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Slavic Soul Party!

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Slavic Soul Party
OriginNew York City
GenresJazz, world music, brass band
Years active1999 – present
Members
  • Kenny Bentley
  • John Carlson
  • Adam Dotson
  • Peter Hess
  • Matt Moran
  • Peter Stan
  • Chris Stromquist
  • Tim Vaughn
  • Kenny Warren
Websiteslavicsoulparty.com

Slavic Soul Party (often stylized Slavic Soul Party!) is an American Balkan brass/jazz band. The band borrows from Balkan brass, dixieland, New Orleans Second Line, funk, klezmer, and Roma music.

The band has performed on stages usually known for rock bands, opening for such acts as Arcade Fire and Dresden Dolls. They have also performed at music festivals which highlight their international flavors, such as Chicago's 14th annual World Music Festival in 2012.

Members

There have been at least nineteen members of Slavic Soul Party, including:

  • Matt Moran, bandleader (drums, percussion)
  • Roland Barber (trombone)
  • John Carlson (trumpet)
  • Ron Caswell (tuba)
  • Brian Drye (trombone)
  • Shane Endsley (trumpet)
  • Jacob Garchik (trombone)
  • Curtis Hasselbring (trombone)
  • Peter Hess (saxophone, clarinet)
  • Ben Holmes (trumpet)
  • Matt Musselman (trombone)
  • Oscar Noriega (saxophone, clarinet)
  • Ted Reichman (accordion)
  • Chris Speed (clarinet)
  • Peter Stan (accordion)
  • Chris Stromquist (snare drum)
  • Take Toriyama (snare drum)
  • Kenny Warren (trumpet)
  • Tim Vaughn (trombone)
  • Rossen Zahariev (cornet, trumpet)

Discography

  • In Makedonija (Knitting Factory, 2002)
  • Bigger (Barbes, 2005)
  • Teknochek Collision (Barbes, 2007)
  • Taketron (Barbes, 2009)
  • New York Underground Tapes (Barbes, 2012)
  • Plays Duke Ellington's Far East Suite (Ropeadope, 2016)

References

  1. ^ Margasak, Peter (18 September 2012). "The World Music Festival: Down but not out". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 22 September 2012.
  2. Henderson, Alex. "Slavic Soul Party!". AllMusic. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  3. ^ "Slavic Soul Party: The Bayou Meets Bratislava". NPR.org. 19 October 2009. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  4. ^ "Slavic Soul Party: Heart and Feet Music". NPR.org. 9 June 2007. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  5. Bardeen, Sarah (19 June 2002). "In Makedonija". NPR.org. Retrieved 15 September 2020.

External links


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