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Subject: "Chris Dave & Drumhedz " Previous topic | Next topic
AtoZ 0toInfinity
Member since Sep 27th 2008
867 posts
Thu Dec-07-17 01:10 PM

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"Chris Dave & Drumhedz "


  

          

New joint out tomorrow
Not sure if anybody is into this
but the last mixtape was DOPE imo

New single ft Elzhi, Phonte, Eric Roberson
https://soundcloud.com/chrisdaddydave/destiny-n-stereo-feat-elzhi

  

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
sounds good
Dec 07th 2017
1
He's my favorite drummer
Dec 07th 2017
2
they've got a track w/ SiR & Anderson .Paak i hope is on there
Dec 07th 2017
3
So glad to hear this...
Dec 07th 2017
4
Dat Feelin' Ft SiR
Dec 27th 2017
5
New Album is Out Here !!
Jan 26th 2018
6
YES, i started dancing immediately
Jan 26th 2018
7
Chris Dave on Why He Needed to Make His Own Album - RS swipe
Jan 26th 2018
8
I wouldn't be mad at a Tweet/Bilal album
Jan 26th 2018
9
the anderson paak tracks bummed me out
Jan 27th 2018
10
what?
Jan 27th 2018
11
huh?
Jan 30th 2018
15
RE: the anderson paak tracks bummed me out
Feb 03rd 2018
16
Dope ass album
Jan 29th 2018
12
great record
Jan 30th 2018
13
Turn the snare up!
Jan 30th 2018
14
Chris “Daddy” Dave & The Drumhedz Are Here To Make You Feel - OKP
Mar 05th 2018
17

c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
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Thu Dec-07-17 01:52 PM

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1. "sounds good"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

thanks

  

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13Rose
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Thu Dec-07-17 02:43 PM

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2. "He's my favorite drummer"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Good looking.

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KennyFresh
Member since Mar 16th 2005
8362 posts
Thu Dec-07-17 03:01 PM

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3. "they've got a track w/ SiR & Anderson .Paak i hope is on there "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

from the same sessions when they all did "Liberation" together,
from SiR's Seven Sundays album

Fresh Selects label: http://freshselects.bandcamp.com | http://soundcloud.com/freshselects
Tight Songs playlist (Spotify & Apple Music): http://smarturl.it/tightsongs

  

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Af-1
Member since Apr 22nd 2008
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Thu Dec-07-17 04:12 PM

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4. "So glad to hear this..."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

His album is so overdue!

-----
Check me out, say hi...
Visit our soul/jazz/funk internet radio station, Blue-in-Green:RADIO: http://www.blueingreenradio.com/
https://www.mixcloud.com/Blue_in_Green_Sessions/
http://soundcloud.com/user305437292

  

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AtoZ 0toInfinity
Member since Sep 27th 2008
867 posts
Wed Dec-27-17 11:44 AM

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5. "Dat Feelin' Ft SiR"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Another nice outing

My apologies but I swore the album was dropping sooner but now it looks like later.

Anyway
https://soundcloud.com/chrisdaddydave/dat-feelin-feat-sir

Also, not sure how I missed this one
https://soundcloud.com/chrisdavethedrumhedz/f-u

  

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AtoZ 0toInfinity
Member since Sep 27th 2008
867 posts
Fri Jan-26-18 09:14 AM

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6. "New Album is Out Here !!"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Just about to give it a run

  

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Crash Bandacoot
Member since May 13th 2003
10119 posts
Fri Jan-26-18 09:26 AM

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7. "YES, i started dancing immediately"
In response to Reply # 0


          

>

  

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
13963 posts
Fri Jan-26-18 12:36 PM

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8. "Chris Dave on Why He Needed to Make His Own Album - RS swipe"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Destiny N Stereo (feat. Phonte and Elzhi and Eric Roberson)

https://youtu.be/PSyB5rtMgSs


https://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/dangelo-adele-drummer-chris-dave-on-making-his-own-album-w515598


Superdrummer Chris Dave on Why He Needed to Make His Own Album
Percussionist whose mind-bending beats have powered everyone from D'Angelo to Adele discusses his new musical manifesto 'Chris Dave and the Drumhedz'

