When
the Brothers Groove, the People Listen
The Brothers Groove were not long ago a guitar-less trio with
a smoking-hot original sound and a penchant for packing nightclubs
near downtown Detroit. Their unconventional mix of instrumentation
(Todd Glass on drums, James Simonson on bass, and Chris Codish
singing and playing keyboards) may have drawn a few comparisons
to the Ben Folds Five and Medeski Martin & Wood, but that
quickly changed when guitarist Erik Gustafson joined the brotherhood.
His presence certainly hasn't detracted, as the Brothers are
collectively nominated for seven Detroit Music Awards this year,
including Outstanding Funk Group. The ceremony is to be held on
April 19th, 2002. Their debut album, "Clamp It Down",
was recorded in the summer of 2000 and received similar accolade
at last year's awards, picking up six. Their infectious grooves
and Chris's quick lyrics were brought together on the well-produced
CD that caught the attention of those living well outside Detroit.
Even beyond Michigan's borders, in fact.
Each band member's roots reach far and deep: vocalist Chris Codish
has played the keys since he was five years old, and spent four
years touring Europe and recorded five albums with Johnnie Bassett
and the Blues Insurgents, also playing alongside Larry McCray,
Lucky Peterson, Martha Reeves and the Vandellas. James Simonson
has played with Joe Williams, Arturo Sandoval and Carol Channing.
Erik Gustafson also lends his guitar to the jazz outfit Blue Dog,
who received their own nomination this year for Detroit's Outstanding
Modern Jazz Group. And Todd Glass is an obvious talent on the
drum kit, proven time and again at their blistering live shows.
His energy drives the band through a captivating mélange
of modern jazz, funk, rock and pop, including a few highly eclectic
covers. "There ain't nothing like a soul food stew,"
sings Chris, on the album's explosive opener, "You're a Pressure
Cooker!"
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John Popper joins
the Brothers Groove onstage at the
SXSW Festival in Austin, TX (March 2002)
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The Brothers have recently become masters of collaboration, with
talent from across the nation joining them onstage. They recently
finished a tour that included a stop here in Traverse City, opening
for the Howling Diablos and legendary funkateers from Los Angeles,
Fishbone. They played with ex-Sponge frontman Vinnie Dombrowski,
currently in a rockabilly outfit called the Orbitsuns. And in
March, the band traveled to Austin, Texas to participate in the
SXSW (south by southwest) Music Convention where an enthusiastic
John Popper, of Blues Traveler, joined them onstage for an extended
take on Gil Scot-Heron's anthem, "The Revolution Will Not
Be Televised". Popper shouted to the crowd after finishing
his performance, "What do you think about this band? These
guys ... rock!"
On April 1st, fans of the Groove were shocked when midway through
their second set, a tour bus appeared outside of the club, at
5th Avenue Billiards in Royal Oak. Teen heartthrobs, N'SYNC, had
just finished an earlier show at the Palace and were followed
into the bar by a host of bodyguards and excited fans. Tipped
off to their band by Simonson's friend, TV Actor and Singer Tony
Lucca, N'SYNC had an interest in catching the hottest act in town.
They all stayed to take in the vibe and watch as Lucca joined
the Brothers Groove onstage for a rendition of Stevie Wonder's
"Superstition". But the night took its strangest turn
when N'SYNC's JC Chavez took up Codish's offer to join the Brothers
Groove onstage! An impromptu version of the Brothers Groove song,
"One Two Three", saw JC free-styling over the two chord
grind. "It was cool because he had to improvise; no choreography,
no routines, just get up on stage and make real music with real
cats," said Codish. "We were just laying down a fat
slow funky groove and he sang some vocal riffs over it, and he
sounded great!" Though JC was heckled by some of the Brothers
Groove faithful, Codish quieted them by saying, "You're just
booing 'cause you can't sing like that." The Brothers were
every bit as surprised as the fans, though it proved to be no
April Fool's joke.
It's astounding to see a band so accomplished after only one
album and a limited edition Christmas single ("Funky Santa",
the first track recorded with Gustafson on guitar). But with so
many years of experience between them, the Brothers Groove seem
likely to push it ever further. And a great sense of humor never
hurts. With such an innovative approach to the music, it should
be inspiring to see where, as a quartet, they turn their talents
next.
by Mike Dudek
The Brothers Groove play on April 19th and 20th at the Loading
Dock in Traverse City. You can also hear the Brothers play a live,
on-air performance at WNMC, 90.7fm on Saturday, April 20th at
4:00 pm.
2002 Detroit Music Awards
(Nominations)
Outstanding Funk Artist/group
Outstanding Blues/R&B Instrumentalist Chris Codish, organ/keyboard
Outstanding Urban/Funk Songwriter Chris Codish, Brothers Groove
Outstanding Urban/Funk Instrumentalist Chris Codish, keyboards
Outstanding Urban/Funk Instrumentalist James
Simonson, bass
Outstanding Urban/Funk Vocalist Chris Codish, Brothers Groove
Outstanding Modern Jazz Artist/Group Blue Dog
This article originally appeared in the Northern Express
Weekly --April 18, 2002