Album info

Album-Release:
2020

HRA-Release:
28.08.2020

Album including Album cover

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FLAC 96 $ 15.80
  • 1 We Are the Greatest (Instrumental) 00:35
  • 2 Mr. Game Speaks: I Am a Winner 03:54
  • 3 We Are the Greatest 01:33
  • 4 Mr. Game: Success is My Middle Name 01:00
  • 5 They / Let's Call Them This 02:45
  • 6 Mr. Game: Beware! They're Going to Cause Problems 00:45
  • 7 The Ever Fonky Lowdown in 4 02:56
  • 8 Mr. Game: Talk is a Waste of Time 00:52
  • 9 I Don't Like Nobody but Myself 02:14
  • 10 Mr. Game: We Must Strike First! (Trust Me) 01:36
  • 11 The Drums of War 02:28
  • 12 Mr. Game: The Mandates of Our Democracy 00:16
  • 13 Consideration Blues / I Know I Must Fight / The Drums of War Return 03:30
  • 14 Mr. Game: Who is We? 00:18
  • 15 What Would the Savior Think? 01:25
  • 16 Mr. Game: Winners Don't Reflect, We Celebrate 01:14
  • 17 Some for Me, None for You 02:05
  • 18 Mr. Game: We're Number One! 01:08
  • 19 The Ever Fonky Lowdown in 5 02:59
  • 20 Mr. Game: They Deserved Everything They Got 02:09
  • 21 Night Trader 02:27
  • 22 Mr. Game: They, Too, Want to Be Winners 02:08
  • 23 Mr. Good Time Man 04:23
  • 24 Mr. Game: Shame is for Losers 00:52
  • 25 Because I Want to, Because I Like to, Because I Can 02:05
  • 26 Mr. Game: a Ridiculous Plea 00:06
  • 27 I Wants My Ice Cream 01:41
  • 28 Mr. Game: Somebody's Got to Rule 00:04
  • 29 The Ever Fonky Lowdown in 6 03:00
  • 30 Reprise: What Would the Savior Think? 00:38
  • 31 The Ever Fonky Lowdown in 5 & 6 03:35
  • 32 Mr. Game: Your First Prize 02:38
  • 33 Isms, Schisms 02:29
  • 34 Mr. Game: Your Second Prize 03:28
  • 35 Yes / No 02:32
  • 36 Where Has the Love Gone? 01:05
  • 37 Mr. Game: Your Third Prize 03:29
  • 38 Consider This 'Bout the Filth We Love 03:26
  • 39 Mr. Game: Your Fourth Prize 03:38
  • 40 Everybody Wear They Mask 02:56
  • 41 Mr. Game: You Love These Prizes Because You Live Them 00:12
  • 42 The Ever Fonky Lowdown in 7 03:35
  • 43 Mr. Game: Your Wildcard 03:13
  • 44 I Got a Nagging Feeling 01:42
  • 45 Mr. Game: The Freedom Fighter: Fannie Lou Hamer 01:33
  • 46 The Ballad of Fannie Lou: Part 1 03:28
  • 47 The Ballad of Fannie Lou: Part 2 03:32
  • 48 Mr. Game: Just Let the Memories of Them Die 01:11
  • 49 Why Do We Pick Slavery over Freedom? 00:46
  • 50 Mr. Game: Your Last Prize (The Best One) 04:59
  • 51 Reprise: The Ever Fonky Lowdown in 4 02:57
  • 52 Reprise: I Wants My Ice Cream 01:02
  • 53 I Know I Must Fight 01:05
  • Total Runtime 01:51:37

Info for The Ever Fonky Lowdown

“You really just want to be entertained,” says Mr. Game, the sly hustler-narrator played by acclaimed actor Wendell Pierce (The Wire, Treme, Jack Ryan) who presides over Wynton Marsalis’s new masterpiece The Ever Fonky Lowdown. Combining droll commentary with soulful, big band-backed vocals, the Lowdown is definitely entertaining—but it also brilliantly reveals Marsalis’s incisive, panoramic view of modern society.

