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Bill Ortiz

Winter in America EP

(Left Angle; US: 16 Jan 2012; UK: 16 Jan 2012)

Although the idea was first conceived over two years ago, San Francisco trumpeter Bill Ortiz finds himself in the unlikely (and perhaps unwanted) situation of releasing the first cover of a Gil Scott-Heron song since the death of the legendary musician. “Winter in America” is the title and lead track of the EP taken from the forthcoming album Highest Wish. Originally recorded for Scott-Heron’s 1975 album The First Minute of a New Day, Ortiz felt “Winter in America’s” themes of social, geographical, and environmental oppression were as relevant today as they were then. He did, however, “want to bring it up to date musically”.


While I’ve always been wary of the labeling of Scott-Heron as the Godfather of Rap, the inclusion of Living Legends, err, hip-hop legend, the Grouch’s new verse strikes home. With a Roots-like backbeat, the Grouch’s sardonic lyrics cut deep through his lazy, easy going delivery, forcefully asking questions of the state of America in the 21st century and its position as the superpower in the world. Supporting the vocal delivery is the supreme, and understated, trumpet of Bill Ortiz. Bringing a jazzy hip-hop element to the track, Ortiz is clearly a player of some control and dexterity.


“I Still Believe” combines more social commentary, this time through a mixture of the spoken word of Dr Martin Luther King’s Nobel Peace Prize speech delivered by Linda Tillery of the Cultural Heritage Choir, and hip-hop by Zumbi, and recalls early 4Hero. Things go a bit flat with “Word Play” before a remix and radio edit close things out. The overriding impression though is of Bill Ortiz as a consummate band leader, giving free license to the vocalists he picks to work with and trusting his instincts. Gil would approve. I think.

Rating:

Founder of the Birmingham Popular Music Archive and Exec Producer of the documentary Made in Birmingham: Reggae Punk Bhangra (you may discern a common theme here!) I get way more pleasure than is acceptable from uncovering obscure facts and stories about music from my home city. The sight of some long forgotten band performing on stage, captured in a crappy in 1970's photo, is likely to send me over the edge! In my spare time, I work with some fellow popular music and radio fanatics in the Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research at Birmingham City University in the UK.


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Bill Ortiz - Winter in America
Related Articles
29 Feb 2012
Just as the winners of the war tend to write the history books, only survivors write memoirs. Nile Rodgers' Le Freak and Gil Scott-Heron's The Last Holiday.
By Gil Scott-Heron
24 Feb 2012
This posthumous memoir provides Scott-Heron’s keen insights into the music industry, the civil rights movement, modern America, governmental hypocrisy, and our wider place in the world.
28 Jun 2011
We thought Gil Scott-Heron was bulletproof. He wasn’t. We thought he’d know better. He didn’t. He was human. And I‘m New Here, not his greatest work, is his most human work.
By Alexander Billet
6 Jun 2011
In an irony that Gil himself must have appreciated, the return of revolution to the global landscape arrived at moment when mass media enjoy more dominance than ever.
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