Soulive

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Soulive
Soulive.jpg
Soulive and Reggie Watts performing at the Rochester International Jazz Festival in 2006
Background information
Origin Buffalo, New York, USA
Genres Soul jazz, jazz funk, jazz fusion, soul music
Years active1999 – present
Labels Velour Recordings, Blue Note, Concord, Stax
MembersAlan Evans
Neal Evans
Eric Krasno
Past membersToussaint Yeshua
Website soulive.com

Soulive is a funk/jazz trio that originated in Woodstock, New York, and is known for its solos and catchy, upbeat songs. The band consists of Eric Krasno (guitar), Alan Evans (drums) and Neal Evans (Hammond B3 organ, bass keys, clavinet). Although they originated as a trio, the band has worked extensively with different horn sections, which have included Sam Kininger (saxophone) [1] from 2000 to 2003, Rashawn Ross (trumpet), and Ryan Zoidis (saxophone) from 2003 to 2006. [2] The band also worked with vocalist Toussaint Yeshua from 2006 to 2007. [3] Soulive is currently touring in the original trio lineup of Eric Krasno, Alan Evans, and Neal Evans. [4]

Contents

History

In the 90s, brothers Alan and Neal Evans had been the rhythm section for the Northeastern jam band Moon Boot Lover with front man Peter Prince. After a brief foray into rap with Edreys aka Billy Drease Williams under the name The Elements, the brothers looked to form a traditional jazz organ trio. On March 2, 1999, Alan and Neal invited guitarist Eric Krasno (a friend they knew from high school days) to record some tracks with them in their home studio in Woodstock, New York. That jam session became their first album, Get Down! and the band shortly thereafter hit the road to begin touring. [5] It was during that first summer together that the band recorded their first LP, Turn It Out , for Velour Recordings. Turn It Out featured various guest musicians, including John Scofield, Oteil Burbridge, and Sam Kininger. The independently produced album went on to sell 65,000 copies, enabling Soulive to gain recognition in the jazz/funk scene.

In the next three years, Soulive embarked on five national tours. The band opened for The Rolling Stones, [6] Dave Matthews Band, The Roots, Common, John Mayer, and others. The band also continued to play at various festivals, including the Monterey Jazz Festival and Bonnaroo. Overseas, Soulive played shows in Japan and all over Europe. [7]

In the fall of 2000, Soulive signed a record deal with Blue Note Records. The following spring, Soulive released its first Blue Note album, Doin' Something , which featured horn arrangements by Fred Wesley, the trombonist from James Brown's band. [5] The band's second Blue Note record, Next , featured guest vocalists Dave Matthews and Amel Larrieux, and rappers Talib Kweli and Black Thought. During this time, the band also recorded with singer-songwriter Goapele Mohlabane.

In 2003, Soulive released a self-titled live album, Soulive (Live), and a collection of remixes, Turn It Out Remixed , which featured guests Jurassic 5, DJ Spinna, DJ Krush, J-Live, Wordsworth, and the Beatnuts.

In the Summer of 2005, Soulive left Blue Note Records and signed a new contract with the jazz label Concord Records. [8]

On September 13, 2005, Soulive released its first album with Concord Records, Break Out . On this release the band eschewed extended jams for beat-driven instrumentals and collaborations with Chaka Khan (featured on "Back Again"), Ivan Neville (featured on "Got Soul" and "Take It Easy"), [5] Corey Glover (featured on "Freedom"), Robert Randolph (featured on the Jimi Hendrix cover "Crosstown Traffic" and also on "Interlude II"), and Reggie Watts (featured on "She's Hooked" and "What Can You Do?"). [8]

Late in 2006 the group recorded No Place Like Soul with producer Stewart Lerman at his studio in Greenwich Village, The Shinebox. The album was released on Stax Records, which had been absorbed into Concord. On that album and the subsequent tour, Boston based reggae/soul artist Toussaint joined band as lead vocalist. [9] However, after the tour, the band decided to become a trio yet again. In a post to the Soulive messageboard, [10] Alan Evans explained: "we just want to have fun. no more chasing the pop thing or whatever that is. We just want to go out and rage, no setlists, no huge venues, no tour buses. Just have fun. This is not to say we didn't have fun with tours, we did but we realized that in looking at our past... We have had the most success and most fun when it was just the trio."

