Troy
‘Trombone Shorty’ Andrews has God-given talent, natural
charisma and a relentless drive to bridge music’s past and future.
His third outing for Verve Records, Say
That To Say This (Sept. 10), was
co-produced by Andrews and kindred spirit Raphael Saadiq, and sounds
like nothing else out there, as Andrews and his longtime band,
Orleans Avenue – guitarist Pete Murano, bassist Mike Ballard and
drummer Joey Peebles – continue their natural musical evolution. In
a very real sense, the torch is passed from one great New Orleans
band to another on the new album, which features the first new studio
recording from the original members of the legendary Meters in 36
years, as they revisit their 1977 classic ‘Be My Lady,’ with
Andrews singing lead and playing horns.
The bandleader and
multi-instrumentalist describes Say
That To Say This as ‘really funky,
like James Brown mixed with The Meters and Neville Brothers, with
what I do on top, and we have a bit of R&B from Raphael’s
side. All the guys in my band are big, big fans of his, so this is a
real dream come true for us. And he’s a fan of New Orleans brass
band music, which I didn’t know beforehand. Just listening to his
music and the direction he’s going in now, I thought that he would
be perfect to work with us. He’s a great producer, but he’s also
a musician, so he was able to get in there, jam with us and take us
to some different places. And we were able to take him to some
different places too.’
Saadiq doesn’t just
co-produce, he becomes a member of the band, playing a variety of
instruments and contributing backing vocals; he also had a hand in
writing three songs. Says Andrews of Saadiq: ‘What drew me to him
was his knowledge of what came before and his imagination of where
the music can move forward to. That’s the same way I think, so it
worked out very well.”
‘We felt a certain amount of
pressure, because we knew we were working with one of the great young
producers and musicians,’ Andrews acknowledges. ‘But it was good
pressure, and Raphael being in the room with us inspired us to step
up as writers and players. We spent an initial two or three weeks in
the studio in L.A. working out the tracks, and I think having that
stretch of uninterrupted time really played a big part in how
creative we were able to get. On the last two records we were so busy
touring that we would go in for three or four days and then go out
for a week, so we had to switch on and off between the stage
mentality and being creative in the studio. So this time, knowing we
were gonna be in the studio for two or three weeks straight, we
reached down deep and were able to do some things that we wouldn’t
have come up with if we’d been on a tight schedule. It allowed us
to be very free.’
The first track laid down for
the album, the pumping ‘Long Weekend,’ came together in a flash
during Andrews’ initial foray to L.A. to hang with Saadiq. ‘I
went out there to see how we would jell,’ Troy recalls. ‘I met
him and his band in the studio and they came up with that song for
me, right in front of my face, and it was really fun to just sit back
and watch it go down. It didn’t take that long – they were
killin’ it. I put the horn parts on that same day. That track has a
lot of energy; I love the way it feels.’
The next step was to see how
Saadiq would jell with Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue. ‘The
one where we really clicked for the first time was ‘Get the
Picture,” Andrews says of this burner, which has Saadiq’s
fingerprints all over it, trading guitar licks with Murano and
playing clavinet. ‘After that, he sat back and watched us work, and
every once in a while he’d come in and make a suggestion,’ says
Andrews of the recording sessions. ‘So he basically let us do what
we do and fine-tuned it if it needed it, and if it didn’t he just
kept it the way we had it. And that was very inspiring, because if he
thought it was cool, then we felt like we’d done what we needed to
do on our end.’
The opening title track
emphatically sets the vibe, as Murano unleashes a barrage of power
chords over a pummeling groove from Peebles and Ballard – but a
blast of brass from Trombone Shorty instantly alters the feel,
bringing a more elegant form of aggressiveness to the proceedings.
The mood then shifts again to a deeply soulful section in the manner
of Earth, Wind & Fire, before powering back into rocking
mode. ‘That track is just a timeline of who we are and how we
think,’ says Andrews.
‘For most of the album,’
he continues, ‘we wanted to get it as tight as we could performing
it in the studio, so we’d just play the song straight through, but
we couldn’t do that with ‘Shortyville,’ which was just myself
and Raphael. I started that track by hitting a bass drum with a
mallet, like you would in a New Orleans brass band; then I played a
full drum set on top of it. We built it up from there part by part,
with me doing the horns and Raphael playing the bass and guitar.’
