Category Archives: News

The Musicians

Dr. Cornel West – spoken word. West is an American philosopher, political activist, social critic, author, and public intellectual (http://www.cornelwest.com/).

On the musical front, West recorded a recitation of John Mellencamp‘s song “Jim Crow” for inclusion on the singer’s box set On the Rural Route 7609 in 2009.

In 2010, he completed recording with the Cornel West Theory, a hip hop band endorsed by West.[57] He has also released several hip-hop/soul/spoken word albums. In 2001, West released his first album, Sketches of My Culture. Street Knowledge followed in 2004. In 2007, West released Never Forget: A Journey of Revelations, his third album which included collaborations with the likes of Prince, Talib Kweli, Jill Scott, Andre 3000, KRS-One, and the late Gerald Levert. West appeared on Immortal Technique’s song “Sign of the Times”, which appeared on the 2011 album The Martyr. In 2012, he was featured on Brother Ali’s song “Letter to My Countrymen”, which appeared on the album Mourning in America and Dreaming in Color.

Genetic Drugs – electronics, various instruments, DJ, radio host & producer (https://geneticdrugs.de/) .

Hubl Greiner – electronics (https://www.hubl.com)

Hubl Greiner is a musician, composer and filmmaker. He is best known for his work with the rock group THE BLECH. Hubl has received international awards (including a nomination for the Austrian Grammy, Amadeus) and has toured worldwide for more than 40 years. He has participated in 65 CD productions. 

Paul Amrod – Fender Rhodes,  poet and composer (https://www.amrod.de/)

As a youth, Paul Amrod sang in a choir under the direction of Leornard Bernstein. He later received his master’s diploma with emphasis on composition at the famous Juilliard School in New York. He was a pianist in the New York jazz scene for many years and performed on stage with Janis Joplin, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, NRBQ, Fred Wesley, Pee Wee Ellis, Maceo Parker, etc. https://youtu.be/Ghqezh29oXI

David Belmont – dobro, guitar and producer (https://windwatermusic.com/)

Since the 1970’s, when David Belmont was active in Manhattan’s rock and performance art scenes, he has been writing backgrounds for poetry, mime, theatre, film and dance. His work includes collaborations with poet Jose Angel Figueroa (Transfigurations, performed at Joseph Papp’s Anspacher Theatre), mime-dancer-director Marc Maislen of Phasa Beam Arts (improvisations at the Cambridge (MA) River Festival, Lincoln Center Out of Doors and the Counterweight Festival, NYC; Angels Without Wings, Ebert Artists House, NYC; Ellipsis, Long Island University’s Triangle Theatre, commissioned by Isaac Asimov for the Futures Conference) and holographer-magician Rick Silberman (Solid Deceptions, Museum of Holography, NYC; Invisible Cities CD).

Alongside his work with SoSaLa, David has led his own band, The WindWater Ensemble, since 1999. He has independently produced 26 CDs of his work. He is currently the co-musical director (along with Michael Walsh) of the Castillo Theatre, located on West 42nd Street in Manhattan, NYC.

He is currently Vice President of Musicians for Musicians, a professional association and musicians’ rights organization, #MakingMusicIsAProfession.

Photo courtsy of Baba Don

Baba Donn Eaton Babatunde – percussionist (https://www.babadonn.com/)

His recording career is as equally varied as it vast; the jazz idiom, rhythm and blues, and most African derived percussion styles are represented in his discography. He is a featured member of the esteemed Last Poets.

He has long been acknowledged as one of New York City’s master teachers of African Drumming and the rhythms of the Diaspora in the Americas. Baba Donn Eaton Babatunde is presently on faculty at the Harlem school Of the Arts for over 25 years, teaching all ages from 4 years of age to adults.

He has performed and recorded with The Dance Theatre of Harlem, Alvin Ailey Dance Theatre, Maurice Hines, Gregory Hines, Andy Williams, and Chuck Davis Dance theatre, Pattie Labelle, Philycia Rashad, Choreographers Frank Hatchet, Geoffrey Holder, Louis Johnson and many more. Babs Donn Eaton Babatunde has recorded with many Jazz artist Donald Brown, Joe Henderson, Jason Linder, Tyrone Jefferson, James Spaulding, Ron Carter, Gorge Clinton, Pharaoh Sanders, and The Last Poets.

He’s also the CEO and founder of the Percussion Arts Projects. As a teaching artist he has also conducted workshops throughout the Metropolitan, Tri State Area, with many institutions such as The Harlem School of The Arts, John Jay College, Arts Connections, African Horizon, Pyramid Dance Company, Arts Horizon, Yaffa Productions, North Hampden High School and Jack and Jill Inc.

