Featuring Rama Duke, Heibert, Mike Tree,
Jordan Brooks, Solomon Dorsey, and Others Along
with the Words of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
EP Equates to Sonic Love-Child of Electronic Music,
Jazz, Hip-Hop, Classical, and Ambient Music
Narducci is a nickname that goes back to L.A. native Matthew Silberman’s days at the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts. “The name started from the Miles Davis’ tune ‘Nardis,’ which was my feature in our jazz combo, and evolved after my friends and I were watching ‘Sopranos’ and saw the name ‘Narducci’ in the credits,” he explains. “After that, it just stuck.” Going most of his career by his birth name, Narducci has worked with R&B stars Miguel and Bilal, System of a Down guitarist Daron Malakian, former Duran Duran/Frank Zappa guitarist Warren Cuccurullo, and jazz legend Peter Erskine among many others. He currently plays with electronic music outfit Dimond Saints, rock band The Orbellion, jazz fusion group Madd Galaxy, and cult party rockers The Prigs.
After graduating from NYC’s New School University Jazz Program, Silberman would make experimental tracks in Garage Band that he uploaded to his alter-ego Narducci DeSoto’s MySpace page. “Originally it was just for fun, a welcome break from the seriousness of becoming a bad-ass jazz saxophonist,” says Narducci. “But I noticed a lot of the time I was having more fun and less stress making these weird tracks than playing jazz gigs. There was no weight of tradition or peer expectation; I felt free to create my own worlds.”
Producing remained a hobby for years as Narducci made his living playing gigs and teaching. In 2012 he released his first album, Questionable Creatures, under his given name. It earned him praise by many major jazz publications. DownBeat described him as “…one of the most reflective, and reflexively complex [jazz voices] on the Brooklyn scene,” while JazzTimes said he is “one of those artists who is not afraid to explore what music can become, while utilizing what music already is.”
That willingness to explore would lead Narducci to truly dedicate himself to the art of music production. “Making Questionable Creatures was cathartic. It felt like I released the weight of 15 years of study and practice. But my tastes were evolving,” he explains. “I was becoming more inspired by producers like Flying Lotus, Boards of Canada, and Sleepers Work than most jazz.” Narducci started learning Ableton Live, acquiring gear, and then built his first studio in 2013 in a small bedroom in Brooklyn. “Then it was official. I was a producer first, saxophonist second.”
Sense of space [EP] was his first electronic music effort, released in 2014 under the last name of his original MySpace moniker, DeSoto, which is also the name of his production company. Each track has a distinct movement, sound, and edge while the entire release seems to flow as an extended cerebral mix of texture and color.” After sense of space, Narducci continued to develop his style and range, producing with artists such as Akie Bermiss (Lake Street Dive), Evan Smith (Bleachers), Jessica Martins (Via Audio), and Leron Thomas (Lauryn Hill, Mos Def), while continuing to gig as a saxophonist.
Deep 808 booms and a bouncing synth chant start off “Gaia,” with Narducci’s snake-charming soprano sax serenading mystic tambourines. A video-game-style “level-up” takes us into a cocktail-lounge-hip-hop beat, with Rama Duke’s (George Clinton, Bobby Brown, Macy Gray) earthy vocals surrounding a robot telling us, “You are now entering a magical land/The answers lie within.” Mike Tree’s (Wu-Tang Clan, Miguel, Jhene Aiko) drums evolve into an Amon Tobin-style break beat, with Narducci’s tenor saxophone bobbing and weaving around Duke’s vocals as the track deconstructs into a Coltrane-esque coda.
“Piano” reveals Narducci’s classical music training, and the influence of being raised by an opera-singing mother. Beautiful, melancholy piano chords set the scene, drawn from improvisations he recorded between teaching lessons at Turtle Bay Music School in NYC. Heibert’s haunting, operatic vocals weave around the piano like ancient spirits, building into a powerful choir pushed by primal drums and knifing cymbals, climaxing to reveal a lone voice floating over the piano refrain. When the music ends, we hear the muse leave the room.
The title track, “Break the Silence,” draws its name from the famous speech by Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., “A Time to Break Silence,” sampled here as a moving narration. A pulsating, breath-powered synth and booming 808s set the stage for King’s spiritual cadence to remind us that “A time comes when silence is betrayal/Even when pressed by the demands of inner truth.” “Break the Silence” is as much a statement on current politics as it is on human evolution and personal realization. Taos’ Native American chants, flutes, strings, and Jordan Brooks’ bass (Albert Hammond, Rubblebucket) fill out the sonic landscape, ending in ethereal wind chimes that soothe the spirit.
“When I was young, my mom would play me a cassette of Itzhak Perlman narrating ‘Peter and the Wolf.’ I loved how each of the characters had their own sound and theme,” explained Narducci. “Celestial Journey” draws its inspiration equally from Neil DeGrasse Tyson’s “Cosmos” as it does the Sergei Prokofiev classic, taking us on an orchestrated, electro/acoustic voyage through space and asking the listener: “Would you rather be dreaming!?” Solomon Dorsey’s (Ke$ha, José James) bass beautifully converses with flutes, clarinets, synths, and harpsichords, climaxing with French horns reminiscent of the big, bad wolf of Prokofiev’s masterpiece. Strings take us home from the edges of this galaxy, revealing a new hope.
Break the Silence will be released September 21, available everywhere digitally, and on cassette and CD through Bandcamp and the DeSoto Shop. It’s the first in a series of 3 EPs, with Journey to Los Angeles next, featuring Rama Duke, Jeff Taylor (Mark Giuliana, Donny McCaslin), and Shay Saint-Victor (Kelly Rowland, Karl Rubin), and another untitled EP to follow. All three EPs will be combined into a triple-LP vinyl collection, with release shows for each to be announced.
All songs written, produced, and performed by Narducci, with:
Mike Tree, drums
Jordan Brooks, bass
Solomon Dorsey, bass
Doc Allison, cello
Sarah Parkington, violin
Amy Sanchez, French horn
Recorded and mixed by Matthew Silberman, DeSoto Sound Factory, Brooklyn, NY/Los Angeles, CA.
Mastered by John Greenham Mastering
Additional recording by Brian Bender at The Motherbrain, Los Angeles, CA., and Andrew Proctor at Veers Studios, Los Angeles, CA.
Cover art by Sandra Reichl, Vienna, Austria
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Tribute, "Break the Silence" from DeSoto Picture Company on Vimeo.