
Whatever you choose to call it, jazz, rock or funk, the Royal Noise makes instrumental music that moves like heavy machinery light on its feet โ aggressive art that doesnโt stay in one place for too long. Itโs musical perpetual motion.
โFusion,โ says guitarist Johan Harvey, โis always a loaded word, because it covers so much. Of late, we really have little regard for stylistic boundaries. Incessant experimentation, heavy groove, itโs loose yet itโs tight, itโs grounded yet itโs stratospheric.โ
The Royal Noise defies categorization. โPeople call it many things,โ Harvey says, โwhether itโs jazz fusion, funk fusion, acid jazz or jazz/funk. But it basically covers all of those bases.โ
Aficionados of Englandโs New Mastersounds, or the Boston funk band Lettuce, need to sit up and pay attention.
The Royal Noise is a quartet of heavy hitters. Along with Harvey, thereโs sax and keys player Mike LaBombard, funkโfried bassist Darius Shepherd, and octopussian drummer Jonathan Proffitt.
The band has been in Elevated Basement Studios, laying down tracks for its second album, which is penciled in for an early 2013 release.
Until then, the touring continues. The Royal Noise made its Athens debut Dec. 1 at the trendy Nowhere Bar, adjacent to the Georgia Theatre. They headlined the afterโparty for Big Gigantic, which played a show that night in the big hall.
This weekend, Harvey and company return to Chatham County. After a warmโup gig Dec. 7 at HucโaโPoos on Tybee Island, theyโre booked into Live Wire Music Hall, on a bill with Dark Water Rising (more on them in a minute).
According to Harvey, itโs in the live context where the Royal Noise really shines. The guys pride themselves on never playing the same show twice. The songs metamorphose right before your eyes and ears, depending on each musicianโs mood that night.
Someone not long ago likened their sets to improv comedy: Whose line is it anyway?
โNobody knows exactly whatโs gonna go on,โ Harvey beams. โSomebody will through out an idea, like Darius will throw out some funky groove that heโs never hit before, and weโll all turn to him and be like โyes … and …โ
โBasically, itโs like you draw a map, A, B, C … weโre gonna turn at these points, but whatever happened in between just kind of happens. Either until itโs about to fall apart โ and we look at each other and say โOK, right turnโ โ or until itโs run its course. Whichever comes first.โ
Indeed, itโs this kind of faith, trust and innerโear convo that makes the best jazz bands work โ and the Royal Noise is very much rooted in jazz. โItโs almost like a practice when weโre onstage,โ says Harvey. โHow much fun can we have? And how can we break the mold of the song yet again?โ
LaBombard was the last to join the band (before his arrival, they were called the Royal Noise Trio). โHe very quickly became one of the most important,โ Harvey explains. โHe wrote the majority of the music for the second album. Heโs a phenomenal player. He blows his brains out every chance he gets.โ
As for the Shepherd/Proffitt rhythm section, โthose two have some kind of clairvoyant connection. Watching them play, youโd think they just completed each otherโs sentences. And itโs funny watching them, because they shock each other, how they latch on.โ
According to Harvey, the Royal Noise is on the โshort listโ to play SXSW in March.
North Carolinaโs Dark Water Rising is a soul/Americana band fronted by the amazing vocalist Charly Lowry, a Season 3 finalist on American Idol.
In 2010, Dark Water Rising won a Native American Music Award as Debut Duo or Group of the Year.
The Royal Noise/Dark Water Rising
Where: Live Wire Music Hall, 307 W. River St.
When: At 9 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 8
Admission: TBA
Online: theroyalnoise.com, darkwaterrising.net
This article appears in Dec 5-12, 2012.
