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Jazz Pharmacy - Self Titled (Size: 172.55 MB)
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Forgive the shitty cover. I had to use my digicam. :/
--------------------------------------------------------------------- Jazz Pharmacy - Jazz Pharmacy --------------------------------------------------------------------- Artist...............: Jazz Pharmacy Album................: Jazz Pharmacy Genre................: Acid Jazz Source...............: CD Year.................: 1998 Ripper...............: Exact Audio Copy (Secure mode) Codec................: Free Lossless Audio Codec (FLAC) Version..............: reference libFLAC 1.2.1 20070917 Quality..............: Lossless, (avg. compression: 56 %) Channels.............: Stereo / 44100 HZ / 16 Bit Tags.................: VorbisComment Ripped by............: Nighted on 1/20/2009--------------------------------------------------------------------- Tracklisting --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. (00:07:02) Jazz Pharmacy - Different Life 2. (00:05:05) Jazz Pharmacy - Can't Get Enough 3. (00:06:44) Jazz Pharmacy - Funky Omar 4. (00:06:07) Jazz Pharmacy - Santa Fe 5. (00:05:24) Jazz Pharmacy - Spaced Invasion Playing Time.........: 00:30:22 Total Size...........: 172.47 MB NFO generated on.....: 1/20/2009 10:53:58 AM--------------------------------------------------------------------- There's something really strange on the jacket of Jazz Pharmacy's debut EP. The tripedal... thing could pass, to the uninformed eye, for some strange squish-a-pod from the murky depths of the sea. Or perhaps an alien or some microscopic critter that lives between your toes. Phil Clarke, keyboard commander and voice box of the trippy triumvirate, gives us the scoop. "We weren't even thinking we needed a symbol, necessarily, but we had our friend Darren, who takes all our pictures, doing our posters and he decided we needed one. He found a blown-glass Italian sculpture from the 19th century, with eight legs. He broke off five of them and made a three-legged representation of the trio." "We chose it as the emblem," explains drummer Eddy Cola, "because it represented the band, but it was also the most ambiguous or unclear. Everyone who sees it asks, 'What is that? Is it a spaceship?' It kinda has that in it--it could be the three of us, the tripod and its stability, how it stays up. But it could be anything, really. I like that idea--of being able to mutate and become different things." Strange growth Mutation is exactly what Jazz Pharmacy are about, in every respect. A scant four years ago, Clarke and Cola were wailin' away in a psychedelic rock band called Heer, while studying music at Vanier College. When the blotter wore off, they found themselves doing the Celtic folk thing, covering Fairport Convention and the like. Soon freelance bassist Fraser Nash was knocking at the door of their basement jam space, his arrival coinciding with the pair's new fascination with soul, funk, and R&B--everything from the Meters to Bitches Brew. Catching a Martin Medeski & Wood gig in Vermont, the three saw the blueprint for where they wanted to go with this thing. Solid funky grooves laid out the parameters for Clarke's laid-back delirium, quirky tangents, growls and sweet whispers. A cute little Clavinet appeared, almost mystically, in the window of a used music store, and it was soon keeping Clarke's Wurlitzer company. That nailed it. in July of '96 they played the first of the almost 300 shows they would do over the next two years. Do the math: that's three a week, factoring in brief stretches of downtime. That Jazz Pharmacy continued to fill lounges around town--Swimming, Quartier Latin--can be attributed to their ever-mutating sound. It's not just the jazz improv angle or the rotating cast of guest musicians--saxes, voices, what have you. It's the vibe. Like the offspring of some deranged genetic experiment, no two shows are ever the same. And then there were two The latest mutation is not a pretty one. Nash's recent departure has left big shoes for some poor sap to fill. "The group sort of steamrolled all of us," says Clarke. "At some point bars, agencies, record labels, they create hidden pressures to go in certain directions. It wasn't that we were at odds with one another or disliked each other. But the group was gonna steamroll all of us or one of us. It ended up being one of us: Fraser." Nash's departure, while on good terms, comes at an awkward time for the band. Fresh off a cross-Canada tour and prepping to hunker down for hibernation/extended studio time (there's an album cooking), Jazz Pharmacy are about ready to hatch out of the local lounge-circuit cocoon and spread their wings on a far wider scale. Disconcerting news to fans familiar with the Pharm boys as an up-close-and-personal act. "We still want to do that, because we value having a scene in Montreal," says Cola. "Phil and I have been talking about doing Pharmacy sessions at places around town, more electronica stuff, more drum & bass, with DJs. That's something New York has that Montreal doesn't... a Knitting Factory, an alternative scene where musicians can do cutting edge music." "A venue for experimentalism," as Clarke puts it. "What we want to bring to the people in Montreal who keep seeing us is the newest things, going in new directions. Trying things, with a DJ or a tuba player or a harmonica, jew's-harp, banjo player..." And so the mutations persist. Like some sonic fractal pattern, each magnified detail a potential tangent, Jazz Pharmacy continue to shift and morph and reconstruct themselves. "We want people to look again, and again, and again," says Clarke, "and always find something new." --------------------------------------------------------------------- Sharing Widget |