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Russell Batiste (July 2005 Issue) Spreading The Groove It wasn't that Russell Batiste needed
another project when the idea of Vida Blue was presented
to him last
year. But once he sat down to jam with Phish's Page McConnell and The
Allman Brothers' Oteil
Burbridge, the deal was done. "I had never heard
Oteil before," Batiste says. "But when he started playing, I just had
to stare
at him. Then Page came in on that little Andromeda keyboard,
and I started kicking it. The stuff started rolling, man, and it
was
the most fun I've had in a long time. And when we played live, I was
almost in heaven." At thirty-seven, Batiste
is already part of New
Orleans musical folklore, having replaced Zigaboo Modeliste in The
Meters (now The Funky Meters) in
1989. In recent years he's branched
out to play and record with George Porter, Papa Grows Funk, Robbie
Robertson,
and Harry Connick Jr. (check out his opening fill on the
title track of She), as well as compose for and record his own
band, Orchestra In Da Hood.
The Vida Blue
album (Elektra 2002) shows Batiste to be a master of texture
and
changing gears. "Anybody can solo," he says. "Anybody can sit behind
the drums and go nuts. Anybody can play riffs on
the bass, and anybody
can play songs on the piano. But playing music is when two or more
people get together from out of
nowhere and turn it into something."
Batiste credits many New Orleans funk drummers for inspiration, but
most of all
Stanley Ratcliff and Zigaboo Modeliste. "When you hear me
going off," he says, "you hear Stanley. And my father played
keyboards
in The Meters, so I used to fall asleep right underneath Zig while they
were practicing. I got his flavor mixed up with
Stanley's flavor, and I
came up with a flavor that no one else has. You know what's incredible?
Those great players
got a chance to watch me, and then went back and
practiced the stuff I was doing. That ain't no
lie."
Robin
Tolleson
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