By Elias Leight


Chris Dave has drummed on some of the most popular and most acclaimed albums of the past decade, including Adele's 21 and D'Angelo's Black Messiah. But instrumental prowess rarely comes with the same cultural clout as singing, producing or even composing. "If you play drums, that's what people look at you as – just the drummer," Dave says. "I don't want to be everyone's drummer until I die. I want to have some kind of statement. It was always a matter of figuring out how, when, where."

powerhouses, we count down the kings and queens of slam
After recording for years, in between tours and session work, with like-minded instrumentalists and singers – including players and the recording engineer from Black Messiah, 2016 breakout star Anderson. Paak, and veteran R&B acts Bilal, Tweet and Mint Condition singer Stokley Williams – the 44-year-old artist finally has his manifesto: Chris Dave and the Drumhedz, an elegant romp through lurching funk, slow-burning soul, throwback hip-hop and fleet Afrobeat.

The range of styles reflects Dave's 25-year–plus career, during which he has recorded with or played behind most of the great musicians in modern R&B, along with many in rap, gospel and jazz. He took up drums and piano in church as a child and continued his studies at Houston's High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, the same institution that nurtured Beyoncé and the jazz pianist Robert Glasper. By the time he was a student at Howard University in Washington, D.C., Dave was touring with Daniel Winans, a member of one of gospel's royal families. During Dave's sophomore year, he auditioned for the Minneapolis funk band Mint Condition and landed a gig as the group's touring drummer.

Dave has maintained a hectic schedule ever since, working with Mary J. Blige, Erykah Badu, Meshell Ndegeocello, Glasper, Ed Sheeran and others. Along the way, he's impressed more than his fair share of musical luminaries. Speaking with Rolling Stone in 2016, Maxwell credited Dave for introducing him to the musicians who played on the Grammy-winning BLACKsummers'night, which featured Dave on percussion and fellow Drumhed Keyon Harrold on trumpet. "At that very fragile, delicate time in my career, who knew what was going to happen, if (my music) was going to be relevant to people or not?" the singer added. "Those guys made it relevant."

Other members of Dave's fan club include Rick Rubin, who convinced him to become the studio drummer at Shangri La Studios, and Don Was, who signed Dave to Blue Note Records. Rubin asked to meet with Dave after seeing him play behind Mos Def on The Late Show With David Letterman. "His understanding of groove, feel and emotion is unparalleled," says Rubin, who has produced everything from early Def Jam singles to Slayer albums and Adele cuts. Like Rubin, Was caught Dave live – playing with Glasper around the time the two men were working on Black Radio – and was enthralled. "He totally fucked me up," says Was, a veteran bassist and producer. "There's an incredible originality and sophistication to where he chooses to play and where he chooses to leave space. It's like a fingerprint – there's no one who approaches drums like he does."

But originals don't always have the opportunity to be original, which is part of why Dave felt compelled to carve out space for Chris Dave and the Drumhedz. This is his personal playground, where lustrous R&B ballads like "Cosmic Intercourse," which features vocals from Stokley Williams, sit next to the head-nod workout "Destiny n Stereo" and "Atlanta, Texas," a spoken-word treatise on the power of rhythm. "Job Well Done," a duet between rising singers Anna Wise and SiR, reaches towards swooning late Seventies cuts like Delegation's "Oh Honey"; it's almost washed away by the next song, a hard-jab number titled "Lady Jane."

Dave used multiple drum sets while recording "Lady Jane," one of several strategies he employed on Chris Dave and the Drumhedz to keep the sound of the percussion alluringly off-kilter. "It was supposed to be a jazz album," he says, "but I was like, I'm not even gonna have a jazz drum set on this record." He advises listeners to return to the record "more than once, so you can hear the little things with the drums you didn't hear the first time": the introduction of a rifle-shot snare – Dave is a snare-drum collector and famous for using snares where another drummer might use tom-toms – and fine mist of cymbals that split up "Sensitive Granite," or the distinctive, hissing smack that guides the listener through all the heroic riffing in "Lady Jane."

Everything on the album was done live, which still surprises Was. "The way he is able to emulate the jagged J Dilla beats – humans aren't supposed to play that stuff," the Blue Note boss says. "I couldn't believe it wasn't a loop."

