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Available at : Amazon,
CdUniverse,
AbstractLogix
and all fine record stores everyhere |
| Steve
Tavaglione, Scott Henderson, Michael Landau, Vinnie Colaiuta,
Gary Willis, Kirk Covington, Alex Acuña, Armand Sabal-Leco,
Cyril Atef,
Jimmy Earl, Tim Hagans, Arto Tuncboyacian, Abe Laboriel
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Scott
Kinsey Kinesthetics
Steve Tavaglione (sax, woodwinds, ewi),
Kirk Covington (drums), Cyril Atef (drums, perc, vox),
Vinnie Colaiuta (drums), Gary Willis (bass) Abraham Laboriel
Sr. (bass) , Armand Sabal-Lecco (bass), Jimmy Earl (bass),
Robert Hurst III (acoustic bass), Paul Shihadeh (bass),
Scott Henderson (guitar), Michael Landau(guitar), Jinshi
Ozaki (acoustic guitar), Alex Acuña(percussion),
Arto Tuncboyaciyan (percussion, vox, beer bottle), Brad
Dutz (percussion), Satnam Ramgotra (tablas) Tim Hagans(trumpet),
Mammady Keita (sampled vox & percussion), Ronald Bruner
Jr. (drums)
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Sample of Kinesthetics |
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"Scott Kinsey has tremendous music skills,
not just playing but producing and sound programming.
He is very talented." -- Joe Zawinul
Abstract
Logix is excited to sign keyboardist Scott Kinsey to
its record label. An important musical force in contemporary
times, Scott has been a vital force with
Tribal Tech, Scott Henderson, Joe Zawinul, Bob Belden,
Nicholas Payton, and have also appeared on soundtracks
to such films as Ocean’s
Eleven, Ocean’s Twelve, Code 46, Confessions of
a Dangerous Mind, Brown Sugar, Smokin’ Aces and
Analyze That!
Kinesthetics has been one of the most requested
releases this year and showcases the tremendous musicality
and global outlook of this mesmerizing keyboard player.
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Since 1991, keyboardist Scott Kinsey has been the secret
weapon of Tribal Tech, one of the premier
bands on the fusion scene. A remarkably distinctive
soloist with a unique harmonic sensibility and a wholly
inventive approach to synthesizers, Kinsey has an uncanny
knack for making technology sound organic and orchestrating
in the moment. As Tribal Tech ringleader Scott Henderson
explains, “Scott has been such a big influence
on the direction that Tribal Tech has taken. Before
we met him all we really had was a band that played
tunes the way they were written out. But Kinsey was
a major reason for us getting to that point of being
able to throw the charts away and just jam right in
the moment, because he could do it so well and pull
it off every time. It wasn’t until I played with
Scott that I realized how loose it can be and still
sound totally together. Because he would be pulling
out so much cool stuff to listen to that you didn’t
need a note of written music. Kinsey’s such a
great improvising musician but he also brings a real
sense of form and harmony to it so that you can just
jam freely and know that it’s always gonna sound
cool.”
Whether he’s improvising strictly in the moment
with loops, concocting provocative tones and textures
or carving out new sonic territory on his Nord Lead
synthesizer, Kinsey’s presence invariably elevates
the proceedings of every situation he finds himself
in. Aside from his ongoing role in Tribal Tech (including
countless tours as well as appearances on 1992’s
Illicit, 1993’s Face First, 1994’s Reality
Check, 1999’s Thick and 2000’s Rocket Science),
Kinsey has enhanced recordings by bassists Jeff
Berlin and Matthew Garrison,
guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel, trumpeters
Tim Hagans and Nicholas Payton
and saxophonist-producer Bob Belden.
In recent years, he has produced tracks for singer and
Earth, Wind & Fire frontman Philip Bailey
(Soul on Jazz) and Weather Report co-founder Joe
Zawinul (Faces & Places) and also appeared
on soundtracks to such films as Ocean’s
Eleven, Ocean’s Twelve, Code 46, Confessions of
a Dangerous Mind, Brown Sugar, Smokin’ Aces and
Analyze That!
Though he remains an in-demand sideman and valued session
player, Scott finally steps out as a leader in his own
right on Kinesthetics, his long-overdue solo debut.
While he had kept busy composing, arranging and playing
on other people’s projects over the years, the
accomplished keyboardist and sonic manipulator eventually
found enough downtime to focus on his project. “I
just finally decided that I needed to get myself out
there as an artist and an entity that exists in the
world,” says the Los Angeles resident. “I
feel like I’m out there all the time touring and
doing sessions, but it’s not really reflecting
my own thing. So getting my own stuff happening became
a real priority for me.”
