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Basement Boys

The Basement Boys Presents Mudfoot Jones

(Savoy Jazz; US: 11 Apr 2006)

The music of the mythical Mudfoot Jones swings, boogies, rocks, and sways like a congregation ought to when it’s calling up the Spirit.  A creation of the cerebral, celebratory Basement Boys, this somewhat cranky old Louisiana-born blues drummer (his fictive personality will come through in spoken yet unobtrusive snippets) has an amazing talent for composition.  Jazz (including Latin and Afro-Caribbean), funk, blues and gospel found their way into the big toe of Mudfoot’s pedal-stompin’ foot; suiting, given his name is derived from his proclivity as a child for banging and beating on all things that made a good, loud sound.  Oh, yes, the Basement Boys will have you stomping your feet, too—and wiggling your backside, and for those who are meant to be moved, swaying, during some of the sweeter moments.  Seems Mudfoot’s roots are deep in the swamp, but his head is almost as high up as heaven.  His spirit was conjured on a flight to Japan; so, too those of St. Germain, Mr. Scruff, and John Lee Hooker.  During that flight some of the best earthly sounds were heard, way up there in the stratosphere, coming through crystal clear over the roar of jet engines; the spirit of Man was down there in the dirt, singing of his glorious musical history.  Our scribes needed only put their proverbial pens to paper.  Mmm, mmm.  Love the smell of that sweet, swampy funk.

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As Senior Editor for PopMatters, Karen Zarker finds herself working with the very kind of writers she loves to read; writers with smarts, wit and style on par with those of The Guardian, The New Yorker, Harper's and Granta, just to name a few of the publications she consumes regularly. Having served as critical reader and editor for her professors while in college, she is devotedly a writer's reader and a writer's editor, and is absolutely thrilled that she gets to work at PopMatters. A graduate of Columbia College (Chicago, that is) with an undergraduate degree in English, Journalism and Liberal Education, she is a post-graduate reader of most everything but minds.


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