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RADIO
CITIZEN
27
year old Niko Schabel was brought to our attention by Quantic.
“Have a listen, you might like this,” he said handing
over a CD-r to Ubiquity A+R rep Andrew Jervis after a gig in San
Francisco. He was right. Schabel hails from Berlin and, thanks
to Quantic, now records for Ubiquity as Radio Citizen. His sound
ranges from slack dub, moody folksy-soul, to adrenalin infused
and spiritual cinematic jazz. The sound of Radio Citizen comes from
Schabels ability to loosely glue together a collage of sampled
textures which are embellished with gifted musicians and often
topped-off with the seductive vocals of the worldly Bajka. It
sounds complicated, but the end result is actually very simple
and addictive.
Schabel is the main force behind Radio Citizen and in addition to
the sampler and mixing desk he plays alto saxophone, clarinet
and bass clarinet, kalimba and small percussion, plus rhodes,
flute and synthesiser. He is regularly assisted by vocalist Bajka
and flute and sax man Wolfi. Bajka was born in an Indian temple
and grew up in Afghanistan, Nepal, Pakistan and on a catamaran
in South Africa. She has traveled the world with a music commune
called Embryo that her uncle founded and father was a member of,
and which coincidentally Schabel was also a latter day guest.
Bajka has recorded with Compost act Beanfield and released solo
records on the Jazzman label. In addition Schabel has played and
performed with the Niko Schabel Quartet, the Express Brass Band,
the Poets of Rhythm, Jojo Kuo (ex-Fela Kuti), Nik McCarthy (Franz
Ferdinand), the Last Poets, and many more.
Schabel chose the name Radio Citizen because it allows for a wide
range of musical connotations. He also read and was influenced
by the Rem Kohlhaas book “Delirious New York” which
is about Radio City Music Hall. Completing the circle, Radio Citizen
music is being used in a German documentary about Berlins famous
communication towers and is providing stills from the documentary
for the album artwork.
Schabel is currently sorting through about 30 tracks to pick the
best selection for the Radio Citizen album. “I have a about
50 CDs worth of material recorded over my various projects!”
remarks Schabel. “I’d like my album to fulfill some
unkept promises of the 1990s. For me, many ideas didn’t
reach their full potential and we entered a period of boring programming,
lounge-overkill, and bad acid-jazz,” he adds. Schabels influences
are wide and deep. “I think Radio Citizen has shades of my
love for sixties jazz, funk 45s, soul, dub and reggae, hiphop,
afrobeat, electronica, trippy stuff, d&b, early eighties avantgarde,
surf, the old school, the new school, Arabian music, Latin, boogaloo,
rocksteady, whatever,” rolls out Schabel. “But the
artist I admire most is John Coltrane. I probably have about 30
of his albums.”
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