With Kinesthetics, his first
fully self-realized synth manifesto, Kinsey rekindles
long-standing relationships with a core group of LA
colleagues, including Tribal Tech drummer Kirk
Covington, saxophonist and EWI specialist Steve
Tavaglione, bassist and former Berklee College
of Music classmate Paul Shihadeh, bassist
Jimmy Earl, percussionists Brad
Dutz and Cyril Atef. Special
guests on this audacious, wildly creative outing include
Scott’s other Tribal Tech mates -- bassist Gary
Willis and guitarist Scott Henderson
-- along with drummer extraordinaire Vinnie
Colaiuta, bassists Abraham Laboriel,
Armand Sabal-Lecco and Robert
Hurst, guitarists Michael Landau
and Jinshi Ozaki, trumpeters Tim Hagans
and Walt Fowler, percussionists Arto Tuncboyaciyan,
Satnam Ramgotra and drummer Ronald
Bruner Jr.
Kinsey plays ringleader for this band of sonic provocateurs,
intuitively calling up tones and textures from his expansive
vocabulary while shaping up songs like a sculptor working
with a slab of clay on the potter’s wheel. “I
improvise on my instrument and we also improvise as
a band,” says Scott. “I love it when music
sounds like it’s just off the top of your head,
and I try to do that with my synth sounds too. Basically,
I’ll just come up with a sound and just mess with
it and see what happens.”
It’s the unpredictable nature of his harmonic
concept along with the unrelentingly fresh quality of
his signature Nord Lead synth lines that has made Kinsey
such an in-demand player on the scene. And those provocative
qualities come to the fore on Kinesthetics. “Overall
I wanted it to be really dimensional and powerful and
wanted to have motion, which is really what the name
implies: esthetics in motion,” says Scott.
From the dynamic Zawinul-influenced title track to the
exotic groover “This is That,” fueled by
Willis’ funky basslines, from the surging uptempo
burner “Sometimes I...” to the slamming
funk of “The Combat Zone,” the music on
Kinesthetics blends world music elements with irrepressible
grooves and improvisational abandon. “To me, it
all breathes and has a certain conversational element
to it, which are important elements in all of my music”
says Kinsey. “The idea was to play with melodies,
play with phrases, just toss stuff around and have fun.”
The sizzling “Quartet” documents a dream
ensemble featuring Kinsey on keys, Hurst on upright
bass, Tavaglione on tenor sax and Colaiuta on drums.
“Wishing Tree,” a dramatic duet with Tavaglione,
is a prime example of Scott’s orchestral touch
on synths that rekindles memories of the special chemistry
that Zawinul and Wayne Shorter demonstrated in concert
with Weather Report. “Let’s face it, they
invented it,” says Kinsey. “That was their
thing. That language they created is really where I’m
coming from. While I never want to copy anything and
that’s never been the point whatsoever for me,
it’s just a sound and a concept that’s ingrained
in me. I used to wonder, ‘How did they come up
with this way of playing together and have it sound
so off-the-cuff yet also have it sound organized and
so burning on top of it?’ So that’s been
a direction to go in for me -- to have the music be
that open and have it still have that kind of energy.”
The throbbing “Big Rock” is another nod
to Zawinul’s pioneering synth prowess, echoing
elements of both Weather Report and the Zawinul Syndicate,
while “Uncle Pat’s Gypsy Van” is a
playful excursion into Scott’s private world of
sound textures, loops and samples.
“Under Radar Intro” is a musical conversation
between Kinsey and drummer Covington that just happened
to be captured during a sound check for this recording.
It segues neatly into “Under Radar,” an
exotic groover with a subtle Afro-pop vibe that features
Laboriel on bass and Sabal-Lecco on piccolo bass. “Shinjuku”
is an unadulterated burner paced by the hyper-kinetic
pulse of drummer Ronald Bruner Jr. “I wanted to
have a tune that represented the band that was playing
a lot in Los Angeles at the club Lavalee,” says
Kinsey. “In that moment it was me, Scott Henderson,
Jimmy Earl and Ronald. And this tune pretty much represents
the energy we have on the gig.” Henderson unleashes
with some fretboard fury and liquid whammy bar articulations
in his outstanding solo here.
The calming closer, “One for Jinshi,” is
a mid tempo swing groove, underscored by Covington’s
brushwork, and featuring some nasty wah-wah explosions
and bluesy abandon by guest guitarist Michael Landau.
Tavaglione adds a soprano sax solo at the tag, and Tim
Hagans offers some tasty muted trumpet work on the bridge,
alongside Tav’s overdubbed flute.
“This whole project was done very intuitively
and organically,” says Kinsey. “I tried
not to think about it too much and also tried not to
write so much music that we wrote ourselves into a box.
Because I want it to be alive and have it be more about
how we play together rather than the music that I compose.
I feel like sometimes it can be an ‘I, I, I’
thing when you compose, and that bothers me. What I
like to do is just come up with some lines and ideas
I like and just see where the band can take them. This
way we can just improvise and keep it fun and fresh.
And of course, I always want to keep the music from
ever getting too boring."
No chance of that on Kinesthetics, which radiates with
audacious energy and daring ideas from start to finish.
-- Bill Milkowski
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