Kaveh Haghtalab – kemancheh and drums (https://www.facebook.com/kaveh.haghtalab)

Haghtalab is an Iranian kamancheh player and drummer. He grew up listening to his parents performing Persian classical music. At the age of 14, he began to perform with various music ensembles at concerts and festivals in Iran. Subsequently he was selected to become a member of “The Center For Preservation and Propagation of Iranian Music”, and won the first title in Fajr International Music Festival. He came to the U.S in 2012 to further study western music and received a diploma from collective school music, and has been performing and touring around the U.S with different bands and also as a solo performer since then.

David Shively – Hungarian cimbalom

Solo appearances throughout North America and Europe include Spectrum XXI (Bucharest), Dia:Beacon, EMPAC, Miller Theatre, Performa, SONiC Festival, the American Academy in Rome, Other Minds, SALT Festival (Victoria), Staatsoper Stuttgart, Wittner Tage für neue Kammermusik, and Münchener Biennale. Now based in British Columbia, from 2004-2018 he was co-director of New York City’s Either/Or Ensemble.  Other ongoing projects include the noise/drone band UllU, Balkan and Carpathian folk musics, and a wide range of work as an improviser.  Recent commissions from Dia:Beacon, Donna Uchizono Dance Group, and Harvestworks.  Recordings for Starkland, New World, Tzadik, Mode, Quecksilber, Braxton House, and other labels in addition to works for film, sound installation, and radio broadcast…

Lautaro Burgos – cymbals

Lautaro Burgos, born in Chaco, Argentina. Studied music in Escuela De Musica Contemporanea in Buenos Aires. Curious of traditions and cultures, in the search of blending roots with contemporary modern sounds. Played with traditional figures of the Argentine folk and tango, such as Maria Volonte, Marina Santillan, Broder Bastos and Sebastian Ibarra, as well as avant-garde jazz with trio del futuro and Javier Lozano. Big bands Kaymanta Kayman and Banda Hermetica and rock bands Papas Negra and Ojo Iman. As a session drummer worked and recorded for renown artists Ruben Goldin, Emanuel Arias, Guadalupe Luccia, Maru Rosa, MAURI.

Burgos first made his mark in NYC as a cast member of Fuerza Bruta with continued successes with as both a session player and side man In New York. He took master classes with Tony Malabi and Ari Hoenig. His works include co-leading electronic Cumbia band Darling Del Oeste, rock bands Foxy and Quickly Quietly. Vital part of traditional Mexican Afro-Amerindian music group Jarana Beat, “new world trash music” with SoSaLa, Brazilian influenced bands JBabun and Trio Matapuercos. Collaborations with afrobeat band People’s Champs. Session work, recording and touring with LaLA BrooksDiego Garcia, David Bronson and Richard Shepherd. Session works for Perfect Mixes Studios, The Mission Studios, Studio G and others.

Mike Irish – keys, recording engineer, producer and co-owner of Shifted Recording in Brooklyn, New York.

Masamba Diop – tama.

Massamba Diop is a master of the tama or talking drum from Senegal, West Africa, and the co founder of The Senegal-America Project. He has worked with Afro-pop superstar Baaba Maal and his Daande Lenol Orchestra since its inception over twenty years ago.

Mar Gueye – sabar.

Born in Tivaoune, Senegal, master drummer Mar Gueye is the son of Bouboucar Gueye and N’dambe Thioune, both of respected musical families known as N’guewel.

Bob Romanowski – guitar.

He currently works as a music therapist in Berlin, Germany. He studied Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology at Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Franfurt am Main and was trained as a music therapist at the  Institut für Musiktherapie in Berlin-Zehlendorf.

SoSaLa “Nu World Trashed” Quotes

“Oh, congratulations! I love it! I’m blessed to be on it! Indeed! I am blessed to groove with the grand artists who made this song! It is soulful, powerful and political! I love it!!” – The Blues Man Cornel West (Thursday, June 11, 2020)

“You got your thing…Great stuff my man – and the message is clear – You got a great sound. Should always be out front (which it is here-nice mix).” – David Liebman (Aug 5th, 2020)

“My man—In a different historical time this would/could be a hit. You combined the various elements with fresh sounds and your soloing is excellent and appropriate. The moods a bit doom and gloom but not all. This music is what people are listening to these days. Good job.” – David Liebman (January 23, 2021)

“Sohrab Saadat Ladjevardi has put together a recording of Music with many messages from his perspectives of life today. Music from his Heart & Soul. That’s what’s it’s all about” – Joe Lovano (Aug. 23, 2020)

“Sohrab invited me to join SoSaLa just after he and I were part of a musical/spoken word ensemble that performed Even Under Bitterness, a dramatization of poetry by Otto Rene Castillo directed by Hans Melzer, at New York’s Castillo Theatre in May 2016. He played brilliantly during the run and could even converse with the director in German.

