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Put your hands on the remote! browse music »Orleans & Claiborne by Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews & Orleans Avenue
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fave it R&B Pop Crossover | Funk
15 tracks | 72 minutes
Released Jun 2005
on Treme Records
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- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:27 Orleans & Claiborne lyrics BUY MP3 02:27 Orleans & Claiborne lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:27 Orleans & Claiborne
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:07 Frontin' lyrics BUY MP3 05:07 Frontin' lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:07 Frontin'
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 06:33 Get Down lyrics BUY MP3 06:33 Get Down lyrics "GIFT MP3" 06:33 Get Down
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 06:00 No Thing On Me lyrics BUY MP3 06:00 No Thing On Me lyrics "GIFT MP3" 06:00 No Thing On Me
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 07:39 Can't Get Enufa Dat Funky Stuff lyrics FREE 07:39 Can't Get Enufa Dat Funky Stuff lyrics "GIFT MP3" 07:39 Can't Get Enufa Dat Funky Stuff
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:01 Act Bad With It lyrics BUY MP3 03:01 Act Bad With It lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:01 Act Bad With It
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:05 Dynamite lyrics BUY MP3 04:05 Dynamite lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:05 Dynamite
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:47 We Gonna Make You lyrics BUY MP3 03:47 We Gonna Make You lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:47 We Gonna Make You
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:23 Suite Azari lyrics BUY MP3 02:23 Suite Azari lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:23 Suite Azari
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:50 This Love lyrics BUY MP3 03:50 This Love lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:50 This Love
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:55 Midnight Creeper lyrics BUY MP3 05:55 Midnight Creeper lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:55 Midnight Creeper
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:02 Gettin' Ready For The Mardi Gras lyrics BUY MP3 03:02 Gettin' Ready For The Mardi Gras lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:02 Gettin' Ready For The Mardi Gras
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:49 I Don't Know lyrics BUY MP3 04:49 I Don't Know lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:49 I Don't Know
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:15 La Chica Dulce lyrics BUY MP3 05:15 La Chica Dulce lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:15 La Chica Dulce
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 08:43 Got To Get Ready lyrics BUY MP3 08:43 Got To Get Ready lyrics "GIFT MP3" 08:43 Got To Get Ready
This debut release by Troy and his band Orleans Ave seamlessly blends Jazz, Funk, Hip Hop, Pop, Brass Band, into one vibrant sound that can only be described as the Trombone Shorty Sound because only Troy & his band have full command of all these styles.
Bio / Background
Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews and his band Orleans Avenue are the next big thing out of New Orleans. While "Shorty" and his band are not yet out of their teens, their jazz/funk stylings are ferocious compositions that can hold court with anybody at anytime in any arena. The general music listening public wants to hear good tunes played with conviction. They want the musicians on the bandstand to believe in what they're playing, to be excited and to be capable of displaying an impressive array of musical chops. This combination of factors is more elusive than it might seem, for the forces of youthful exuberance and instrumental virtuosity are usually found at opposite ends of the spectrum: young performers are usually all about the energy and the potential, while veteran cats on the scene can play just about anything, but somehow they lost the fire along the way.
↓ more ↓Every once in a blue moon, though, along comes someone who can merge the forces of exuberance and virtuosity and unleash them on an unsuspecting public-the latest in this exclusive line of blue moon "specials" being Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews. While it may seem like hyperbole to place him in a class of folks like Stevie Wonder, Derek Trucks and Miles Davis (people who were musical shamen at a young age), Andrews belongs there and any doubts you may harbor will evaporate after seeing him perform. Andrews plays trombone and trumpet. He is a man to be reckoned with on both. In fact, even before he was a man, he was a man to be reckoned with in musical conversations. A product of New Orleans culturally rich Treme neighborhood, Andrews was a bandleader by the age of 6. That's right, at 6 years old, he was leading a band on the streets of the French Quarter, and they made so much damn scratch that "Shorty" had to invest in extra belts to wrap around his waist, for the weight of all the coins he was collecting was dragging his pants down. While Andrews was promenading around the streets of New Orleans as a youngster with his band in tow, he was also absorbing lessons at the knee of his older brother James, a dynamic musical performer known all around the city as the "Satchmo of the Ghetto." It is safe to say that by the time Andrews hit his early teens, he had a PhD in the ways of the streets, which you can still hear in his music. But he also has elegance and class, gleaned from his successful studies at the prestigious New Orleans Center for the Creative Arts (NOCCA) Institute (he is a recent graduate, joining the ranks of other grads like Wynton and Branford Marsalis, Harry Connick Jr., and Nicholas Payton). This collision of the streets and the classroom, the dive bar and the ballroom, well, it is powerful stuff, like Muhammad Ali taking Bridget Bardot out for a spin on the dance floor. The here and now finds Andrews a fully developed performer locked, loaded and ready to burst into national consciousness. His current project is a band called Orleans Avenue, a jazzy funk hybrid populated with musicians like Andrews who are young in age only. While no one in the band is of legal drinking age, this is no novelty act, no cute children butchering "Cherokee." Orleans Avenue brings the heat-a typicalperformance finds the audience wound up in merry confusion. Jaded jazz-heads shake their heads in disbelief while merry maidens shake what they got with glee, then things reach a fevered pitch when Andrews starts his circular breathing show-one note sustained in pristine beauty while the band vamps on a second line beat and sax player James Martin dances so ugly it's funky.This all comes back to the virtuosity vs. exuberance issue, which Orleans Avenue makes moot because these youngsters effortlessly combine both traits, weaving them together into something as natural as the pairing of a bowlegged woman with a knock-kneed man. If you are serious about booking serious music that is serious fun, it is time for you to get in touch with Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews and Orleans Avenue. Their performances transcend the boundaries of generation and classification-their music is high energy and high octane and it possesses that secret ingredient that tattoos a smile on an audience's collective face.
Orleans Avenue is:
Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews-trombone, trumpet, vocals, keyboards & percussion
Mike Ballard-Bass
Jonathon Batiste-Keyboards
James Martin-Sax
Joey Peebles-Drums
Special Guests:
ReBirth Brass Band - Phil Frazier, Keith Frazier, Derek "Khabuki" Shezbie, Derrek Tabb, Herb Stevens
Theresa Andersson
Karen Gant
5th Ward Weebie
Cheeky Blakk
June Yamagishi
Kevin O'Day
Chris Jones
Geechie Johnson
Jesse Paige
Andy Ambrose
John Bagnato
Eduardo Tozzatto
Thomas McDonald
Estabon "Big Chief Peppy" Eugene
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