PRESS RELEASE
Feedel is a Washington DC based Ethio-Jazz Band and has been performing as a self contained unit, as well as supporting Ethiopian artists like Tilahun Gessesse, (The king of Ethiopian pop music) ,very recently with Aster Aweke (The queen of Ethiopian soul music) on her “Ewedihalehu” or "I love you" US tour.
Feedel band’s "Ethio - jazz" genre, Founded in 2010 by Araya Woldemichael, and weeks later, his current band members joined him and together they have formed the first native Ethiopian group in north America as an Ethio -jazz music-oriented band that starred Moges Habte on Sax, Alemseged Kebede on Electric bass, Araya Woldemichael on keyboards and Samson Juffar on drums., after Samson Juffar’s departure to Ethiopia, drummer Kenneth Joseph took Samson’s place. In addition to krarist Minale Bezu, the band found Its own and a very unique Ethio - jazz sound.
Since 1997 the Éthiopiques series has made Ethiopian music a hipster obsession, exposing jazz heads and rockists to the jazzy funkiness that emanated from East Africa in the ’60s and ’70s. (Never heard of the collection? You may have heard songs from Volume 4—there are now 29 volumes in total—in Jim Jarmusch’s 2005 film Broken Flowers.) Feedel’s sax player Moges who was born in Addis Ababa, and can be heard performing the funky James Brown Band-influenced cut “Muziqawi Silt” on Éthiopiques’ Volume 13 with his ’70s group The Walias Band. You can also easily find and hear Feedel's bass player Alemseged Kebede's great groovy bass lines and Araya's unique keyboard playing style in most of Aster Aweke, Tsehaye Yohannes and Tilahune Gessesse's music CD's.The group is currently working with DC-based producer, composer and arranger Araya Woldemichael for their up coming 3rd new album. Feedel Band’s sound can be best described as a merging of ’60s R&B, funk and jazz with traditional Ethiopian song - craft.
Feedel or (alphabet) are Ge’ez script and a unique Ethiopian characters that are entirely phonetic structured in seven columns., in other words, each character in the Geez Feedel system has seven sounds. Feedel are not only a dazzling of human creativity but also, in practical terms, a powerful medium for communication and social interaction. The power of Feedel resides in the characters ability to represent virtually every sound. The ancient Ethiopians, who invented Ethiopic writing system, were poised, it seems, to capture and harness all sounds in the universe.
Feedel Band is taking Ethiopian music and Jazz, and blending it into a simmering stew of musical genre’s, textures and feeling.These boys have real feel – for their music, for their audience and for each other. Playing with maturity and passion is second nature to all of them ... Feedel band has devoted much of a creative career spanning almost 20 years to this eternal, inspiring form - the very base and roots of Ethio-jazz.... gather inspiration from The Golden Age of Ethiopian popular music in the late 1960s and 70s— a time that had Addis Ababa littered with groups playing a brass-heavy concoctions influenced by a great African bands as well as American soul and jazz. So here they are, as enthusiastic as ever - Ethiopian's finest, most skilled practitioners in the art of the Ethiopian music. They take their newly created original pentatonic melodies and repurpose them with mutated instrumentation like 60s and 70s-era Ethiopian grooves: Bass, Saxophone, traditional Krar, Piano, Organ, and Drums. What sets Feedel Band apart from other acts that play Ethio-Jazz style of music is that they commonly hybridize the regular Jazz style with Ethio - Jazz genres, or modernized the sound without loosing its original texture or feeling. The energy and power is overwhelming. They are creating and in some cases re-creating the musical language of what has been called Ethio - Jazz. Since the bands inception, the reception that Feedel has received has been extraordinary; at FestAfrica 2011, APAP showcase "Drom" New York City, World cafe live Philadelphia, Global roots festival Minneapolis, MN and most recently at The Kennedy Center in 2014 and the audience was enamored with their warm and engaging style. While their music is inspired by the Golden Age of Ethiopian popular music, but Feedel Band mostly play their own original music. Their newly released CD is called “Ethiopian Ocean”
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/09/arts/music/review-feedel-band-and-the-libyans-african-sounds-at-the-global-beat-festival.html?smid=url-share
The New York Times, Wamu radio about feedel The Washington Post,
Feedel is a Washington DC based Ethio-Jazz Band and has been performing as a self contained unit, as well as supporting Ethiopian artists like Tilahun Gessesse, (The king of Ethiopian pop music) ,very recently with Aster Aweke (The queen of Ethiopian soul music) on her “Ewedihalehu” or "I love you" US tour.
