Carlos Niño & Friends
(I’m Just) Chillin’, On Fire

 

Now Available

Carlos Niño & Friends
(I’m Just) Chillin’, On Fire

 

Featured Video

“Taauud”

 

Featuring Sibusile Xaba (Voice), Jamael Dean (piano & wurlitzer), and Nate Mercereau (guitar synth & pedals). Produced, Mixed, Edited, and Arranged by Carlos Niño.

 
 

IARC0067:

Carlos Niño & Friends
(I’m Just) Chillin’, On Fire

Out September 15, 2023

Liner Notes by Marcus J. Moore:

Over the past few years, concert patrons have stopped the musician Carlos Niño after gigs to ask two simple questions: “Are you a shaman?” “I hear the medicine in your music, can I come to your next ceremony?” The queries are fair enough: Looking at Niño, a tall man with a wild beard and kind eyes, one would think he’s from some faraway time and could maybe cast spells. Once you get to know him, you find that he’s just an incredibly sweet guy with a laid-back demeanor, and that he isn’t some guru claiming to have an all-access pass to the otherworld.

So what does he say to those wondering if he’s a spiritual teacher?

“I’m just chillin’, on fire,” he declares. “I'm not rolling with or out any kind of religious or traditional focus, rules or doctrine. I'm just presenting something that has a lot of energy, and is intended to be an opening for those of us who are journeying, creating musically, and for those who gather with us.”

Indeed, there’s a communal essence to Niño’s self-described Energetic Space Music. As leader of Carlos Niño & Friends, he encourages his collaborators to improvise without preconceived ideas of what the sound is supposed to entail. His new album, (I’m just) Chillin’, on Fire, features more than a dozen musicians and includes a who’s who of sonic experimentation — everyone from guitarist Nate Mercereau and saxophonist Kamasi Washington, to New Age cornerstone Laraaji and hip-hop legend André 3000 playing his now trademark flute. On purpose, Niño lets the music drift and the unity ensue, making (I’m just) Chillin’, on Fire another highlight in a recent run of sublime work.But where albums like 2020’s Chicago Waves (with multi-instrumentalist Miguel Atwood-Ferguson) and last year’s Extra Presence hovered in the speakers, (I’m just) Chillin’ forges ahead in certain spots through energetic drums equally indebted to jazz and electronic funk. It eschews genre, but the tenets of ‘70s underground jazz are present. Fifty years ago, acts like Brother Ah, the Ensemble Al-Salaam and Mtume Umoja Ensemble crafted music that scanned as Spiritual Jazz yet flared in many different directions. They leaned into the transcendence of the music overall, not artificial terms used to market it. (I’m just) Chillin’ emits the same emotion: On “Mighty Stillness,” when the experimental violinist V.C.R proclaims her “ancestral right” to rest, she evokes Black women like Jeanne Lee, Jayne Cortez and Beatrice Parker, innovative vocalists from indie scenes who embodied the same freedom. Then on “Love Dedication (for Annelise),” Niño uses subtle bass (from Michael Alvidrez) and a serene piano loop (from Surya Botofasina) to speak of endearment in broad terms. “Love is unconditional — everywhere, everything, flowing always,” he observes. “Totally alive, no upper limit.” Though he hesitates to embrace comparisons to the spacious arrangements heard on indie labels of the ‘70s like Strata, Strata-East and Tribe (only because of how much he respects their legacies, not wanting to claim any space in their fields), there’s no denying his stature as an anchor in the jazz, hip-hop and beat scenes in Los Angeles over the last nearly 30 years, and how his influences are alive in what he makes.

“All of those labels to me are hugely influential,” Niño says. “When I think about Strata-East, I immediately think of Pharaoh Sanders, and I think of one of my favorite albums of all-time, Live at the East (on Impulse!), and how The East and that movement is a huge influence. I'm not from that community. I don't claim any direct connection to it, but my awareness of it and my appreciation of it is gigantic.”

