James Whiton - Double Bass & Vocals Bill Patton - Guitar John Fricke - Trumpet Jay Jaskot - Drums Nate Distelhorst - Alto Saxophone
Influences
Early Pink Floyd, Soul Coughing, Lou Reed, Black Sabbath, John Zorn, Nels Cline, Charles Mingus, Geezer Butler, Les Claypool, Queens of the Stone Age, Chris Whitley, Bob Dylan, Tom Waits, Neil Young, J.S.Bach, Igor Stravinsky, Henryk Gorecki, Johnny Cash, Outkast, Busta Rhymes, Willie Nelson, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Hank Williams Sr., Hank III, Rev Horton Heat, Yo-Yo-Ma, Edgar Meyer, Dave Holland, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Frederic Chopin, Motorhead, Led Zeppelin, Metallica, Carlos Santana, Jaco Pastorius, Scott LeFaro, Bootsy Collins, John Lennon, Jean Sibelius, Carl Orff, Ludwig Van Beethoven, Jello Biafra, Dead Kennedys, Suicidal Tendencies, Primus, David Byrne, Talking Heads, James Brown, Fred Wesley, Maceo Parker, Saddle Tramps, Nirvana, Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, Tool, System of a Down, SerArt, Adrian Belew, Frank Zappa, King Crimson, John McLaughlin, Mahavishnu Orchestra, the Beatles, Bill Frisell, Wayne Horvitz, Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra, Terry Bozzio, Mr. Bungle, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Richard Wagner, Arnold Schoenberg, Peter Tchaikovsky, Lucinda Williams, Nick Cave, Black Flag, Henry Rollins, George Clinton, Bernie Worrell, BlackByrd McKnight, Lige Curry, Parliament-Funkadelic, Rush, Yes, Abdullah Ibrahaim, The Police, The Kinks, Dolly Parton, Captain Beefheart, Dmitri Shostakovich, Gustav Mahler, Bela Bartok, John Zorn, Marc Ribot, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Carla Kilstedt, Andrew Hill, ...these are just a start....
Sounds Like
Early Pink Floyd, Soul Coughing, Lou Reed, Black Sabbath, John Zorn, Nels Cline, Charles Mingus, Geezer Butler, Les Claypool, Queens of the Stone Age, Chris Whitley, Bob Dylan, Tom Waits, Neil Young, J.S.Bach, Igor Stravinsky, Henryk Gorecki, Johnny Cash, Outkast, Busta Rhymes, Willie Nelson, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Hank Williams Sr., Hank III, Rev Horton Heat, Yo-Yo-Ma, Edgar Meyer, Dave Holland, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Frederic Chopin, Motorhead, Led Zeppelin, Metallica, Carlos Santana, Jaco Pastorius, Scott LeFaro, Bootsy Collins, John Lennon, Jean Sibelius, Carl Orff, Ludwig Van Beethoven, Jello Biafra, Dead Kennedys, Suicidal Tendencies, Primus, David Byrne, Talking Heads, James Brown, Fred Wesley, Maceo Parker, Saddle Tramps, Nirvana, Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, Tool, System of a Down, SerArt, Adrian Belew, Frank Zappa, King Crimson, John McLaughlin, Mahavishnu Orchestra, the Beatles, Bill Frisell, Wayne Horvitz, Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra, Terry Bozzio, Mr. Bungle, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Richard Wagner, Arnold Schoenberg, Peter Tchaikovsky, Lucinda Williams, Nick Cave, Black Flag, Henry Rollins, George Clinton, Bernie Worrell, BlackByrd McKnight, Lige Curry, Parliament-Funkadelic, Rush, Yes, Abdullah Ibrahaim, The Police, The Kinks, Dolly Parton, Captain Beefheart, Dmitri Shostakovich, Gustav Mahler, Bela Bartok, John Zorn, Marc Ribot, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Carla Kilstedt, Andrew Hill, ...all of these and none of these.... I mean, it would be easy to describe what you sounded like if you were a Journey cover band, right?
I am taking the opportunity to plug this great band. James Whiton and the Downtown Apostles, my friends, is a group that should not be missed. They play here in Oly on a regular basis, as well as up and down the coast into CA.
This music is gorgeous, soul bending, emotion pulling funk and jazz and pure gut wrenching beauty. James' voice and his depth of spoken word, his rhythmic cadence filirting with what he happens to be pulling from his huge bass at that moment, john's trumpet echoing lost and swollen in the background...You hear the music of whales, underwater and all around you, thrumming through your body, as the music crashes into a crescendo of passion and guitar and percussion. I can imagine making love to this music, all night- I can imagine watching a perfect, sad ,and passionate and angry dance, the figures colliding and twisting and soaring and leaping, intertwining and releasing- I can see gypsies fighting and loving and living in it's rhythms- I can hear a soul's voice echoing out with that trumpet, with James' bass and voice, with a triumphant crash and hum, a heart broken and regained and trampled again. That's what I feel when I listen to them play- I feel an echo of my own soul's patterns; my heartbreaks, my depression, my passion, my grief, the great feeling of loss that overwhelms us all when we start to leave our childhood behind and move into the world of the grown-up, the hope and the knowledge of ourselves that fluctuates and flutters, our coping mechanisms for such overwhelming changes as come over us, the nights of drinking, and fighting, and sorrows untold. When you come to hear these boys, don't come expecting fluff and fancy, don't come to find music to grind on your date to (unless you are planning on going all the way, right then), or something nice in the background to speak in front of. Come expecting to have your senses usurped, your heart pulled, your emotions thrust about for all to see. This music is not for the faint hearted, this music if for those who have lived a little, some hard, some fast, some fallen, some free, some hanging by the skin of their teeth...
