Tezeta Band

Ethiopian Dance Music

New single and Happy New Year!

Tezeta band is celebrating the Ethiopian New Year with a sneak preview of our upcoming album “The Origin of Nightlife”. Have a listen to our first song off the top “Gizie Degu Neger”, and don’t forget to mark your calendars for Thursday October 8th when Tezeta Band plays the Goodfoot Lounge and Pub.

Happy New Year Ethiopia!!

TZB

Live Wire Podcast with Tezeta Band

For those of you who missed the Live Wire broadcast that went out nationally on public radio. Here is the link to the podcast.

Live Wire Tezeta Band Link

It was a thrill to be involved with Live Wire. All of the staff and cast were top notch professionals and set us at ease making a very enjoyable environment…and the beer wasn’t bad either.

We also suggest listening to this weekend’s Live Wire broadcast as well featuring Crystal Bowersox. Crystal had an amazing voice and couldn’t have been cooler. She played The Tonight Show 1 week later. So we were in very good company.

If you are interested in attending future Live Wire events here is the link and show schedule. Live Wire Radio

Next up for us Thursday April 18th at The Secret Society

Ciao for Now,

Tezeta Band

Tezeta Band featured in the Willamette Week! Thank you Robert Ham!

Five Fingers of Funk members come out of retirement to play Ethiopian funk and soul.

image from:campbellsalgado.com

[ETHIOPIAN FUNK] They don’t look like revivalists of the groove-heavy sound of vintage Ethiopian funk and soul. To the outside observer, the three slightly geeky, buttoned-down white dudes sitting around a table at Sengatera on Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard on a wet January evening would most likely be trading tips on software upgrades or relaying parenting woes.

Instead, Tim Cook, Ted Hille and John Teagle, the core members of Tezeta Band, one of Portland’s best-kept secrets, are dropping names like Mulatu Astatke and Alemayehu Eshete and trying desperately to put into words what the music is like.

“When you meet someone who’s never heard any of this stuff, you think, ‘How do you explain this?’” says Hille, Tezeta’s saxophone player. “Well, it’s Ethiopian, but it’s not world music…there are elements of Motown and James Brown in there…it’s American and un-American at the same time…it’s hypnotic and sweet and seductive. I can’t put my finger on what makes it so personal. It almost feels like you grew up with it.”

Hille’s last sentence strikes at the core of what makes the sound of Ethiopian popular music so engaging. It’s a rich, complex sound that stirs together soul, funk and jazz from the U.S. and Europe; Arabic melodies that have survived in the region for centuries; and the African rhythms that leaked from regions surrounding the land-locked country. On their own, the pieces don’t seem like they’d fit. But when put together by the right hands, it sounds like they’ve been enmeshed for centuries.

“I was over at a friend’s house, and she put on this tape of this music for me,” says Cook, the band’s keyboardist. “Immediately, I was like, ‘What is this?!’ It was the most incredible stuff I’d ever heard. I begged her to make me a copy, and when my wife and I were repainting the house we bought, we just listened to that on repeat for days.”

The tape featured the first volumes of The Ethiopiques, a peerless series of compilations of both the “golden years” of Ethiopian pop in the ’60s and ’70s and modern versions of the same.  For many, like director Jim Jarmusch, who featured some tracks by Astatke in his 2005 film Broken Flowers, it was their entree into this hypnotic world of sound.

It also served as a wellspring of inspiration for Cook. He and four other members of Tezeta Band (Hille, trombonist Curt Bieker, trumpet player Josh Prewitt, and drummer Talbott Guthrie) spent six years backing up rapper Pete Miser in the Five Fingers of Funk. When that band split up in 1998, Cook concentrated on running a construction company and stopped playing music for a decade.

But after that first hit of the Ethiopian sound, Cook needed more and more. “I would go to Merkato, the Ethiopian market on Northeast Russell, every two months and buy a new CD from them. And this became so infectious that I sat down and started playing all the time, trying to figure these songs out.”

Soon thereafter, Cook had spread the music around to anyone who would listen, including his old Five Fingers bandmates, eliciting a similar epiphanic reaction. Soon enough, they were huddling around a stereo, working out the parts. “It’s ironic all of those bands were listening to old Motown records and emulating what they heard,” says Hille, “and now here’s this group of Americans trying to do the same thing to their songs.”

Their sets these days are now made up almost entirely of instrumental covers of some of their favorite Ethiopian songs, capturing the raw energy of the source material and surprising plenty of émigrés from the African nation, like Sengatera owner Yonnas Yilma. “I went with another friend from Ethiopia to see them play for the first time,” Yilma says. “And we were saying, ‘What?! What am I hearing?!’”

Yilma has since become the band’s biggest benefactor, allowing them to take the stage at his restaurant once a month, and providing them with the biggest thrill of their still-young career: opening for two rare Portland appearances by legendary Ethiopian singer Mahmoud Ahmed.

Ahmed fell quickly in love with Tezeta Band (“Tezeta”—properly pronounced Tiz-ee-tah—roughly translates to “longing” or “nostalgia,” and is a catch-all phrase for slow Ethiopian songs that speak to those feelings), even inviting it to play a few songs with him during both of his shows here. But, remembers Cook, their pale skin tone did take him by surprise.

“When he got picked up in Seattle to come down here, Yonnas played him our CD, but didn’t tell him anything about what we looked like. So, when I came here to meet him, he was told, ‘Tim is in the band opening up for you,’ and he went, ‘How can this be?’”

Robert Ham

Announcing the Tezeta Band site!

So you’ve got a MySpace page, a Facebook page, and a Twitter account; what’s missing in this digital age? Offers A web site of Business course! That’s why we are pleased to announce TezetaBand.com. Think wholesale nfl jerseys of it as wholesale nba jerseys a little oasis of Strategy American-Ethiopian music goodness. Or, just think of it as cheap jerseys a place where we cheap jerseys tell the full Tezeta Football Band story with songs, pictures, and stuff.