I accepted his invitation right away. I found Sohrab to be a top flight improviser, with a great sound on both the tenor and soprano saxophones, as well as a sensitive listener and co-creator of the spontaneous compositions that were the basis of that show. Our styles meshed well. I am a musician (dobro, guitar, percussion) with roots in American rock, blues and jazz and world influences ranging from India and Persia to Japan and China. Sohrab is world citizen/musician conversant in Persian music with a strong dash of Japanese music thrown in, owing no doubt to his decades living in Japan.

The other thing I found attractive about SoSaLa was the range of international musicians associated with the band. I got to play a number of times with Kaveh Haghtalab (kamancheh), and Baba Don Eaton (percussion). Big fun.

And Sohrab, the president of Musicians for Musicians, walks his talk. He paid all the musicians for all rehearsals and performances.

The only downside for me being in SoSaLa is that we don’t get enough gigs.” – David Belmont (Aug16, 2020) 

“On my round the world trip in 2003 I met SoSaLa in Tokyo, where I had two gigs. He is a gentle intelligent person who helped me out in my ‘Lost in Translation’ situation with Japanese culture. Since then we’re connected on FB, where I discovered his fabulous Tenor Sax improvisation, recorded live in the streets of New York City. The melodies reminded me of Ethio Jazz, surprisingly SoSaLa shared this impression, but dedicated it to his mentor Ornette Coleman. As my production skill is focused on street recordings all over the world, I was inspired of the great quality, sound and mood of the performance. SoSaLa allowed me to use it, in order to create a completely new studio track, with a verse-refrain-solo structure, arrangement, playing all other instruments and mixing a demo. His positive reaction on the result encouraged me to compose two more tracks with another SoSaLa improvisation. I’m happily sharing this inspiring collaboration on my album: “Waves for the Universe” © Pharma Tunes 2020 – UPC 194491489939” – Genetic Drugs (Aug 26, 2020)

“The latest album by SoSaLa “Nu Word Trashed” is a reflective, hopeful, and confrontational expression of life in New York City in a time of pandemic and unrest. Sohrab blends the musical vocabulary of Persian Classical, Japanese Enka, and Free Jazz into an improvisational exploration of many traditions, while also painting a soundscape of what New Yorkers have heard for the past 6 months: sirens, cheers, and demands for social justice. It is beautifully human in all its spontaneity and vibrancy.” – Chris St. Hilaire of The London Souls, Sinkane, and founder of the Sound Mind Collective (SMC) (September 16, 2020)

“Love your new recording.” – Arturo O’Farrill (September 19, 2020)

“Sohrab Saadat Ladjevardi is unique in the space and time continuum we call jazz.  His latest work is encyclopedic in it’s scope and understanding of styles, textures and aesthetics.  A savvy composer and instrumentalist, he is also a master improviser who’s music can rightly be called music of the world and of the future.  For Sohrab, affixing your art to a fixed point in space is not possible, he sees the connectedness and the landscape of what is possible when you come from, appreciate and traverse many musical worlds.  Thank you Sohrab for this wide-open direction you point all of us into.” – Arturo O’Farrill (November 30, 2020)

“Regardless of his many administrative duties, Sohrab has wonderful creative abilities upon reviewing his album.

  1. Welcome Nu World: Sounds a bit as if you’re wandering “where to go” (first section).
  2. Enough Is Enough: An “out and out” protest. (I like that.)
  3. Mystical Full Moon (For Ornette) (Sounds like you played 3 or 4 of those instruments yourself.)
  4. Sad Sake: Creates a nice oriental flavor.
  5. Anybody Out There ( I particularly like the last few statements at the end.)
  6. What’s What Live (“B” is a good key for the tenor sax.)
  7. My Shushtari: (Nice playing “in tune”.)
  8. Anybody Out There (Lift Off) Actually …nice effect (with two lines being “slightly out of tune at times)
  9. Intro Music – Good start with string instr. at beginning. (This one could use “more energy”, though there are a few “wild statements” near the end.) – Billy Harper (September 24, 2020)

“Salam Sohrab,
I just played your latest SoSala album and its bold, beautiful, loud and clear. Protestingly honest during coviditude and notably welcomed on my hi fidelity or buds.
Award winning cultural advocacy abounds when “Nu World Trashed’ is administered through both ears. This music can be effectively used as an antidote for melancholia, activist burn out or PTSD.
Side effects: Detoxification, inspiration and further cleansing of the liver.
I cooked, danced, i zoned and feasted on every song.” – Stephen Johnson (December 24, 2020)