Featuring the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra and guest vocals from Camille Thurman, Ashley Pezzotti, Christie Dashiell, and Doug Wamble, the Lowdown is a funky jazz parable for 2020. It covers terrain from football to politics, from power to poverty, from love and romance to betrayal and corruption; it will make you dance and think. The Ever Fonky Lowdown is a horn-fueled survey of the political malaise and cultural decay now plaguing America—and how Marsalis suggests we might be able to rise above the structures that have been holding us back for centuries.

JLCO with Wynton Marsalis




Jazz at Lincoln Center
The mission of Jazz at Lincoln Center is to entertain, enrich and expand a global community for jazz through performance, education, and advocacy. We believe jazz is a metaphor for Democracy. Because jazz is improvisational, it celebrates personal freedom and encourages individual expression. Because jazz is swinging, it dedicates that freedom to finding and maintaining common ground with others. Because jazz is rooted in the blues, it inspires us to face adversity with persistent optimism.

Wynton Marsalis
is an internationally acclaimed musician, composer and bandleader, an educator and a leading advocate of American culture. He has created and performed an expansive range of music from quartets to big bands, chamber music ensembles to symphony orchestras and tap dance to ballet, expanding the vocabulary for jazz and classical music with a vital body of work that places him among the world’s finest musicians and composers.

Always swinging, Marsalis blows his trumpet with a clear tone, a depth of emotion and a unique, virtuosic style derived from an encyclopedic range of trumpet techniques. When you hear Marsalis play, you’re hearing life being played out through music.

Marsalis’ core beliefs and foundation for living are based on the principals of jazz. He promotes individual creativity (improvisation), collective cooperation (swing), gratitude and good manners (sophistication), and faces adversity with persistent optimism (the blues). With his evolved humanity and through his selfless work, Marsalis has elevated the quality of human engagement for individuals, social networks and cultural institutions throughout the world.

Rubén Blades
Panamanian-born Rubén Blades (1948– ), another giant of salsa, is a multi-talented celebrity whose interests range from music to film to politics. He grew up in Panama, the child of professional musicians, and was trained as a lawyer. Cuban music and Beatles songs were his musical inspirations, and anti-US student demonstrations sparked his political awareness. Blades immigrated to New York in 1974 with $100 in his pocket and found a job in the mailroom at Fania Records. He was soon signed by the record label and began to perform as a member of the Fania All Stars, singing alongside trombonist Willie Colón and vocalist Héctor Lavoe. Blades’ first solo Fania record—produced by Colón—established an alliance between the two artists.

When the Blades-Colón partnership ended in 1982, Blades moved to Elektra Records (now Sony). He formed a new synthesizer-flavored band called Seis del Solar (Six from the Tenements) and released a crossover album called Buscando América (Looking for America), which featured doo-wop, reggae, Cuban, and rap influences. Blades’ experimentations with salsa have sometimes employed elements of jazz and rock as well as synthesizers to replace the traditional horn-led sound. He has collaborated with artists as diverse as Joe Jackson and Linda Ronstadt, and in 1988 he released an album in English called Nothing But the Truth. In 1996 he won a Grammy for his album La Rosa de Los Vientos (Rose of the Winds), and two years later sang alongside rising Latin superstar Marc Anthony in Paul Simon’s Broadway musical, The Capeman.

When Blades stresses social and political issues in his lyrics he reflects the Latin American Nueva Canción (New Song) and Cuban Nueva Trova movements, which blend poetry and politics. According to critic Anthony De Palma, “The words Blades sings are not of partying, but of protest, of indignance against greed, corruption, and spiritual sloth.” 19 Blades’ songs have sometimes stirred up controversy. His 1980 song “Tiburón” (Shark) condemned superpowers for interfering with the affairs of smaller countries. Angry conservative listeners interpreted the song as criticism of US involvement in Panama (which it was), and the song was banned on many of Miami’s Latin music radio stations. For a time, Blades even had to wear a bullet-proof vest when performing in the city.

Blades is a multi-talented artist who has pursued multiple career directions. In 1984 he put his music career on hold to study for a master’s degree in international law at Harvard University. Following that he went into film acting and won roles in several major films. Blades also founded a political party in Panama and ran for president in 1994. He came in second with almost a quarter of the vote. He continues to make music, perform, and blend genres. Blades is fully bilingual and translates all the lyrics on his records so that multiple audiences can appreciate the poetry of his work.



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