--Maeve Short
James Whiton is a Seattle based double bassist and poet who nearly lost his left arm to a car wreck in 1994. After several surgeries and an incredible amount of determination he managed to prove more than one doctor wrong and keep the arm so necessary to his instrument. Despite the resulting limited mobility of one quarter of his limbs, there is absolutely nothing "stiff" about his playing which ranges from soft and quiet to hard and heavy, but never fails to be powerful. Having played alongside such notables as Michael Shrieve and George Clinton's P-funk, Whiton claims influences ranging from Charles Mingus to Geezer Butler, and a cursory listen to The Way Your Mouth Moves instantly confirms he isn't exaggerating.
The Downtown Apostles is a somewhat floating membership of extremely adept musicians who back his forays into the fringes of jazz, metal, ambient, and experimental rock. For the 2005 release The Way Your Mouth Moves on Hipsync Records, the Apostle line-up is a fixed four-piece with electric guitarist Bill Patton lending a decidedly metallic edge to the proceedings, and drummer Jay Jaskot and trumpet player John Fricke filling things out more than solidly. This group is incredibly tight, and provides a soundtrack to Whiton's spoken narrative that ranges from haunting to fearsome.
It is hard not to examine music that mines the borders of heavy metal rockism and experimental jazz without bringing comparisons to John Zorn into the picture, and it is probably worth suggesting to fans of Painkiller and Naked City that they check The Downtown Apostles out. Given that the incarnation of the Apostles on The Way Your Mouth Moves doesn't feature a saxophone (though apparently the current live group does) there is no reason, however, to take the comparisons very far. Whiton's group has a very distinct sound all their own that manages to mix genres and influences without seeming overtly derivative at all.
While "Your the Only One" reads a bit more on the funk meter than other tracks, and while the title piece is a considerably quieter more ambient statement, the songs flow quite cohesively from one to the next. For me the standout track is "My Soul is Pure" a dark serious poem of a soldier's psychological victimization from war set to the Apostles soundtrack in full echoing heaviness, juxtaposed with a humorous intro of Bill Patton laying some classic death metal riffage to Whiton's mocking comment. The whole of The Way Your Mouth Moves was essentially recorded live with all four musicians playing at once in true band form, and it shows. Live use of an effects pedal allowed Whiton and trumpet player Fricke to layer their instruments quite effectively in this framework.
Obviously I like this record quite a bit. I was rather surprised by it in fact, as it came in a package of all sorts of music from Seattle recording engineer friend, Mr. Erik 4-A, and I had no idea what to expect, nor any background as to what I was throwing in the cd player. That has worked out entirely for the better, as it's always great to discover something really good that one had no idea even existed.
To find out more about Mr. Whiton's background, influences, history of recording projects, and to purchase this and other albums or download some MP3s, check out his website: http://www.downtownapostles.com
Rating: 9 out of 10
Submitted by Ricardo Wang on Sun, 12/04/2005 - 8:36pm.
James Whiton and the Downtown Apostles's Friend Space (Top 15)
James Whiton and the Downtown Apostles has 647 friends.
What is wrong with me? I missed you... actually was down with a cold. But please play here again. I have heard nasty rumors that you are leaving the NW soon. Please don't leave without me!!!!!!
You all rocked on Jay's Birthday. Promise me a tape of that night or some facsimile. I heard you guys were doing the same the other night at the Eastside.
I want to know your schedule and maybe get some friends to go to Seattle or so to see you all. I miss you all and moreso that I missed you last thursday. I must repent now, for I have sinned.
Heya "We're goin' to the Roadhouse we're gonna have a real good time!" I hope you can make it out to see this show on Sat Dec 15th at the Shanty Tavern!
when y'all played mingus on the second song in the first set last night, i about melted. and stayed that way for the next three hours... thanks for doing what you do. xoxo
Yalls is some bad muthafuckas, yes you is. You guys need to pull a doubleheader with EMT and bring the show on down to Dallas/ Ft Worth. Or release another album... or both.
Hey James....nice to see you here...loved jammin with you....we have the next Glass Roots Arts Festival coming up for Aug 19th 2008..I will get back with you with details if you are interested....
Hey James...I just wanted to say hello. I think about you and talk about you...I figure I should at least say hi. Love listening to you play. See you...................pf
Thank you so much for the add! If they have a World's Greatest Bass Player contest you will win! I saw you play with EMT last summer in Nevada City, CA. I look forward to the day I will be wowed, once again, with your most excellent talent with EMT, Downtown Apostles or whomever! Thanks for an AMAZING performance!
dear sirs: i'd like to commend all of you fine downtown apostles gentlemen for the fantastic electric heaviness for the mind and body featured at the SeaMonster Lounge this past weekend. I was most highly stoked, and rather pleased that I'd rallied some of my fellow stokers out for this distinguished evening. The picture below is only indirectly related to the above words of most sincere praise. Basically, I would like to get y'all some widespread national/intl. publicity for being kicked clean off of myspace's music site due to the posting of a classic American album cover. Sometimes, you see, there's quite a calculated method to my stokeness ~ LOL ~ Have a helluva good one mang!!!!!!! and KEEP IT URBAN, of course!
Hey man! How's it going? Sorry I missed you at the Urban Arts Festival but I just couldn't go out into that fucking monsoon. I see that you're playing at Masa soon on a Sunday I think. I was wondering if you maybe wanted to come over and sit in on our Jam Night. We have Brett Cummings from the Schematics, Darrin Watkins and Jeff Leonard from the Vicci Martinez band along with the occasional visit from alot of our friends. If you come over after your show we'll totally take care of you. My number is 253-298-7864. Are you going to the Dead Artists show at The Tempest on Saturday, July 21st? I'm gonna try to go cause I haven't hung out with Hume or Loiselle for a long time.