
Stanton Moore – Drums
Robert Mercurio – Bass
Ben Ellman – saxophone, harmonica
Richard Vogel – Keyboard
Jeff Raines – Guitar
It’s shaping up to be a stellar year for celebrated New
Orleans outfit GALACTIC. On February 9th
the band will release their groundbreaking new album YA-KA-MAY a
visionary mix, intertwining New Orleans sounds from jazz to brass
band to funk and far beyond. With this release, the five-man
group comprised of drummer Stanton Moore, bassist Robert Mercurio,
saxophonist/harmonica player Ben Ellman, keyboardist Richard Vogel,
and guitarist Jeff Raines – reaffirms their status as the
quintessential modern day New Orleans band and one of the funkiest
outfits in the known universe.
Ya-Ka-May features all-new material
generated by the band in collaboration with a stellar series of
New Orleans guests, who range from iconic figures of the 1960s
to the younger veterans to the underground. These invitees appear
here outside their normal contexts and away from the sound you
might typically associate with them, like putting a picture in
a different frame. Guaranteed you know some
of their names, but it’s unlikely that you know them all,
even if you live in New Orleans. At first listen you’re
bound to discover scorching talents from the worlds of music you
know – jazz, brass bands, r&b, gospel, rock – and
one you may not have encountered before: bounce.
Being immersed in all the various New Orleans music scenes, GALACTIC are
in a unique position to bring them all together. On YA-KA-MAY
(to be released Feb 9th, 2010 on Anti-), they have
powerfully connected these genres, illuminating how they are all
part of one distinct musical continuum. The album features established
legends such as the Rebirth Brass Band, Irma Thomas, Big Chief
Bo Dollis, Allen Toussaint, Trombone Shorty and Corey Henry, John
Boutté, Josh Cohen and Scully, Glen David Andrews, and Walter “Wolfman” Washington
alongside groundbreaking new “Bounce” artists like
Cheeky Blakk, Big Freedia, Katey Red, and Sissy Nobby. The end
result is New Orleans like it’s meant to be heard, and pure GALACTIC. |