriately features a sample from Mos Def's "Ms. Fat Booty" and will
likely never see the light of mainstream jazz radio. Which is unfortunate given the incredible
Zappa-esque playing from all on this track. It's by far the most raucous and exploratory on
the record and puts the spotlight squarely on Brown's technical abilities as both a trumpet
player and as a purveyor of sonic experimentation. Colin too is ferocious on this track, which
ends with a hilariously juxtaposed quote from the "Girl from Ipanema". In live performance
Brown delights in saying, upon tune conclusion: "What? You didn't know? The Girl from
Ipanema was a Catholic School Girl!".
11) Bye Bye Blackbird (6:51) by Ray Henderson, 1926, arr. by Brownman, 2011
feat. Brownman - trumpet, Colin Kingsmore - drums, Tyler Emond - bass
Though originally written in 1926, most fans of jazz think of Miles' version on the 1957
"Round About Midnight" when they think of Bye Bye Blackbird. Brown has long used this tune,
played with a slight hip-hop edge, to cool out the trio on live performances and is the perfect
musical conclusion to this adventurous record. No pedals on this track - it's all about tone
and depth of exploration - for everyone. As per Miles' version, the tune is essentially over at
4:38, followed by a 4-bar cycle repeated over and over for open improvisation. For another
full 2 minutes the trio enjoys cooling out in the rideout, before Colin & Ty joyfully pushes the
groove into one last drum'n'bass fun-filled romp as Brown finally takes it home with a tip-of-
the-hat to a standard Duke Ellington style closing phrase.
12) Guru Closer (0:26)
A final message & website plug from legendary rapper GURU. Brown was the featured
trumpet player in Guru's Jazzmatazz from 2006 until Guru's tragic death in 2010, and the
audio was stripped from a video taken in 2007 at the very end of a world-tour. In the original,
Guru gushes amicably about his trumpet player for close to a minute before plugging the
website. It was edited down here, but it worth finding on YouTube, just to see how visibly
humbled Brown is Guru's words. A fitting closing to this aptly titled heavy recording.
Next >
Juggernaut
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About Brownman Electryc Trio
Instrument: Trumpet
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