Hypnotic Brass Ensemble

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (95 ratings)
Hypnotic Brass Ensemble album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 52:23

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

This is fantastic...

Anglogalaico

War is a great track. Also check out the Hynotics on the Gorillaz's new album

user avatar

Fiercely brass and driving.

SumFin

Ballicki Bone, War and the title track , Hypnotic, are the highlights.

user avatar

NOBS brass

humans

This is pretty good, but NOBS Brass Band out of Richmond, VA is way better. Check them out if you dig this brass band kind of sound....

user avatar

"War"

Atlaight!

is the slammingest slammer ever.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Minimalism and Its Discontents

By Jeff Morris, eMusic Contributor

Minimalist music, as it came to be known, grew out of the New York downtown scene in the 60's. Its steady pulse and consonant structure offered a welcome repast from the somewhat alienating serial music which seemed to have run its course. But what influenced those cascading patterns, textured drones and shifting rhythmic landscapes? And where have others taken minimalism beyond its formalist constraints. This program will trace a dotted line from the influences to the… more »

0

eMusic Loves Honest Jon's

By eMusic Editorial Staff, eMusic Contributor

Has any musician ever demonstrated more impeccable taste than Blur's Damon Albarn? When it comes to finding strange, vital, compelling, and indelible new sounds, Albarn is like a coolness divining rod, and the label he formed in tandem with several highly influential UK record-shop owners, Honest Jon's, is one of the most reliably head-turning in existence. From the compilations they curate, which unearth unheard seams of funk, soul, and indigenous music from the world's must… more »

They Say All Music Guide

“Hypnotic” may be somewhat misleading: the word suggests something lulling and gently soothing, but the music made by this band of brothers is fiery and dynamic, anything but sleepy. While occasionally reminiscent of more established brass band traditions (Balkan, New Orleans), with a hint of soul and a dash of Afro-beat’s frenzied intensity, their music is best described as jazzy instrumental funk: compositionally sophisticated, highly contrapuntal, and infused with thorny harmonics undoubtedly picked up from their father — avant-jazz notable Kelan Phil Cohran — but always rhythmically direct and unfailingly tight. Anchored by sturdy, simple drum parts and Tycho Cohran’s supple, syncopated sousaphone basslines, the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble blow dense chord clusters, indelibly soulful unison melodies, and tuneful interlocking counterlines, with only occasional focused soloing and emphasis on accessibility and groove. The album — their first widely released full-length, which features re-recordings of many selections from their earlier self-released CD-Rs — is consistently strong though fairly stylistically homogenous, containing mostly upbeat, party-ready tunes with either straight-ahead funk or Afro-inflected grooves, but there are a couple of curve balls in the lush, languorous (and yes, plausibly hypnotic) “Jupiter” and the especially manic, Balkan-esque Moondog cover “Rabbit Hop” (which reappears at the end with the addition of some spacy, wobbly electronic sounds). The only notable flaw in the flow comes toward the end of “Party Started,” with some crowd-hyping chants that come off as moronically fratty — though the group shouldn’t necessarily avoid vocals altogether: by contrast, the street-corner scatting that closes the slinky “Ballicki Bone” is a special highlight. As a whole, it makes for an exceedingly spirited and largely unique listening experience., Rovi – K. Ross Hoffman

more »