Snarky Puppy feat. Chantae Cann - Da Da N'Da (Family Dinner - Volume One)
"Da Da N'Da"
from
Snarky Puppy's live
DVD/CD - "
Family Dinner -
Volume One"
Buy It Here:
http://ropeadope99.bandcamp.com/
album/family-dinner-volume-1
http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/family-dinner-vol.-1/id692332178
http://www.snarkypuppy.com / http://www.facebook.com/snarkypuppy
Lyrics by Chantae
Cann, music by
Anthony Dixon
arranged by Chantae Cann &
Michael League
produced by Michael League
co-produced by Snarky Puppy
recorded and filmed at the
Jefferson Center in
Roanoke, VA, in front of a live audience on March 9,
2013.
Chantae Cann - guest vocalist
Robert "Sput" Searight - drums
Nate Werth - percussion
Michael League - bass
Bob Lanzetti - electric guitar
Mark Lettieri - electric guitar
Cory
Henry - organ
Bill Laurance - acoustic piano
Jay Jennings - flugelhorn
Mike "Maz" Maher - flugelhorn
Chris Bullock - tenor sax
Chelsea "
Peaches"
West - backing vocals
Katya Diaz - backing vocals
Rachella Searight - backing vocals
engineered by
Eric Hartman
assisted by Avi
Gunther &
Jake Dempsey
mixed by Eric Hartman
mastered by
Scott Hull
film directed by
Andy LaViolette
filmed by Andy LaViolette,
Brad Holt,
Simon C.F. Yu, and
Nikki Birch
On March 8th, 2013, Snarky Puppy and a host of special guests convened at the Jefferson Center in
Roanoke VA.
The project was to record a series of live performances in audio and video that would bring attention
and benefit to the ongoing work of the center. The Jefferson Center is a non-profit arts organization that is revitalizing a key neighborhood in
Roanoke with the restoration of
Jefferson High School and the renovation of the Shaftman
Performance Hall.
The hall brings world class music to the local community through the
Music Lab, providing education and recording space for local children.
The Music Lab at Jefferson Center is working daily to pull from every social and economic class of the Roanoke community and create the next wave of real, human musicians. They host low cost or free after-school programs for any interested young people filled with visits by guest artists, private instrumental instruction, and recording training. Wafting out of the little studios and rehearsal rooms on the third floor of Jefferson Center, you can hear Afro-beat in
Swahili, hip-hop in Liberian
Kreyol, the blues coming from the guitar of a 13 year-old prodigy, and the undeniable sound of young musicians growing.
It's a thing that needs to be supported at all costs across this country, and by purchasing this record, you've done it.
A portion of every sale will go to the Music Lab at Jefferson Center.