![]() The bunch at times reaches up to 30 musicians, according to Shaun Martin, one of Snarky Puppy’s keyboardists who also happens to be a Grammy-winning musician. “Because the camaraderie musically and the level of musicianship is very high, it doesn’t take long for the band to start something and make something out of it - to bring it to life. ![]() It’s also about growing as a musician and experiencing a level of freedom while playing in the moment, he says.īeing part of the collective has helped him find that groove and continue to push forward. From there, Ross said “it’s been a ride” of touring around the world with the band while also juggling a successful solo career.īut being part of the Snarky Puppy family is more than having fun - though that is a big part of the group’s goal. Ross, 31, of New Orleans joined the “fam,” as the group calls it, in 2015 after playing with League at a jazz festival. “We’ve definitely grown to be about embracing culture and understanding there is more than one view point on everything.” Jamison Ross, one of the band’s drummers, agrees. “The idea here is that everything is fluid, that everything is always moving and that we’re all in a constant state of immigration,” he says on Snarky Puppy’s website. The collective’s founder, composer and bassist Michael League says the album - its moniker not without political undertone - is about movement. Their latest release, “Immigrance,” plays on the band’s diverse makeup and bent for embracing cultural sounds. The band snagged back-to-back Grammys for best contemporary instrumental album (“Culcha Vulcha”) in 20. ![]() In 2014, the collective earned a Grammy Award for best R&B performance. Local appearances have included the Carnegie of Homestead Music Hall in Munhall and Greensburg’s SummerSounds concert series. The self-described collective has been around since 2003 and has cranked out 12 albums and gone on countless tours around the globe. And if you haven’t heard their hard-to-define music, chances are you’re in a growing minority. Snarky Puppy, an instrumental jazz-funk band whose members hail from all over the world, will make an appearance at McKees Rocks’ Roxian Theatre at 8 p.m. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, the 18th-century German writer and politician, once said we should try to “hear a little music” every day in order to stay in touch with life’s beauties.īeauty may be in the eye of the beholder, but there is nothing little about Snarky Puppy’s sound - or songs. ![]()
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