Dave sees the album as an antidote to the stifling risk aversion that characterizes some major-label projects. "Artists wants to do stuff that maybe the label doesn't want them to try," he explains. "'Would they ever let you sing something like this on your project?' Most artists are like, 'Fuck, no.' We're like, 'Let's do that one.'" Take "Spread Her Wings," another rippling duet between Bilal and Tweet. "There's no smooth Marvin Gaye, Tammi Terrell–type shit (today)," Dave says. "I always wanted a song with Bilal and Tweet; I just wanted to do it our way."

"The project was to show that drummers can write, produce and arrange," Dave continues. "It's for all the unsung musicians: You can do whatever the fuck you want to."

  

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Ray_Snill
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Fri Jan-26-18 08:27 PM

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9. "I wouldn't be mad at a Tweet/Bilal album"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

those two go together like lamb and tuna fish. Chris did his thing on here. made me pull out the mixtape from 2013, ended up listening to Mint Condition's 2nd and 3rd joints.


<=========================================
https://cdn0.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/PYzh4v9cSf4FDnq3yMQyqNqh79o=/800x0/filters:no_upscale%28%29/cdn0.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4079674/jlio.0.gif

  

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Hellyeah
Member since Jul 05th 2008
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Sat Jan-27-18 07:31 AM

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10. "the anderson paak tracks bummed me out"
In response to Reply # 0


          

where the fuck is the new music? dude is in aftermath hell..what a waste

  

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Crash Bandacoot
Member since May 13th 2003
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Sat Jan-27-18 08:32 AM

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11. "what?"
In response to Reply # 10


          

>

  

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The3rdOne
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Tue Jan-30-18 10:49 AM

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15. "huh?"
In response to Reply # 10


  

          

  

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Dupree90
Member since Jul 10th 2005
639 posts
Sat Feb-03-18 11:47 AM

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16. "RE: the anderson paak tracks bummed me out"
In response to Reply # 10


          

Dude has put out 3 albums in the past two years toured the world and his band is about to put out its de it album which I’m more than sure will have Paak on lead vocals

  

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13Rose
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Mon Jan-29-18 10:54 PM

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12. "Dope ass album"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

I was lucky enough to catch the Robert Glasper Experiment show the night before the Grammys in the LES. Joint was super dope and it was great seeing Chris back with the guys.

This post was paid for by the following.

www.twitter.com/13Rose
www.debunkthemyth.org
http://dashaunworld.wordpress.com/
www.mothergreen.com

Remember MJ The Great!
PSN: ThirteenRose

  

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spirit
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Tue Jan-30-18 12:27 AM

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13. "great record"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

One of the more cohesive albums with that many features in a minute.

side note: I’m trying to hear at least a joint EP from Elzhi and

ps: shout out to Prhyme for pulling off a feature heavy album as well

>New joint out tomorrow
>Not sure if anybody is into this
>but the last mixtape was DOPE imo
>
>New single ft Elzhi, Phonte, Eric Roberson
>https://soundcloud.com/chrisdaddydave/destiny-n-stereo-feat-elzhi


Peace,

Spirit (Alan)
http://wutangbook.com

  

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tapedeck
Member since Dec 27th 2004
6785 posts
Tue Jan-30-18 12:37 AM

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14. "Turn the snare up!"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Hot album!

Bumpin in the STEREO:
Gladys Knight&The Pips
Anita Baker-Compositions
The APX-Electrik Funk
Jesse Boykin-Bartholomew

  

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
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Mon Mar-05-18 11:16 AM

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17. "Chris “Daddy” Dave & The Drumhedz Are Here To Make You Feel - OKP"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

http://www.okayplayer.com/originals/chris-daddy-dave-drumhedz-make-feel-interview.html


Chris “Daddy” Dave & The Drumhedz Are Here To Make You Feel

(Interview)

POSTED BY SHARONNE COHEN


The most known unknown force in music, Chris “Daddy” Dave, shares with Okayplayer why his unique abilities are meant to make you feel.


Chris “Daddy” Dave isn’t the first drummer to front a band. But his new album with the Drumhedz, a crew he has developed musical relationships with for years, isn’t your typical drum-heavy drummer’s project. Tapping into the deep well of all the music he loves — from jazz to funk, soul, hip-hop, Afrobeat and go-go — rather than focusing on his astounding skill, the recording offers listeners an opportunity to check out of reality, enter another dimension, and feel something.

