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Praiseworthy: Arthur Verocai for Timeless III

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

On Sunday, March 15th, as the third installment of the VTech and Mochilla Timeless series takes place, Madlib, DJ Nuts, and Airto Moreira are just a few supporting players taking part in welcoming Arthur Verocai to his first ever live performance in Los Angeles. Truly, a can’t miss performance.

Arthur Verocai

Arthur Verocai

For those still unsure about the power of Arthur Verocai’s self-titled 1972 debut album, 36 years later, his influence remains throughout the music world, especially in today’s hip hop culture.

Arthur Verocai album

Arthur Verocai album

“Arthur Verocai is a genius, one of the finest“ -Quantic, DJ and Producer

“I could listen to the (Arthur Verocai) album everyday for the rest of my life” - Madlib, hip hop producer

“Em 1972 falaram que ele estava maluco… sua musica é agora.” - DJ Nuts

“When I listen to Arthur’s music it makes me glad to feel alive. It doesn’t get any better than this,” -Harmonic 313.

“Arthur Verocai is living proof that soul transcends generations, races, and creeds. If you are a producer and don’t know who this guy is……. then you don’t know soul music at its best….. Welcome to Brazillian Soul……………. meet Arthur Verocai” -9th Wonder, hip hop producer

“When I listen to Arthur’s music it makes me glad to feel alive. It doesn’t get any better than this” - Mark Pritchard/ Troubleman

“Of all the Brazilian music I have encountered, this is my favourite record” -Yoshihiro Okino, Kyoto Jazz Massive

“A touch of folk, more than a hint of funk, jazz-style solos, amazing 20-piece string arrangements, and a blending of electronics and keyboards with organic sounds and social commentary… You could easily get laid to this stuff.” -Water Magazine

“With influences stretching from Milton Nascimento and Herbie Hancock to Frank Zappa and Jimmy Webb, Verocai was very much a product of the Tropicalia era, drawing on the music of the exterior to speak to the oppressed youth. Touching on folk, jazz cinema music and early electronica Verocai’s self-titled album is a stunning piece of work and worthy of comparisons with the lo-fi sound of Shuggie Otis and the orchestral soul of Charles Stepney. A wonderful discovery.” -Straight No Chaser

“Verocai’s self-titled album from 1972 is an amazing album full of psych-funk arrangements and jazz-pop sounds that continue to be a landmark for the music of post-Tropicalia Brazil…it’s one of my favorite albums of all time!” -Lin Yee Yuan, Associate Editor at Theme Magazine

“The name Arthur Verocai may not ring a bell with even the keenest Brazilophiles, but this 1972 debut has been reissued principally because internationalist DJs like Rainer Trüby and Gilles Peterson have worked it into their sets, sprinkling their cool dust on it. Verocai had a pop-jazz-symphonic vision, employing sad, soaring melodies and advanced harmonyh, similar to Milton Nascimento’s early collaborations with Lo Borges and Fernando Brant.” -Ben Ratliff, Tracks

“Arthur Verocai was an accomplished producer and arranger when he released this long-lost 1972 album that still sounds like nothing else. It turned out to be a crucial bridge between the experimental pop of the 1960s Tropicalia era and the deep funk that followed.” - Aaron Cohen, Downbeat Magazine

Take Brazilian producer Arthur Verocai’s music on its face, and you can group him with David Axelrod, Charles Stepney, and oter Maerican studio wizards from the ‘70s who wrangled psychedelia and orchestral arrangements into an R&B context. But unlike Axelrod or Stepney, Verocai did his thing under a military dictatorship that regularly jailed artists, censored lyrics and banned suggestive stage dancing. LuvN’Haight’s reissue of Verocai’s rare, eponymous solo album from 1972 offers a snap shot of a sonic craftsman working in- and subtly commenting on – a political and artistic environment controlled by the badge and the gun.

You can’t exactly call Verocai an outright renegade; he both produced largely uncontroversial Brazilian artist of the time like Jorge Ben and Gal Costa and composed TV themes. But he generously sprinkles Arthur Verocai’s pop-soul casserole with the kind of intriguing flavors that would later on current retro-experimentalists like Stereolab and Zero 7: snarling horn-section lines, sharp string-section stabs, and the twinkling electric-piano solos. - Ron Nachmann (SF Weekly)

“Timeless has showcased legendary composers’ lasting mark on hip-hop music in each of their own unique ways. The response that these artists have received has been remarkable and illustrates their relevance to every generation. We are thrilled to have Arthur Verocai headline our third concert in the series.” -Tom Bacon, VP of Marketing, VTech Communications. “

Arthur Verocai is something else again- a lost slice of Brazilian psychedelic samba-pop from 1972 that shows hippie-era culture from another angle. -Entertainment Weekly

Sunday, March 15th, 2009
7-11pm / All Ages / $22.50 Limited Presale / $32.50 After
*Presale Tickets Available @www.ticketmaster.com and
The Luckman Box Office +1 323 343 6600

(Please keep in mind that these are assigned seating events – in order to sit together you MUST purchase your tickets together – to view seating chart please go http://luckmanarts.org/seatingchart.php)
*Presale + early arrival is STRONGLY suggested*

Harriet and Charles Luckman Fine Arts Complex
Cal State University Los Angeles
5151 State University Drive. Los Angeles. 90032

MF Doom/Metal Fingers’ Passion Flower for Arthur Verocai’s Seriado

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

MF DOOM

MF Doom (photo by B+)

MF Doom (photo by B+)

Daniel Dumile, better known as MF DOOM (DOOM), is a British born American hip hop artist. Born in London, England, he moved with his family to New York and raised in Long Island. Under one of his many pseudonyms, Dumile has release several albums and appeared on collaborative projects with artists such as Danger Mouse and Madlib.

