| Afloat: Shawn Livingston Moseley |
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| Written by Catharine Lo | |||
| Tuesday, August 21 2007 | |||
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Shawn Livingston Moseley: "Searching for the Calm" Sit in on Moseley’s upcoming performance “The Augmented Sea,” and you’ll see that the gifted pianist has endowed his compositions with the ability to reach into your soul and pull out loose emotions. As the music rises and settles, the hints of melancholy that resonate with unresolved feelings yield to a melodic benediction, leaving the listener with a promise that individual potential, like the sea’s energy, is boundless. Shawn says the music is an expression of the changing sea he observed for years from the living room of his home near Waimea Bay. “The music often felt not like my own; rather I was just a channel by which the ocean would manifest itself into song,” the reflective artist describes. “As a romantic dark and stormy day becomes a sunny afternoon, so does the music I am guided to create.” ![]() His interpretation comprises the first half of the intimate Aug. 25 concert at Atherton. Following a demonstration of the therapeutic harp by Dr. Elizabeth Chen Christenson of Sounding Joy Music Therapy will be the acoustic debut of Moseley’s new band Evasive Species. Billed as “the next evolution of music in Hawai‘i,” Evasive Species infuses the traditional sound of slack key with the modern jazz feel of urban hip-hop. Band members include MC Navid Najafi on vocals, Stephen Inglis on vocals and slack key guitar, Jon Hawes on upright bass, and Steve Howells on drums and electronica. Moseley will play piano and Fender Rhodes electric piano. Shawn highlights Inglis’s strong background in rock, blues, and groove on electric as well as his ability to play conventional slack key in a non-traditional band, Hawes’s underground rank as the best bassist in the Pacific Rim, Howells’s tight grasp of rock and blues, and Navid Najafi’s fresh style and easy flow. “Navid’s lyrics rank up there with early Mos Def and Black Star, among many other east coast-based conscious rappers,” Shawn adds. “He can rap over anything and do it well, not to mention sound good while he does it.” Having worked with the likes of the Dave Matthews Band, Metallica, and blues legend Ron Levy, Moseley’s praise doesn’t come lightly. After 14 years of making records in Boston, New York and San Francisco, the veteran producer, engineer, and songwriter brought home his valuable experience and with Rodney Alejandro co-founded ‘Aumakua Records, a label dedicated to nurturing and protecting Hawai‘i artists in all genres. “The only way to pull together a kick-ass band is with Hawai‘i Public Radio’s Atherton Studio 738 Kaheka St. Saturday, Aug. 25 7pm 955-8821 $20 general, $17.50 for HPR members, $10 for students www.shawnlivingston.com Music notes: “Searching for the Calm” was the opening song at Shawn Livingston Moseley’s Jun. 2 show at Mamiya Theatre. “What Lives Below” features Pumehana Davis Wadsworth on her electric harp that she named Elvis. Shawn composed this piece as a film score for a silent underwater film by Morgan Hoestery submitted to the Hawai‘i International Film Festival.
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Comments (1)![]()
Parisa
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| dear Navid Najafi I have lost one of my freinds for 2 years that his name is Navid Najafi, I searched by his name and accidently i found your wonderful site. I like piano but not that much that I confuse by that voice. you are Perfect. Regards Parisa |
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