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Brock Mumford

Matt Munisteri

Fast Facts


Birthday: April 28

Hometown: Brooklyn, NY

Height: 6'2"

Shoe size: 10 1/2

Favorite color: Burgundy

Favorite dessert: "A big, fresh, ripe peach."

Interview with the artist


How did you get involved in music? "I heard 'dueling banjos' on the radio."

How would you describe your music? "Post-alt Musette"

Nickname: "Matty."

Little-known fact: "My earlobes are perfectly shaped, but a little stiff when you pull on them."

Do you get stage fright? "YES"



Will Holshouser

Fast Facts


Birthday: July 31, 1968

Hometown: Cambridge, Mass.

Height: 6'1"

Shoe size: 12

Favorite color: Blue

Favorite dessert: Bananas flambee

Interview with the artist


How did you get involved in music? "My dad sang to me when I was little, then I took piano lessons then a friend gave me an accordion."

How would you describe your music? "Accordion music, mostly jazz, but many other styles too (Cajun, French and klezmer)."

Nickname: "Will"

Little-known fact: "I look like I'm eight years old."

Do you get stage fright? "Only when I don't know the music."



Jon-Erik Kellso

Fast Facts


Birthday: May 8, 1964

Hometown: Allen Park, Mich.

Height: 5'10"

Shoe size: 73

Favorite color: Crimson

Favorite dessert: Flabee Montal Banaise

Interview with the artist


How did you get involved in music? "I discovered my parents' old 78 rpm swing records at age 10."

How would you describe your music? "I enjoy playing a wide variety of styles - mostly swinging old style jazz, swing, dixieland, mainstream, with emphasis on melody, interplay and strong pulse."

Nickname: "Jonny Gig"

Little-known fact: "I am the best chili chef in the history of the world."

Do you get stage fright? "Not usually, but sometimes if I am unsure of the repertoire or abilities of the other musicians I'm with, or if I feel unprepared."


Jim Whitney

Fast Facts


Birthday: April 5, 1964

Hometown: Franconia, NH

Height: 6'1"

Shoe size: 12

Favorite color: Purple

Favorite dessert: Peanut butter pie

Interview with the artist


How did you get involved in music? "I couldn't help it. I have five older brothers and sisters and ended up with lots of records. I was drawn to the bass like a pig to ..."

How would you describe your music? "Jazz, bluegrass, klezmer, avant-garde, country, rock, R&B, Brazilian and any combination thereof."

Nickname: "Sinner."

Little-known fact: "I'm really a rural person living in the city. I'm just as likely to me mountain climbing or skiing as playing bass."

Do you get stage fright? "Rarely,but i kind of dig it because it brings out aspects of my playing I might not otherwise experience. I also like the challenge of relaxing as quickly as possible."



multi media feature

By ALYSA PHILLIPS,
GazetteNET Staff

Brock Mumford, live.

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Brock Mumford
Iron Horse Music Hall
September 25, 2001


By ALYSA PHILLIPS, GazetteNET Staff
From the sound of Brock Mumford, one might expect to see old, black men from the late nineteenth century, playing smooth jazz with sparks of Dixieland and swing on a Sunday afternoon. But not at the Iron Horse, and not from this group of 30-something musicians from New York City.

They got the sound right, but that's because they know their history. Jefferson "Brock" Mumford was the guitarist in Buddy Bolden's band, which is considered to be the first jazz band, and played in the late 1800's. Since Bolden left no physical evidence of his music, the new Brock Mumford took the opportunity to make its own, while dodging the criticism of traditional jazz fans. "No one knows what the music sounded like," trumpeter Jon-Erik Kellso said after the show, "so we made up our own." And band leader and guitarist Matt Munisteri added, "We were going in an undefinible direction, and Brock Mumford sounded like a good reference."

Brock Mumford is four soloists between the ages of 34 and 37, playing songs reminiscent of the simpler, almost sleepy romantic era of the early twentieth century. Adding to the talent of Kellso and Munisteri is Jim Whitney on bass and Will Holshouser on accordion.

Munisteri started the night off by narrating, "Get Aquainted With Yourself," during which each member of the band did a solo piece on his instrument, adequately introducing the talent of Brock Mumford, which has been playing together for only a year and a half, although each of its members has a lifetime of experience performing and writing songs. When not performing together, Brock Mumford is four solo musicians, performing in a variety of venues with other bands.

But when Brock Mumford is together, it produces a show of nostalgia, sounds from a forgotten time, with such ambience of the simpler musical era the air seems almost musty.

Perhaps the highlight of the evening was watching Holshouser do his accordion solo, "Flambee Montal Banaise," a song by French composer Gus Viseur. Munisteri prefaced the impressive song with a warning, "Don't let your hair catch fire." Holshouser was amazing; his fingers slid up and down the keyboard with incredible accuracy, to the elation of the audience.

Holshouser had one problem, though: he couldn't bow after his solo because he had an accordion strapped to his chest. "Accordion players are dorks," Holshouser said after the show. But he is used to it, he said. Since a friend gave him an accordion in the late 1980's, Holshouser has been hooked, paying more attention to discovering the art of jazz accordion and less to the stigma attached. "We couldn't get through a show without someone throwing spitballs at Will," Munisteri joked after the show.

Brock Mumford's mix of blues, modern and traditional jazz, bluegrass, gypsy swing, Dixieland and musette demands a very strict audience, one that is heavy on older, white males, Whitney said, so the only reaction they want from their audience is that they will try it out, and it would be nice if they enjoyed it.

As far as musical influence goes, the band members agree: their role models include the singing frogs from "Bugs Bunny," the trumpet solo from "The Jetsons" and Randy Newman.



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