New York rocks to London's ace percussionist Yussef Dayes


By Ashe O

New York, Aug 4 (IANS): New Yorkers were treated to a delightful pulsating vibrant jazz music at its famed Manhattan night club, Sound of Brazil (SoB), at the "Yussef Dayes Experience" with hundreds lining up two streets to watch the live performance of the south London ace drummer and his band.

The show was scheduled for 7 p.m., and people arrived as early as 5:30 p.m. to get a front row seat. However, it was only after 7:30 p.m. that the night club's black liveried security men allowed people to enter. Drinks and snacks were floating around the gathering to keep them entertained, all standing, and waiting for an outstanding performer, who could become an icon in the next 10 years.

The waiting was for a good two hours during which the sponsors played reverberating pulsating reggae and rap songs blaring from the club's huge wall mounted speakers. The delay was due to the arrival of the band from Chicago to New York and cruising through the notorious traffic from the airport to the venue.

Yussef kept the gathering dancing to footsies to the band even as his base guitarist, Rocco Paladino, Sax player and Keyboards artist and Bongo drums puncher played nonstop for over near two hours except for a small break. When they came back, they kept the audience entranced with their new composition, which Yussef said, was a thought from Chicago and a special one for the big apple New Yorkers. He is scheduled to perform in Philadelphia next and a number of other US cities.

What shot Yussef to international fame?

Present at the embryonic stage of the 2010s South London jazz scene, Yussef is a talented drummer whose expressive and characterful style was first heard by many as part of United Vibrations. Formed with his brothers Kareem and Ahmad, alongside their friend Wayne Francis II, the act fused Afro-beat stylings with forward-looking jazz and rock elements, gaining acclaim for their second LP, 2016's The Myth of the Golden Ratio. That same year brought the release of Black Focus, a collaboration with Kamaal Williams, under the name Yussef Kamaal, that saw them named Best Breakthrough Act at 2017's Jazz FM awards, says his biographer James Wilkinson.

In 2018, he released "Love Is the Message," his first solo single, before What Kinda Music, a collaborative Blue Note LP with local singer/songwriter Tom Misch, reached the Top Five of the UK album charts in May 2020.

Born in South East London, Yussef was given his first drum kit at age four by his bass-playing Jamaican father. While his mother played country music and '60s pop around the house, his father listened to reggae and jazz vinyl. This eclectic mix of genres wove into his rhythmic sensibility, but it was the opportunity to study, at ten years old, under the tutelage of fusion icon Billy Cobham that secured his interest in chasing professional musicianship. The grime and hip-hop loved by his friends at school, as well as the jungle produced by his elder brother Ahmad, additionally went on to inspire his playing style, says Wilkinson.

Even prior to Yussef reaching his teenage years, United Vibrations played gigs in areas of South London -- such as Peckham and Camberwell -- that would later become synonymous with the burgeoning jazz scene swooped upon by the UK press and beyond.

In 2009, they set out their stall with the single "Ra!"; as its name suggests, the song was inspired by their spiritual jazz idol, Sun Ra. This eventually formed part of their 2011 debut album, Galaxies Not Ghettos, and further evidence of their influences could be found on the 2012 EP We Never Die. The release included tributes to both John Coltrane and Gil Scott-Heron and featured an appearance on the lead track by grime MC Conrad Kira.

In 2015, Yussef and Kamaal Williams formed Yussef Kamaal and collaborated on funk-inspired sessions with Shabaka Hutchings, released as the Black Focus LP the following year. The record was soon certified silver, which led to an invite to play at South by Southwest in 2017; however, the performance was cancelled when a travel ban prevented Yussef from entering the US.

After the duo split, his career hit a slower pace, but over the next couple of years, he released a handful of tracks in collaboration with artists such as Alfa Mist, Charlie Stacey, and Rocco Palladino. When Yussef crossed paths with Misch at a session for the Loyle Carner single "Angel", the pair stayed on in the studio to jam. Unbeknownst to them at the time, these tracks would form the initial recordings for 2020's What Kinda Music, Yussef's first charting album.

 

  

Top Stories


Leave a Comment

Title: New York rocks to London's ace percussionist Yussef Dayes



You have 2000 characters left.

Disclaimer:

Please write your correct name and email address. Kindly do not post any personal, abusive, defamatory, infringing, obscene, indecent, discriminatory or unlawful or similar comments. Daijiworld.com will not be responsible for any defamatory message posted under this article.

Please note that sending false messages to insult, defame, intimidate, mislead or deceive people or to intentionally cause public disorder is punishable under law. It is obligatory on Daijiworld to provide the IP address and other details of senders of such comments, to the authority concerned upon request.

Hence, sending offensive comments using daijiworld will be purely at your own risk, and in no way will Daijiworld.com be held responsible.