The vocals for (I’m just) Chillin’ were compiled unconventionally. “I was like, ‘I'm going to turn on the mic, and you're going to listen all the way through the album and record anything you're feeling at any moment,’” Niño says of the creative process. “It was completely open to their interpretation.” He found that the vocalists Cavana Lee, Maia, Mia Doi Todd, and V.C.R interpreted the music in similar ways: “People who are not even in the same room, who did not hear what the other person did, they all created these really cool weavings — and it was so fun.”

While the album compiles live and studio arrangements recorded in places like Venice, Leimert Park and Woodstock over the past three years, it feels harmonious, as if captured in one space with all musicians present. This highlights Niño’s ability as a conductor and producer. That he could winnow such vast experimentation into a seamless set is a worthy feat on its own. Much like Niño’s other LPs, (I’m just) Chillin’ is an immersive listen that requires attentive ears to fully absorb. In a world dominated by social media and the 24-hour news cycle, it seems we’re all in a hurry for no reason in particular. By creating music with tender messages and leisurely pacing, Niño nudges listeners to slow down and appreciate life’s natural wonders, to savor the journey and not rush so quickly to the destination. In turn, his art conjures pastoral images — endless fields, boundless oceans, ripples crashing along the shoreline. It urges you to simply look up: notice the wind rustling through the trees, listen to the birds sing a glorious song. This is real life, the stuff you can’t quite capture with a smartphone camera. As a conduit, Niño embodies the water he cherishes so deeply. He’s not just the bandleader, but a vessel for everyone’s ideas to shine through.

“Creativity, to me, is an expression of a being's state, and their states of being,” he says. “It's really reflecting or reporting how they feel. The deeper ‘why’ is what I'm getting to with all this, what is inside that feeling, and it's not uncharted territory. I'm one of these people who's very into organizing, curating and offering; it's a deeply sharing kind of thing. It's a living thing; it grows. Sometimes it gets sculpted. Sometimes it gets rocked by forces outside of its maneuvering. Sometimes it looks one way. Sometimes it looks another way, but it's alive.” 

Notes

 

Produced, Mixed, Edited, and Arranged by Carlos Niño.

Bells, Chimes, Cymbals, Drums, Field Recordings, Flutes, Gongs, Kalimbas, Keyboards, Leaves, Plants, Rattles, Shakers, Sound Design, Synths, Voice, and Whistles throughout by Carlos Niño.

Mastered by David Allen.

Cover Photo by Annelise.
On The Cover and Insert: Tile VI (Fall in or Fly Away), Ceramic, by Aparna Sarkar.
Art Direction and Original Elements by Nep Sidhu.
Graphic Design and Layout by Craig Hansen.

01) Venice 100720, Hands In Soil
Jamire Williams – Drums
Josh Johnson - Alto Saxophone and Pedals
Nate Mercereau - Guitar Synth and Pedals
Andres Renteria – Congas

Recorded Live in The Townhouse Courtyard in Venice, California by Don Hernandez, on Wednesday, October 7, 2020. Congas added in January 2021.

02) Mighty Stillness
Jamire Williams – Drums
Josh Johnson - Alto Saxophone and Pedals
Nate Mercereau - Guitar Synth and Pedals
V.C.R – Voice
Cavana Lee – Voice
Mia Doi Todd – Voice

Recorded Live at The World Stage in Leimert Park, California by Tomoaki Soto on Friday, November 6, 2020. Voices added in December 2022.

03) Love Dedication (for Annelise)
Surya Botofasina – Piano
Michael Alvidrez – Bass
Annelise – Voice
Cavana Lee – Voice
Maia – Voice
Mia Doi Todd – Voice

The basis of this piece was Recorded by Jesse Peterson during the Sessions for Surya's Album Everyone's Children. Bass and Voices added in December 2022.

04) Flutestargate
Deantoni Parks – Drums
Nate Mercereau - Guitar, Guitar Synth and Pedals

05) Maha Rose North 102021, Breathwork
Laraaji - Electric Kalimba and Voice
Photay - Buchla and Drum Machine
Lionmilk – Flute
Arji - Chimes and iPad

Recorded Live at Maharose North, in Woodstock, New York by Stu Pender on Wednesday, October 20, 2021. Thanks to Luke Simon, Diego Gaeta,
Mekala Session, and V.C.R. for their additional Vibes.


