We had a great time at the Riviera! Thanks to all those who came out and the friendly staff for making it a great night. If you haven;t been there, make sure to check it out sometime. The food is cooked to perfection (since you cook it yourself on their indoor grill) Fun stuff.
Montalban Quintet Readies for Round 2…
So in a few hours we will begin our second live excursion. We are all excited and ready and somewhat under-rehearsed, which is right where we need to be for some peaks and valleys of the tightrope walk of a live show.
We are playing this Wednesday (tomorrow) at the Riviera Supper Club from 9-11 and are playing our own stuff along with a few tunes from the Ethiopian master Mulatu Astatke as well as the great Sun Ra. It should be a fun one indeed. Come on down. It’s free and you can cook your own dinner in a swanky restaurant joint!
San Diego City Beat has some kind words…
City Beat has picked Montalban Quintet’s debut performance as a recommended way to spend your Friday evening.
“If film score composer Ennio Morricone teamed up with members of Pinback, their music would sound something like Montalban Quintet. Featuring members of Pinback, The Mattson 2 and No Knife, this local side project—playing live for the first time—fuses elements of post-punk, jazz and schmaltzy ’50s pop into an immersive sound.”
We can’t wait to play this strange thing in a live performance! See you at Lestat’s this Friday, January 13th. 8:30pm, $8 cover charge.
KALX 90.7 FM Berkeley Radio Airplay
KALX has been playing the new Montalban Quintet CD. It’s been interesting to see what people choose to play as it’s been all over the map. Berkeley was dosed with “Feast of Manioc” this week. Thanks for listening!
Source 96.1 FM Radio Airplay
England’s the Source 96.1 FM has been spinning the new Montalban Quintet album. We couldn’t be happier! Thanks Andy Webster for the support!
MQ Self-titled Album Makes Year-End Top 50 list
England’s Siren Sound Blog puts the Montalban Quintet self-titled debut in it’s top 50 best albums of the year. Not bad, eh?
We are off to a strong start and are anxious to find what 2012 will bring.
Finally… Montalban Quintet live.
It’s ALIVE!!!!
After what seems like forever to us, we are playing live in San Diego. Friday, January 13th at Lestat’s with Ray Barbee and the Mattson 2. We play first at 8:30. We are very excited about it and are having a blast working up the tunes to play with a full band.
Five Stars from JazzReview.com!
Rarely does an ensemble come along that has its own vision, one that is rooted in the music the members heard around them and grew up with, yet is still original in conception. That is truly the case with the Montalban Quintet. One of the first to incorporate indie music conceptualizations placed within jazz frameworks, this ensemble has staked out a unique path.
All of the tunes are mixed into each other, with the result being a non-stop stream of music that doesn’t really change from one track to the next as evolve. Occasionally extramusical devices are thrown into the barrage, like caterwauls and half-valve wails from the trumpet on “Abajo del Mar” or non-defined beat oriented Miles Davis-ish Pangeae-like grooves as on “Lonnie’s Lament.” This is challenging music, to say the least, that both rewards and, upon completion of listening, leaves more questions asked than answered. This might be the most original music you’ll listen to this year, if you have courage to walk down this road. It’s not really about arriving as much as it is about the trip.
Click here for the full review: http://www.jazzreview.com/reviews/latest-cd-track-reviews/item/28798-montalban-by-montalban-quintet.html
Stellar review on BlogSanDiego
Montalban Quintet S/T 10.22.11
Imagine the project born in the epic openness of Monte Alban in Oaxaca.
Arisen like Robert Wyatt, Gavin Bryar’s mooded loop in”Jesus’ Blood Never Failed Me Yet” is so perfect. The timbre sways in this cover to the heart of the project, with sentimental soft drums and horns accompanying the loop gently, swooning in a long warm bath of slow ripples. Originally recorded for the Obscure label, this song does the original justice and is the clue in which the album is best taken. I would prefer this track ended the disc, filled with this monumentally satisfying bliss.
This collection is mostly an ambient piece, perfect when it resides in Eno’s compelling balance of non/being creating a silent translucent underwater scrim, that colors the world as it plays through your subconscious. Across genres, the album is populated mainly with horns. Regardless, in the background and production, you get a feeling of the San Diego sound, the carefully constructed and crafted vibe of recorded Pinback and Album Leaf, coupled with accomplished song crafting. Many of the players have been in the SD scene for a while; Sleeping People, No Knife, Tanner +. This debut album by the band was recorded over the past 5 years, seemingly between other projects. And, it listens as the moss greens the ground, with great ambiance.
The instrumentation keeps the vibe in a seamless pocket and for the most part the vocals are treated gently and sit in a bed of smooth sounds. Though the drums are often pounding (IE: “Lonnie’s Lament”) and the vocals often wail loud in the room, like Boilermaker, both are mixed at a level sufficient for ambient imbibing. Layered textures and thoughtfully constructed orchestration allow a gentler listen to a bigger sound. Occasionally a mysterious broken loop or buried vocal evoke a feeling of another world. These are some of my favorite parts within the songs. In Abajo del Mar, there is a vocal loop living throughout the song, textured by horns and some great Jerry Garcia simple, repetitive guitar lines.
There are six different horns used on the album, as well as a vibraphone, and you can feel the use of air, the natural movement of the breath. It’s a sweet 8 tracks that mostly cross fade into a 50 minute feast, definitely a sit down record. If you only listen to the electronica or the guitar-driven sounds of San Diego, it’s definitely a twist and a different vibe. About half of the songs are originals and the others are based around tracks by Coltrane, Miles Davis +.
The vocal loop in the “Feast of Manioc” (C Prescott and and K Thibideau) is evocative and compelling and touches a bit of what High Mountain Tempel aims for (disclosure: Thibideau has mastered all four of High Mountain Tempel’s records). This track turns the disc in a new direction for a couple of minutes, before the horns make their presence felt again, and lift the songs into their climaxes. Down by the water you can loll in the ever-evolving layers. The longer songs are assisted by a slight touch of a fever, something that tarnishes the perfectly recorded sounds, and adds a ghostly seance to the proceedings.
Is it born in Oaxaca?
“Feast of Manioc” on 91X Radio
“Feast of Manioc” was featured on the 10/2 edition of 91X Loudspeaker show. It marked the first week of Mike Halloran’s taking over the reigns for 91X’s local music show. We are looking forward to what’s in store for Loudspeaker and anticipate good things. After all, this guy seems to know a thing (or two). Thanks for the airplay, Mike!