Artist Name
New Cool Collective
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members icon 8 Male

Origin
flag Netherlands

Genre
genre icon Funk

Style
style icon Jazz

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Born

born icon 1993

Active
calendar icon 1993 to Present...

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4 users heart off New Cool Collective - Perry
4 users heart off New Cool Collective - Big Mondays
4 users heart off New Cool Collective - Big Mondays
4 users heart off New Cool Collective - Big Mondays
4 users heart off New Cool Collective - Lang Lang


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Artist Biography
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In 1993 saxophonist Benjamin Herman began experimenting with DJ Graham B at nightclub Soul Kitchen in Amsterdam. The combination of playing live to spinning records was still unusual then. But the results worked and ended up evolving into the eight-piece New Cool Collective. The band is now impossible to think away from the nightclubs and festivals of the Netherlands and beyond. They’ve not only played in clubs like Panama, Café Meander, Sugar Factory and Paradiso, but also on television via NPS and De Wereld Draait Door.

New Cool Collective is made up of saxophonist Benjamin Herman, drummer Joost Kroon, percussionists Frank van Dok and Jos de Haas, pianist Willem Friede, bassist Leslie Lopez and trumpet-player David Rockefeller. The band themselves describe their role division as: ‘Frank is the captain. Leslie is the balls. Willem is the brains. Jos is the fists. Ben is the founder and the style keeper. Joost is the joy and the sex. And David is Mister X and the most musical of us all.’ They could not say it better.

As a pioneer of Dutch jazz, the band was long regarded as the ugly duckling of the scene. Jazz purists found their 'soul jazz latin flavours nineties vibe' too hard and fast. But once a group of younger club goers found their way to Café Meander where the sizzling orchestra played regularly, the dam burst. Now everyone, both jazz lovers and haters, go to their concerts. NCC has won an Edison, the Heineken Crossover Music Award and the Gouden Notenkraker. They have toured England, Germany, Benelux, Africa, Canada, Russia and Japan. They have not only played in the hippest clubs but also giant rock and pop festivals such as Roskilde festival in Denmark, Sziget in Hungary, Lowlands in the Netherlands, Camden Mix Festival in London, and the Aberdeen Alternative Festival in Scotland.

Eighteen – THE NEW ALBUM FROM NEW COOL COLLECTIVE
Eighteen. For eighteen years now, New Cool Collective has brought countless venues to the boiling point when sweat is literally dripping from the ceiling. Right back to the furthest, hidden corners the public would be swept up with hair was sticking to their faces and their feet airborne. Whether it’s the nineteen-piece Big Band or the more compact eight-piece, New Cool Collective is impossible to think away from the clubs and festivals of the Netherlands and beyond.

Eighteen is the official age of adulthood in the Netherlands. In theory it’s the perfect time for a look back. But don’t expect a nicely-packaged anniversary album. No matter how much experience they have collected over the years in their playing, composing and internal bickering, the music still comes with the energy of a pack of young pups. Driven and with no time to lose, they are always out to try something new.

So it’s not about nostalgia. And after the fat, thick resin left behind by the latest Big Band album, Pachinko, it was time for the eight-piece formation to create an album with more of a sense of space and lightness. In a way, Eighteen continues from where the 2008 album, Out of Office, left off. So perhaps they are looking back somewhat. This is certainly true in the way the music is made. Moving from nineteen-pieces back to eight, and entering a new album with open visors, they still believe everything is possible and allowed. But now this attitude comes with heaps more experience when compared to their early, tender years.

With varied influences that range from Surf, Rock Steady and Electro to Afro-Cuban and even Dub, Eighteen covers a lot of musical ground. And that should not come as a surprise, as they have enjoyed and learned from much from their international collaborations. Poet/DJ Jules Deelder taught them the true meaning of swing ('The drums must come a little later while the bass should come a little ahead. What’s most important is that they don’t come at the same time’). Teaming up with rapper Typhoon forced the band to play very fast and focussed. And through the collaboration with Los Papinos & Mapacha, their singing abilities reached a whole new level.

Perhaps that’s the sense of ‘adulthood’ that has sneaked onto Eighteen. They are certainly better than ever: more versatile, more tight and yet looser. Each member is self-willed, but also more tuned to the others. They no longer feel it necessary to play every note and solo as loud as possible. But while they are adults they are also still young dogs, and Eighteen exhibits the best of both of these worlds.
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Last Edit by Eison
24th Mar 2013

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