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.:: Pocket Full of Funk ::.

Program:

1) Pocket Full of Funk
2) Degrees of Separation
3) Jello
4) Kaia's Waltz
5) Sunrise over Madrid
6) What Waz
7) Society Folks
8) Integration

Click Links above for samples.
These samples are in mp3 format
.

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Album Info
All Tracks Composed and Arranged by Brandon Tarricone
Recorded at UltraSonic Studios, New Orleans, September 17-21, 2001.
Engineered by Steve Reynolds.

Personnel:
  • Brandon Tarricone - electric & acoustic guitars & vocals
  • Michael Ray - trumpet
  • John Ellis - tenor & soprano saxophones
  • Michael Pellera - piano [7,8]
  • Alan Broome - double bass [1,3,4,5,7,8]
  • John Stonbley - electric bass [2,6]
  • Dan Caro - drums & vocals, vibes and tablas [6]

History:
Dan Caro The band started when Brandon Tarricone and Dan Caro first played together in November 2000. We met playing a Jazz standards gig. Since then we have played with a few different line-ups. We started playing out in mid- March 2001 with multiple gigs a week. We have also participated in several tours in the Northeastern USA
Liner Notes:

Brandon Tarricone and his Brotherhood of Groove have come a long way in a very short time. Organized just under a year ago by guitarist Tarricone and drummer Dan Caro, who met in November 2000 on a jazz standards gig in hometown New Orleans, the Brotherhood was formed sometime there after and started playing clubs in March 2001. The Brotherhood currently features the stellar front line of former Sun Ra/Kool & the Gang trumpet star Michael Ray and saxophonist par excellence John Ellis, a UNO jazz program graduate now based in New York City, also playing with the Charlie Hunter Quartet. The Brotherhood of Groove has sharpened its musical focus and managed to plumb greater musical depths than ever before. Propelled by Tarricone’s guitar, acoustic bassist Alan Broome (spelled by electric bassist John Stonbley on “Degrees of Separation” and “What Waz”) and Caro on drums, the Brotherhood rolls and tumbles through an intriguing program of Tarricone’s compositions, interpreted and elaborated upon by the fluent solo work of Ray and Ellis also accompanyeed by veteran pianist, Michael Pellera, on two distictivly special compostions (“Society Folks,” and ”Integration”).Though some may consider a “jam band,” the Brotherhood of Groove has moved into the headier realm of contemporary jazz at its best, exploring Tarricone’s meaty compositions with ensemble and solo playing that’s at least first-rate and always highly inspired. Tarricone’s ambitions are set high as well, and you can look for this splendid quintet to appear at a concert venue, festival or nightspot close to you in the very near future. Don’t miss ’em!
- John Sinclair -
November 5, 2001
Amsterdam–Paris via train
© 2001 John Sinclair. All Rights Reserved

© 2004 Brandon Tarricone's Brotherhood Of Groove
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