Showing posts with label Nubya Garcia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nubya Garcia. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 December 2024

The First Time With... Series 33 - 3. Nubya Garcia


THE FIRST TIME WITH... SERIES 33 - 3. NUBYA GARCIA (320kbs-m4a/137mb/60mins)

BBC Radio 6 Music broadcast: 27th November 2024

British jazz musician, composer and bandleader, Nubya Garcia, talks about the pivotal First Times in her life, soundtracked by Esperanza Spalding, Erykah Badu, Sonny Rollins and more!

Nubya Garcia - Triumphance [Concord Jazz]
Bob Marley & The Wailers - Three Little Birds [Island]
Herbie Hancock - Maiden Voyage
Ornette Coleman - Peace [Warner Jazz]
Herbie Hancock - Chameleon [Columbia/Legacy]
Herbie Hancock - Watermelon Man
Sonny Rollins - St. Thomas [Prestige]
Theon Cross & Moses Boyd - Activate [Gearbox]
The Charles Lloyd Quartet - Tagi [ECM]
Nubya Garcia - Hold (Alternate Take) [Jazz Re:freshed
Erykah Badu - All Night
Nubya Garcia - The Message Continues
Nubya Garcia - La Cumbia Me Está Llamando [Concord Jazz]
Nubya Garcia - The Seer [Concord]
Nubya Garcia (feat. Esperanza Spalding) - Dawn [Concord]
Esperanza Spalding - Precious

Tuesday, 3 May 2022

The Collection: Peel Acres - 4. Nubya Garcia


THE COLLECTION: PEEL ACRES - 4. NUBYA GARCIA (320kbs-m4a/130mb/57mins)

BBC Radio 6 Music broadcast: 20th February 2022

Jazz saxophonist and band leader Nubya Garcia is the latest guest to Peel Acres, helping Tom Ravenscroft make sense of his dad's eclectic music collection - tens of thousands of albums, singles and related paraphernalia.

Presenter: Tom Ravenscroft
Producer: Kevin Core

Track 1: Augutus Pablo - Shake Up (from Augustus Pablo Presents... Ital Dub)
Nubya is drawn to her first pick because of the "beautiful green fern" on the cover (although Tom suggests it's actually likely something a little more… herbal). The Jamaican roots reggae and dub artist and producer was known for popularising the melodica. The album was mixed by King Tubby, a hugely influential sound engineer who played the mixing desk like an instrument and was key to the development of dub in the late 60s.

Track 2: Ornette Coleman - Cross Breeding (from Ornette on Tenor)
Nubya's love of jazz comes from being exposed to her mum's record collection as a kid. She's excited to find an album by one of her all time favourites, Ornette Coleman - on which he's playing tenor saxophone rather than his usual alto. Coleman was a principal founder of free jazz - an experimental improvised genre, which takes its name from his 1961 album.

Track 3: Uthawolfu Amentkentshane - Ntombi Mgiyakuthanda (from Soweto Street Music: The Definitive Collection)
Next Nubya pulled out a 1984 compilation of artists originating from Soweto - a township in Johannesburg, South Africa which has strong ties to a number of different music genres. Among them is mbawanga, which heavily influenced Paul Simon's hugely successful 1986 album Graceland.

Track 4: Dr Ross - Thirty Two Twenty (from Detroit Blues: The Early 1950s)
From one compilation to the next, hailing from another location with a rich musical heritage - Detroit, Michigan - a US city Nubya would love to visit. Her selected track is by Doctor Ross, who usually performed as a one man band, simultaneously singing and playing guitar, harmonica and drums. And, as if that wasn't enough to think about, he was left-handed but played a right-handed guitar, upside down. Nubya learnt to "feel her way round" music by improvising over blues tracks.

Track 5: African Stone - Right Choice
Next Nubya pulls out a 7" single by Dennis Bovell, a producer and musician she's long admired. A member of the British reggae band Matumbi, Dennis is also well known for his long term collaboration with dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson. He was awarded a MBE in the 2021 Queen's Birthday Honours for services to music.

Track 6: Alain Permal and Mauritius Police Band - Danse Dans Mo Les Bras
The Mauritius Police Band are exactly that; a specialist music unit within the island nation's police force. "Danse Dans Mo Les Bras" translates from French into English as "Dance in My Arms". The 1960 single was recorded with Alain Permal, a singer specialising in Séga - one of the country's major music genres, originating among its former slave populations.

Track 7: Al Campbell - Cherry Baby
Nubya was beyond thrilled to rediscover this 1983 single by Al Campbell, which she heard on a tour bus seven years ago and has been searching record stores for ever since. The Jamaican reggae singer was part of the first generation of dancehall artists whose vocals have been gracing records sicne the late 60s, when his group Thrillers tried out at Studio One. Which leads us nicely to the final track…

Track 8: Dub Specialist - Better Dub (from Better Dub From Studio 1)
Final track and another compilation album pick from Nubya. Studio One was one of Jamaica's most renowned record labels and recording studios. Founded by Clement Dodd, "the Motown of Jamaica" helped shape and grow the island's reggae, dub, ska, rocksteady, and dancehall movements in the 60s and 70s - launching the career of many artists, including a young Bob Marley (and previous pick Al Campbell).

Nubya Garcia - Pace [Concord Jazz]
Augustus Pablo - Shake Up [Trojan]
Ornette Coleman - Cross Breeding [Avid Jazz]
Nubya Garcia - Pace [Concord Jazz]
Doctor Ross - Thirty Two Twenty [Not Now Music]
Uthawolfu Amentkentshane - Ntombi Mgiyakuthanda [Audiotrax]
African Stone - Right Choice [Tempus]
Al Campbell - Cherry Baby [Bromac Production]
Nubya Garcia - Pace [Concord Jazz]
Alain Permal And Mauritius Police Band - Danse Dans Mo Les Bras [Melodisc]
Dub Specialist - Better Dub
Al Campbell - Cherry Baby [Bromac Production]