Author Archives: misterott

‘In The Flow’ album launch at Mary’s Underground

Thursday Feb 25th

Mary’s Underground, Circular Quay

6pm and 9pm

tickets here

Line up:

Matt Ottignon (tenor, baritone saxophone), Ellen Kirkwood (trumpet), Daniel Pliner (keys), Ben Panucci (guitar), Dave Symes (bass), Carlos Adura (drums) with special guests: Loretta Palmeiro (tenor saxophone), Shannon Stitt (keys) and Dom Kirk (percussion)

Special Support: Zaynab WilsonPassionate Canadian-Trinidadian globe-trotting multi-instrumentalist Zaynab Wilson draws on jazz, soul, R&B and Afro-Caribbean music to craft a unique and dynamic style.

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Mister Ott returns to 505 Sep 1

Mister Ott returns to Venue 505 Saturday Sep 1st as part of Sydney Fringe 2018.

More info to come soon, but chuck it in your diary. You won’t want to miss as last years gig was killer. It will be exactly the same band as last time, only we will be featuring new material as well as stuff from our first 3 albums, all over two action packed sets.

 

Here’s a video from last year!

 

Mister Ott perform at Lazybones for Earshift Music Festival 2018

To celebrate 20 releases, the Earshift Music label will be throwing a party with some of its favourite bands over four nights! Come and get along for some music and partying

Sunday 6th May
The Strides and Mister Ott
Lazybones Lounge
294 Marrickville Rd, Marrickville
doors: 5:00pm, music from 7:30pm
https://www.trybooking.com/book/event?eid=372191&

EAR-Fest_03_Lazybones copy

Sydney performance Oct 14

MisterOttSingleShot505_FacebookBanner.jpgWe are performing in Sydney with Cope St Parade!
Date: Saturday October 14th
Venue : Venue 505, 280 Cleveland St, Surry Hills
Time 8pm-11pm
Cost $20
There should be cd’s of Mister Ott and Cope St Parade in your library.
Tickets available through the Venue 505 website http://venue505.com/gigs/mister-ott-1504233186.html
MISTER OTT 9:30pm
Matthew Ottignon -sax
Ellen Kirkwood – trumpet
Daniel Pliner – keys
Ben Panucci – guitar
Dave Symes – bass
Carlos Adura – drums
COPE ST PARADE 8:30pm
Sydney born and bred, The Parade does love songs like no others can.
The Cope Street Parade are a high energy Australian music ensemble. They blend spicy rhythms with unique song writing that span the genres of folk, pop, gypsy and swing. With tender ballads and rollicking dance numbers they capture the spirit and warmth of early music styles and successfully blur the lines between the contemporary and the classic. Influences include Louis Armstrong, Louis Prima, Father John Misty and Leadbelly.

New Reviews

Review: Echoesanddust

Here we are then at the arse end of the year, so the least we can do in 2016 is try and go out on something of a high. Sydney’s Mister Ott – signed to the exemplary Art As Catharsis label and led by the titular Matthew Ottignon are just the right kind of antidote you need for a year that has – in the opinion of all great thinkers and philosophers – gone tits up.

Flippant I may be – but in times when insularity, suspicion of ‘the other’, hate crimes, and racism all seem to be on the increase, Ottignon and his band of hip cats have recorded an expansive album that embraces world music and culture, that looks forward positively to a global society where unity, rather than division, are the main virtues of humanity. Positive, buoyant, Single Shot slides easily from Mulatu Astatke inspired Ethiopian Jazz through the relentlessly compulsive Afro-futurism of Head Hunters/Sunlight period Herbie Hancock.

This in itself would be enough for many, but the seven tracks on this record also take in Nik Turner style space-jazz (particularly his Space Fusion Odyssey which we reviewed last year) and the regimented fastidiousness of Fela Kuti or Steely Dan. Yes, there’s a touch of acid-jazz – that much maligned and mostly forgotten movement of the late 1990s but – god damn – you really want to get up and dance to this record. Stick it on at New Year’s Eve after a few drinks and see what happens (and send me pictures).

Starting with the musicianship – it’s near faultless – the interplay between Ottignon’s saxes and Ellen Kirwood’s Trumpet is a wonderful thing to hear when they go at it full bore – recalling, if you will, the heady jazz-funk experimentalism of Eddie Henderson. Daniel Pilner’s organ and Ben Panucci’s guitars provide plenty of spaced-out effects and trickery to keep the most jaded space-head happy, while Eden Ottignon’s bass is rock-solid throughout, providing not just the foundations of each track, but imbued with a great amount of P-Funk flare. There are a number of Bootsy Collins albums, no doubt, nestling in his collection somewhere. Finally, on more than one occasion do percussionist-drummers Carlos Adura and Dan Kennedy prove that they have a touch of the Billy Cobhams about them, there’s no doubting that they know their way around a kit – and then some. While these musicians are giving us a masterclass we should also give a nod to the production, making full use of the aural space with a terrific wall of sound.

Each track is upbeat and drenched in cosmic energy – from the hedonistic promise of the night in the opener ‘Blood Sky’ to the syncopated reggae blitz of ‘Dragon Majesty’ through to the closing Sun-Ra hat-tip ‘Space Will Win’, we’re drawn very willingly into a world where jazz-fusion rules, and where it becomes very difficult to believe that this album was made in 2016 rather than 1976. Standing out for me are the epic-workouts of ‘Snakebite’ and ‘Shakedown’, powerhouses of tracks that hit light speed early on and suck you along with them.

It’s all too short, and over too quickly in my opinion – but you won’t wear it out from repeated listening. I’d also say you really mustn’t pass by the opportunity to hear this music. Single Shot is certainly a strong contender for one of this year’s better jazz releases, has a great deal of crossover appeal, and transcends the genres from which it was born, and by which it was influenced.

I think you’ll love it.