Live at Indo
The Near Jazz Experience / Dear Thief
Formats | Tracks | Price | Buy |
---|---|---|---|
7" Vinyl Single | 2 tracks | £4.25 | Out of stock |
Download Single (MP3) | 2 tracks | £1.58 | |
Download Single (FLAC) | 2 tracks | £1.58 | |
Download individual tracks | From £0.79 |
Description
The Near Jazz Experience / Dear Thief - Live at Indo
The Near Jazz Experience was formed by multi-instrumentalist Terry Edwards, bassist Mark Bedford and drummer Simon Charterton in the spring of 2010. Born out of a love of improvised music which was accessible - funky beats and grooves - yet experimental enough to break the mould of middle-of-the-road jamming, the trio built up a following at a residency in the heart of London’s East End, headlining the monthly Sartorial Records music nights at Indo, a place where time stands still - the clock is always ‘wrong’!
Edwards & Charterton cut their musical teeth with Norwich punk-funk band The Higsons after which Edwards formed BUtterfield 8 with ex-Madness bassman Mark Bedford. Mainstays of the NJE sound are Edwards’ distinctive guttural sax-sound, Charterton’s polyrhythmic funk patterns and Bedders’ fluid but grounding basslines. The whole is a Near-Jazz Experience - just what you’d expect from musicians who have worked with people as far-flung as Robert Wyatt, Hot Chip, Jerry Dammers, Tom Waits, Spiritualized, Ian Dury, Alex Harvey, Robyn Hitchcock, St Vincent and Gallon Drunk.
By contrast Dear Thief is a guitar-led trio who pen songs about sex, death, homelessness and civil war, as witnessed on their debut album Under Archway (Orchestra Pit/Sartorial). The rhythm section of Emma Bennett and Tim Greany wilfully overwhelms the subaqueous vocals of Yusuf B’layachi, a refreshing change from vocal-heavy radio mixes which has found several well-placed admirers, most notably designer Stella McCartney who has used Dear Thief’s music on the catwalk.
Edwards & Charterton cut their musical teeth with Norwich punk-funk band The Higsons after which Edwards formed BUtterfield 8 with ex-Madness bassman Mark Bedford. Mainstays of the NJE sound are Edwards’ distinctive guttural sax-sound, Charterton’s polyrhythmic funk patterns and Bedders’ fluid but grounding basslines. The whole is a Near-Jazz Experience - just what you’d expect from musicians who have worked with people as far-flung as Robert Wyatt, Hot Chip, Jerry Dammers, Tom Waits, Spiritualized, Ian Dury, Alex Harvey, Robyn Hitchcock, St Vincent and Gallon Drunk.
By contrast Dear Thief is a guitar-led trio who pen songs about sex, death, homelessness and civil war, as witnessed on their debut album Under Archway (Orchestra Pit/Sartorial). The rhythm section of Emma Bennett and Tim Greany wilfully overwhelms the subaqueous vocals of Yusuf B’layachi, a refreshing change from vocal-heavy radio mixes which has found several well-placed admirers, most notably designer Stella McCartney who has used Dear Thief’s music on the catwalk.