MP3 Richie Goods and Nuclear Fusion - Live At the Zinc Bar
This record Has a retro 70''s fusion flavor thats updated with a younger new funky/rock/jazz sound .
9 MP3 Songs in this album (70:26) !
Related styles: JAZZ: Jazz Fusion, URBAN/R&B: Funk
People who are interested in Herbie Hancock Chick Corea Marcus Miller should consider this download.
Details:
ABOUT NUCLEAR FUSION
I have always enjoyed science and appreciated how many of its principles translate to music. One of the best examples I know of this is the principle of fusion in which separate components come together to make a powerful reaction much bigger than the individual parts. That’s how good music should be made. And when I decided to put together my Fusion Jazz band, I knew I needed the right components to get that perfect balance.
The first component to be added was the drums. There was no doubt in my mind who I wanted on drums. A Fusion Jazz innovator, Mike Clark has one of the funkiest grooves on drums I have ever heard. I first played with Mike Clark in 2005 when I made one of several appearances with pianist Michael Wolf’s band. I had heard Herbie Hancock and the Headhunters records with Mike on drums. And after playing with him, I knew he was a key ingredient for the music I wanted to make.
No matter what project I’m involved with, I always want Jeff Lockhart on guitar. Jeff is a Funk master from Boston who I first met when I was at Berklee School of Music, and we played together in my band. The way he makes the guitar talk Funk is electrifying. When Jeff said he was down, I had another key ingredient to the recipe.
Only keyboards was missing. I’ve played with some of the greats on the keys and piano. One of them was Helen Sung. I met Helen when she first moved to New York City. I loved the sounds and textures she could get out of the piano and wondered if she could get those same sounds and textures out of the keyboard. Over the years we have worked together often and exposed each other to different types of music. When I approached Helen about playing with Nuclear Fusion, I knew I was asking her to step a little out of her element; but I also knew for her, being the virtuoso she is, it wouldn’t be a problem. She didn’t disappoint.
When the four of us played together for the first time that night at the Zinc Bar, I knew the equation was balanced. I could only marvel as this perfect mix of talent and energy became like a nuclear explosion, igniting the stage and exciting the audience in one beautiful chain reaction. The best way I can describe what moved through me as we played was that Holy Ghost feeling you get after a good sermon in church. Just like the chemical reaction for which the band is named, the members of Nuclear Fusion create an energy that is so much more than any of us individually. That’s how good music is made.