“Sohrab Saadat Ladjevardi AKA SoSaLa

سهراب سعادت لاجوردی سَکسیفونیست ، آهنگساز ، تهیه کننده وفعال حقوق موسقیدانان متولد ۱۹۵۳ در سوییس از والدین ایرانیست. موسیقی را با پیانو شروع میکند، بعد درامز ، گیتار و در نهایت با سَکسیفون و جَز موزیک به ماجراجویی در موزیک میپردازد، با هنرمندان بین المللی همکاری میکند ، به فستیوال های معتبری مثل Montreux Jazz Festival دعوت میشود و …
سهراب به تازگی آلبومی منتشر کرده به نام Nu World Trashed که ۷ قطعه بدون کلام و دو قطعه با دکلمه هایی اعتراض محور است که بین سالهای ۲۰۱۴ تا ۲۰۲۰ ضبط شده اند و تجربه ای از سبک های الکترونیک ، جَز ، بلوز و موزیک معاصر است.
جدا از دغدغه تولید موسیقی ، سهراب فعالیت زیادی در زمینه حقوق موزیسین ها دارد و انجمنی در این زمینه راه اندازی کرده که به زودی به شما معرفی خواهیم کرد.
آلبوم سهراب رو هم میتونید آنلاین بخرید و هم نسخه ی CD در فروشگاه آدیومنت موجود هست.
برای آشنایی بیشتر با سهراب و فعالیت هاش:https://sohrab.info/press-2/” – Ali Reza Roostaee (12/27/2020)

“Sohrab ist ein Unikum, ein Mensch, der sich im Leben und in der Musik die Freiheit nimmt, zu tun, was er für richtig hält. Er ist nicht nur ein hervorragender Saxofonist, der seine ureigene musikalische Sprache entwickelt hat, sondern auch ein kritischer und politisch aktiver Geist, der sich einmischt und mithilft, die Welt im Kleinen zu verändern, damit sie im Großen ein Stück besser wird.

Auf seiner CD “Nu World Trashed” präsentiert er vital originäre, lyrische und energiereiche Klangbilder jenseits des Mainstream. Seine Musik passt in keine Schublade, changiert zwischen Jazz, World, Punk und Neuer Musik, voll verblüffender Wendungen und erfrischender Ironie.

“Nu World Trashed” ist das Werk eines authentischen Künstlers, der sich von der Masse abhebt und die Zuhörer in eine vielfältige Klangwelt entführt.” – Hubl Greiner (2/14/2021)

موسیقی جاز همیشه برای من لذت بخش بوده و شنیدن این آلبوم آن را زنده کرد. ساکسفون سهراب (سوسالا  SoSaLa) نوای دلنشینی دارد متفاوت با دیگر اجرا ها که آمیزشی از نوای غرب و شرق است. بر خلاف خیلی از موسیقی دانان ایرانی مقیم آمریکا، سهراب سبک موسیقی مترقی را در مقابل آهنگ های پاپ انتخاب کرده که قابل تقدیر است. حمایت از نوازندگان مستقل و مترقی وظیفه همه الاقمندان به هنر و بخصوص موسیقی می‌باشد که دسترسی به امکانات وسیع تجاری و تبلیغاتی ندارند. آلبوم Nu World Trashed یکی از جالب ترین کار های SoSaLa هست که شامل چند آهنگ جدید می‌باشد. انتخاب آهنگ مورد علاقه من قدری دشوار است چون از همه اجرای های ساکسفون  لذت بردم، بخصوص اجرا های بدون گفتار.” – Ali Banifazl (March 15, 2021)

Translated from Farsi into English:

Jazz has always been a pleasure for me and listening to this album brought it to life. Sohrab Saxophone (SoSaLa) has a pleasant sound, different from other performances, which is a mixture of western and eastern music. Unlike many Iranian musicians living in the United States, Sohrab has chosen a progressive style of music over pop songs, which is commendable. Supporting independent and progressive musicians is the duty of all those who love art, especially music, who do not have access to vast commercial and advertising facilities. Nu World Trashed is one of SoSaLa’s most interesting works, which includes several new songs. Choosing my favorite song is a bit difficult because I enjoyed all the saxophone performances, especially the non-speech performances.” – Ali Banifazl (March 15, 2021)

“Sohrab!
So while driving to Berlin for a PRO MUSIK meeting today I had the time to listen to your recordings.
From a saxophonist’s standpoint: Wow, you’ve got a great sax-sound! Unusual phrasing, not sticking to any bebop-, hardbop- or lick-based vocabulary – pretty original and uncommon. Ornette Coleman would be the first comparison to come to my mind – if – like we Germans do – one would want to pigeon-hole everything.
From my political awareness standpoint: I enjoy hearing music, that has this „urgency“ both musically and contextually.
Great!” – Axel Mueller/PRO MUSIK (May 30, 2021)