Here under the name Metal Fingers, he samples Arthur Verocai’s Seriado in his song, Passion Flower.

 



 

The many faces of DOOM: 

DANIEL DUMILE: The man behind the masks. 

ZEV LOVE X: Lead rapper with KMD (that’s a positive Kause in a Much Damaged society if you squint from the right angle), whose black power-meets-Daisy classic Mr Hood kaused… sorry caused… a fraction of the damage it deserved. 

MF DOOM: Only the warm, softly-spoken voice (now descending into an alcoholic slur) remains as he re-emerges in 1997 as Metal Face Doom with a head full of comic books, wearing a mask over his face and bearing eccentric LPs for the Fondle ‘Em label. Ditching every last vestige of his KMD past, he abandons raw funk and skewed jazz for tinny beats at un-danceable tempos, while playful narratives give way to scatter- gun surrealism. 

KING GEEDORAH: A 500-foot tall three-headed lizard inhabiting distant galaxies. Unable to visit earth for fear of the widespread panic that might ensue, he channels his philanthropic message through MF Doom. Quite why he chooses a mask-wearing loon as a conduit rather than a more credible witness like, say, respected news- reader Trevor McDonald or cosmologist Stephen Hawking, isn’t fully explained. 

VIKTOR VAUGHN: Though also derived from Marvel Comics’ Vic Von Doom, VV is a very different MC from MF. Younger, more villainous, street-smart and battle-ready, last year’s brilliant Vaudeville Villain album is an unstoppable romp through street crime, open-mic nights and voyeuristic sex. More funny ha-ha than funny weird. 

DOOM’S LIFE IN FIVE PARTS … ONE OF OURS: Daniel Dumile was actually born in London, but he emigrated to New York before he could talk. Still, with only Slick Rick to compete with in the Anglo-American rap list, he should he claimed for the UK the minute he steps back onto British soil. 

DEATH OF SUBROC: KMD’s debut album, Hr Hood, was evenly divided between angry 5 Percent diatribes (“Nitty Gritty”) and goofy Tribe-like novelties (“Peachfuzz”). Although both were released as singles, the group resented Elektra marketing them as fluffy Native Tongues, not men on a militant mission. With a darker second album in the can their mood wasn’t helped when Subroc, Dumile’s brother and KMD DJ, was killed in a car accident. A decade on the wound hasn’t healed and when Sleaze tried to discuss KMD’s tragic demise the interview was abruptly terminated. 

BL_CK B_ST_RDS: Already uneasy with the gurgles of black separatism emanating from KMD’s second album, Elektra threw the baby out with the bathwater when they saw the sleeve. The black sambo character, which had been crossed out on the Mr Hood cover in a denunciation of racist stereotyping, was now being hanged n the manner of the kids’ word game. KMD and the label parted company. Zev Love/Dumile disappeared, rumoured to be suffering from depression, fuelled by spiralling drink and drug abuse. 

REBIRTH AS MF DOOM: Oddly, he really found his voice when it deteriorated. Dooms early records are slurred, arryhythmic and blissfully unaware of such rules as scanning. But this gave him a peculiar freedom to make records no one else would even contemplate. Now that he’s re-developed something resembling a proper (if still unique) flow matched to lyrics so damn sharp you need a week to take them in, Doom is making the best records of his life. 

 

Another 9th Wonder sample of Verocai

Little Brother’s song, We Got Now on The Minstrel Show cd  uses Verocai’s song, Caboclo


 

Catch the man behind the music, Arthur Verocai, this Sunday, March 15th, 2009 for Timeless III presented by VTech and Mochilla 

Sunday, March 15th, 2009
7-11pm / All Ages / $22.50 Limited Presale / $32.50 After
*Presale Tickets Available @www.ticketmaster.com and
The Luckman Box Office +1 323 343 6600

(Please keep in mind that these are assigned seating events – in order to sit together you MUST purchase your tickets together – to view seating chart please go http://luckmanarts.org/seatingchart.php)
*Presale + early arrival is STRONGLY suggested*

Ludacris and 9th Wonder “Do The Right Thang” for Arthur Verocai

Monday, March 9th, 2009

VTech and Mochilla present: Timeless III with Arthur Verocai.

For the first time ever, composer/producer Arthur Verocai, will be in Los Angeles performing his self-titled 1972 album with a 30 piece orchestra. Though some may consider him just a Brasilian producer, his music is far reaching. From 9th Wonder to Gilles Peterson, to Madlib, 30 years later his music still holds sway to a captive audience.

“Arthur Verocai is living proof that soul transcends generations, races, and creeds. If you are a producer and don’t know who this guy is……. then you don’t know soul music at its best….. Welcome to Brazillian Soul……………. meet Arthur Verocai”

-9th Wonder

9th Wonder, born Patrick Douthit, is a DJ and hip hop producer. Originally from Raleigh, North Carolina, he began his career as the producer for the hip hop group, Little Brother with Phonte and Big Pooh. He has worked with Mary J. Blige, Jay-Z, MURS, Erykah Badu, De La Soul, Mos Def, Memphis Bleek,and Destiny’s Child.He pays tribute to Arthur Verocai’s, Na Boca Do Sol, on Ludacris’ Do The Right Thang (Instrumental) 

 

Christopher “Ludacris” Bridges is a Grammy Award winning American rapper. On his most recent album, Theater of the Mind (2008), he performs to 9th Wonder’s sample with Common and Spike Lee. 

Do the Right Thang (Vocals)



  

The original Verocai version:



 

Timeless III: Arthur Verocai

March 15th, 2009,  7-11 pm

Luckman Fine Arts Complex at Cal State University Los Angeles

5151 State University Drive, Los Angeles, 90032

For Tickets:  www.ticketmaster.com or 1-323-343-6600