The Emily Brass Band Shines On
The following was published in The Floyd Press on December 6, 2007.
Roberta Flack meets Bob Marley, that’s how I first described the music of Emily Brass when she was lead singer for the popular Floyd-based band, Foundation Stone. Back then I considered Foundation Stone to be a hometown “house band.” They regularly played at The Pine Tavern Restaurant, renowned for its Sunday Night Open Mic, community gatherings, and the Italian cooking of chef, Michael Gucciardo.
But then the Pine Tavern closed and later Foundation Stone folded when Emily and her husband, Jacques, the band’s bass guitarist, broke up. It felt like the end of an era, significant losses that would lessen my opportunities to dance with and socialize locally with friends.
The Pine Tavern has been open under the new management of Reed and Jane Embrey for over two years now. They serve down home Southern cooking that the Roanoke Times has rated with 4 ½ stars. Tom Ryan, a satirist who authors the online Floyd Enquirer, tends bar in The Tavern Room. This past Friday night, the venue and the sound of Foundation Stone were reunited. Emily, a singer, songwriter, and saxophonist, hosted a party for the release of her new CD with her new band, The Emily Brass Band.
In the old days bands played in the restaurant’s main room. Tables were moved to make room for dancing. Over the years, I and others wore down some of the Tavern’s wood floor shine with our enthusiastic and persistent dance steps. Since then the place has expanded. On this night, the last of November, we danced under the Tavern Pavilion, closed in with plastic and warmed with portable heaters. But it didn’t take long for people to throw their coats over the backs of chairs. Emily has a stage presence that encourages a feeling of celebration, and when she plays sax she reminds me of snake charmer with a talent for getting everyone up and shaking to her rhythmic grooves.
“Who knew?” I asked more than once of those who danced near me, after hearing lead guitarist Richard Ursomarso play. I’ve known Richard, a Floyd Market Gardener, for years but didn’t know he could play guitar riffs like a top chart musician. Other band members who rounded out the reggae, jazz, and hip-hop influenced sound were bass guitarist John Lindsey, keyboardist James Pace, and Foundation Stone drummer Dave Brown.
Emily, who is originally from Montreal Canada, is an environmental activist, and her lyrics reflect that. We once shared a group bus ride to Washington D.C. to protest the start of the Iraq War. She wore a large silver Statue of Liberty crown to go with her hand painted sign that read “Protest is our Patriotic Duty,” one of the slogans we came up with at a sign painting party the night before the march. She volunteers her time to help put a local newsletter together, which frequently happens on my kitchen table, and sells Guatemalan clothing when she’s not busy writing and playing music.
The name of her new CD, “Open Door,” suggests the hopefulness that is an integral part of Emily’s style. With a sultry voice ranging from soothing to commanding, she raps and sings lyrics that prod listeners to think about how they live, urging global awareness with a hip upbeat that causes me to look around and smile at my dancing neighbors.
Although most of the songs Emily performed were new ones off her CD, every now and then she would shout out to the crowd that it was time for a “Foundation Stone fix,” and the audience would cheer and prepare to sing along.
Emily’s website, emilybrass.com, best describes her music and what it’s like to dance to: Like a musical shape-shifter, Emily Brass takes you on a psychedelic hippie-hop journey, channeling the ghosts of old school rap, rock-steady reggae, ragtime jazz, and 60’s rock & soul, while relentlessly keeping you in a sweat-inducing, smile-inspiring trance-dance, all night long.
Maybe not all night long for some of us, but when it comes to the music of Emily Brass, I’m good for at least a first two hour set.
Post notes: HERE’S a short video clip of the band on the Pine Tavern Pavilion Stage Friday night. And HERE is a Roanoke Times write-up about Emily which links to audio of two of Emily’s songs. Emily’s CD can be purchased online HERE. It is also available in Floyd at noteBooks, Café Del Sol, and New Mountain Mercantile; and in Roanoke at Seeds of Light.
December 2nd, 2007 2:28 pm
What a fun entry. I love it when you get to hear music that makes you HAPPY! And it sounds like Emily certainly does that for you. I’ll check out her site. As a fellow musician, I’m always looking for other artists who “rock my boat”!
Michele sent me today, and I’m glad she did. Have a great weekend.
December 2nd, 2007 2:53 pm
She looks fantastic. I’ll try her audio links. This sounds like a wonderful night. Southern cooking or not we have got to get back up there. When I was 21-23 we’d load up vans full in Mount Airy and ride up to enjoy the dancing and ambiance.
December 2nd, 2007 5:00 pm
Thanks to you Floyd won’t seem far away. Sorry I missed this performance…will check out her site.
December 3rd, 2007 6:40 am
Great review. Sounds like a good gig and excellent when you can follow a musician through their bands. Also fine that you know some of the other players. Sounds like a fun evening!
rashbre
December 3rd, 2007 8:50 am
It really does sound like a great night. I can see and hear why you like her. I am glad she is back. I don’t like endings….guess what? Jamie’s closed the beginning of December. It was really the only place around the south shore where you can dance. I haven’t gone in a long time, but it was good to know we always had that in our neighborhood. Remember when we went? Well it is now closed, I’m bummed.
December 3rd, 2007 9:39 am
What the heck? I would think with all the stores and places you have there there would be more opportunities to dance. What are people doing? Not dancing. It’s really the most fun I can have, as you know, She. Keep your ears open for another place for when I come there. Or maybe you’ll have to come here to dance.
December 3rd, 2007 12:46 pm
i spent the evening dancing ,too, this weekend. except it was to a d.j. at a christmas party thrown by hubby’s employer. i think i would have rather been dancing to this band. 🙂
it is always sad when beloved bands go their separate ways. there was an asheville band i loved during its early ‘downtown rennaissance’ days… the blue rags. talk about dancing!! they played at ‘be here now’, which is now ‘the orange peel’. now both the band and the venue is gone.
December 3rd, 2007 1:01 pm
I remember “Be Here Now.” I may have even been inside there once with Josh and his friends. On Saturday night the Asheville Band Toubab Krewe played here in Floyd at the Winter Sun. I missed it myself but hear they were great, except a truck knocked a power line down and town lost power so they had to quit early.
We’ve had other house bands over the years that have broken up and occasionally a reggae band called “Jah Levi” played here. They had some ability to stone me on nothing but the music.
December 3rd, 2007 1:27 pm
I dance at home but I haven’t danced in public in many years, mostly because I stay away from places filled with cigarette smoke. But some nights when nobody’s around, that CD player wails and off I go… it sounds like you had a great time, Colleen. Good times are such gentle treasurers, even when you ride them hard and fast like a dance!
December 3rd, 2007 5:51 pm
Hello Colleen. Thanks for the music and the writing and the photos and the walk and all.
December 4th, 2007 3:14 pm
great info I like her.. thanks
December 5th, 2007 3:01 pm
Colleen you dance great! What a fun night out in Floyd. You described it beautifully and put a smile on my face while reading it. Both Heather and I are brand new fans of Emily Brass.