
Maceo
Parker: his name is synonymous with Funky Music, his pedigree
impeccable; his band: the tightest little funk orchestra on earth.
Everyone
knows by now that he's played with each and every leader of funk, his
start with James Brown, which Maceo describes as " like
being at University ";
jumping aboard the Mothership with George Clinton; stretching out
with Bootsy's Rubber Band. He’s the living, breathing pulse
which connects the history of Funk in one golden thread. The cipher
which unravels dance music down to its core.
"Everything's
coming up Maceo," concluded DownBeat Magazine in a 1991 article at the beginning of
Maceo Parker's solo career. At the time Maceo was a remembered by
aficionados of funk music as sideman; appreciated mainly by those in
the know. More than a decade and a half later Maceo Parker has been
enjoying a blistering solo career. For the past sixteen years
Maceo has been building a new funk empire, fresh and
stylistically diverse. He navigates deftly between James Brown's
1960's soul and George Clinton's 1970's freaky funk while exploring
mellower jazz and the grooves of hip-hop.
His
collaborations over the years performing or recording or both have
included Ray Charles, Ani Difranco, James Taylor, De La Soul, Dave
Matthews Band and the Red Hot Chilli Peppers. His timeless sound has
garnered him a fresh young fan base.
It is almost
impossible to separate which came first, Maceo or the funk. The
amazing P-funk Parker has been at it with his legendary alto horn for
some time dating back to the 1960’s. That’s when Maceo and his
drummer brother Melvin climbed on board the James Brown funky soul
funk train. It wasn’t long before James coined the solo summoning
signature, “ Maceo,
I want you to Blow!” .
To most musicologists it’s the muscially fertile group of men from
this period of James Brown's band who are recognized as the
early pioneers of the modern funk and hip-hop we still jump to today.
In 1964, Maceo and his brother Melvin were in college
in North Carolina studying music when a life-changing event took
place. James Brown, the famous God Father of Soul happened on to an
after hours club in which Melvin was drumming a gig. Mr Brown was in
search of some late night food when he was knocked out by Melvin
Parker’s bombastic beats. Brown offered the drumming Parker a
future gig, telling him all he had to do was refresh the soul man’s
memory and a job would be his. Cut to a year later when James Brown’s
band was touring again in the North Carolina area. The Parker
brothers looked to take JB up on his verbal job posting and cased the
venue in search of James Brown’s limo. After a while they spotted
the vehicle and waited for brother James to step out. Walking right
up to the already legend of soul, Melvin works Mr. Brown’s memory
to the year before. Soon, JB’s eyes light up and he resubmits the
job to the drumming Parker, while Maceo stands by waiting his shot.
Then Melvin blurts, “Oh, by the way Mr. Brown this is my brother
Maceo, he plays saxophone, and he needs a job too.” James, asks
Maceo if he owned the big horn. Maceo, spouts a big fib responding
“Ahhhhh, yes Mr. Brown,” knowing full well he would have to go
out and find the big brass Bari sax if he wanted to join his brother
on the road. Maceo found a Baritone sax and recollects that he and
his brother thought they’d play with JB for about six months and
then head back to school. Maceo laughs, “ We
stayed a lot longer than that.”
Maceo grew
to become the lynch-pin of the James Brown enclave for the best part
of two decades. - his signature style helped define James' brand of
funk, and the phrase: "Maceo,
I want you to Blow!" passed into the language. He’s still the most sampled
musician around simply because of the unique quality of his sound.
There would
be other projects and short hiatuses during his on-off time with The
Godfather, including a brief spell overseas when he was drafted, and
in 1970 when he left to form Maceo and All the Kings Men with some
fellow James Brown band members (the two albums from this period are
on a constant reissue cycle even some thirty years later.)
It was
Maceo's uncle front man for local band the Blue Notes, who was
Maceo’s first musical mentor. The three Parker brothers (Maceo,
Melvin and trombonist Kellis- later to become Professor of
Entertainment law at Columbia University) who formed the “Junior
Blue Notes. " .
When Maceo reached the sixth grade, their uncle let the Junior Blue
Notes perform in between sets at his nightclub engagements. It
was Maceo's first experience of the stage that started his
love affair with performing that has increased rather than diminished
with time.
Maceo grew
up admiring saxophonists such as David "Fathead" Newman,
Hank Crawford, Cannonball Adderley and King Curtis. "I
was crazy about Ray Charles and all his band, and of course
particularly the horn players" .
By the age of 15, Maceo had forged his own style on the tenor sax. "I
thought about ‘Maceo Parker plays Charlie Parker’, and then I
thought how about ‘Maceo Parker plays Maceo Parker’, what would
it be like to have young sax players listening to me and emulating my
style of playing”. Thus the “Maceo sound” we know so well was born.
