Gritty, dusty garage jazz that feels like a lost 1970s library record. Heavy on the vibraphone and drum breaks, it is the ultimate soundtrack for urban movement.
The Stance Brothers sound like a crate-digger's fever dream. It is jazz stripped of its academic pretension and returned to the basement, where the air is thick with tape hiss and the smell of old drum heads. The music is anchored by Teppo Mäkynen's impeccable drumming, which carries the weight and swing of classic hip-hop breaks but remains fluid enough for sophisticated improvisation. It is warm, analog, and deeply rhythmic.
What makes this project distinctive is the 'garage jazz' ethos. Instead of the polished sheen of modern nu-jazz, you get the clatter of a vibraphone and the punch of a dry snare drum. There is a specific cinematic quality here, reminiscent of 70s heist films or urban documentaries, where the melody is secondary to the 'vibe' and the pocket. It feels lived-in, slightly scuffed at the edges, and effortlessly cool.
Start with the album 'Duktus' to hear the full evolution of this sound. It captures the perfect balance between jazz-funk sophistication and the raw, unpolished energy of a trio jamming in a dusty room. It is essential listening for anyone who loves the intersection of jazz, soul, and the rhythmic DNA of boom-bap.
Shares funk, nu jazz, soul, instrumental only (subgenre)
Shares funk, nu jazz, soul, analog warmth (subgenre)
Shares funk, soul, tape saturation, analog warmth (subgenre)
Shares funk, nu jazz, soul, analog warmth (subgenre)
Shares nu jazz, hand played, funk, tape saturation (signature)
Shares nu jazz, funk, instrumental only, downtempo (signature)
Shares funk, nu jazz, soul, tape saturation (subgenre)
Shares cool jazz, nu jazz, instrumental only, coffee shop (subgenre)
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