In 2008, Soulive performed at the Newport Jazz Festival. [11] [12]

Soulive released a new album, Up Here , on April 14, 2009. The album marked somewhat of a return to form for the group, as many of the songs are solely instrumentals. For this album, they were joined once again by Ryan Zoidis on tenor sax, Sam Kininger on alto sax - who are now under the alias/moniker "The Shady Horns" - as well as appearances by Rashawn Ross on trumpet. Nigel Hall also guests on the track "Too Much".

On July 28, 2009, played the pre-game festivities for the 2009 MLS All-Star Game at The Canyons in Park City, Utah. [13]

In 2010 the band released an album of Beatles covers entitled Rubber Soulive . Neal Evans said in an interview, "We had a ton of different concept albums that we wanted to do over the years, including a ‘British Invasion’ album....When it came time to make a record we decided to follow through with the Beatles concept." [14] In 2019, Krasno moved to the West Coast, in part, to build a home studio and dig deeper into his producer work. [15] Soulive currently are focusing on city-specific runs and residencies. In 2020, he launched the Plus One podcast. [16]

Bowlive

Starting in 2010, Soulive has held an annual two-week, ten-night residency at the Brooklyn Bowl. [17] The shows run from Tuesday to Saturday, each night involving a different opening act consisting of a myriad of both announced and unannounced guest musicians. Rarely has Soulive played as a trio during these shows—a horn section called "The Shady Horns," has almost always joined them on stage. The players have changed slightly over the years, but the section usually includes Ryan Zoidis on tenor and baritone saxophones and Sam Kininger on alto saxophone.

Some of the guest musicians have included:

Bowlive I (2010) – Oteil Burbridge, Questlove, Marco Benevento, Derek Trucks, Susan Tedeschi, Talib Kweli, The London Souls, Lettuce
Bowlive II (2011) – Robert Randolph, John Scofield, Karl Denson, Ivan Neville, Matisyahu, Bernie Worrell, Taylor Hicks, Kofi Burbridge, Lettuce, Corey Glover
Bowlive III (2012) – John Scofield, Karl Denson, George Porter Jr., Marco Benevento, Citizen Cope, Allen Stone, Derek Trucks, Lettuce, Questlove, Luther Dickinson
Bowlive IV (2013) - Luther Dickinson, Robert Randolph, Lee Fields, Marco Benevento, David Hidalgo (Los Lobos), George Porter Jr.
Bowlive V (2014) - George Porter Jr., Nicki Bluhm, John Scofield, Susan Tedeschi, Joe Russo, Darryl McDaniels (Run-DMC), Talib Kweli
Bowlive VI (2015) - Marco Benevento, George Porter Jr., Anders Osborne, Chris Robinson, Jennifer Hartswick, Aaron Neville
Bowlive VII (2017) - Karl Denson, Steve Kimock, Doyle Bramhall II, John Scofield, George Porter Jr., Marcus King, GRiZ, Son Little

Discography

TitleYearLabel
Get Down! (EP)1999 [re-released 2002]Soulive Records; Velour Recordings
Turn It Out 2000 [re-released 2002]Velour Recordings
Doin' Something 2001 Blue Note
Next 2002Blue Note
Soulive [live]2003Blue Note
Turn It Out Remixed 2003Velour Recordings
Steady Groovin' (compilation)2005Blue Note
Break Out 2005 Concord
No Place Like Soul 2007 Stax Records
Up Here 2009Royal Family Records
Live in San Francisco2009Royal Family Records
Live at the Blue Note Tokyo2010Royal Family Records
Rubber Soulive 2010Royal Family Records
Spark! (with Karl Denson)2012Royal Family Records
Cinematics, Vol. 1 (EP)2018Soulive Music

See also

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References

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  7. "Soulive on MSG". www.jambands.com. 28 June 2012. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  8. 1 2 "Soulive Finds New Groove On Concord". Billboard . June 24, 2005. Archived from the original on June 18, 2014. Retrieved March 15, 2017.
  9. "Soulive: Vocals are the new Soul — Interview". JamBase . July 31, 2007. Archived from the original on March 15, 2017. Retrieved March 15, 2017.
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