Dave has contributed his groundbreaking, explosive yet deeply soulful drumwork to albums by a broad array of artists from Adele to D’Angelo, Maxwell and Meshell Ndegeocello. The offerings on this album, which dropped Jan. 26 on Blue Note Records, range from the funky, instantly contagious “Dat Feelin’” (featuring SiR) to the delectable slow jam that is “Cosmic Intercourse” (with vocals by Stokley Williams) to the kaleidoscopic, hard-hitting “Lady Jane”. The iconic jazz label is home to pianist Robert Glasper, who also appears on the album, with other jazz musicians including trumpeter Keyon Harrold and saxophonists Marcus Strickland and Casey Benjamin. The core crew of Pino Palladino (bass), Isaiah Sharkey (guitar), Cleo “Pookie” Sample (keys) and Sir Darryl Farris (vocals) is joined by numerous others including James Poyser (the Roots), Shafiq Husayn (Sa-Ra), Anderson .Paak, Bilal, DJ Jazzy Jeff, Goapele and Phonte. But don’t let this long list of collaborators fool you; it’s the man with the drumsticks who’s leading the proceedings, with a voice all his own.

Dave’s playing is known for its sophistication, imagination, fire and virtuosity (astounding The Time, he learned to play the drum part for “777-9311,” which was created with a drum machine). And then there’s his unique way of choosing not only what but where to play, and where to leave space. Deceptively understated at times, you’ll need to go back to this album repeatedly to discover the exhilarating nuggets you may have missed.

@Okayplayer caught up with the Texas-born, 44-year-old legend over the phone who was about to go into the studio with The Band guitarist Robbie Robertson.

________________________________________

Okayplayer: Your first album as a leader came out on a mythical jazz label. How did the Blue Note record deal happen? And what does it mean to you to be releasing an album on this label?


Chris Dave: I got signed with Blue Note because of the people I’ve been working with over the years. I feel happy that we got to do the kind of record we wanted to do; Don Was (Grammy Award-winning producer and president of Blue Note Records) was instrumental in us being able to go there.


OKP: You’ve said that (the band’s second mixtape) Drumhedz Radio Show was “an overture for the album to come.” What experiences did you take from Radio Show into the new album?


CD: The mixtape was based on friends and relationships in the music industry. It was more like a small, quick musical journey, like a “Drumhedz World” — our own kind of playlist. Through the mixtape, other relationships were formed as well, like a family of all types of artists.


OKP: Around the release of the first mixtape, you told The Revivalist that you want people who don’t listen to jazz to still like live music, that this attitude “applies to all the genres we play on the record.” What can you say about the mix of genres on the album, and your general approach?


CD: If you put all of us together in a box, you really couldn’t have one type of music that defines us, that we would all want to listen to over and over. It’s a blend of life experiences, music we like, people and cultures we were influenced by, and lyrics reflecting what’s currently going on in the world.


OKP: What are some of the lyrical preoccupations of the album?


CD: “Black Hole,” featuring Anderson .Paak, deals with police brutality, and how people are trying to get ahead by any means, using the quickest or easiest way rather than doing the hard work. “Spread Her Wings” with Bilal and Tweet is about going from thinking you know everything when you’re young, to realizing you know nothing; you have to leave your nest and spread your wings to see what you can do without a safety net.


OKP: You worked with Anderson .Paak on Malibu; How did that come about?


CD: I’ve known Anderson for five or six years, since he was playing drums in L.A. He had a mixtape at the time, so I was already familiar with some of his work, and liked the sound of his voice and the way he was writing. I went to one of his gigs — this was when his name was Breezy Lovejoy; we became friends that night, and started working together right away.


OKP: You’ve said you weren’t sure what the album was going to sound like, but could picture it: “This album is gonna take place in a portal. You’re getting away from Earth, from all the bullshit. You’re safe, but now you’re in our world.” What is this interstellar theme that runs through the album (and some of your previous work, such as “Cosmic Slop” — the cover of a 40-second Dilla beat) all about?