In the mid
'70's Maceo hooked up with Bootsy Collins, George Clinton, and the
various incarnations of Funkadelic and Parliament. He now had worked
with the figure heads of Funk music at the height of their success.
From the breathtaking shows of James Brown to the landing of the
Mothership, Maceo has been there - as close as it gets to some
of the most exciting moments in musical history, contributing his
sound as a constant point of reference.
In 1990 the
opportunity came for Maceo to concentrate on his own projects. He
released two successful solo albums entitled Roots
Revisited (which spent 10 weeks at the top of Billboard's Jazz Charts in 1990)
and Mo'
Roots (1991). But it was his third solo album, Maceo’s ground breaking CD Life
on Planet Groove, recorded
live in 1992 which soon became a funk fan favorite. Planet
Groove also served as a calling card, boosting Maceo's contemporary career
as a solo artist for a college aged audience, and bringing into being
his catch phrase "2%
Jazz, 98% Funky Stuff."
Maceo began
his relentless headlining touring, bringing his top notch, road-tight
band and three hour plus shows to the people all over the world. "I
feel it's my duty as an artist to go as many places as I can,
especially if the people want it." The soft spoken North Carolina native doesn't come out on stage
in a diaper or a velvet swirling cape, no giant spaceships or 50
person entourages, nothing except the core of his musical soul which
he lays open every time he blows his horn.
In 2003, after
several years as Band Leader for the Rhythm and Blues Foundation
Awards Maceo received a Pioneer Award from the Rhythm and Blues
Foundation for his contribution as a sideman to the genre of R &
B.
He has also
since 1999 participated in some of Prince's groundbreaking tours when
not with his own group.
Maceo's albums Funk
Overload , Dial
M-A-C-E-O and Made
by Maceo entered the top 40 in the European charts upon release. Dial
M-A-C-E-O features guest spots from the Mistress of folk music Ani DiFranco,
Prince, and a quite different James from the one we have come to
associate with Maceo: James Taylor, while School's In from 2005 is
about as Funky as a studio album can be.
At the
beginning of 2007 Maceo had a chance to fulfill one of his dreams in
working with a Big Band. Working with Grammy Award Winners the WDR
Big Band, he broadcast and performed a live series of shows paying
tribute to Ray Charles and putting Maceo’s own funky music to a Big
Band setting.
This has led
to his latest release Roots
and Grooves a
live recording taken from these shows which also features Dennis
Chambers and Rodney "Skeet" Curtis.
" Given
Parker's sense of groove invention and the evergreen emotional power
of Charles' chestnuts like "Busted" and "Hit the
Road Jack," anyone might have expected this to be a dream match.
But it's more than that because Parker also sings with a gravelly, Charles- like
perfection on these two songs, and even more poignantly on "You
Don't Know Me," "Margie," and a magically moody
"Georgia on My Mind." Charles may have been declared
deceased in body in 2004, but he lives again through Parker in
haunting yet wonderful ways"
All
Music Guide
There are
plans afoot to bring Maceo and the WDR BIg Band shows
to more cities and countries during 2008...
In
the meantime Maceo and his own die-hard band continues to tour
around the world.
School’s In!
Indeed.
” Maceo put a complex funk spin to the famous Parker name playing his
horn more like a drum than a melodic instrument. The result is an
insanely percussive style, which forces everyone within ear shot to
dance like a giddy geek. For sure no one plays the alto saxophone
like Maceo Parker, and most likely no one ever will again. Never
ignoring melody Parker woos us sweetly on one tune, only to make us
jump out of our skin the next with Funkalicious ferocity. The bottom
line...if you want to dance with members of the opposite sex without
asking them too, go to a Maceo Parker show. Once there, you suddenly
realize this is one of the reasons why you’re alive on this
planet...to be taken to a place where your mind stops thinking as you
listen, move, and experience pure joy”.
Dave
Todoroff
"He's
no bebopper, reborn or otherwise. His roots are the church and the
blues…his sound is joyful, cutting ribbon of light and heat
burnished by grit and soul. His riff-based attack is melodic,
unraveling and re-weaving themes rather than running chords, and
primarily rhythmic, relying on finely-shaped nuances of timing and
displacement to communicate - kinda like his longtime boss' vocals,
amazingly enough." There's no doubt about it, "There's only
one Maceo."
Gene
Santoro Downbeat Magazine
“When
people talk about legends they mean ‘they’re done, but boy did
they do good’ when I think of Maceo Parker I think of legendary
funk master and horn player, but not ‘legend’ in the term that
he’s done. He’s still doing it. And that to me makes a really
legendary person ”
Ani
DiFranco.
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