The Herbaliser - Live (Opening for De La Soul)

1. Same As It Never Was 00:03:26
2. Mr Chombee has the Flaw 00:03:27
3. Can´t Help This Feeling (ft Jessica Darling) 00:03:26
4. Another Mother 00:06:55
5. Geddim 00:04:47
6. Sensual Women 00:05:24
7. Sensual Women 00:03:22
8. Clap Your Hands (ft Jessica Darling) 00:05:09
9. Moon Sequence (if memory serves) 00:04:59
10. Stranded on Earth (feat Jessica Darling) 00:06:52
11. On Your Knees (ft Jessica Darling) 00:04:53
12. The Missing Suitcase 00:06:05

Concert information

Review
The Herbaliser is a patchwork of musical influences: from Jazz to Hip-Hop, and including funk and soul. The english band electrified the Grande Halle, honoring the Festival that brought them to Paris - Jazz à la Villette. Generous & enthusiastic, The Herbaliser was a high class opening band for De La Soul, ...special mention to the delicious Jessica Darling that set the stage ablaze!

The Herbaliser est un patchwork d'influences musicales: du Jazz au Hip-hop en passant par la funk et la soul, le collectif anglais électrisa la Grande Halle, honorant avec brio le Festival qui les conviait à Paris : Jazz @ La Villette. Généreux et enthousiaste, The Herbaliser a parfaitement ouvert la soirée entre grâce à la délicieuse participation de Jessica Darling !
Artist info

The Herbaliser

The Herbaliser are one of the more purely hip-hop-oriented acts on Ninja Tune's roster of sample-based pocket-funk. Combining deft midtempo beats, well-chosen jazz and funk figures, sparse scratching, and even the odd rap, Herbaliser bridge the gap between dusty B-side instrumental hip-hop and London's new school of psychotropic beat scientists. Formed by Ollie Teeba and Jake Wherry in the early '90s, Herbaliser, unlike many of London's abstract beat scene's acid house-steeped big-name artists, trace their roots to American jazz and funk (Roy Ayers, Johnny Pate, Ramsey Lewis), as well as old-school hip-hop (particularly of the New York variety -- Grandmixer D.ST, Sugarhill, Jungle Brothers). A bass player in acid jazz/funk group the Propheteers, Wherry met local DJ Teeba in South London, where they both lived. The pair assembled a few tracks in Wherry's tiny studio, which they subsequently passed to Ninja Tune bosses Matt Black and Jonathan More (aka Coldcut) in a club. The group were signed to the label shortly after.

Herbaliser released a few warmly received EPs on Ninja Tune in 1994 and 1995 (the hard to find Real Killer being the best) before dropping their debut LP, Remedies, which brought both the group and the then up-and-coming Ninja label much attention. While that album capitalized more directly on London's burgeoning underground breakbeat scene, freely mixing styles into a funky, sample-heavy amalgam closer to beat-heavy acid jazz, subsequent singles ("Flawed Hip-Hop," "New & Improved") subtracted the schmaltzier bits from the mix, focusing and expanding upon the group's hip-hop foundation. Blow Your Headphones, their second LP, presented a solid hour-plus of the same, simultaneously taking aim at U.K. trip-hop's tendency toward gimmick and noodle over depth and kick. Very Mercenary followed in 1999, bolstering the duo's hip-hop foundation, as did 2002's Something Wicked This Way Comes.

The group has provided remixes for artists including DJ Food, Raw Stylus, and label foremen Coldcut's "Atomic Moog," the last of which went to number one on the U.K. singles chart. Wherry has also released solo material through the Parisian Big Cheese label (under the name the Meateaters) and worked with the Propheteers. A touring act as well, Herbaliser have assembled a full-blown group -- sometimes dubbed the Herbaliser Band, unleashed as a recording project for 2000's Session 1 -- for live performances, with Wherry's bass and Teeba's turntable tricks supported by a three-piece horn section and live drums and percussion. That live act has gained more influence on the recording front, seen to small effect on Something Wicked This Way Comes but coming into full flower with 2005's Take London and 2008's Same as It Never Was.
Venue

Jazz à la Villette

More than 200 artists, 50 bands, 15 totally exclusive projects and creations... Jazz à la Villette is not a dusty jazz festival or a sepia picture of the world of black music. It celebrates cross-over and musical diversity.

The 2009 edition of the festival includes a world-class selection of artists:

Seun Kuti & Fela's Egypt 80 / Amadou & Mariam feat. The Magic Numbers / Orchestre Poly-Rythmo de Cotonou + DJ RKK (Radio Nova) Special Afromix / Ornette Coleman Quartet / Bunky Green / Ron Carter Foursight Quartet/ Mario Canonge & Alain Jean-Marie
/ Josef Nadj / Les Corbeaux / Hélène Labarrière & Friends / Stormy Weather / Yael Naim Hommage à Joni Mitchell / Ornette / Hélène Labarrière & Friends / John Zorn Shir Hashirim feat. Clotilde Hesme & Mathieu Amalric / Hélène Labarrière & Friends / Las Ondas Marteles / Hypnotic Brass Ensemble / Jazz à la Villette for kids / Peter & Lupus / Marc Ducret Grand Ensemble / Big Four feat. Joey Baron / Hélène Labarrière & Friends / Elysian Fields feat. Don Byron / Limousine / Daniel Darc / Jacques Coursil / De La Soul / The Herbaliser / Carl Craig presents Tribe feat. Doug Hammond, Phil Ranelin, Marcus Belgrave, Wendell Harrison / Jean Louis
/ Etienne Jaumet Solo / Hank Jones Solo / Jacky Terrasson solo / Jacques Schwarz-Bart Abyss / Bibi Tanga & The Selenites / Son of Dave / Adolphus Bell / Hank Jones & Cheick Tidiane Seck / Mahmoud Ahmed /Alemayehu Eshete / Nils Petter Molvaer / Sophie Hunger / Alain Jean-Marie & Daniel Maximin Connivences antillaises / Ahmad Jamal, Yusef Lateef & Archie Shepp / Benjamin Dousteyssier Septet

Address:
221, Avenue Jean Jaurès, 75019, Paris, France

Phone:

Website:http://www.citedelamusique.fr/minisites/0909_jazz_villette/index.aspx
MySpace:http://www.myspace.com/jazzalavillette

Music styles
Hip Hop / Rap
Jazz
Sounds like