Q-Bizm
Q-Bizm EP (2003)
review
by: Michael Walls
Date:
3/28/03
Sometimes
you come across an artist or band that, on the surface,
just doesn't seem to have it. The packaging may be unimpressive
or uninteresting, or the name of the band doesn't instill
any kind of premonition of what the music might be about.
These instances can have an adverse effect on one's opinion
about the music before the first note is heard. Due to
the art of advertising and promotion, the art of music
can sometimes be overshadowed. And that is a crime.
This
was the case with Q-Bizm, an Italy-based collection of
musicians that sent me their 7-song self titled EP. This
non-descript CD sat on my desk for several weeks before
I finally managed to find some quiet time to listen to
it. And after listening, I kicked myself for wasting my
time with far inferior, slickly-packaged CDs by bands
trying to be the next Foo Fighters.
Q-Bizm
creates music that may be difficult to classify. Frontman
and Bassist, Filippo Gaetani likes to call their music
"new progressive", which may be a excellent
description, especially when you open a dictionary to
the word "progressive" and see "moving
forward, advancing, ongoing
" This music is
definitely progressive. But it still doesn't describe
it in musical genre terms. Let's try calling it Jazz.
Or Funk. Or Classical. Or Jazzy classical funk.
Various
percussion techniques and heavy bass lines bring the funk
elements to the surface, while sax solos and jazzy guitars
lend to the jazz feel. Electric and acoustic violin add
the classical flavor to some tracks, and the vocals of
Filippo are simply complimentary to the music (rather
then a focal point).
"Lessons to Learn" is a great funk-rock tune,
that I imagine started off as a endless jam session, complete
with solos for everyone bass, guitar, sax, drums
that vocals just polished off. "2 Wings"
is a darker jazz tune that leans on the interesting mix
of electric violin, bass and sax. "Compact the File"
could easily be mistaken for a lost Steely Dan song, a
fun rock tune with heavy horns and cleaver percussion.
Live recordings of "Low Sprinkler" and "Down
Home" sound like entertaining jams at a small jazz
club.
These
are seasoned musicians, not a startup garage band. Their
music is crisp, clean, emotional, fun and challenging.
Their collective bios list interests and influences ranging
from Bach to Zappa, from Elvis to Tom Waits. And the listener
can definitely feel these varied influences through their
music.
Q-Bizm has more interest in the art of music then
in the art of promotion, and for that, they may pay the
price of obscurity. But for the fortunate few that get
to hear their music their ears will be thankful.
|