Of ‘Fire &
Brimstone,’ the lead single, Andrews notes, ‘The beat I was
hearing was an old-school hip-hop thing. I can’t remember what we
were listening to when we came up with the idea, it might’ve been
something by Dr. Dre, Easy E or Run-D.M.C., but when I heard it, I
said, ‘Joey, let’s do a beat like that underneath the track so I
can do some intricate things on top.’ That’s what we did, and it
came out with this swampy, voodoo feel.’
As for the impromptu Meters
reunion, Andrews was listening to the band’s eighth and final
album, 1977′s New Directions,
one day, and as the smoothly soulful ‘Be My Lady’ wafted out of
the car speakers, it hit him that the track’s mellow, romantic vibe
(‘laid-back in the cut,’ as he puts it) was exactly what his
album in progress needed. But rather than simply covering it, Andrews
got it in his head that he had to record it with The Meters
themselves. When he told friends of his plan, they told him he was
dreaming. Since breaking up soon after releasing New Directions, the
four original members had performed together a mere handful of times,
and only on stage for special occasions, never in the studio. What’s
more, there was no manager to contact; Andrews had to call each one
and ask if he’d be up for going in the studio with his former
bandmates.
‘With all four of them, when
I asked the question, there was a second of silence,’ Troy recounts
with a laugh. ‘But then, each one of them said, ‘If you talk to
the rest of the guys and they’re up for it, then I’ll do the
track. And even if you can’t get everybody together, I would still
love to play on it. So I was able to get all of them to agree, and
then I had to call all of them back to tell them it was on. So they
all came to the studio, including Cyril Neville, who sang the
original vocal; he does the background vocal and the ad-libbing on
the new track. At the end of one of the takes, they started jamming,
and you could see a sparkle in all of their eyes at the magic they
could make together. Whatever their differences, whatever reasons
they don’t work together, it went out the window for those few
minutes, and I got a chance to experience what it used to be like
when The Meters made all those classic records. I had the chills
while it was going on.’
‘After we were done,’
Andrews continues, ‘George Porter pulled me aside and said, ‘Thank
you. You have gotten us to do something that people have been trying
to get us to do for 35 years,’ and I was speechless. Because The
Meters helped to create a sound that gave me a foundation for doing
what I do. It was one of those magical moments in life for me,
because in New Orleans, The Meters are like the Beatles.’
The title, Andrews explains,
is a common New Orleans expression that essentially means ‘To make
a long story short,’ serving as a wonderfully on-point description
of the album and of Trombone Shorty’s music in general. ‘This
record is a direct expression of everything we hear, everything we’ve
seen and everything we’ve been through musically,’ Andrews
assets. ‘We’re just making a long story short.’
Saadiq is equally thrilled
with the results of this musical summit meeting of young giants. ‘If
you’re a producer or musician, you want to work with other great
musicians,’ he says, ‘because it only betters you, I was just
honored to be a part of the project.’
Andrews’ previous projects
include 2010′s Grammy-nominated Backatown
and his sophomore effort, For True
(2011), which spent 12 weeks atop Billboard’s Contemporary Jazz
Chart. In the past few years alone, Andrews has appeared on recent
recordings by an eclectic assortment of artists ranging from Zac
Brown to Eric Clapton to Rod Stewart and Cee Lo Green, while taking
the time to initiate a mentoring program at Tulane University via his
Trombone Shorty Foundation. He’s also been featured on the covers
of Downbeat and Jazziz magazines, as well as on Conan, The Tonight
Show, Jimmy Kimmel Live, Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, Austin City
Limits and in a recurring role on the hit HBO series Treme.
The band was also chosen to play the closing set at the 2013 New
Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, a huge honor in the world
of true music lovers.
But for Andrews, the biggest
thrill of all was performing at The White House in February 2012.
‘That was a dream come true about 50 times over,’ he says. ‘When
we started playing, I forgot I was at the White House because I was
on stage with all this musical royalty – B.B. King, Mick Jagger,
Booker T. Jones, Jeff Beck, Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks, Gary
Clark Jr., the list goes on. And then, when I turned to the audience,
there’s the President and the First Lady. I’m like, ‘This can’t
be happening.”
Good things continue to happen
for Trombone Shorty, thanks to his virtuosity, his dedication, and
his ability to move people. That he pursues his passion with such
humility and unpretentiousness makes his still-unfolding story as
compelling as the music he’s making along the way.
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