06) Transcendental Bounce, Run to it
Deantoni Parks – Drums
The Growth Eternal - Synth Bass
Nate Mercereau - Electric Guitar, Guitar Synth and Effects
Sibusile Xaba - Acoustic Guitar
Maia – Voice
Cavana Lee – Voice
Mia Doi Todd – Voice
V.C.R – Voice

07) Taaaud
Jamael Dean - Piano and Wurlitzer
Nate Mercereau - Guitar Synth and Pedals
Sibusile Xaba - Voice

Contains a Sample of "Duat" by Jamael Dean, from his Solo Piano Album Ished Tree, used with permission from the Artist.

08) Spacial
Jamael Dean - Piano and Wurlitzer
Sibusile Xaba – Voice

09) Am I Dreaming?
Dntel - Modular Synthesizer
Luis Pérez Ixoneztli - Aerophones, Drums and Percussion
Surya Botofasina – Keyboards

Thanks to Maya Luma for her energy toward this piece.

10) Etheric Windsurfing, flips and twirls
Adam Rudolph - Drum Machine, and Gimbre
Jesse Peterson – Synthesizers
Maia – Voice
Alakoi Peete – Percussion
Surya Botofasina – Keyboards

11) Boom Bap Spiritual
Surya Botofasina - Keyboards and Piano

Based on the piece "Beloved California Temple."

12) Woo, Acknowledgement
Mark Ives – Clarinet
Nate Mercereau – Zither
Surya Botofasina – Keyboards

This piece originated as the second half of a Remix made for the Woo piece "Paradise In Pimlico" (from the Album of the same name, released by Quindi Records). Clive and Mark added to the Remix, then Carlos decided to focus on and develop this part.

13) Sandra’s Willows
Aaron Shaw - Tenor Saxophone and Flute
Surya Botofasina – Keyboards

These pieces were recorded by Jesse Peterson at Carlos Niño’s Home Studio, Composed in the moment for a Film Project by Sandra de la Loza. She and her partner William were present in the Studio.

14) One For Derf
Aaron Shaw - Tenor Saxophone and Flute
Surya Botofasina – Keyboards
Michael Alvidrez – Bass
Maia – Voice
Jamael Dean – Piano
Pablo Calogero - Bass Clarinet
Andres Renteria - Hand Drums

Dedicated to The Great Derf Reklaw.

15) Conversations
André 3000 - Flute and Voice
Nate Mercereau - Guitar, Sampler and Synthesizers
Maia – Voice
Cavana Lee – Voice
Mia Doi Todd – Voice

Thanks to Recording Engineer Ken Oriole and to Jesse Peterson who can be heard playing Gimbre through Pedals for a few moments.

16) Essence, The Mermaids Call
Nate Mercereau - Electric Guitar
Clive and Mark Ives - Multi-Instruments and Voices

Co-Produced by Woo. Thanks to Laraaji and his piece "Essence" - the inspiration for the genesis of this one.

17) Eightspace 082222
Aaron Shaw – EWI
Andres Renteria - Hand Drums
Annelise – Percussion
Diego Gaeta – Keyboards
Kamasi Washington - Tenor Saxophone
Nate Mercereau - Guitar Synth and Pedals
Surya Botofasina - Keyboards and Piano

Thanks to Linafornia, Banch Abegaze, Nes Abegaze, Scottie McNiece, Alejandro Ayala, and Andrew Maxwell for their support of this Concert.

About Carlos Niño

Carlos Niño refers to himself musically, and in many aspects of his life, as a "Communicator." Producing, playing and making music are facets of that to him. He considers his "presence, aura, energy field," his voice, and many collected instruments (a unique and colorful assortment of bells, chimes, cymbals, gongs, keyboards, shakers, shells, and more) among his essence, and hence his intrinsic means of expression and communication.

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