CD: We just have our own portal. We know people have to deal with issues — things you have to tolerate to get around in the world — and at some point you want to escape. “Fuck it; I want to get back to where the Drumhedz hang out.” When you have that mentality, it’s more like a freedom thing of creating and inspiration; everyone is so respectful of each other’s art. It’s just a fun, peaceful place.


OKP: Can you share a particularly memorable moment from the recording process?


CD: When it was done, and I played it for Don, the expression he had on his face… “What the fuck am I listening to?!” — it was a good thing, not a bad thing. He knew it would be different than what was expected. There aren’t a lot of drum solos, there isn’t even an acoustic bass on it, and I wasn’t sure it would work with Blue Note; but he said that was exactly what he was looking for.

________________________________________


OKP: There are close to 50 artists collaborating on the album and, as you just mentioned, not many drum solos. Were you concerned about people losing sight of the fact that this is actually a drummer’s record? Your record?


CD: Technically it’s a drummer’s record because I produced the whole project and arranged it, and I write, and I was hands-on with every little aspect of it. To me it’s a drummer’s project because a drummer made it; it’s just another side of drummers, and I wanted to show that side — songwriting, arranging, bringing people together, making things happen — as opposed to just doing a drum solo. That’s not really my vibe. It’s about making people <em.feel things through the music, instead of a “look at me” type of thing. I’ve never been like that. I’m a shy person, anyway.


OKP: Tell me about being a drummer and a bandleader.


CD: When you’re performing live, if people come back to see the show it’s because the drummer has a really great groove, or a flashier type of show; it’s all about the feeling you can offer. It was always a consensus for us that the drummer was the DJ of the show as well, especially if you’re touring a lot. You’re reading audiences in different countries, different venues. Most drummers I knew coming up went to theory and music classes, and most of us played piano or bass, or other instruments, so we were always writing music. Technically, my first introduction to that was Mint Condition, because Stokley (Williams) was the drummer, and the lead singer, and a writer, and produced some of the songs, so I learned first-hand. It was about being smart with your craft.


OKP: How did you first connect with Mint Condition?


CD: The day we met was during my first year at Howard University in Washington, D.C., and (legendary songwriting and record production team) Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis were on their tour, and stopped by Howard. I skipped class and went to the concert. I was with a few friends, and we met them after the show, and they were super cool. We told them we were musicians too, and for some reason they said “Let’s just go to your practice room; we want to hear you guys play.” So they came with (The Time drummer) “Jellybean” Johnson, and we just started playing, and then Jimmy Jam said he liked what he heard, and next thing you know, I’m in Minneapolis, rehearsing with the band.


OKP: Which must’ve been blowing your mind at the time?


CD: It was kinda scary; do you stay in college, or do you go on tour with a band your parents don’t know? My parents were more about education. But on my first major tour with Mint (Condition) we were opening up for Janet Jackson, and that’s when I officially left school.


OKP: Since then, you’ve been best known as a sideman. What’s important to you about focusing on your own independent projects?


CD: We were all just trying out figure out what we wanted to do. There had to be another option other than being a sideman for other people till we die. When I think about what it would be like to do my first interview at 80 years old, and I’d be asked “So, how does it feel being Robert Glasper’s drummer?” And the next question would be “When I saw you with Mint Condition at that festival, how did that feel?” — and I’d have nothing to stand on on my own. That may be good for some people, but that would be really sad for me.


OKP: What’s next?


CD: We’re touring, doing a lot of shows, recording live, and already working on the second album, so it won’t be a long wait. I’m also in studio working on the new Blue Note project — a tribute to (revolutionary jazz drummer) Tony Williams. I’m producing Jermaine Holmes’ first album (Holmes appears on the Drumhedz album and sings with D’Angelo and others). There’s another new group I’m producing, Radio Galaxy, which is one more portal in the Drumhedz world of live music. I’m doing shows in Paris and London next week with another group we just started called BDG, with Yasiin Bey, Robert Glasper, and special guests. And I’m doing more producing and writing for a few different artists I can’t talk about just yet.


Chris Dave and the Drumhedz is out and available for listening now.



Sharonne Cohen is a Montreal-based writer whose work has appeared in DownBeat, JazzTimes and Afropop Worldwide. You can find her work here.

http://www.sharonnecohen.com/music-journalism.html

  

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