‘Tombstone’ is Hot 8 Brass Band’s third LP. The second instalment in a
two-album set, it closely follows sister album ‘The Life & Times
Of…’ (Nov 2012), which gained four and five star reviews including The
Observer, MOJO, Metro, Songlines and The Big Issue, and widespread major UK and international radio support.
‘Tombstone’ is a counterpoint to the straight-up party side of the
band showcased on ‘The Life & Times Of…’. Thematically a more
sombre, emotional record, it presents another chapter in the history of
the Hot 8 Brass Band – a new window onto the lives, the friendships, the
heartbreaks, the roots and culture of New Orleans brass music and its
players. The majority of the songs are personal dedications, in memory
of the four Hot 8 band members, and other musicians and dear friends,
who have passed away. And those that aren’t dedication songs are new,
original Hot 8 jams, party tunes that remind us – and the band – of why
the music is worth it all; setting the scene for where the band are at
today, while their city and its people still bear the scars of Hurricane
Katrina, and where they are carrying the spirit next.
“These two records celebrate the times we have had both before and
after the storm. Burying our dead and letting their spirits soar,
celebrating our city and the lives that our band mates have lived
individually and collectively as Hot 8,” explains band leader and tuba
player Bennie Pete, of these two complementary releases.
‘Tombstone’ is an album of stories. “Tombstone Intro” is a prologue
to all the tales contained within. As much a hip hop track as a brass
one, the Intro spans the many styles and musical inspirations of Hot 8,
and tells as many stories, giving way to an uninterrupted run of great
songs infused with jazz, blues, funk and a heightening hip hop
influence. Sparkling hooks, charged vocals and dynamic rhythms wind out
into expressive and playful horn solo breaks. Life, death, tragedy and
revelry come together in a bittersweet sonic stew. A symbolic symmetry
emerges as the “Tombstone Outro”, rocking to the same atmospheric sway
as the Intro, closes out he record. The first single, “Milwaukee Fat”
(out 6th May), epitomises the album, showcasing one poignant and
spirited dedication song for a lost musician and friend, and one raucous
party tune (B-Side “Hot 8 Shit”) that updates the age-old tradition of
the drinking song along a Big Easy hip hop tip.
In many ways their most deeply personal record, ‘Tombstone’ is also
the first Hot 8 Brass Band album to feature all original compositions.
While the roaring success of inspired cover versions – including “Sexual Healing” and “Ghost Town” – may have widened their renown, this
innately talented ensemble, ensconced in New Orleans’ musical and
sociological heritage, have lyrical depth and dexterity, compositional
chops and improvisational flair to spare.
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