Feedel band’s "Ethio - jazz" genre, Founded in 2010 by Araya Woldemichael, and weeks later, his current band members joined him and together they have formed the first native Ethiopian group in north America as an Ethio -jazz music-oriented band that starred Moges Habte on Sax, Alemseged Kebede on Electric bass, Araya Woldemichael on keyboards and Samson Juffar on drums., after Samson Juffar’s departure to Ethiopia, drummer Kenneth Joseph took Samson’s place. In addition to krarist Minale Bezu, the band found Its own and a very unique Ethio - jazz sound.
Since 1997 the Éthiopiques series has made Ethiopian music a hipster obsession, exposing jazz heads and rockists to the jazzy funkiness that emanated from East Africa in the ’60s and ’70s. (Never heard of the collection? You may have heard songs from Volume 4—there are now 29 volumes in total—in Jim Jarmusch’s 2005 film Broken Flowers.) Feedel’s sax player Moges who was born in Addis Ababa, and can be heard performing the funky James Brown Band-influenced cut “Muziqawi Silt” on Éthiopiques’ Volume 13 with his ’70s group The Walias Band. You can also easily find and hear Feedel's bass player Alemseged Kebede's great groovy bass lines and Araya's unique keyboard playing style in most of Aster Aweke, Tsehaye Yohannes and Tilahune Gessesse's music CD's.The group is currently working with DC-based producer, composer and arranger Araya Woldemichael for their up coming 3rd new album. Feedel Band’s sound can be best described as a merging of ’60s R&B, funk and jazz with traditional Ethiopian song - craft.
Feedel or (alphabet) are Ge’ez script and a unique Ethiopian characters that are entirely phonetic structured in seven columns., in other words, each character in the Geez Feedel system has seven sounds. Feedel are not only a dazzling of human creativity but also, in practical terms, a powerful medium for communication and social interaction. The power of Feedel resides in the characters ability to represent virtually every sound. The ancient Ethiopians, who invented Ethiopic writing system, were poised, it seems, to capture and harness all sounds in the universe.
Feedel Band is taking Ethiopian music and Jazz, and blending it into a simmering stew of musical genre’s, textures and feeling.These boys have real feel – for their music, for their audience and for each other. Playing with maturity and passion is second nature to all of them ... Feedel band has devoted much of a creative career spanning almost 20 years to this eternal, inspiring form - the very base and roots of Ethio-jazz.... gather inspiration from The Golden Age of Ethiopian popular music in the late 1960s and 70s— a time that had Addis Ababa littered with groups playing a brass-heavy concoctions influenced by a great African bands as well as American soul and jazz. So here they are, as enthusiastic as ever - Ethiopian's finest, most skilled practitioners in the art of the Ethiopian music. They take their newly created original pentatonic melodies and repurpose them with mutated instrumentation like 60s and 70s-era Ethiopian grooves: Bass, Saxophone, traditional Krar, Piano, Organ, and Drums. What sets Feedel Band apart from other acts that play Ethio-Jazz style of music is that they commonly hybridize the regular Jazz style with Ethio - Jazz genres, or modernized the sound without loosing its original texture or feeling. The energy and power is overwhelming. They are creating and in some cases re-creating the musical language of what has been called Ethio - Jazz. Since the bands inception, the reception that Feedel has received has been extraordinary; at FestAfrica 2011, APAP showcase "Drom" New York City, World cafe live Philadelphia, Global roots festival Minneapolis, MN and most recently at The Kennedy Center in 2014 and the audience was enamored with their warm and engaging style. While their music is inspired by the Golden Age of Ethiopian popular music, but Feedel Band mostly play their own original music. Their newly released CD is called “Ethiopian Ocean”
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/09/arts/music/review-feedel-band-and-the-libyans-african-sounds-at-the-global-beat-festival.html?smid=url-share
The New York Times, Wamu radio about feedel The Washington Post,
"Feedel band played the kind of dense, gnarled funk that was recorded in Ethiopia in the 1960's and 70's'
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'Feedel band is reviving a robust sound"
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meet_the_feedel_band-_epk_revised_pdf.pdf | |
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